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TABLE OF CONTENTS 1
TABLE OF CONTENTSGeneral Information & Highlights
Welcome Letter .........................................................................................................2APSA Anti-Harassment Policy .................................................................................3General Information
About APSA ............................................................................................................4General Information ..................................................................................................5Sponsors and Supporters .........................................................................................10Hotel Maps ...........................................................................................................11Restaurant and Attractions ........................................................................................21
Special Events and HighlightsProgram Highlights .................................................................................................24Livestreaming Sessions .............................................................................................27Pre-Conference Short Courses ...................................................................................29Theme Panels ........................................................................................................31Innovative Session Formats .......................................................................................34Lightning Rounds ....................................................................................................36TLC at APSA ..........................................................................................................39Professional Development Events ...............................................................................43Diversity and Inclusion Program Events ........................................................................44Poster Sessions .......................................................................................................46APSA Awards ........................................................................................................48Organized Section Awards ......................................................................................52Campus Teaching Award Recognition ........................................................................83APSA Lifetime Members ...........................................................................................84
Exhibits and AdvertisersExhibit Hall Map ....................................................................................................86Exhibitor Listing ......................................................................................................87Advertisements .......................................................................................................89
2021 Annual Meeting ProgramTheme, Division, Related Panels ..............................................................................125Meetings and Receptions .......................................................................................179Detailed Daily Schedule ........................................................................................181Index of Participants .............................................................................................405
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2 WELCOME LETTER
Dear Colleagues,
Welcome to the 117th American Political Science Association’s Annual Meeting and Exhibition in Seattle!
This year’s Meeting is APSA’s first dual-format meeting, providing opportunities for scholars to meet and engage in-person or virtually. Opening amidst the continued pandemic, we recognize that these are difficult times, and we are overjoyed to be able to make many of the aspects of the Meeting available no matter where you attend.
The 2021 theme is Promoting Pluralism. In choosing this theme we recognized the ongoing political, economic, and social upheaval that portends significant transformations across the globe. More than ever, we believe that political science is positioned to address pressing questions of this moment and beyond, provided we embrace and promote the rich intellectual pluralism of our discipline. Our heterogeneity should be a hallmark of political science and an opportunity to lead other social sciences. For this year’s meeting, we call attention to the multidimensional diversity our discipline has to offer, and we have invited panels and papers that push us away from silos and toward respect, engagement, and celebration of a wide array of scholars, methods, methodologies and approaches. We hope you will be able to attend some panels on our theme listed here: https://connect.apsanet.org/apsa2021/theme-panels/
The first set of virtual sessions will take place at 6:00 a.m. Pacific on Tuesday, September 28. The first round of in-person panels will start at 8:00 a.m. Pacific on Thursday, September 30. Please note that all times in the program are Pacific Daylight Time. In-person short courses will also take place in Seattle on Wednesday, September 29. A select number of panels will be livestreamed from Seattle to the virtual platform. You can find these panels on the “Livestreamed Panels” tab on the virtual platform and on the APSA website.
On Wednesday evening at 6:00 p.m., all registered attendees are welcome to join us for a virtual Awards Ceremony. An invite-only reception will be held onsite in Seattle. Please join us in celebrating these scholars for their outstanding achievements!
We encourage you to attend APSA President Janet Box-Steffensmeier’s Presidential Address, “Engaged Pluralism: The Importance of Commitment,” on Thursday, September 30, at 6:30 p.m. to kick off the meeting. This will be followed by the APSA Opening Reception at 7:30 p.m. There will also be several sessions devoted to the work of the topical Presidential Task Force on Election Assistance as well as Engaged Methodological Pluralism.
Beyond an exciting program of paper panels and roundtables across every field of political science, we wanted to highlight a few special features this year. We have three plenary speakers that you won’t want to miss. First, Congresswoman Robin Kelly, Representative of the 2nd Congressional District of Illinois, will virtually address the audience on Thursday, September 30, at 10:00 a.m. US Election Assistance Commissioner Thomas Hicks will give his plenary address in-person and via livestream on “Running an Election during a Pandemic” on Friday, October 1, at 12:00 p.m. Dr. Scott Page will address the audience in-person and via livestream on Saturday, October 2, at 12:00 p.m. on “Appreciating and Leveraging the Diversity of Political Sicence.”
Within the Meeting, there will be a number of substantive and methodological pre-conference short-courses, emerging scholar lightning rounds, iPosters, and mini-conferences.
As we acknowledge APSA’s location this year on the unceded land of the Duwamish people at QulXáqabeexW, alongside the shared waters of the Duwamish, Puyallup, Suquamish, Tulalip and Muckleshoot nations, we are particularly pleased to be able to support a mini-conference on Indigenous Politics and another on Intersectionality and Social Movements. Relatedly, we are proud to be able to offer a number of sustainability initiatives this year at https://connect.apsanet.org/apsa2021/sustainability/ and encourage you to take advantage of those and help us reduce the Meeting’s carbon footprint.
We are grateful to the division chairs for their hard work and creativity in putting together an excellent program. We are also deeply indebted to the terrific APSA staff—in particular, Ashley, Kristin and Steve—for shepherding this conference to fruition in these uncertain and challenging times.
We hope you enjoy the meeting!
Dino P. Christenson, Washington University in St. Louis Valeria Sinclair-Chapman, Purdue University2021 APSA Annual Meeting Program Co-Chairs
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ANTI-HARASSMENT POLICY 3
The APSA Annual Meeting is convened for the purposes of professional development and scholarly and educational interchange in the spirit of free inquiry and free expression. Harassment of colleagues, students, or other conference participants undermines the principle of equity at the heart of these professional fora and is inconsistent with the principles of free inquiry and free expression. Consequently, harassment is considered by APSA to be a serious form of professional misconduct.
The following Anti-Harassment Policy outlines expectations for all those who attend or participate in APSA meetings. It reminds APSA meeting participants that all professional academic ethics and norms apply as standards of behavior and interaction at these meetings.
1. PurposeAPSA is committed to providing a safe and welcoming virtual conference environment for all participants, regardless of actual or perceived gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, ability, socioeconomic status, age, or religion.
“Participant” in this policy refers to anyone present at APSA meetings, including staff, contractors, vendors, exhibitors, venue staff, APSA members, and all other attendees.
2. Expected BehaviorAll participants at APSA virtual meetings are expected to abide by this Anti-Harassment Policy in all meeting venues including ancillary events and official and unofficial social gatherings.
• Abide by the norms of professional respect that are necessary to promote the conditions for free academic interchange. • If you witness potential harm to a conference participant, be proactive in helping to mitigate or avoid that harm. • Alert conference personnel if you see a situation in which someone might be in imminent danger.
3. Unacceptable BehaviorUnacceptable behaviors include:
• persistent and unwelcome solicitation of emotional or physical intimacy • persistent and unwelcome solicitation of emotional or physical intimacy accompanied by real or implied threat of
professional harm • intimidating, harassing, abusive, derogatory or demeaning speech or actions by any participant in an APSA meeting
and/or at any related event • prejudicial actions or comments related to actual or perceived gender, gender identity, race, ethnicity, sexual
orientation, ability, socioeconomic status, age, or religion that coerce others, foment broad hostility, or otherwise undermine professional equity or the principles of free academic exchange
• deliberate intimidation, stalking or following • harassing photography or recording • sustained disruption of talks or other events • real or implied threat of physical harm
The APSA Ombuds is available for consultation with any annual meeting attendees who believes that they have experienced any form of harassment, or have concerns about violations of the sexual harassment provisions of the APSA anti-harassment policy while attending the 2021 APSA Annual Meeting. For information on contacting the APSA Ombuds, please visit www.apsanet.org/ombuds.
The ombuds will be available via email at [email protected] for consultation or to set up a Zoom appointment.
ANTI-HARASSMENT POLICY
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Frank J. GoodnowAlbert ShawFrederick N. JudsonJames BryceA. Lawrence LowellWoodrow WilsonSimeon E. BaldwinAlbert Bushnell HartW. W. WilloughbyJohn Bassett MooreErnst FreundJesse MacyMunroe SmithHenry Jones FordPaul S. ReinschLeo S. RoweWilliam A. DunningHarry A. GarfieldJames W. GarnerCharles E. MerriamCharles A. BeardWilliam Bennett MunroJesse S. ReevesJohn A. FairlieBenjamin F. ShambaughEdward S. CorwinWilliam F. WilloughbyIsidor LoebWalter ShepardFrancis W. CokerArthur N. HolcombeThomas Reed PowellClarence A. DykstraCharles Grove HainesRobert C. BrooksFrederic A. OggWilliam AndersonRobert E. CushmanLeonard D. WhiteJohn GausWalter F. DoddArthur W. MacMahonHenry R. SpencerQuincy WrightJames K. PollockPeter H. OdegardLuther GulickPendleton HerringRalph J. BuncheCharles McKinleyHarold D. LasswellE. E. SchattschneiderV. O. Key, Jr.R. Taylor ColeCarl B. SwisherEmmette S. RedfordCharles S. Hyneman
Carl J. FriedrichC. Herman PritchettDavid B. TrumanGabriel A. AlmondRobert A. DahlMerle FainsodDavid EastonKarl W. DeutschRobert E. LaneHeinz EulauRobert E. WardAvery LeisersonAustin RanneyJames MacGregor BurnsSamuel H. BeerJohn C. WahlkeLeon D. EpsteinWarren E. MillerCharles E. LindblomSeymour Martin LipsetWilliam H. RikerPhilip E. ConverseRichard F. FennoAaron B. WildavskySamuel P. HuntingtonKenneth N. WaltzLucian W. PyeJudith N. ShklarTheodore J. LowiJames Q. WilsonLucius J. BarkerCharles O.JonesSidney VerbaArend LijphartElinor OstromM. Kent JenningsMatthew Holden, Jr.Robert O. KeohaneRobert JervisRobert D. PutnamTheda SkocpolSusanne Hoeber RudolphMargaret LeviIra KatznelsonRobert AxelrodDianne M. PinderhughesPeter KatzensteinHenry E. BradyCarole PatemanG. Bingham Powell, Jr.Jane MansbridgeJohn H. AldrichRodney E. HeroJennifer HochschildDavid LakeKathleen ThelenRogers Smith
FORMER APSA PRESIDENTS
OFFICERS
PRESIDENTJanet M. Box-SteffensmeierOhio State University
VICE-PRESIDENTSMichelle DeardorffUniversity of Tennessee,Chattanooga
Mala HtunUniversity of New Mexico
John SidesVanderbilt University
PRESIDENT-ELECTJohn IshiyamaUniversity of NorthTexas
PAST PRESIDENTPaula D. McClainDuke University
2018–2021Adam J. BerinskyMassachusetts Instituteof Technology
Ann O’M. BowmanTexas A&M University
Julia S. Jordan-ZacheryUniversity of NorthCarolina, Charlotte
Lori J. MarsoUnion College
Alberto SimpserInstituto TecnológicoAutónomo de México
Charles SmithUniversity of California,Irvine
Rocío TitiunikPrinceton University
Lisa WedeenUniversity of Chicago
2019–2022Ben AnsellUniversity of Oxford
Erik BleichMiddlebury College
Alexandra FilindraUniversity of Illinois atChicago
Rebecca GillUniversity of Nevada, LasVegas
Soo Yeon KimNational University ofSingapore
David LealUniversity of Texas,Austin
Suzanna LinnPenn State University
Melanye PricePrairie View A&MUniversity
TREASURERDavid LublinAmerican University
EXECUTIVE DIRECTORSteven Rathgeb Smith
COUNCIL
Founded in 1903, the American Political Science Association (APSA) is the leading professionalorganization for the study of political science and serves more than 11,000 members in over 100countries. With a range of programs and services for individuals, departments, and institutions,APSA brings together political scientists from all fields of inquiry, regions, and occupationalendeavors within and outside academe in order to deepen our understanding of politics, democracy,and citizenship throughout the world. The direct advancement of knowledge is at the core of APSAactivities. We promote scholarly communication in political science through a variety of initiativesincluding publishing four distinguished journals: American Political Science Review, Perspectives onPolitics, PS: Political Science & Politics, and the Journal of Political Science Education.
ABOUT THE AMERICAN POLITICALSCIENCE ASSOCIATION (APSA)
American Political Science Association1527 New Hampshire Avenue, NWWashington, DC 20036202-483-2512 | www.apsanet.org
2020–2023Menna DemessieCongressional BlackCaucus Foundation
Terry L. GilmourMidland College
Catherine GuisanUniversity of Minnesota,Twin Cities
Nancy J. HirschmannUniversity ofPennsylvania
Nahomi IchinoEmory University
Tamara MetzReed College
Ido OrenUniversity of Florida
Jillian SchwedlerHunter College
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GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION 5
GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION
Registration and Badge Pick-Up HoursBadge pickup and Registration will be in the Washington State Convention Center (WSCC) 4th Floor Atrium during the following times:
Wednesday, September 29 7:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.Thursday, September 30 7:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.Friday, October 1 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.Saturday, October 2 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
All attendees are required to wear badges and masks in all APSA meeting spaces. Registration times have been historically busier on Thursday morning and afternoon. If possible, we recommend coming early on Wednesday to collect your badge.
APSA Information Desks are located in the Sheraton Second Floor Foyer and the Washington State Convention Center Conference Center on the first floor.
Meeting space is located at the The Washington State Convention Center (WSCC), The Conference Center (TCC), and the Sheraton. To access The Conference Center, walk out Level I at the Washington State Convention Center and cross Pike Street. For the Sheraton, cross 7th Street.
COVID Health and SafetyWe are committed to the health and safety of our members, exhibitors, and partners. We have partnered with Safe Expo, an event and safety company, to help plan and meet pandemic guidelines for venue, local, state, and federal mandates for our event.
Fully Vaccinated Verification Requirement for AttendanceAll in-person attendees at the APSA Annual Meeting must provide proof of having been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Fully vaccinated means 14 days have passed since your final dose. Therefore, you must have received the final dose of a COVID-19 vaccine prior to September 15, 2021. International proof of vaccination is accepted, as long as it follows the World Health Organization’s (WHO) guidance of acceptable vaccines. Attendees were able to upload this documentation in advance, or they can show it onsite. If you would like to confirm your documentation before showing it onsite, please email [email protected].
Those who are already vaccine-verified and approved can present their vaccine verified purple screen on the first day of entry at the WSCC Level 4 Screening Station to access Registration and pick up their badge. If you have not yet been approved, you must present your vaccine documentation in advance of picking up your badge. We recommend doing this at the Sheraton Second Floor Foyer Screening Station or the Conference Center Yakima Foyer Screening station. You will not be able to pick up your badge and enter meeting space until you have shown a vaccine verification purple confirmation screen or have had your documentation approved onsite. For the health and safety of attendees, no exceptions will be made.
You can access your vaccine verification purple confirmation screen by logging into the upload site with your email or scanning this QR code:
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6 GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION
Screenings will be located at:
• Washington State Convention Center on the 4th Floor (outside the Atrium near registration) – Wednesday – Sunday • Sheraton Grand Seattle 2nd Floor Foyer – Wednesday – Sunday • The Conference Center Yakima Level Room 1 – Thursday – Sunday
The Washington State Convention Center location is likely to be the busiest location. It may save time to stop at the Sheraton Grand Seattle, especially if you are staying there, to do your screening before arriving at the convention center.
Other PrecautionsAPSA has many other precautions in place to help create a safe environment:
• Touchless Badge Printing • Mobile App and Digital Program in lieu of a print program • Hand Sanitizer throughout the event • Frequent cleaning of high-touch areas • Ability to watch virtual sessions or livestreamed sessions from your personal device, hotel room, or other venue • Widened, one-way aisles in the Exhibit Hall with full-length side drape • Social distancing reminders throughout the venues
Things You Can Do to Create a Safe Event • All attendees must wear badges in all APSA meeting spaces and for all APSA events, including business meetings and
receptions. For the health and safety of our members, no exceptions will be made. If you are attending an evening reception, you will need to check in in advance during registration hours to pick up your badge.
• Attendees must wear masks in all meeting spaces, unless sipping a drink or eating. Sound has been added in all rooms so that attendees can hear speakers with masks on.
• Wash your hands frequently • Socially distance • Avoid handshakes – give an elbow bump!
While you are welcome to bring your own mask, we will have masks and hand sanitizer available onsite, sponsored by Cambridge University Press. Read more about our health and safety protocol.
Meeting ScheduleAll meeting times are in Pacific (PDT, UTC-7).
Virtual MeetingThe virtual meeting begins on Tuesday, September 28, at 6:00 a.m. and ends on Sunday, October 3, at 3:30 p.m.
Tuesday, September 28 – Saturday, October 2:6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m. Pacific10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Pacific2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Pacific
Sunday, October 3:6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m. Pacific12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Pacific2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Pacific
Virtual sessions can be accessed at https://apsa2021.conventus.live/
GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION
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GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION
In-PersonPanel sessions begin Thursday, September 30, at 8:00 a.m., and end on Sunday, October 3, at 11:30 a.m. All panel sessions, business meetings, and receptions will be held at the Washington State Convention Center and Conference Center, as well as the Sheraton Grand Seattle.
Thursday, September 30 – Saturday, October 2:8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. 4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, October 3:8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Business Meetings and ReceptionsMany business meetings and receptions will start Tuesday, September 21, through Friday, September 24, on the virtual platform so that all attendees can participate. Business meetings and receptions will continue both virtually and in-person the week of the event. Check the schedule for your events.
Virtual Session Access from OnsiteRooms have also been set aside for in-person attendees to participate in virtual panels from Seattle from their own personal device or laptop. These rooms will feature 6’ tables with chairs and an electricity drop. Meeting spaces will have general conference wifi access. We recommend bringing your device/laptop, power cord, and headphones/headset.
All rooms below are open 7:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. unless otherwise noted. For earlier morning sessions, we recommend using the complimentary wifi in the guest room.
• Sheraton Juniper and Leschi (Tuesday through Sunday at 3:30 p.m.) Capitol Hill, Greenwood, and Kirkland will also have seating and tables, but not electricity
(Thursday – Sunday at 3:30 p.m.) Grand Ballroom B (Thursday only)
• Washington State Convention Center 203, 213, 304, and 306 (Tuesday through Sunday at 3:30 p.m.) 203 (Wednesday - Sunday at 3:30 p.m.) 303 (Wednesday only) 201 (Thursday and Friday) 202 and 210 (Thursday - Sunday at 3:30 p.m.)
• The Conference Center Skagit 1, Chelan 2, 4, and 5 (Thursday – Sunday at 3:30 p.m.)
Additionally, all conference hotels offer guest room wifi.
GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION 7
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Wi-Fi Access InformationWashington State Convention Center & The Conference CenterNetwork: APSAAnnualMeetingPassword: apsa2021
Sheraton Network: Sheraton_CONFERENCEPassword: apsa2021
Meeting Mobile AppBe sure to download the APSA Annual Meeting mobile app to your smartphone or tablet and keep track of panels, receptions, and announcements, navigate the exhibit hall, and more during the annual meeting!
• Desktop Version: https://event.crowdcompass.com/apsa2021 • Download App: https://crowd.cc/apsa2021
Livestreaming SessionsA select number of sessions will be livestreamed from Seattle to the virtual platform. Please visit the APSA Annual Meeting website, the virtual platform, or the mobile app for more information on these sessions.
Pre-Recorded PresentationsPre-recorded presentations for in-person participants can be found on the virtual platform. Most recordings are for individuals who are unable to attend in person. These are available before, during, and after the conference. Attendees can provide feedback.
iPostersView the 2021 iPosters in the online gallery, both before and after the conference. Posters are searchable by keyword, author name, division, and more. Attendees can send comments or messages directly to poster authors at any time from their own computer or device via the online gallery. Each presenter will hold a live text chat during their division’s scheduled poster time. Stop by virtually to ask questions or give feedback. Can’t attend the live text session? You can still correspond with the author before, during or after the meeting!
Exhibit HallThe Exhibit Hall is located in Washington State Convention Center Hall 4B. The Exhibit Hall features exhibitors, the APSA Lounge, and the Headshot Lounge. The hours are:
Thursday, September 30 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.Friday, October 1 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.Saturday, October 2 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
For your health and safety, widened, one-way aisles have been implemented and full side drape has been placed between each booth.
A virtual exhibit hall is also available on the virtual platform.
Conference Paper UploadsConference paper authors are required to post papers delivered at the Annual Meeting to the All Academic submission site and APSA Preprints in the APSA Annual Meeting paper archive. APSA strongly encourages APSA Annual Meeting participants to upload their papers to the Annual Meeting paper repositories. Papers are available online through All Academic to attendees.
8 GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION
GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION
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GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION 9
GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION
APSA LoungeVisit the APSA Lounge at the WSCC in Exhibit Hall 4B during exhibit hall hours for information on all that APSA offers. Find out about the benefits of membership, the programs offered, and more. Make sure to also stop by the APSA Lounge on Friday, October 1, at 3:00 p.m. for a reception.
All Gender RestroomsAll Gender Restrooms are located at each property. All are welcome to use these restrooms. View the conference venue maps starting on page 11.
Washington State Convention Center 2A & 2B (2nd Floor), 4C and 400 (4th Floor), 6E Lobby (6th Floor) Conference Center Chelan Level (2nd Floor)Sheraton Spruce and Willow (2nd Floor), Medina (3rd Floor)
Family ResourcesChildcare Sponsored by Cambridge University Press During the Annual Meeting, APSA offers daily childcare service operated by ACCENT on Children’s Arrangements. On-site registration for childcare is based on availability. The hours are:
Wednesday, September 29 8:30 a.m. – 6:30 p.m.Thursday, September 30 7:30 a.m. –10:00 p.m.Friday, October 1 7:30 a.m. –10:00 p.m.Saturday, October 2 7:30 a.m. –10:00 p.m.Sunday, October 3 7:30 a.m. –12:30 p.m.
Mother’s Rooms A Mother’s Room is a room available to mothers who are breastfeeding or expressing breast milk. Locations are:
• Washington State Convention Center Room 302 (Wednesday – Sunday) – Keys available at the Registration Desk • The Conference Center Chelan 1 (Thursday – Sunday) • Sheraton Spruce (Thursday – Sunday) – Keys available at the Information Desk in the Second Floor Foyer
Infant Changing StationsLocations are:
• Washington State Convention Center – all restrooms have infant changing stations. • The Conference Center– all restrooms have infant changing stations. • Sheraton:
• 1st Floor Women’s Restroom by Starbucks and All Gender Restroom• 2nd Floor: All four restrooms• 3rd Floor: Women’s Restroom by Ballard
Quiet RoomsQuiet spaces are available for attendees to get away from the noise of the conference:
• Sheraton Everett (Thursday – Sunday) • Washington State Convention Center 301 (Thursday – Sunday) • The Conference Center Chelan 3 (Thursday – Sunday)
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10 2021 SPONSORS AND SUPPORTERS
SPONSORS AND SUPPORTERS
Thank You 2021 Annual Meeting Supporters
BRONZE SPONSORS
GOLD SPONSORS
CONTRIBUTORS
PREMIER SPONSOR
Ivywood Foundation
A SAGE Publishing Imprint
Lee Ann Fujii Fund
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HOTEL MAPS 11
SHERATON GRAND SEATTLE
1
12
2
10
11
8
13
63
5
7
9
4
Annual National Convention
Seattle, 2021
CONTRACTED HOTELS
• Crowne Plaza Seattle-Downtown
• Fairmont Olympic Hotel
• Grand Hyatt Seattle
• Hilton Seattle
• Hotel Max
• Hotel Theodore (formerly the Roosevelt Hotel)
• Hyatt at Olive 8
• Mayflower Park Hotel
• The Paramount Hotel
• Renaissance Seattle Hotel
• Sheraton Grand Seattle
• W Seattle
• The Westin Seattle
1
3
4
5
8
9
10
Convention Center to Pike Place Market: ½ mi / 800 mConvention Center to Space Needle: 1.2 mi / 1.9 kmConvention Center to Seattle Great Wheel: .7 mi / 1.1 km
MAJOR ATTRACTION
SUMMIT AND ARCH
CONVENTION HOTEL
SEATTLE CENTER MONORAIL
LINK LIGHT RAIL
IIIIIIII
------------
PEDESTRIAN WALKWAY
2
6
7
13
12
11
Seattle Center• Space Needle• Museum of Pop Culture• Chihuly Garden and
Glass
WALKING ROUTE – WSCC TO PIKE PLACE MARKET / WATERFRONT
HOTEL MAPS
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12 HOTEL MAPS
SHERATON GRAND SEATTLE
CIRRUS
35th Floor - Pike Street Tower
RAVENNA CRAVENNA BRAVENNA A
METROPOLITAN BALLROOM
PREFUNCTION
A BEVERETT
CAPITOL HILL
BALLARD FREMONT
LESCHI
PREFUNCTION
MEDINA
KIRKLANDISSAQUAH AISSAQUAH BGREENWOOD
Third Floor
Second Floor
GRAND BALLROOM
PREFUNCTION
A B C D
WILLOW A
WILLOW B
LOADING DOCK
CEDAR BCEDAR AJUNIPER
MADRONAFEDEX BUSINESS CENTER
ASPEN SPRUCE
REDWOOD BREDWOOD A
DIAMOND A DIAMOND B
CHELAN
EAGLE BOARDROOM
First Floor Lobby Level
PFA
SHILSHOLERICHMOND BOARDROOM
PACIFICALKI BOARDROOMDASH POINT
Fourth Floor - Pike Street TowerFourth Floor - Union Street Tower
PREFUNCTION
BOREN COLUMBIA
JEFFERSON B
JEFFERSON ASENECA
UNIVERSITYVIRGINIA
Floor Plans and Capacity Charts35th Floor – Pike Street Tower
Fourth Floor – Pike Street TowerFourth Floor – Union Street Tower
First Floor – Lobby Level
Second Floor
Third Floor
Sheraton Grand Seattle1400 6th Avenue
Seattle, WA 98101(206) 621-9000
ALL GENDER RESTROOMS
ALL GENDER RESTROOMS
SHERATON GRAND SEATTLE
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HOTEL MAPS 13
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
2 206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
N
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
LEVEL 4
PIK
E S
TR
EE
T
7TH AVENUE
8TH AVENUE
NOTES
Washington State Convention Center 705 Pike St.
Seattle, WA 98101(206) 694-5000
ALL GENDER RESTROOMS
6E LOBBY
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
The Conference Center can be accessed from the Washington Convention Center by exiting Level 1 and crossing Pike Street. You will enter The Conference Center on the Yakima Level.
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14 HOTEL MAPS
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
3206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
LEVEL 1 – ENTRANCES, SHOPS, & SERVICES
N
ARCH at 800 PIKE
8TH AVENUE
PIK
E S
TRE
ET
7TH AVENUE
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 4
20-1-15
10
7 6
12
11
14
7th
AV
EN
UE
PIKE STREET
8th
AV
EN
UE
PIKE STREET
CO
NVE
NTI
ON
PLA
CE
(Gro
und
Tran
spor
tatio
n an
d Sh
uttle
)
UNION STREET
ENTRANCEENTRANCE
ENTRANCE
ENTRANCE
ENTR
ANC
E
ENTRANCE
ENTRANCE
ENTRANCE
Office Tower
BusinessCenter
Retail
Retail
PublicRestroom
Pike StreetLobby
ACT Theatre
F & BEventSpace
F & BEventSpace
Fo
unta
in
ToConvention
Center Parking Garage Entrance
Levels 1-4and to
Atrium Lobby
Levels 1-4and to
Skybridge Lobby
i
$
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
ARCH at 705 PIKE
LEVEL 1 – ENTRANCES, SHOPS, & SERVICES
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 14 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
HOTEL MAPS 15
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
4
LEVEL 2 – MEETING ROOMS
206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
LEVEL 2 ROOMS SQUARE FEET
DIMENSIONS HEIGHT THEATER CLASSROOM3PP 4PP
BANQUET B-10
CONFERENCE RECOMMENDED FRONT
Room 201 1,435 35 x 41 8’6” 147 63 84 90 48 South
Room 202 602 43 x 14 9 35 15 20 20 28 South
Room 203 1,044 36 x 29 9 81 30 45 50 36 East
Room 204 1,443 39 x 37 9 119 45 65 80 44 East
Room 205 1,073 37 x 29 8’11” 96 34 51 60 38 East
Room 208* 1,160 40 x 29 9 - - - - 26 West
Room 209* 928 32 x 29 8’10” - - - - 20 West
Room 210 1,170 39 x 30 9 70 35 50 42 24 South
Room 211 1,247 43 x 30 9 119 42 63 70 38 South
Room 212 812 29 x 28 9 65 24 36 40 32 South
Room 213 840 30 x 28 9 70 27 39 40 32 North
Room 214 780 30 x 26 9 56 24 32 40 26 North
Room 2A 1,521 39 x 39 13 135 58 82 90 48 South
Room 2B 1,786 47 x 38 13 175 69 97 110 56 South
Rooms 2AB 3,393 87 x 39 13 325 142 201 210 96 South
N
* Permanent Set
8TH AVENUE
PIK
E S
TR
EE
T
7TH AVENUE
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 4
12-4-19
To Two Union Square
WSCCAdmin.Office
Int’l.Meeting
Place
Ram
pR
amp
Open
Ram
p
Open
SalesStudio
210
211
212
213
214
201
203
202
204
205
2B
2A
2AB Lobby
209*
208*
To/FromLevel 1
To/FromLevel 3
W
M
W M
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
67
12
11
10
LEVEL 2 – MEETING ROOMS
206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
ROOM SET CAPACITY INFORMATION
General Room Set Information
• Sample maximum set room diagrams are available upon request
• Maximum listed capacities will be reduced by optional peripheral equipment such as stages, audio visual equipment, catering services, etc.
• All exhibit, general session and registration layouts are subject to fire code review
• Stage risers are not generally set in rooms with ceiling heights less than 12’ or non-combined meeting rooms
Complimentary Amenities
• Linen on classroom, conference style, and meetings set at round tables
• Table skirts on head tables and classroom aisles
• Notepads and pens provided within meeting room
• Room conversions / refreshes with sufficient notice: › Daytime meeting set to or from a food and beverage set› Overnight to or from any set or room combination› One daytime room refresh and nightly cleaning to GBAC STAR™ standards
Chair Dimensions:
• Arch at 705 Pike chairs: 21” wide x 19” deep• Arch at 800 Pike chairs: 19½” wide x 19” deep
Theater:
• Maximum of 15 chairs per row (before aisle)• Maximum 15 rows (before aisle)• 20” space between rows (leg to leg)
Classroom:
• Maximum of 3 tables per row (before aisle)• Maximum 15 rows (before aisle)• 8’ x 18’ tables as standard• 1 chair per 2’ of table• 36” space between tables
Banquet:
• 72” rounds• 10 chairs per table• 11’ centers–spacing between tables• Straight row layout as standard, staggered sets not
preferred
Conference:
• Conference maximum capacity may be set as board or hollow square, depending on room size
• 8’x 30” tables as standard • 1 chair per 2’ of table
Riser Specifications:
• Safety rails are required on all stage risers• 6’x 8’ sections• 16”, 24”, 32”, 40” heights• Installation fee will apply for 40” units or sets
exceeding 12 units • Subject to available inventory
Front of Room Allowance in Capacity Counts:
• Front wall to first row for Theater and Classroom sets:› Single meeting rooms – 10 ft › Ballrooms 6ABCE & Hall 4C – 20 ft› Combined meeting rooms – 13 ft › Exhibit Halls 4AB & 4DEF – 40 ft
• No front of room allowance in Banquet or Conference sets
LEGEND AED Device Card to Cash Machine Food/Beverage Accessible Entrance Lift
Fire Exit Gender-Neutral Restrooms First Aid Seattle Visitor Center
$FE i
Event Space Attendee Access Retail F & B Event Space Back of House Fireplace
Summit
Arch
PIKE ST.
UNION ST.
E UNION ST.
E PIKE ST.
E PINE ST.
UNIVERSITY ST.
OLIVE WAY
7TH A
VE
.
6TH A
VE
.
4TH A
VE
.
5TH A
VE
.
8THA
VE
.
9TH A
VE
.
HOWELL ST.
STEWART ST.
PINE ST.
BO
RE
N A
VE
.
MIN
OR
AV
E.
TER
RY
AV
E.
INTE
RSTATE
5
LEGEND: HOTEL PARK THEATRE
ALL GENDERRESTROOMS
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 15 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
16 HOTEL MAPS
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
5206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
LEVEL 3 – MEETING ROOMS
20-1-15
301*
Open
Open
3AB Lobby
To Garages and Freeway Park Garage
Open
Main Entrance toParking Garage
307
308
309
310
306
305
304
303
302
3B
3A
To/From
Level 2
To/FromLevel 4
To
301
-310
To Skybridge Lobby
8th
AV
EN
UE
10
7
11
12
6FE
FE
FEFE
FE
FE
W
M
LEVEL 3 ROOMS SQUARE FEET
DIMENSIONS HEIGHT THEATER CLASSROOM3PP 4PP
BANQUET B-10
CONFERENCE RECOMMENDEDFRONT
Room 301* 450 30 x 15 8’5” - - - - 16 -Room 302 460 23 x 20 8’5” 30 8 12 20 18 SouthRoom 303 1,305 45 x 29 9 117 54 74 70 46 SouthRoom 304 918 34 x 27 9 79 30 40 60 32 NorthRoom 305 840 30 x 28 9’6” 55 24 32 40 24 EastRoom 306 714 34 x 21 9’6” 53 20 30 30 30 EastRoom 307 841 29 x 29 10 67 29 40 40 30 NorthRoom 308 812 28 x 29 10 61 24 32 40 30 WestRooms 307-308 1,653 57 x 29 10 156 63 90 80 56 NorthRoom 309 840 28 x 29 10 56 25 36 40 28 WestRoom 310 1,200 40 x 30 10 96 42 60 60 40 SouthRoom 3A 1,521 40 x 39 12 135 58 82 90 48 SouthRoom 3B 1,786 47 x 38 12 175 69 97 110 56 SouthRooms 3AB 3,393 87 x 39 12 325 142 201 210 96 South
N
* Permanent Set
8TH AVENUE
PIK
E S
TRE
ET
7TH AVENUE
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3 – MEETING ROOMS
206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
ROOM SET CAPACITY INFORMATION
General Room Set Information
• Sample maximum set room diagrams are available upon request
• Maximum listed capacities will be reduced by optional peripheral equipment such as stages, audio visual equipment, catering services, etc.
• All exhibit, general session and registration layouts are subject to fi re code review
• Stage risers are not generally set in rooms with ceiling heights less than 12’ or non-combined meeting rooms
Complimentary Amenities
• Linen on classroom, conference style, and meetings set at round tables
• Table skirts on head tables and classroom aisles
• Notepads and pens provided within meeting room
• Room conversions / refreshes with suffi cient notice: › Daytime meeting set to or from a food and beverage set› Overnight to or from any set or room combination› One daytime room refresh and nightly cleaning to GBAC STAR™ standards
Chair Dimensions:
• Arch at 705 Pike chairs: 21” wide x 19” deep• Arch at 800 Pike chairs: 19½” wide x 19” deep
Theater:
• Maximum of 15 chairs per row (before aisle)• Maximum 15 rows (before aisle)• 20” space between rows (leg to leg)
Classroom:
• Maximum of 3 tables per row (before aisle)• Maximum 15 rows (before aisle)• 8’ x 18’ tables as standard• 1 chair per 2’ of table• 36” space between tables
Banquet:
• 72” rounds• 10 chairs per table• 11’ centers–spacing between tables• Straight row layout as standard, staggered sets not
preferred
Conference:
• Conference maximum capacity may be set as board or hollow square, depending on room size
• 8’x 30” tables as standard • 1 chair per 2’ of table
Riser Specifi cations:
• Safety rails are required on all stage risers• 6’x 8’ sections• 16”, 24”, 32”, 40” heights• Installation fee will apply for 40” units or sets
exceeding 12 units • Subject to available inventory
Front of Room Allowance in Capacity Counts:
• Front wall to fi rst row for Theater and Classroom sets:› Single meeting rooms – 10 ft › Ballrooms 6ABCE & Hall 4C – 20 ft› Combined meeting rooms – 13 ft › Exhibit Halls 4AB & 4DEF – 40 ft
• No front of room allowance in Banquet or Conference sets
LEGEND AED Device Card to Cash Machine Food/Beverage Accessible Entrance Lift
Fire Exit Gender-Neutral Restrooms First Aid Seattle Visitor Center
$FE i
Event Space Attendee Access Retail F & B Event Space Back of House Fireplace
Summit
Arch
PIKE ST.
UNION ST.
E UNION ST.
E PIKE ST.
E PINE ST.
UNIVERSITY ST.
OLIVE WAY
7TH A
VE
.
6TH A
VE
.
4TH A
VE
.
5TH A
VE
.
8THA
VE
.
9TH A
VE
.
HOWELL ST.
STEWART ST.
PINE ST.
BO
RE
N A
VE
.
MIN
OR
AV
E.
TER
RY
AV
E.
INTE
RSTATE
5
LEGEND: HOTEL PARK THEATRE
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 16 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
HOTEL MAPS 17
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
6 206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
LEVEL 4 – EXHIBITION HALLS
N
2021-7-21
4C-4
4C-3 4C-2
4C-1
4D
400
4E 4F
4B 4A
401
439 438454
416
4C
WSCC Use
Grill
NorthLoading Dock
Ellis Plaza
Atrium Lobby
South Service Corridor
North Service Corridor
SkybridgeLobby
Solera
Deli
OpenT
ruck
Bri
dg
e
WSCC Use
Skybridge
Waterfall Suite
Open Grand Staircase
South LoadingDock
TRUCK R
AMP
TO H
UBBELL
PLAC
E
UP
DO
WN
UP
DO
WN
DOWN
UP
Leve
ls 1
to
4
To/FromThe Conference
Center
ToSkybridge
Lobby
To/From Levels 5&6
To/From
6
To
Atr
ium
Lo
bb
y
To/FromLevel 6
To/FromLevel 3
4
10
12
7 6
11
21
N-2
N-1
5
3
PIKE STREET (Below)
$
M W
FE
FE
FE
FE
FEFE
FE
FEFE
FE
FE
FE
FE
WM
FE
M W
FE
MW
MW
W M
FE
FE
FE
FE
FEFEFE
FE FE
FE
FE
FE
8TH AVENUE
PIK
E S
TR
EE
T
7TH AVENUE
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 4 – EXHIBITION HALLS
ALL GENDERRESTROOMS
ALL GENDERRESTROOMS
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 17 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
18 HOTEL MAPS
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
10 206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
N
MEETING ROOMS SQUARE FEET
DIMENSIONS HEIGHT THEATER CLASSROOM 3PP 4PP
BANQUET CONFERENCE RECOMMENDEDFRONT
Skagit 1 966 42 x 23 12 90 36 48 60 40 South
Skagit 2 1,763 43 x 41 14 171 72 96 90 56 East
Skagit 3 1,575 45 x 35 14 133 56 84 90 52 North
Skagit 4 1,927 47 x 41 14 180 72 108 120 64 West
Skagit 5 1,968 48 x 41 14 180 72 108 120 64 South
Skagit 4-5 3,936 96 x 41 14 391 160 224 240 - South
Skagit Lower Level Yakima Level 1 Chelan Level 2
12-4-19
Dock
Dock
ENTRANCE
Yakima 1 Foyer
1
2
2
1
To/From Chelan
To/FromSkagit
FE
FE FE
FE
M
W
PIKE STREET
12-4-19
4 1
2
3
5
To Yakima
1
2
FE
FE
FE
W
M
12-4-19
FE
FE
FE
FE
NP3
1
2
M
W
Open to below
Fireplace
Fireplace
4
2
1*
5
3*
To/FromTahoma
To/From Yakima
Chelan 1* 1,170 39 x 30 9’6” - - - - 16 North
Chelan 2 2,090 55 x 38 9’3” 197 90 126 120 56 North
Chelan 3* 640 32 x 20 9’6” - - - - 14 North
Chelan 4 1,344 42 x 32 9’6” 114 54 72 60 46 North
Chelan 5 1,225 35 x 35 9’6” 97 45 60 60 40 North
8TH AVENUE
PIK
E S
TRE
ET
7TH AVENUE
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 4
8TH AVENUE
PIK
E S
TRE
ET
7TH AVENUE
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 4
8TH AVENUE
PIK
E S
TRE
ET
7TH AVENUE
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 4
* Chelan 1* and 3* each feature an executive conference table and are a permanent set.
Yakima 1 2,838 66 x 43 10’ 4” 281 129 173 150 78 North
Yakima 1 + Foyer 4,875 113 x 43 10’ 4” - - - - -
Yakima 2 1,008 36 x 28 10’ 6” 84 35 50 60 38 North
ARCH AT 800 PIKE
206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
ROOM SET CAPACITY INFORMATION
General Room Set Information
• Sample maximum set room diagrams are available upon request
• Maximum listed capacities will be reduced by optional peripheral equipment such as stages, audio visual equipment, catering services, etc.
• All exhibit, general session and registration layouts are subject to fire code review
• Stage risers are not generally set in rooms with ceiling heights less than 12’ or non-combined meeting rooms
Complimentary Amenities
• Linen on classroom, conference style, and meetings set at round tables
• Table skirts on head tables and classroom aisles
• Notepads and pens provided within meeting room
• Room conversions / refreshes with sufficient notice: › Daytime meeting set to or from a food and beverage set› Overnight to or from any set or room combination› One daytime room refresh and nightly cleaning to GBAC STAR™ standards
Chair Dimensions:
• Arch at 705 Pike chairs: 21” wide x 19” deep• Arch at 800 Pike chairs: 19½” wide x 19” deep
Theater:
• Maximum of 15 chairs per row (before aisle)• Maximum 15 rows (before aisle)• 20” space between rows (leg to leg)
Classroom:
• Maximum of 3 tables per row (before aisle)• Maximum 15 rows (before aisle)• 8’ x 18’ tables as standard• 1 chair per 2’ of table• 36” space between tables
Banquet:
• 72” rounds• 10 chairs per table• 11’ centers–spacing between tables• Straight row layout as standard, staggered sets not
preferred
Conference:
• Conference maximum capacity may be set as board or hollow square, depending on room size
• 8’x 30” tables as standard • 1 chair per 2’ of table
Riser Specifications:
• Safety rails are required on all stage risers• 6’x 8’ sections• 16”, 24”, 32”, 40” heights• Installation fee will apply for 40” units or sets
exceeding 12 units • Subject to available inventory
Front of Room Allowance in Capacity Counts:
• Front wall to first row for Theater and Classroom sets:› Single meeting rooms – 10 ft › Ballrooms 6ABCE & Hall 4C – 20 ft› Combined meeting rooms – 13 ft › Exhibit Halls 4AB & 4DEF – 40 ft
• No front of room allowance in Banquet or Conference sets
LEGENDAED Device Card to Cash Machine Food/Beverage Accessible Entrance Lift
Fire Exit Gender-Neutral Restrooms First Aid Seattle Visitor Center
$FE i
Event Space Attendee Access Retail F & B Event Space Back of House Fireplace
Summit
Arch
PIKE ST.
UNION ST.
E UNION ST.
E PIKE ST.
E PINE ST.
UNIVERSITY ST.
OLIVE WAY
7TH A
VE
.
6TH A
VE
.
4TH A
VE
.
5TH A
VE
.
8THA
VE
.
9TH A
VE
.
HOWELL ST.
STEWART ST.
PINE ST.
BO
RE
N A
VE
.
MIN
OR
AV
E.
TER
RY
AV
E.
INTE
RSTATE
5
LEGEND: HOTEL PARK THEATRE
The Conference Center
ALL GENDERRESTROOMS
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 18 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
HOTEL MAPS 19
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
11206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
ARCH at 800 PIKE
N
Open to below
Falls Suite*
Tahoma 5 Foyer 5
4
3
21
To/From Chelan
To/From 4F
1
2
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
FE
MW
Tahoma Level 3
* Permanent Set
8TH AVENUE
PIK
E S
TRE
ET
7TH AVENUE
TAHOMA LEVEL 3
CHELAN LEVEL 2
YAKIMA LEVEL 1
SKAGIT LOWER LEVEL
LEVEL 6
SKYBRIDGE
TRUCK BRIDGENORTHLOADING DOCK
TO/FROM ARCH at 800 PIKE
SOUTHLOADING DOCK
LEVEL 5
LEVEL 4
LEVEL 3
LEVEL 2
LEVEL 1
LEVEL 4
MEETING ROOMS SQUARE FEET
DIMENSIONS HEIGHT THEATER CLASSROOM 3PP 4PP
BANQUET CONFERENCE RECOMMENDEDFRONT
Tahoma 1 2,542 62 x 41 15 224 100 140 150 72 North
Tahoma 2 2,604 62 x 42 15 240 112 152 150 72 North
Tahoma 1-2 5,208 62 x 84 15 485 234 312 330 - North
Tahoma 3 4,136 94 x 44 13 408 198 266 240 104 East
Tahoma 4 4,136 94 x 44 14 408 198 266 240 104 East
Tahoma 3-4 8,366 94 x 89 13 828 396 528 520 - North
Tahoma 5 2,856 56 x 51 15 303 126 180 160 72 East
Tahoma 5 + Foyer 5,916 116 x 51 15 - - - - -
Falls Suite* 558 18 x 31 9 - - - - 6
Tahoma as Exhibit Space 31,000 Tahoma Level 3 can accommodate a total of (124) 10’x10’ booths and (2) 8’x10’ booths.
ARCH AT 800 PIKE
The Conference Center
WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 19 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
20 HOTEL MAPS
Summit
Arch
PIKE ST.
UNION ST.
E UNION ST.
E PIKE ST.
E PINE ST.
UNIVERSITY ST.
OLIVE WAY
7TH A
VE
.
6TH A
VE
.
4TH A
VE
.
5TH A
VE
.
8THA
VE
.
9TH A
VE
.
HOWELL ST.
STEWART ST.
PINE ST.
BO
RE
N A
VE
.
MIN
OR
AV
E.
TER
RY
AV
E.
INTE
RSTATE
5
ARCH GENERAL AREA
206.694.5060 | www.seattleconventioncenter.com | Arch | Floor Plans, Capacities, and Dimensions | July 2021
ROOM SET CAPACITY INFORMATION
General Room Set Information
• Sample maximum set room diagrams are available upon request
• Maximum listed capacities will be reduced by optional peripheral equipment such as stages, audio visual equipment, catering services, etc.
• All exhibit, general session and registration layouts are subject to fi re code review
• Stage risers are not generally set in rooms with ceiling heights less than 12’ or non-combined meeting rooms
Complimentary Amenities
• Linen on classroom, conference style, and meetings set at round tables
• Table skirts on head tables and classroom aisles
• Notepads and pens provided within meeting room
• Room conversions / refreshes with suffi cient notice: › Daytime meeting set to or from a food and beverage set› Overnight to or from any set or room combination› One daytime room refresh and nightly cleaning to GBAC STAR™ standards
Chair Dimensions:
• Arch at 705 Pike chairs: 21” wide x 19” deep• Arch at 800 Pike chairs: 19½” wide x 19” deep
Theater:
• Maximum of 15 chairs per row (before aisle)• Maximum 15 rows (before aisle)• 20” space between rows (leg to leg)
Classroom:
• Maximum of 3 tables per row (before aisle)• Maximum 15 rows (before aisle)• 8’ x 18’ tables as standard• 1 chair per 2’ of table• 36” space between tables
Banquet:
• 72” rounds• 10 chairs per table• 11’ centers–spacing between tables• Straight row layout as standard, staggered sets not
preferred
Conference:
• Conference maximum capacity may be set as board or hollow square, depending on room size
• 8’x 30” tables as standard • 1 chair per 2’ of table
Riser Specifi cations:
• Safety rails are required on all stage risers• 6’x 8’ sections• 16”, 24”, 32”, 40” heights• Installation fee will apply for 40” units or sets
exceeding 12 units • Subject to available inventory
Front of Room Allowance in Capacity Counts:
• Front wall to fi rst row for Theater and Classroom sets:› Single meeting rooms – 10 ft › Ballrooms 6ABCE & Hall 4C – 20 ft› Combined meeting rooms – 13 ft › Exhibit Halls 4AB & 4DEF – 40 ft
• No front of room allowance in Banquet or Conference sets
LEGEND AED Device Card to Cash Machine Food/Beverage Accessible Entrance Lift
Fire Exit Gender-Neutral Restrooms First Aid Seattle Visitor Center
$FE i
Event Space Attendee Access Retail F & B Event Space Back of House Fireplace
Summit
Arch
PIKE ST.
UNION ST.
E UNION ST.
E PIKE ST.
E PINE ST.
UNIVERSITY ST.
OLIVE WAY
7TH A
VE
.
6TH A
VE
.
4TH A
VE
.
5TH A
VE
.
8THA
VE
.
9TH A
VE
.
HOWELL ST.
STEWART ST.
PINE ST.
BO
RE
N A
VE
.
MIN
OR
AV
E.
TER
RY
AV
E.
INTE
RSTATE
5
LEGEND: HOTEL PARK THEATRE
ARCH GENERAL AREA
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 20 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
RESTAURANT AND ATTRACTIONS 21
RESTAURANT AND ATTRACTIONS
A growing number of Seattle restaurants and venues are now requiring proof of vaccination or tests, so we recommend bringing your proof of vaccination with you to Seattle.
View restaurants and venues that require vaccines.
Hotel Restaurants and CafesHours may be impacted due to COVID-19 restrictions. We suggest contacting the hotel for more information.
SHERATON SEATTLE (HQ HOTEL)
Fountain Wine BarBuilt around a restored fountain sculpted by iconic local artist George Tsutakawa, Fountain offers a unique array of local wine and craft beer options, as well as casual American fare suitable for every palate.Thurs. – Sat., 4:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m.
StarbucksOpen daily for breakfast and lunch
CROWNE PLAZA SEATTLE DOWNTOWN
Regatta Bar and GrilleContemporary lounge for Pacific Northwest cuisine & cocktailsOpen daily, 7:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.; 5:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
FAIRMONT OLYMPIC SEATTLE
Olympic BarApproachable American cuisine focused around the modern traveler that features local and seasonal ingredients. Sun. – Thurs., 7:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m.Fri. – Sat., 7:00 a.m. – 10:00 p.m.
Shuckers Oyster BarOne of Seattle’s oldest and most preeminent oyster bars.Thurs. – Sat., 5:00 p.m. 9:00 p.m.
4th Ave Espresso BarA place for both aficionados and explorers to enjoy great coffee and homemade sweet and savory bites and delights.
GRAND HYATT SEATTLE
Ruth’s Chris Steak HouseQuintessential spot for the best seared and sizzled plates in Seattle.
NYC DeliDelicious sandwiches on crisp baguettes and offers up pre-packaged goodies to satisfy the traveler on the go.
Starbucks
HILTON SEATTLE
redtrees restaurant + barAmerican cuisine with a Pacific Northwest flair is the star of this feature presentation. As a Surfrider Foundation Ocean Friendly Restaurant, it is dedicated to sustainably.HOTEL THEODORE
Made Coffee Chic spot in the lobby offering a short menu of espresso & chai drinks & drip coffee as well as some grab and go breakfast items.Open daily, 7:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
HYATT AT OLIVE 8
UrbaneWith our local twist on global favorites, we strive to take guests on a culinary journey around the world with the familiarity of the Pacific Northwest. Tues. – Thurs., 3:00 p.m. – 10:00 p.m.Fri. – Sat., 3:00 p.m. – 11:00 p.m.
Olive 8 Bagel ShopStart your morning like a local with Victrola drip coffee, lattes with homemade syrups, Seattle’s favorite Blazing Bagels, and bagel sandwiches made in-house.Open daily, 6:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
MAYFLOWER PARK HOTEL
AndalucaNationally recognized culinary oasis, resonating with the romance of the Mediterranean. Throughout the handsome space, mahogany mill work, hand painted murals and plush, deep-toned fabrics work together to conjure up a sun baked Mediterranean grotto.Wed. – Fri., 7:00 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.Sat. – Sun., 7:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Open daily for take out, 3:30 p.m. – 8:00 p.m.
Oliver’s LoungeAs Washington state’s first daylight bar, it provides the perfect setting for a northwest nibble or hand-crafted cocktail.Sun. – Thurs., 3:30 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. Fri. – Sat., 3:30 p.m. – 11:00 p.m.
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22 RESTAURANT AND ATTRACTIONS
RESTAURANT AND ATTRACTIONS
RENAISSANCE SEATTLE
The Fig & The Judge RestaurantNorthwest American Cuisine.Open daily for breakfast
The 515 Bar & LoungeLobby bar and lounge.Open daily for lunch and dinner.
W SEATTLE
Trace Restaurant and BarEnriching and thoughtful culinary experiences thanks to the electric energy and talent of our Hawaii-born Executive Chef, Steven Ariel.Open daily, 7:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.
WESTIN SEATTLE
Relish Burger Bistro (To Go Only)Combines Seattle’s culinary influence with gourmet burgers.Sun. – Thurs., 7:00 a.m. – 7:00 p.m. Fri. – Sat., 7:00 a.m. – 9:00 p.m.
1900 FIFTH Bar + LoungeCraft beverages in a comfortable environment. Discover a wide range of inventive cocktails, world-class wines, and delicious small plates in a stylish, modern atmosphere.Fri. – Sat., 3:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
Nearby RestaurantsDistances listed are from Sheraton Seattle. Hours may be impacted due to COVID-19 restrictions. We suggest contacting the restaurant before arriving.
Capital Grille – 0.1mi(206) 382-0900, $$$$Outpost of the upscale steakhouse chain offers classic American fare in a modern, refined setting.
Purple Cafe & Wine Bar – 0.2mi(206) 829-2280, $$The iconic wine tower should say it all: we love wine! Our chefs and sommeliers create food and wine pairings that inspire.
Din Tai Fung – 0.2mi(206) 682-9888, $$Modern Seattle outpost of a Taiwan chain famed for its Shanghai-style soup dumplings & noodles.
Japonessa Sushi Cocina – 0.5mi(206) 971-7979, $$Fusion spot dishes out sushi rolls with Latin-influences, such as cilantro & mango, plus happy hour.
La Cocina Oaxaquena – 0.6mi(206) 623-8226, $$Mexican eats & specialty tequila cocktails in an industrial-cool cantina with outdoor seating.Tues. – Sun., 12:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
Mamoon – 0.7mi(206) 906-9606, $$Traditional Middle Eastern cooking gets modern tweaks at a popular eatery in a former warehouse.
Pike Place Chowder – 0.7mi(206) 838-5680, $$Local seafood institution serving traditional & specialty chowders in a counter-serve setting.
Elliott’s Oyster House – 0.8mi(206) 623-4340, $$$Waterfront restaurant with a bay view known for its selection of oysters & sustainable seafood.
The Fisherman’s Restaurant & Bar – 0.8mi(206) 623-3500, $$Casual seafood place with basic fare, family-style dinners & outdoor seating right on the water.
Metropolitan Grill – 0.8mi(206) 624-3287, $$$$Classic, upscale steakhouse decorated in wood, brass & velvet with a 60-ft. marble bar.
Spinasse – 1.1mi(206) 251-7673, $$$Bustling, high-end Northern Italian restaurant in a cozy, rustic space with an open kitchen.
Ba Bar – 1.3mi(206) 328-2030, $$Authentic Vietnamese cuisine with the best Pho in town.
Bar Cotto – 1.3mi(203) 838-8081, $$Modern, hip destination serving classic pasta, cured meats & wood-fired pizzas, plus cocktails.
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RESTAURANT AND ATTRACTIONS 23
RESTAURANT AND ATTRACTIONS
Things to DoHours and procedures may be impacted by COVID-19. Please be sure to contact the attraction for more information.
Space NeedleBuilt for the 1962 World’s Fair, the 605-foot-tall Space Needle quickly became an icon of the city. On the observation level, which you can reach via a 43-second elevator ride, see the doodle-on-a-napkin concept that led to the Space Needle design. Views from the top feature Elliott Bay, the Cascade Mountains, and even Mount Rainier.
Pike Place MarketFrom the iconic market sign and Rachel the Piggy Bank to the gum wall, the original Starbucks cafe, well over 225 local artisans selling their wares, the famous fish-tossing tradition, and music-playing street performers, there are enough sights and sounds at Pike Place Market to pack a day (or more).
Seattle Great WheelAn entirely new sightseeing perspective, thanks to its location perched on the end of Pier 57. Enjoy three revolutions around in one of the air-conditioned gondolas to see the city, water, and mountains on the horizon.
Museum of Pop Culture (MoPOP)Music, science fiction, and pop culture all come together at the fascinating Museum of Pop Culture. The Frank Gehry-designed building looks like a smashed guitar from above, while inside, its colorful exhibits cover everything from the history of indie video games and horror films to Nirvana, the Seahawks, and more.
Washington State FerriesA ride across Puget Sound aboard one of 22 Washington State Ferries vessels is a quintessential Pacific Northwest experience. Enjoy the breathtaking views from the bow of the boat as you cruise to the nearby communities of Bainbridge Island or Bremerton.
Chihuly Garden and GlassOne of Seattle’s greatest treasures, the collections and exhibits here display and explore the work of innovative glassblower Dale Chihuly - a Tacoma native. Chihuly’s work is known for using glass as a purely artistic medium and creating sculptures that captivate onlookers.
Starbucks Reserve Roastery & Tasting RoomThe Starbucks Reserve Roastery & Tasting Room is a Willy Wonka–esque coffee wonderland, where you’ll find exclusive beverages, various brewing methods, a coffee library, and more.
Kid-Friendly ActivitiesSeattle Children’s Museum An interactive experience, allowing little hands and growing minds to explore, play, and learn. With 18,000 square feet of arts, culture, and STEM-based exhibits, children 6 months –10 years old can learn and explore together with their families.
Woodland Park ZooSeattle’s award-winning zoo. With a dedicated kids’ Zoomazium, high-flying Willawong Station, a petting zoo area and other immersive wildlife experiences for kids, Woodland Park Zoo is the only place in Seattle where you’ll get a chance to set eyes on a chuckwalla, a wallaroo and a kookaburra.
Seattle AquariumStunning 40-foot, 55,000-lb. viewing window that looks into a 120,000-gallon aquarium filled with salmon, colorful rockfish, vibrant sea anemones, and other native Washington marine life. Other exhibits include two touching tide pools filled with sea anemones and sunflower sea star, a pacific coral reef exhibit, marine mammals and an underwater dome, the aquarium’s largest exhibit. The aquarium is located on Seattle’s waterfront at Pier 59.
Artists at Play PlaygroundLocated at Seattle Center, adjacent to the epic structure that is MoPOP, and in the shadow of the monumental Space Needle, the Artists at Play playground offers kids a great place to climb, slide, hang, swing and just generally run around. With a giant 35-foot climbing structure (one of the tallest in North America!), kids can scale the rope ladders that lead straight up to the top or take a more adventurous path through the large climbing net and rope passageways to get to the top of the two enormous tube slides.
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24 2021 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
2021 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
Thursday, September 234:00 p.m. APSA Mentoring and Networking Reception Virtual
Tuesday, September 286:00 a.m. – Intersectionality and Social Movements Virtual Mini-Conference 5:30 p.m. See the Innovative Session Formats page for more information
Wednesday, September 299:00 a.m. In-Person Short Courses These pre-conference, professional day features a variety of short courses sponsored by APSA Organized
Sections, Related Groups, and other affiliate organizations. They require pre-registration. See Short Course page for Rooms
10:00 a.m. – Indigenous Politics Virtual Mini-Conference 3:30 p.m. See the Innovative Session Formats page for more information
6:00 p.m. APSA Awards Ceremony & Reception The ceremony honors the 2020 and 2021 APSA Award recipients for their contributions to the discipline. The
Awards Ceremony will be available to view virtually on the platform, and an in-person reception (invite-only) will be held onsite in Seattle for both 2020 and 2021 award winners.
WSCC, Ballroom 6C and Virtual
Thursday, September 306:00 a.m. – Indigenous Politics Virtual Mini-Conference 3:30 p.m. See the Innovative Session Formats page for more information
7:00 a.m. New Member and First Time Attendee Breakfast New members are invited to join us for a breakfast with association leaders. An RSVP was required for this event. Sheraton, Cirrus Sponsored by Cambridge University Press
10:00 a.m. Plenary Address with Representative Robin Kelly: Congresswoman and Political Scientist Congresswoman Robin Kelly, Representative of the 2nd Congressional District of Illinois Virtual
12:00 p.m. APSA All-Member Business Meeting All APSA members are encouraged to attend the APSA General Membership Meeting, the official business
meeting of the Association. This event is an opportunity for members to learn about the business of the Association and express their views. A link will be sent out via email.
Virtual
2:00 p.m. – Career Fair and Coffee 4:00 p.m. WSCC, Exhibit Hall 4B
6:30 p.m. 117th APSA Annual Meeting Presidential Address: “Engaged Pluralism: The Importance of Commitment”
Dr. Janet Box-Steffensmeier, APSA President, The Ohio State University WSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming
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2021 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS 25
2021 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
7:30 p.m. 117th APSA Annual Meeting Opening Reception APSA hosts the Opening Reception. All attendees are invited to enjoy hors d’oeuvres and cocktails. WSCC, Ballroom 6E
8:30 p.m. APSA International Attendee Reception APSA invites all international attendees to this special reception as a welcome to Seattle and the annual meeting. Sheraton, Cirrus Sponsored by Cambridge University Press
Friday, October 110:00 a.m. Lightning Round: Research in Five Graduate Students I Virtual
10:00 a.m. Department Chairs’ Roundtable Virtual Viewing: “Aligning Graduate Training with Hiring Institution Needs”
Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C
11:30 a.m. Department Chairs’ Networking Luncheon (Invite Only) Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A
12:00 p.m. Plenary Address: “Running an Election during a Pandemic” U.S. Election Assistance Commissioner Thomas Hicks WSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming
2:00 p.m. John Gaus Award Lecture and Reception Christopher Hood, Emeritus Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford University UK Virtual
3:00 p.m. APSA Member Appreciation Reception WSCC, Exhibit Hall 4B (APSA Lounge)
4:00 p.m. APSA Reception Honoring Women of Color in the Profession Virtual
Saturday, October 26:00 a.m. Lightning Round: Research in Five: Undergraduate Student Session Virtual Sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha
8:00 a.m. TLC at APSA – Teaching & Learning Mini-Conference Sheraton Grand Ballrooms B & C; Virtual The fifth Teaching and Learning Mini-Conference at APSA seeks to promote the scholarship of teaching and
learning, equip faculty with new techniques and resources for teaching, and enhance the role of teaching in the discipline of political science.
See TLC at APSA page for panels and locations.
9:00 a.m. APSA Graduate School Information Fair An advance RSVP was required for this event. Virtual
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26 2021 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
2021 PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS
10:00 a.m. Lightning Round: Research Design Virtual
12:00 p.m. Plenary Address: “Appreciating and Leveraging the Diversity of Political Science” Dr. Scott Page, University of Michigan WSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming
4:00 p.m. Lightning Round & Coffee: Research in Five: Graduate Students II WSCC, Room 620
6:30 p.m. APSA Graduate Student Happy Hour Graduate students are invited to network with each other and meet informally with APSA officers and council
members. Sheraton, Cirrus Sponsored by Cambridge University Press
Sunday, October 36:00 a.m. Lightning Round: Graduate Student Research Session III Virtual
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LIVESTREAMING SESSIONS
Please note all sessions are in Pacific time. Livestreaming sessions will be available on the virtual platform in real-time for virtual attendees.
Thursday, September 30Managing Interdependence in the Digital AgeWSCC, Ballroom 6A12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Power Shifts: Congress and Presidential Representation by John DearbornWSCC, Ballroom 6B12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Local Politics at the Forefront of America’s Fight for Racial EqualityWSCC, Ballroom 6C12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Open-Source Educational Resources for Political Science EducationWSCC, Ballroom 6C4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Presidential Address: “Engaged Pluralism: The Importance of Commitment”WSCC, Ballroom 6C6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
Friday, October 1Advances in the Study of Gender Inequality in PoliticsWSCC, Ballroom 6C8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Roundtable on “The American Political Economy: Politics, Markets, and Power”Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Internships in Political Science: Best Practices in the DisciplineWSCC, Ballroom 6A12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Living with the Consequences of Climate ChangeWSCC, Ballroom 6B12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Plenary Address: “Running an Election during a Pandemic”WSCC, Ballroom 6C12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Author Meets Critics: Daniel Carpenter’s “Democracy by Petition”WSCC, Ballroom 6A4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
The Pluralistic Politics of Resource ExtractionWSCC, Ballroom 6C4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Author Meets Critics: “Before the West: Rise and Fall of Eastern World Orders”Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
LIVESTREAMING SESSIONS 27
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Saturday, October 2The Legacy of 2020 for How America VotesWSCC, Ballroom 6A8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Prospects for Rebooting Arms Control for Today’s Great Power Nuclear CompetitionWSCC, Ballroom 6B8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Reclaiming Causality in Political ScienceWSCC, Ballroom 6C8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
TLC at APSA: Teaching IR Theory for Future Foreign Policy PractitionersSheraton, Grand Ballroom C10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Plenary Address: “Addressing and Leveraging the Diversity of Political Science”WSCC, Ballroom 6C12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
TLC at APSA: Keynote Address with President-Elect John IshiyamaSheraton, Grand Ballroom C12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
England’s Cross of Gold: Keynes, Churchill, & The Governance of Economic BeliefsWSCC, Ballroom 6A4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
The U.S. Campaign Finance System and Consequences for RepresentationWSCC, Ballroom 6C4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
TLC at APSA: Diversified Approaches to Simulations and Games in the Classroom IISheraton, Grand Ballroom C4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
LIVESTREAMING SESSIONS
28 LIVESTREAMING SESSIONS
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PRE-CONFERENCE SHORT COURSES 29
Short courses provide diverse opportunities for professional development and offer attendees the chance to connect with scholars from a range of backgrounds. They are sponsored by APSA Organized Sections and other affiliated organizations. Pre-registration for short courses is required, and each short course has a $25 fee. All short courses will be held on the premises of the Annual Meeting, unless otherwise noted. View short course descriptions here.
Africa Research Development Group Part 1 8:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.Washington State Convention Center, 606
Advancing the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Political Science 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.Washington State Convention Center, 603
Causal Inference and Treatment Effect Estimation using Stata 1:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.Washington State Convention Center, 607
Data Sources for Interest Group Research 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.Washington State Convention Center, 604
Democratic Deliberation and Gene Editing 1:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.Washington State Convention Center, 604
Learning for Democracy: Lessons in Power and Persuasion 1:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Washington State Convention Center, 616
Political Economy Section Junior Research Workshop (Invite Only) 1:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.Washington State Convention Center, 603
Process Tracing: The Logic and Best Practices of Process Tracing (QMMR 3) 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.Washington State Convention Center, 607
Virtual WorkshopsVirtual workshops will be held on the annual meeting virtual platform.
Africa Research Development Group Part 2 Thursday, September 30 8:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
PRE-CONFERENCE SHORT COURSES
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30 PRE-CONFERENCE SHORT COURSES
Off Platform Virtual Short Courses and WorkshopsThe following short courses will be held outside of APSA’s virtual platform on Monday, September 27 unless otherwise noted. Please visit the virtual platform for more information on scheduling and links to access these short courses.
Emerging Scholars Research Development Workshop (Invite Only) – Wednesday, September 29
European Politics and Society - Early Career Workshop
Improvisational Pluralism in Field Research 1: Pre-Field Planning (QMMR 1)
IPSA Workshop: The Importance of Developing Ties Between Political Science Associations
Managing and Sharing Qualitative Data
MENA Research Development Group (Invite Only) – Tuesday, September 28
Pluralism and Reform Politics: Achieving Multi-Racial, Multi-Party Democracy
Teaching the Presidency When Democratic Legitimacy Is Questioned
PRE-CONFERENCE SHORT COURSES
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THEME PANELS 31
PLENARY PANELS
Thursday, September 30Plenary Address with Representative Robin Kelly: Congresswoman and Political ScientistCongresswoman Robin Kelly, Representative of the 2nd Congressional District of IllinoisVirtual10:00 a.m.
Presidential Address: “Engaged Pluralism: The Importance of Commitment”APSA President Dr. Janet Box-SteffensmeierWSCC, Ballroom 6C and Livestreaming6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
Friday, October 1Running an Election during a PandemicUS Election Assistance Commissioner Thomas HicksWSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 2Appreciating and Leveraging the Diversity of Political ScienceDr. Scott Page, University of MichiganWSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
THEME PANELS
Tuesday, September 28Intersectionality and Social Movements Mini-ConferenceVirtual
• Intersectional Consciousness and Coalition Politics 6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
• Burdens and Risks of Intersectional Activism 8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
• Intersectional Mobilization and Representation 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
• Latinx and Latin American Intersectional Praxis 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
• Intersectional Agency and Structure 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
• Intersectional Praxis and Solidarity 4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
The Problem of Knowledge CumulationVirtual6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
Data Possibilities, Replication and Transparency: Ready for the Challenges?Virtual10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Wednesday, September 29Advances in Probabilistic Network Data AnalysisVirtual6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
Political Behavior Across Disciplinary BoundariesVirtual6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
Can Democratic Innovations Deepen Democracy in Diverse Societies?Virtual10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Funding Opportunities at the National Science FoundationVirtual10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Indigenous Politics Mini-Conference Virtual (continues Thursday)
• Settler Colonialism, Indigenous Politics, and Political Science: Critical Histories and New Directions 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
• Self-Definition is Self-Determination 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. (Continues Thursday, September 30)
Methodological Considerations for Studying Diverse IdentitiesVirtual2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
THEME PANELS
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32 THEME PANELS
Thursday, September 30Indigenous Politics Mini-Conference Virtual (continued from Wednesday)
• Indigenous Autonomy and Sovereignty: Practices of Governance 6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
• Indigenous Political Participation 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
• Native Lands, Native Waters: The Politics of Climate Change and Native Nations 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
Pitied but Ignored? Discrimination toward Disabled People in Politics and PolicyVirtual6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
Pandemic Politics, Vaccine Polities: Comparing Outbreaks, Eras, and GeographiesTCC, Tahoma 28:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Pluralistic Approaches to Complex Inferential ChallengesWSCC, Ballroom 6098:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Reshaping Capitalist Democracies Virtual10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Sexual Harassment and Assault during Field ResearchVirtual10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Democratic and Revolutionary PedagogySheraton, Grand Ballroom A12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Local Politics at the Forefront of America’s Fight for Racial EqualityWSCC, Ballroom 6A 6C & Livestreaming12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
Methodological PluralismVirtual2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
Pluralizing Political Theory: Contemporary Queer Contributions(Pre-Recorded)4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Theoretical Implications of Empirical ModelsSheraton, Grand Ballroom A4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Friday, October 1Cutting-Edge Research Methods in Climate Governance ResearchVirtual6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
Unequal Access? Voting and Participation of Disabled PeopleVirtual6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
Advances in the Study of Gender Inequality in PoliticsWSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Funding for Political Science Research, Teaching, and Professional DevelopmentWSCC, Ballroom 6A & Livestreaming8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Measuring Misperceptions and Misinformed BeliefsVirtual2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
(Mis)Information in Great Power Competition and Democratic GovernanceWSCC, 6094:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
The Pluralistic Politics of Resource ExtractionWSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 2Opposition Strategies to Overcome Autocratization in Polarized DemocraciesVirtual6:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
THEME PANELS
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THEME PANELS 33
THEME PANELS
Race, Racism and the Politics of Identity WSCC, 6138:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Reclaiming Causality in Political ScienceWSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Plural Approaches to Understanding COVID-19 ResponseVirtual10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Support for Reproducibility in Political ScienceVirtual10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Equity in CampaignsVirtual2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
The U.S. Campaign Finance System and Consequences for RepresentationWSCC, Ballroom 6C & Livestreaming4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, September 13Challenging Paradigms in the Study of BureaucracyWSCC, 6148:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Emotions, Beliefs and Political Behavior in Pluralistic Societies WSCC, 6098:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Enhancing Pluralism by Understanding Systemic BiasesWSCC, 21110:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Interpretivist Political Science: Conversations on Methods and MethodologiesVirtual12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
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INNOVATIVE SESSION FORMATS
Mini-ConferencesMini-conferences are full days of content devoted to a theme. Each mini-conference can be in pursuit of a larger cohesive goal than traditional panels provide, such as an edited volume or an omnibus dataset. Sessions within the mini-conference might be comprised of other formats in this list.
Virtual Mini-ConferencesIntersectionality and Social Movements Mini-Conference (Theme Panel)Division 31: Women, Gender, and Politics Research; Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Tuesday, September 286:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m. Intersectional Consciousness and Coalition Politics8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m. Burdens and Risks of Intersectional Activism10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Intersectional Mobilization and Representation12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Latinx and Latin American Intersectional Praxis2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Intersectional Agency and Structure4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Intersectional Praxis and Solidarity
Comparative Political Theory Mini-ConferenceDivision 1: Political Thought and Philosophy
Tuesday, September 286:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m. Abolition and Futurity10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Developmental Imaginaries and Decolonial Possibilities2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Cartographies of Thought in Comparative View
Wednesday, September 296:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m. Comparative Political Theory and the Comparative Study of Religion and Politics10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Taking Stock at 24: Comparative Political Theory in 2021 and Beyond
Indigenous Politics Mini-Conference (Theme Panel)Indigenous Studies Network
Wednesday, September 2910:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Settler Colonialism, Indigenous Politics, and Political Science: Critical Histories and
New Directions2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Self-Definition is Self-Determination
Thursday, September 306:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m. Indigenous Autonomy and Sovereignty: Practices of Governance10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Indigenous Political Participation2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Native Lands, Native Waters: The Politics of Climate Change and Native Nations
Formal Modeling in Political Science: Epistemology and Method(s) Mini-ConferenceDivision 6: Political Economy
Sunday, September 36:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m. Epistemological Place of Formal Models12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Thin Versus Thick Narratives, Generalizability versus Best Explanations, Connections to
Process Tracing2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Epistemology and Method(s) Mini-Conference: Choosing Method(s) of Formal Modeling
34 INNOVATIVE SESSION FORMATS
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In-Person Mini-Conferences The Politics of Illicit Economies, Organized Crime, and Extra-Legal ActorsThe Conference Center, Tahoma 4Division 21: Conflict Processes
Thursday, September 308:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m. Roundtable10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Criminal and Extra-Legal Governance12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. The Methods and Ethics of Research on Criminal and Extra-Legal Actors2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. State Responses to Illicit Economies, Organized Crime, and Extra-Legal Actors4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Criminal Competition and Violence
Justice and Injustice: Political Science Perspectives on Crime and Punishment Mini-ConferenceThe Conference Center, Tahoma 3Division 8: Political Methodology; Division 25: Public Policy; Division 26: Law and Courts; Division 30: Urban Politics; Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Friday, October 18:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m. Descriptive Representation in the Criminal Legal System10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Policy Implementation and Discretion in the Criminal Legal System12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Criminal Legal Intersections and Boundaries2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Roundtable: Political Science for the Public Good4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Junior Scholar Poster Session
Chinese Politics Mini-ConferenceThe Conference Center, Tahoma 4Division 13: Politics of Communist and Former Communist Countries
Saturday, October 38:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m. China’s Response to COVID-19 Bureaucracy, Governance and Public Opinion10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Dimensions of Dissent: Protest in Contemporary China12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Changing Modes and Measures of State Capacity in China2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. The Political Economy of State-Business Relations4:00 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. China on the Global Stage: Policies and Reactions
Virtual CafésThis session format incorporates a handful of topic clusters, each staffed with a moderator to discuss various outreach efforts in the field. Members will share successful engagement methods and provide guidance to colleagues on ways to apply what they have learned in other ways. This session could be about interdisciplinary outreach, public engagement, or any variety of outreach to unique audiences.
Friday, October 1Methods Café 202110:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.APSA Panel
Saturday, October 2Equity in Campaigns2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.Theme Panel
INNOVATIVE SESSION FORMATS
INNOVATIVE SESSION FORMATS 35
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APSA is excited to announce the return of Lightning Rounds for the 2021 Annual Meeting. Lightning Rounds are similar to PechaKucha. Each scholar has five minutes to present, followed by five minutes of feedback or Q&A. This format provides a structured framework, giving presenters not only an opportunity to share their research at the world’s largest political science meeting, but also an opportunity to develop and enhance research communication skills through a concise presentation.
Friday, October 110:00 a.m. Research in Five: Graduate Students I (Virtual)
Chair: Mary Shiraef, University of Notre DameDiscussant: Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley; Daniela Osorio Michel, Vanderbilt University
Local Economic Effects of Morales’ Legacy in BoliviaSina Smid, Copenhagen Business School
Model Credibility in Political ScienceShana Scogin, University of Notre Dame
Understanding Societal Divisions in Post-conflict StatesNimendra Mawalagedara, Georgia State University
Water Crisis in Cape Town, South Africa: State and Nonstate InteractionsShana Scogin, University of Notre Dame; William Kakenmaster, University of Notre Dame; and Shasta Kaul, University of Notre Dame
Who Talks and Who Does Not? Gender Differences in Everyday Political TalkManuel Neumann, Mannheim Centre for European Social Research
Why Limiting Aggressive Policing Led to Decreases in Violence in Rio de JaneiroJessie Bullock, Harvard University
Saturday, October 26:00 a.m. Research in Five: Undergraduate Students (Virtual)Sponsored by Pi Sigma Alpha
Chairs and Discussants: Nancy E. Wright, Pace University – New York City; Rachel Vanderhill, Wofford College
Airstrikes and Rebel Use of Force in the Syrian Civil WarRamin Farrokhi; Emory University; Bernadette Catherine Bresee
Deudney and International Government: The Philadelphian System At WorkHenry Haynes Thompson, United States Military Academy
Former Experiences and a Terrorist Leader’s Decision to Recruit Female MembersKristen Budsberg, University of Georgia; Amanda Murdie, University of Georgia
How Local Structural Conditions Influence Adoption in ICE’s 287(g) ProgramMario Marset, London School of Economics
LIGHTNING ROUNDS
36 LIGHTNING ROUNDS
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LIGHTNING ROUNDS
Machine Learning for Predicting Congressional Environmental Voting RecordsThomas Chen, Academy for Mathematics, Science, and Engineering
Major and Authoritarian Personality: Based on a Survey of PKU UndergraduatesYongkang Tai, The Research Center for Contemporary China, Peking UniversityYifan Zhan; Zixuan Liu, Peking University; Mingsen Wang, Peking University; 辰阳 夏, Peking University
Popularity Politics: Estimating the Value of the “Social Media Subsidy”Jasmine Cui, Emory University
The Problem of Power in AmericaIvy Flessen, Duke University
10:00 a.m. Research Design (Virtual)
Chair: Ian M. Hartshorn, University of Nevada, RenoDiscussant: Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Analysis of the Strength of Provincial Identity in ChinaJingyuan Cheng
Armed Non State Actors, Taxation, and Coercion and Consent in the PhilippinesTanya Bandula-Irwin, University of Toronto
China’s LGBTQ+ NGOs Go to Market: Striving for Structural OpportunitiesHuiru Wang, University of Oxford
The Quality of Citizenship: Identity Contestation & the Reorganization of PowerSabrina Marasa
The Unsilent Majority: Labor Power in the IMF Loan ConditionalityDancheng Li
To Listen or Not To Listen: Do Government Decisions Reflect Public Preferences? Madeline Schomburg
When Citizens Demand More Censorship — Theory and Evidence from ChinaQitong Cao, Stanford University; Yunpeng Bai, Yale University
4:00 p.m. Coffee & Research in Five: Graduate Students II (In-Person)
Chair & Discussant: Kumar Ramanathan, Northwestern University
An Analysis of the Strength of Provincial Identity in ChinaJingyuan Cheng
Informal Housing and Good Citizens in Development (Pre-Recorded)Ying Gao, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
LIGHTNING ROUNDS 37
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38 LIGHTNING ROUNDS
The Electoral Consequences of Rural Prison BuildingJacob Harris, Cornell University
The Liberal Paradox of Suicide in PrisonShirley Le Penne, Cornell University
The Urban-Rural Political Trust Gap: Rurality, Trust, and Partisan SupportJames Kirk, University of Notre Dame
Why Did the United States Facilitate China’s Rise?Zoltan Feher, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
Sunday, October 36:00 a.m. Research in Five: Graduate Students III (Virtual)
Chair and Discussant: Biko Koenig, Franklin & Marshall College
Community Organizing for Affordable Housing and Anti-Displacement PolicyMarisa K Westbrook, University of Colorado Denver
Immigration Attitudes in the US: Economic Outlook and Cultural Threat PerceptionReha Atakan Cetin, University of Florida; Sebastian Tobon Palma, University of Illinois at Chicago
The Effect of Partisan Competition on Tolerance of Election CheatingErik Clarke, Ohio State University
The Four Faces of Partisan AffectJoseph Phillips, Pennsylvania State University
The Knowledge Within: Conceptualizing African American Political KnowledgeJasmine Jackson, Purdue University
We Are Watching: Explaining the US Media’s Selective Attention on World LeadersRuilin Lai, Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
LIGHTNING ROUNDS
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TLC AT APSA 39
TLC AT APSA
The fourth annual TLC at APSA (Teaching and Learning Conference at APSA) is a full-day hybrid event that seeks to promote the scholarship of teaching and learning and enhance the role of teaching in the discipline of political science. This year’s conference theme is “Teaching Pluralism through Political Science Education.”
Saturday, October 2, 20218:00 a.m. WORKSHOP AND PANEL SESSION 1
Workshop: Pandemic Proof Your Voter Outreach Strategy (Virtual) Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South Bend (chair) Elizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Leah A. Murray, Weber State University Allison Rank, SUNY, Oswego State Carah Ong Whaley, James Madison Center for Civic Engagement, James Madison University Abraham Goldberg, James Madison University Edie N. Goldenberg, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Workshop: Online Teaching: Adapting Games for Comparative & International Relations (Virtual)
Joseph W. Roberts, Roger Williams University (chair) Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Workshop: Bridging the Partisan Divide: Cultivating the Next Generation of Citizen Leaders Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C Janet Tran, Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute (chair) Michelle Ashley Faggert, The Ronald Reagan Institute Kimberly Lipina, The Reagan Institute
Panel: Around the World in 80 Credits Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B
• Active and Experiential Learning in Teaching International Law to Undergraduates, Spyridon Kotsovilis, University of Toronto Mississauga
• Encouraging Local Community Engagement in International Relations Courses, Sarah Kenyon Lischer, Wake Forest University
• Information Security: Alternative Reading Strategies for International Security (Pre-Recorded), Danielle Gilbert, U.S. Air Force Academy and Paul Bezerra, United States Air Force Academy
• Incorporating Peer Review into Courses: Can Active Learning be Asynchronous?, Michael P. A. Murphy, University of Ottawa; Andrew Heffernan, University of Ottawa; Doug Yearwood
9:30 a.m. COFFEE BREAK
10:00 a.m. WORKSHOP AND PANEL SESSION 2
Workshop: Teaching IR Theory for Future Foreign Policy Practitioners Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C and Livestreaming
David A. Cooper, Naval War College (chair)Nikolas K. Gvosdev, Naval War CollegeJessica D Blankshain, Naval War College
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40 TLC AT APSA
Workshop: Organizing & Supporting Junior Scholar Virtual Workshops (Virtual)Cleo Marie O’Brien-Udry, Yale University (chair)Aidan Milliff, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyAngie Torres-Beltran, Cornell UniversityChristina Ladam, University of Nevada, RenoRachel Porter, University of North Carolina, Chapel HillSyeda ShahBano Ijaz, UC San DiegoAustin Bussing, University of North Carolina, Chapel HillAbby M Fanlo, Stanford UniversityJosh McCrain, University of UtahAlexander Charles Furnas, University of MichiganJ Andres Gannon, University of California, San DiegoElizabeth L Brannon, Michigan State UniversityNina Obermeier, Cornell University
Panel: Sharing Pedagogy: International Service-Learning Network during COVID (Virtual) • The Special Relationship: Lessons Learned from a UK/US Service-Learning
Network, Mark Charlton, De Montfort University • The Effect of Virtual Service-Learning on Community Partners, Mary A. McHugh,
Merrimack College • Converting a Large Service-Learning Event Online in Covid: Surviving and
Thriving, Alison Rios Millett McCartney, Towson University; Michele Calderon, Towson University; Conner Cameron, Towson University; Madeleine Meyer, Towson University
12:00 p.m. LUNCHEON AND KEYNOTE WITH PRESIDENT-ELECT JOHN ISHIYAMA Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C and Livestreaming For health and safety reasons, lunch has limited capacity and pre-registration for lunch was required.
Please show your confirmation email to pick up your lunch.
2:00 p.m. TRACK PANEL SESSION 1
Track 1: Civic Engagement Education Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B Out of Your Chair and Into the Streets: Active Approaches to Civic Engagement, moderated
by T.M. Sell, Highline College • Restorative Civics Education, Samantha Pearl, Center for Justice and Peacebuilding Studies • Service Learning at a Hispanic-Serving Institution, Andrew Hewitt Smith,
Univ of Texas Rio Grande Valley • That’s our house! Let’s take it over!: Antiracist Pedagogy in Advocacy Courses,
Kathleen Cole, Metropolitan State University
Track 2: Simulations & Games (Virtual) Diversified Approaches to Simulation and Games in the Classroom I, moderated by Renee Van
Vechten, University of Redlands • Can Simulations Promote an Inclusive Classroom?, Nayma Qayum, Manhattanville
College • Teaching Theory: A Mini-Simulation on the Theory of Human Territoriality,
Halit M. Tagma, Northern Arizona University • The Impact of Gender on Student Learning: Lessons from a Model UN Course,
Mert Kartal, St. Lawrence University • Using “Fantasy” Politics to Increase Knowledge of International Politics,
Petra Hendrickson, Northern Michigan University
TLC AT APSA
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TLC AT APSA 41
TLC AT APSA
Track 3: Technology and Innovative Pedagogy in the Classroom Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C Making It Real: Taking Action in Teaching, moderated by Julio F. Carrión, University of Delaware
• Homelessness and Project Based Learning, Bobbi Gentry, Bridgewater College • Incorporating Inquiry in an Introductory American Politics Course (Pre-Recorded),
Sean Q Kelly, California State University, Channel Islands • Online Deliberation: Bridging divides and navigating “niceness”, Kara N Dillard,
James Madison University and Kara L. Lindaman, Winona State University
Track 4: Broad Curriculum/Pedagogy (Virtual) New Strategies for Increased Teaching Effectiveness, moderated by Chiedo Nwankwor,
Johns Hopkins University • Teaching Comparative Politics: A Guide to Making Choices, Nandini Deo, Lehigh
University; Julie George, CUNY, Queens College; Meg Guliford, University of Pennsylvania; Mary Anne Mendoza, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
• Doing intersectional feminist community-engaged learning in the neo-liberal U, Michael J. Illuzzi, Lesley University and Nafisa Tanjeem, Lesley University
• The Biopolitics of EdTech, Stefan Kehlenbach, University of California, Riverside • Students as Teachers for Political Discourse, Lynne M Chandler-Garcia, US Air Force
Academy and Stacy G. Ulbig, Sam Houston State University
4:00 p.m. TRACK PANEL SESSION 2
Track 1: Civic Engagement Education (Virtual) Multiple Methods for Civic Engagement, moderated by T.M. Sell, Highline College
• Bring a Chair: Getting Methods Students Out of the Classroom and into the Field, Douglas M. Cantor, Loyola Marymount University
• Building Community to Promote Civic Engagement in an American Government Course, Scott Spitzer, California State University, Fullerton and Lori M Weber, California State University, Chico
• Facilitating Impactful Civic Engagement with Metacognitive Questions, Shannon McQueen, West Chester University
Track 2: Simulations & Games Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C and Livestreaming Diversified Approaches to Simulations and Games in the Classroom II, moderated by
Renee Van Vechten, University of Redlands • Choose Your Own Adventure: A Virtual Alternative to Model UN, John A. Tures,
Lagrange College • Professor, Lawyer, Long Haul Trucker in the 2020 Election, Courtney Chenette, Hollins
University • The Governing Dead: How a Game about Zombies Can Demonstrate Federalism,
Edmond Hally, Ferrum College • Words Matter! Infusing International Relations with Foreign Language &
Diplomacy, Dalia Fikry Fahmy, Long Island University, Brooklyn
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42 TLC AT APSA
Track 3: Technology and Innovative Pedagogy in the Classroom (Virtual) Opening Up the Playbook: Broadening Approaches to Teaching Political Science, moderated
by Julio F. Carrión, University of Delaware • Civic Engagement Scholarship: What We Can Learn From the Research,
David J Hurley, Indiana University South Bend; Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South Bend; Kayla Christine Isenbletter
• Personalized Screencast Feedback: Rethinking How We Respond to Student Writing, Levente Szentkirályi, University of Colorado at Boulder
• Promoting Pluralism in Unexpected Places: The Value of Experiential Education, Mark David Hamilton, Inter-American Defense College, Samuel R. Greene, Shepherd University, Roberto Pereyra Bordon, Inter-American Defense College
Track 4: Broad Curriculum/Pedagogy Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B Critical Perspectives on Teaching, moderated by Chiedo Nwankwor, Johns Hopkins University
• Addressing Antiracism through a Study of Political Science Syllabi, Viviana Rivera-Burgos, Baruch College, CUNY; Stephanie R. Golob, CUNY-Baruch College; David R. Jones, Baruch College, City University of New York; Marcus Johnson, Baruch College, CUNY; Els de Graauw, Baruch College, CUNY
• How Trauma-Informed Pedagogy Helps us Teach Religion in Political Science, Misbah Hyder, University of California, Irvine
• Rigor Mortis: An engagement with rigor in political science education, Wendy Wright, William Paterson University
• The Case for a ‘Pedagogy of Kindness’: Now and in the Post-Pandemic University, Simone R. Bohn, York University
5:30 p.m. TLC AT APSA RECEPTION, Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A
We would like to extend a special thank you to the 2021 TLC at APSA Program Committee for all of their dedication and hard work in planning this year’s TLC at APSA.
Tavishi Bhasin, Kennesaw State University (co-chair)Patrick McKinley, Morningside College (co-chair)Kenneth Betsalel, University of North Carolina, AshevilleJulio F. Carrión, University of Delaware (Track Moderator: Technology and Innovative Pedagogy in the Classroom)Chiedo Nwankwor, Johns Hopkins University (Track Moderator: Broad Curriculum/Pedagogy)T.M. Sell, Highline College (Track Moderator: Civic Engagement)
TLC AT APSA
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PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EVENTS 43
PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT EVENTS
Professional Development events are virtual, unless otherwise noted.
Careers & the Job MarketExploring Career Opportunities Outside of AcademiaWednesday, September 29, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. PDT
Applying for a Job at a Teaching-Oriented InstitutionThursday, September 30, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. PDT
Get the Job: Tips for the Academic Job MarketFriday, October 1, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. PDT
APSA Career Open House: Ask-Me-Anything SessionsThursday, September 30, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. PDT
• Landing a Postdoc • Expectations and Experiences Newly on the
Tenure Track • Navigating the Job Market for Political Science
Practitioners • Recent Experiences on the Academic Job Market • Working at a Community College
In-Person: APSA Career Open House: Career Fair and CoffeeThursday, September 30, 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. PDTWSCC, Exhibit Hall 4B
APSA Graduate School Information FairSaturday, October 2, 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. PDT
For Departments & the DisciplineCreating Minimum Standards for Employing Contingent Faculty in the ProfessionThursday, September 30, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. PDT
Teaching Civic Engagement GloballyFriday, October 1, 8:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m. PDT
Aligning Graduate Training with Hiring Institution Needs: Thinking Way Beyond R1 (Department Chairs’ Roundtable) Friday, October 1, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. PDTVirtual roundtable with in-person viewing session and networking luncheon to follow. For health and safety reasons, lunch has limited capacity. Please show your confirmation email to pick up your lunch. The in-person viewing session will be held in Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C, with the luncheon following at 11:30 a.m. in Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A.
Internships in Political Science: Best Practices in the DisciplineFriday, October 1, 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. PDT
Advancing Racial Justice in Political ScienceSaturday, October 2, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. PDT
Community Colleges: The Potentials and Perils for Creating Engagement & EquitySunday, October 3, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. PDT
Funding and PublishingA Discussion Among the Editors: What It Means to Be a Political Science Journal Editor in 2021Wednesday, September 29, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. PDT
How to Promote Your Book Inside and Outside the DisciplineThursday, September 30, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. PDT
Meet the Editors: Political Science Journal Editors Discuss, Advise, and AnswerFriday, October 1, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. PDT
Get the Grant: Finding Funding, Writing Proposals, and Advancing Your Research at Every Career Stage Sunday, October 3, 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. PDT
ReceptionsIn-Person: APSA Graduate Student Happy HourSaturday, October 2, 6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. PDTSheraton, Cirrus
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44 DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION PROGRAM EVENTS
All times listed in Pacific Time.
Special Events (All Virtual)
APSA Bystander Intervention Training I Wednesday, September 29, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Sponsored by APSA Diversity & Inclusion Programs(Virtual)
APSA Bystander Intervention Training IIThursday, September 30, 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.Sponsored by APSA Diversity & Inclusion Programs(Virtual)
Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP) Best Practices Meeting Friday, October 1, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. (Virtual)Sponsored by APSA Diversity & Inclusion Programs
APSA Graduate School Information FairSaturday, October 2, 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.Advance registration is requiredSponsored by APSA Diversity & Inclusion Programs(Virtual)
Roundtable: McClain Taskforce Panel on Systemic Inequality in the DisciplineSaturday, October 2, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. (Virtual)
APSA Bunche Scholars iPoster SessionSaturday, October 2, 2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. (Virtual)
Roundtables and Panels (All Virtual)
Roundtable: Black Politics: Old Problems, New Directions and Charting a Path ForwardWednesday, September 29, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks
Roundtable: Faculty Recruitment and Retention – APSA Toolkit and Best PracticesThursday, September 30, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Sponsored by APSA Diversity and Inclusion Programs
Roundtable: Navigating Careers During and After the PandemicThursday, September 30, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Women
Roundtable: Exploring LGBTQ Contributions to and Inclusion in the BLM Movement: opportunities and challengesThursday, September 30, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of LGBT Individuals
Roundtable: Promotion, Tenure, Career, and Impact on the ProfessionFriday, October 1, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Latinos y Latinas
Roundtable: Anti-Racism Movements, Coalition-Building, and Intersectional EmpowermentFriday, October 1, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Sponsored by APSA Diversity and Inclusion Programs
Roundtable: APSA Committee on the Status of First-Generation Scholars RoundtableSaturday, October 2, 10:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Panel: Getting It Published: A Panel Discussion on Writing and Publishing Books in REPSunday, October 3, 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks
Roundtable: Asians and Pacific Islanders in the Profession: Opportunities and Challenges for Job Seekers in a Time of Multiple CrisesSunday, October 3, 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Sponsored by the APSA Committee on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans
Receptions (All Virtual)
Open Mentoring and Networking ReceptionThursday, September 23, 4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Sponsored by APSA Mentoring and Networking Diversity & Inclusion Programs
Joint Reception of the LGBT Status Committee, LGBT Caucus, and the Sexuality and Politics SectionThursday, September 23, 4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m.
DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION PROGRAM EVENTS
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DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION PwROGRAM EVENTS 45
DIVERSITY AND INCLUSION PROGRAM EVENTS
Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession and NCOBPS ReceptionThursday, September 30, 4:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.
APSA Reception Honoring Women of ColorFriday, October 1, 4:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Sponsored by APSA Diversity & Inclusion Programs
Joint Reception for Allied Status Committees, Caucuses, and Organized SectionsFriday, October 1, 4:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Co-sponsored by the APSA Status Committees on the Status of Asian Pacific Americans, Blacks, First Generation Scholars, Latinos y Latinas in the Profession, LGBT Individuals, Women, and APSA Diversity & Inclusion Programs
Diversity Fellowship Program (DFP) & RBSI Alumni ReceptionSaturday, October 2, 4:30 p.m. – 5:30 p.m. Sponsored by APSA Diversity & Inclusion Programs
*This is not an exhaustive list. Please see the online program and search keyword “diversity” for additional events.
APSA Ombuds Office HoursThe APSA Ombuds is available during the 2021 APSA Annual Meeting to speak with meeting attendees on a variety of topics including, but not limited to, consultation with anyone who believes that they have experienced harassment or discrimination, or who have concerns about violations of the sexual harassment provisions of the APSA anti-harassment policy while participating in the 2021 APSA Annual Meeting. Virtual consultations will be available throughout the meeting.
Learn more about the APSA Ombuds at www.apsanet.org/ombuds or email [email protected] to set up an appointment.
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46 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
Engage in exciting discussions and network with fellow scholars at the following iPoster sessions. These sessions provide an excellent opportunity for exchanging innovative ideas and discussing the latest in political science research. While the meeting will have both in-person and virtual formats, all iPosters will be presented virtually and will be linked from the virtual meeting platform. The iPoster Gallery will be available before, during, and after the event. The iPoster system also includes a live text chat function so attendees can ask questions and discuss the posters with their presenters. For information about the iPosters being presented, please see the Daily Schedule at the end of the program book. You can access the iPoster Gallery here.
Thursday, September 30iPoster Session: Qualitative Methods & Sexuality and Politics & Health Politics and Health Policy Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 6:00 a.m. – 6:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: New Political Science & Religion and Politics Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 6:30 a.m. – 7:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: African Politics & Public Administration Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 7:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: Women and Politics Research & Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 7:30 a.m. – 8:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: Conflict Processes 1 Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: Conflict Processes 2 Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 10:30 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: Conflict Processes 3 & Political Psychology Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 11:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: Foundations of Political Theory Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 11:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
iPoster Session: Division 26: Law and Courts Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 12:00 p.m. – 12:30 p.m.
iPoster Session: Foreign Policy & Comparative Politics in Advanced Industrial Societies & Ideas, Knowledge and Politics Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 1:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
iPoster Session: Political Science Education & Comparative Politics of Developing Countries 1 Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 2:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
iPoster Session: Comparative Politics of Developing Countries Virtual Poster Session 2Thursday, September 30, 2:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
iPoster Session: Elections and Voting Behavior Virtual Poster SessionThursday, September 30, 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
Friday, October 1iPoster Session: Political Organizations and Parties & Political Networks & American Political Thought & Education Politics and Policy Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 6:00 a.m. – 6:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: Human Rights & Urban and Local Politics Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 6:30 a.m. – 7:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: Class and Inequality & Legislative Politics Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 7:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: International Security: Militaries Beyond the Battlefield Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 8:00 a.m. – 8:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: International Security: Assessing and Improving Countering Violent Extremism Programs Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 8:30 a.m. – 9:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: Political Thought and Philosophy Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.
iPOSTER SESSIONS
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2018 APSA ANNUAL MEETING & EXHIBITION 47
iPoster Session: Information Technology and Politics; Formal Theory; and American Political Thought Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 10:30 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: Political Communication Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 11:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: European Politics and Society Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 11:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
iPoster Session: International Collaboration Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 12:00 p.m. – 12:30 p.m.
iPoster Session: The Benefits of Claiming Your Early Research Using Preprints Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 1:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m.
iPoster Session: Political Methodology Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 1:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
iPoster Session: Politics of Communist & Former Communist Countries Virtual Poster Session IFriday, October 1, 2:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
iPoster Session: Politics of Communist & Former Communist Countries Virtual Poster Session IIFriday, October 1, 2:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m.
iPoster Session: Autocracy & Democracy Virtual Poster SessionFriday, October 1, 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
Saturday, October 2iPoster Session: Experimental Research & Migration and Citizenship & Politics, Literature and Film & Civic Engagement Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 6:00 a.m. – 6:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: Presidents and Executive Politics & Public Policy Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 6:30 a.m. – 7:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: International History and Politics & Science, Technology and Environmental Policy Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 7:00 a.m. – 7:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 7:30 a.m. – 8:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: Public Opinion Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 9:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: Politics and History & Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: Representation and Electoral Systems & Normative Theory Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 10:30 a.m. – 11:00 a.m.
iPoster Session: State Politics and Policy & New Directions in Political Economy Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 11:00 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
iPoster Session: International Political Economy Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 11:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.
iPoster Session: Comparative Politics Virtual Poster Session ISaturday, October 2, 1:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
iPoster Session: Comparative Politics Virtual Poster Session IISaturday, October 2, 2:00 p.m. – 2:30 p.m.
iPoster Session: Ralph Bunche Summer Institute Scholars (RBSI) Virtual Poster SessionSaturday, October 2, 2:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
iPOSTER SESSIONS
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48 APSA AWARDS
APSA AWARDS
DISSERTATION AWARDSGabriel A. Almond Award for the best dissertation in the field of comparative politics
Co-Recipient: David Peyton, Northwestern UniversityTitle: “Property Security in the Midst of Insecurity: Wealth, Violence, and Institutional Stasis in the Democratic Republic of Congo”Co-Recipient: Chantal Berman, Princeton UniversityTitle: “Protest, Social Policy, and Political Regimes”
Award CommitteeChair: Professor David Rueda, University of OxfordDr. Jaimie Bleck, University of Notre DameDr. David T. Buckley, University of Louisville
William Anderson Award for the best dissertation in the general field of federalism or intergovernmental relations, state, and local politics
Recipient: Scott LaCombe, University of IowaTitle: “Institutional Design and the Politics of US States”
Award CommitteeChair: Jeffrey J. Harden, University of Notre DameDr. Shelly R. Arsneault, California State UniversityBrian Roberts, University of Texas at Austin
Edward S. Corwin Award for the best dissertation in the field of public law
Recipient: Anthony DeMattee, Indiana UniversityTitle: “Domesticating Civil Society: How and Why Governments Use Laws to Regulate CSOs”
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Lori J. Hausegger, Boise State UniversityDr. Paul M. Collins, Jr., University of Massachusetts, AmherstDr. Matthew P. Hitt, Colorado State University
Harold D. Lasswell Award for the best dissertation in the field of public policy
Recipient: Guillermo Toral, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyTitle: “The Political Logics of Patronage: Uses and Abuses of Government Jobs in Brazil”
Award CommitteeChair: Colleen M. Grogan, University of ChicagoDr. Ursula Hackett, Royal Holloway, University of LondonDr. Jeffrey R. Henig, Columbia University
E.E. Schattschneider Award for the best dissertation in the field of American government
Recipient: Christina Kinane, University of MichiganTitle: “Control without Confirmation: The Politics of Vacancies in Presidential Appointments”
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Chris Bonneau, University of PittsburghKenneth W. Kollman, University of Michigan, Ann ArborDr. Sharece Thrower, Vanderbilt University
Kenneth Sherrill Prize for the best dissertation proposal for an empirical study of lesbian, gay, bisexual, or transgender (LGBT) topics in political science
Recipient: Joseph Saraceno, University of Southern CaliforniaTitle: “Three Essays on the Representation of LGBT Americans”
Award CommitteeChair: Gary Mucciaroni, Temple UniversityDouglas Page, Gettysburg CollegeKelly Kollman, University of Glasgow
Leo Strauss Award for the best dissertation in the field of political philosophy
Recipient: David Lowry Pressly, Harvard UniversityTitle: “Being Accountable: Privacy, Self, and Society”
Award CommitteeChair: Julie L. Rose, Dartmouth CollegeJennifer Forestal, Loyola University, ChicagoDr. Philip A. Michelbach, West Virginia University
Merze Tate Award for the best dissertation in the field of international relations, law, and politics
Recipient: Danielle Gilbert, George Washington UniversityTitle: “The Logic of Coercive Kidnapping”
Award CommitteeChair: Kimberly Hutchings, Queen Mary University of LondonDr. Clifford Bob, Duquesne UniversityDr. Quan Li, Texas A&M University
Leonard D. White Award for the best dissertation in the field of public administration
Recipient: Anthony DeMattee, Indiana UniversityTitle: “Domesticating Civil Society: How and Why Governments Use Laws to Regulate CSOs”
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APSA AWARDS 49
APSA AWARDS
Award CommitteeChair: George A. Krause, University of GeorgiaDr. Randall Scott Davis, Southern Illinois UniversityDr. Alisa Moldavanova, Wayne State University
PAPER, ARTICLE & POSTERAPSA Best Poster Award for the best poster presented by a graduate student and/or early career scholar at the APSA Annual Meeting
Recipients: Stephanie Chan, Tanika Raychaudhuri, and Ali Valenzuela of Princeton UniversityTitle: “Group Threat or Contact? The Effects of Local Immigration Primes on Policy Views”
Award Committee:Chair: Paul MacDonald, Wellesley College,Tobin Grant, Southern Illinois UniversityErica Owen Palmer, University of Pittsburgh
Franklin L. Burdette/Pi Sigma Alpha Award for the best paper presented at the previous year’s Annual Meeting
Recipient: Aditya Dasgupta, University of California, RiversideTitle: “Explaining Rural Conservatism: Technological and Political Change in the Great Plains”
Award CommitteeChair: Elizabeth Suhay, American UniversityDr. Joanne Miller, University of DelawareHans Peter Schmitz, University of San Diego
Heinz I. Eulau Award for best article published in the American Political Science Review and Perspectives on Politics in the previous calendar year
Recipients (American Political Science Review): Beatriz Magaloni, Edgar Franco-Vivanco and Vanessa MeloTitle: “Killing in the Slums: Social Order, Criminal Governance and Police Violence in Rio de Janeiro”
Recipient (Perspectives on Politics): Natalie Wenzell LetsaTitle: “Expressive Voting in Autocracies: A Theory of Non-Economic Participation with Evidence from Cameroon”
Award CommitteesChair: Dr. Miki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State UniversityDr. R. Michael Alvarez, California Institute of TechnologyAarie Glas, Northern Illinois UniversityMs. Hannah Smidt, University of ZurichDr. Marianne C. Stewart, University of Texas at Dallas
BOOK AWARDSAPSA Best Book Award for the best book on government, politics, or international affairs
Recipients: Ismail K. White and Chryl N. Laird, Princeton University PressTitle: Steadfast Democrats: How Social Forces Shape Black Political Behavior
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Anjali Thomas, Georgia Institute of TechnologyProfessor Heath Brown, City University of New York, Graduate Center and John Jay CollegeDr. Han Dorussen, University of EssexDr. Liza Mugge, University of AmsterdamDr. Anand Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado, Boulder
Ralph J. Bunche Award for the best scholarly work in political science that explores the phenomenon of ethnic and cultural pluralism
Recipient: LaFleur Stephens-Dougan, University of Chicago PressTitle: Race to the Bottom: How Racial Appeals Work in American Politics
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Saskia Bonjour, Universiteit van AmsterdamDr. Darren Davis, University of Notre DameDr. Bradford S. Jones, University of California, Davis
Robert A. Dahl Award for an untenured scholar who has produced scholarship of the highest quality on democracy
Recipient: Mai Hassan, Cambridge University PressTitle: Regime Threats and State Solutions: Bureaucratic Loyalty and Embeddedness in Kenya
Award CommitteeChair: Rachel Riedl, Institute of Advanced StudiesAgustina Giraudy, American UniversityDr. Imke Harbers, University of AmsterdamEva Sørensen, Roskilde Universitet
Gladys M. Kammerer Award for the best book published during the previous calendar year in the field of U.S. national policy
Recipients: James Curry and Frances Lee, University of Chicago PressTitle: The Limits of Party: Congress and Lawmaking in a Polarized Era
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Award CommitteeChair: James C. Garand, Louisiana State UniversityDr. Matt Grossmann, Michigan State UniversityAllyson Shortle, University of Oklahoma
Benjamin E. Lippincott Award for exceptional work by a living political theorist that is still considered significant after a time span of at least 15 years since the original publication
Recipient: Charles Mills, Cornell University PressTitle: The Racial Contract
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Barbara Arneil, University of British ColumbiaDr. David Runciman, University of CambridgeDr. Steven B. Smith, Yale University
APSA-IPSA Theodore J. Lowi First Book Award for the best first book in any field of political science, showing promise of having substantive impact on the overall discipline
Recipient: Simukai Chigudu, Cambridge University PressTitle: The Political Life of an Epidemic: Cholera, Crisis and Citizenship in Zimbabwe
Award CommitteeChair: Chair: Dr. Barbara Arneil, University of British ColumbiaDr. David Runciman, University of CambridgeDr. Steven B. Smith, Yale University
Victoria Schuck Award for the best book published on women and politics
Recipients: Christina Wolbrecht and J. Kevin Corder, Cambridge University PressTitle: A Century of Votes for Women: American Elections Since Suffrage
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Melissa Deckman, Washington CollegeDr. Lisa A. Bryant, California State University, FresnoDr. Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami
CAREER AWARDSAPSA Community College Faculty Award for excellence in teaching, mentoring, community engagement, governance, and/or research by a community college faculty member in the profession
Recipient: Cammy Shay, Houston Community College
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Veronica Reyna, Houston Community CollegeErich G. Frankland, Casper CollegeSierra Powell, Mount San Antonio College
APSA Distinguished Award of Civic and Community Engagement for significant civic or community engagement activity by a political scientist which merges knowledge and practice and has an impact outside of the profession or the academy
Recipient: Mona Lena Krook, Rutgers University
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Nancy Burns, University of Michigan, Ann ArborCassandra Giana Khatri, Lone Star College- University ParkDr. Kyle Casimir Kopko, Center for Rural PennsylvaniaDr. Gisela Sin, University of Illinois, Urbana-ChampaignDr. Matthew Woessner, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
APSA Distinguished Teaching Award for outstanding contributions to undergraduate and graduate teaching political science at two- or four-year institutions
Recipient: Charity Butcher, Kennesaw State University
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Marijke Breuning, University of North TexasProfessor David Monda, CUNY York CollegePaula O’Loughlin, University of Minnesota, Morris
John Gaus Award for a career of exemplary scholarship in the joint tradition of political science and public administration
Recipient: Christopher Hood, University of Oxford
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Donald P. Moynihan, Georgetown UniversityArjen Boin, Louisiana State UniversityDr. Ines A. Mergel, University of Konstanz
Frank J. Goodnow Award for service to the community of political science by teachers, researchers, and public servants who work in the many fields of politics
Recipient: Henry E. Brady, University of California, Berkeley
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Louise K. ComfortDr. Frederick J. Boehmke, University of IowaDr. Lorenzo Morris, Howard University
APSA AWARDS
50 APSA AWARDS
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Hubert H. Humphrey Award for notable public service by a political scientist
Recipient: Charles Kupchan, Georgetown University
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton UniversityScott H. Ainsworth, University of GeorgiaDr. Sarah Anderson, University of California, Santa BarbaraHerbert B. AsherDr. Laura M. Luehrmann, Wright State University
Carey McWilliams Award for a major journalistic contribution to our understanding of politics
Recipient: Loren Ghiglione, Northwestern University
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Jennifer Nicoll Victor, George Mason UniversityDr. Steven E. Schier, Carleton CollegeDr. Jenifer Whitten-Woodring, University of Massachusetts, Lowell
Charles E. Merriam Award for an individual whose published work and career represent a significant contribution to the art of government through the application of social science research
Recipient: Arthur Lupia, University of Michigan
Award CommitteeChair: Professor Simon Hix, London School of EconomicsDr. Sarah A. Fulton, Texas A&M UniversityDr. Seth E. Masket, University of Denver
Barbara Sinclair Lecture for achievement in promoting the understanding of the U.S. Congress and legislative politics
Recipient: Wendy Schiller, Brown University
Award CommitteeCo-Chair: Dr. David C. Barker, American UniversityCo-Chair: Megan McConaughey, American Political Science AssociationDr. Alison Craig, University of Texas, AustinDr. Nancy Martorano Miller, University of DaytonDr. Jean Reith Schroedel, Claremont Graduate University
Hanes Walton, Jr. Career Award for political scientist whose distinguished scholarship has made significant contributions to our understanding of racial and ethnic politics
Recipient: Cathy J. Cohen, University of Chicago
Award CommitteeChair: Chris Zepeda-Millan, UCLADr. Maya Sen, Harvard UniversityK. Tate, Brown University
TEACHING AND LEARNING AWARDSMichael Brintnall Teaching and Learning Award to support attendance at the conference
Recipient: No Award Given
CQ Press Award for Teaching Innovation for developing a new approach to teaching
Recipient: Megan Becker, University of Southern California
Award CommitteeChair: Dr. Vanessa Bouche, Texas Christian UniversityMary A. McHugh, Merrimack CollegeNathaniel Swigger, Ohio State University
APSA AWARDS
APSA AWARDS 51
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ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS
SECTION 1: Federalism & Intergovernmental RelationsMartha Derthick Book AwardConferred for the best book on federalism and intergovernmental relations published at least 10 years ago that has made a lasting contribution to the study of federalism and intergovernmental relations.
Award Committee: Katrina Kosec (Chair), International Food Policy Research Institute; Jean-Paul Faguet, London School of Economics & Political Science; Jacob Levy, McGill University
Recipient: Jonathan Rodden, Stanford UniversityTitle: Hamilton’s Paradox: The Promise and Peril of Fiscal Federalism. Cambridge University Press, 2005.
Deil S. Wright Best Paper AwardConferred for the best paper in the field of federalism and intergovernmental relations presented at the previous year’s annual meeting of the APSA.
Award Committee: Laura Evans (Chair), University of Washington; Julia Payson, New York University; Paula Clerici, Universidad de Buenos Aires
Recipients: Katrina Kosec, International Food Policy Research Institute and Tewodaj Mogues, International Monetary FundTitle: “Decentralization without Democracy.” World Politics, 2020.
Daniel Elazar Distinguished Federalism Scholar AwardRecognizes distinguished scholarly contributions to the study of federalism and intergovernmental relations.
Award Committee: Phil Rocco (Chair), Marquette University; Imke Harbers, University of Amsterdam; Connor Ewing, University of Missouri
Recipient: Kent Eaton, University of California, Santa Cruz
John Kincaid Best Article AwardConferred on the author(s) of the best article published in Publius: The Journal of Federalism in the previous year.
Award Committee: Allyson Benton (Chair), City University of London; Liesbet Hooghe, University of North Carolina; Jake Grumbach, University of Washington
Recipient: R. Kent Weaver, Georgetown UniversityTitle: “Policy Dynamics in Federal Systems.” Publius: The Journal of Federalism, 2020.
SECTION 2: Law and CourtsBest Graduate Student Paper AwardThis award (formerly the CQ Press Award) is given annually for the best paper in the field of law and courts written by a graduate student.
Award Committee: Charles Anthony (Tony) Smith (Chair), University of California, Irvine; Susan Achury, Miami University; Scott Barclay, Arizona State University; Lisa Holmes, University of Vermont; Jonathan Parent, LeMoyne College
Recipients: Nathan Carrington, Syracuse University and Claire Sigsworth, Syracuse UniversityTitle: “Home-State Interest, Nationalism, and the Legitimacy of the Criminal Court.”
Teaching and Mentoring AwardThe Teaching and Mentoring Award recognizes innovative teaching and instructional methods and materials in law and courts. The Teaching and Mentoring Award is supported by a generous contribution from the Division for Public Education of the American Bar Association.
Award Committee: Stephen Engel (Chair), Bates College; Cyril Ghosh, Wagner College; Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota; Joey Mello, DePaul University; Jamie Rowan, University of Massachusetts
Recipient: Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore College
Law and Courts Service AwardThe Law and Courts Service Award recognizes service to the section in the literal sense, as in service on committees and in leadership positions, as well as service within the Section, as in service to the profession within the field of law and courts in the form of archiving data, promoting infrastructure, representing the profession in the media, etc.
Award Committee: Keith Bybee (Chair), Syracuse University; Sara Benesh (Pashak), University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee; Jennifer Fredette, Ohio University; Lauren McCarthy, University of Massachusetts; Veronica Michel, City University of New York; Jason Pierceson, University of Illinois-Springfield
Recipient: Rebecca Reid, University of Texas – El Paso
Best Conference Paper AwardThe Law and Courts Best Conference Paper Award (formerly the American Judicature Society Award) is given annually for the best paper on law and courts presented at the previous year’s annual meeting.
52 ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS
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ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS
Award Committee: Wendy Martinek (Chair), SUNY Binghamton; Elizabeth Chrun, McGill University; Lisa Conant, University of Denver; Edward Kammerer, Idaho State University; Dagmar Soennecken, York University
Recipients: Amanda Driscoll, Florida State University and Michael Nelson, Pennsylvania State UniversityTitle: “The Minimal Costs of Court Curbing: Experimental Evidence from the United States.”
Best Journal Article AwardThis award recognizes the best journal article in the field of law and courts written by a political scientist and published during the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Kathleen Sullivan (Chair), Ohio University; Traci Burch, Northwestern University; Tao Dumas, College of New Jersey; Maya Sen, Harvard University; Lisa Vanhalla, University College London; Joshua Wilson, University of Denver
Recipient: Sarah Staszak, Princeton UniversityTitle: “Privatizing Employment Law: The Expansion of Mandatory Arbitration in the Workplace.”
Recipient: Whitney Taylor, San Francisco State UniversityTitle: “On the Social Construction of Legal Grievances: Evidence from Colombia and South Africa.”
C. Herman Pritchett Award for Best BookThe C. Herman Pritchett award is given annually for the best book on law and courts written by a political scientist and published the previous year.
Award Committee: Jeffrey Dudas (Chair), University of Connecticut; Taniesha Means, Vassar College; Paul Passavant, Hobart and William Smith Colleges; Julio Rios Figueroa Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, Mexico City; Joanna Wuest, Princeton University
Recipient: Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew UniversityTitle: The Truth Machines: Policing, Violence, and Scientific Interrogations in India. University of Michigan Press.
Recipient: Terri Peretti, Santa Clara UniversityTitle: Partisan Supremacy: How the GOP Enlisted Courts to Rig America’s Election Rules. University of Kansas Press.
Law and Courts Lasting Contribution AwardAwarded annually to a book or journal article, 10 years old or older, that has made a lasting impression on the field of law and courts.
Award Committee: Carol Nackenoff (Chair), Swarthmore College; Eileen Braman, Indiana University; Jinee Lokaneeta, Drew University; Jerry Thomas, University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh; Lydia Tiede, University of Houston
Recipient: Ran Hirschl, University of TorontoTitle: Towards Juristocracy: The Origins and Consequences of the New Constitutionalism. Harvard University Press.
Law and Courts Lifetime Achievement AwardGiven for a lifetime of significant scholarship, teaching and service to the Law and Courts field. Nominees must be political scientists who are at least 65 years of age or who have been active in the field for at least 25 years.
Award Committee: Susan Sterett (Chair), University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Rachel Cicowski, University of Washington; Tamir Moustafa, Simon Fraser University; Miriam Smith, York University; Art Ward, Northern Illinois University
Recipient: Leslie Goldstein, University of Delaware (Emerita)
SECTION 3: Legislative StudiesAlan Rosenthal PrizeIn the spirit of Alan Rosenthal’s work, this prize is dedicated to encouraging young scholars to study questions that are of importance to legislators and legislative staff and to conduct research that has potential application to strengthening the practice of representative democracy. The prize is funded by the Trust for Representative Democracy of the National Conference of State Legislatures and the State Legislative Leaders Foundation.
Award Committee: Christopher J. Clark, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Leslie A. Schwindt-Bayer, Rice University; Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin
Recipient: Leah Stokes, University of California, Santa BarbaraTitle: Short Circuiting Policy: Interest Groups and the Battle over Clean Energy and Climate Policy in the American States. Oxford University Press, 2020.
ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 53
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ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS
Carl Albert Dissertation AwardThe Carl Albert Dissertation Award is given annually for the best dissertation in legislative studies. Topics may be national or subnational in focus — on Congress, parliaments, state legislatures, or other representative bodies. The prize is funded by the Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center at the University of Oklahoma. In addition to the cash prize associated with the award, winners are typically invited to guest lecture on the OU campus with travel expenses paid by the Carl Albert Center.
Award Committee: Lior Sheffer (Chair), Tel Aviv University; Sharece Thrower, Vanderbilt University; Danielle M. Thomsen, University of California, Irvine
Recipient: Erin Lauterbach, University of VirginiaTitle: “Punishments, Incentives, and Oversight: How Legislators Turn Preference into Policy.” University of California, Riverside.
CQ Press AwardThe CQ Press Award for the best paper on legislative studies presented at the previous year’s (2020) APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Stefanie Bailer (Co-Chair), University of Basel; Oliver Huwyler (Co-Chair), University of Basel; Tomas Turner-Zwinkels (Co-Chair), University of Basel
Recipients: Mandi Eatough, University of Michigan and Jessica Preece, Brigham Young UniversityTitle: “Toward a Fuller Accounting of Lawmaking: The Lawmaking Productivity Metric (LawProM).” Paper presented at the 2019 APSA Annual Meeting.
Jewell-Loewenberg PrizeJewell-Loewenberg Prize for the best article in the Legislative Studies Quarterly in the previous year.
Award Committee: Mathias Wessel Tromborg (Co-Chair), Arhaus University; Hye Young You, New York University (Co-Chair); Michael Barber, Brigham Young University (Co-Chair)
Comparative PoliticsRecipients: Raffaele Asquer, University of California, Los Angeles, Miriam A. Golden, European University Institute; Brian T. Hamel, University of California, Los AngelesTitle: “Corruption, Party Leaders and Candidate Selection: Evidence from Italy.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 45(2): 291-325.
American PoliticsRecipient: Josh M. Ryan, Utah State UniversityTitle: “Bicameralism and Minority-Party Influence on Legislative Development: Evidence from House Standing Committee Votes.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 45(3): 365-396.
Subnational PoliticsRecipients: Michael Peress, SUNY Stony Brook University and Yangzi Zhao, SUNY Stony Brook UniversityTitle: “How Many Seats in Congress Is Control of Redistricting Worth?” Legislative Studies Quarterly, 45 (3): 433-468.
Richard F. Fenno Jr. PrizeThe Richard F. Fenno, Jr. Prize is awarded to the best book in legislative studies published in the previous year. In the tradition of Professor Fenno’s work, this prize is designed to honor work that is both theoretically and empirically strong. Moreover, this prize is dedicated to encouraging scholars to pursue new and different avenues of research in order to find answers to previously unexplored questions about the nature of politics.
Award Committee: Bryan D. Jones, University of Texas at Austin; Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas at Austin; Michelle Whyman, Florida State University
Recipients: Beth Reingold, Emory University; Kerry L. Haynie, Duke University; Kirsten Widner, University of TennesseeTitle: Race, Gender, and Political Representation: Toward a More Intersectional Approach. Oxford University Press, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Jonathan Lewallen, University of TampaTitle: Committees and the Decline of Lawmaking in Congress. University of Michigan Press, 2020.
Barbara Sinclair Legacy AwardThe Barbara Sinclair Legacy Award is designed to honor in the tradition of Professor Sinclair’s body of work, recipients of this award will have focused on individual legislative behavior, institutional rules, or the role of party in shaping legislative politics. This award is also intended to recognize scholars who employ a range of methods in their research.
Award Committee: Wendy Schiller (Chair), Brown University; Michelle Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M University; Craig Volden, University of Virginia
Recipient: Kenneth Sheplse, Harvard University
54 ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS
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ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS
Emerging Scholar AwardThe Emerging Scholar award is designed to recognize a scholar who is no more than 6 years from the year of their PhD who has informed the study of legislative politics through innovative and rigorous scholarship.
Award Committee: Melinda Ritchie (Chair), University of California, Riverside; Alexander Bolton, Emory University; Taeko Hiroi, University of Texas at El Paso
Recipient: Ken Opalo, Georgetown University
SECTION 4: Public PolicyAaron Wildavsky Enduring Contribution AwardThe Aaron Wildavsky Enduring Contribution Award is given for the best book or article published in the general area of public policy during the past twenty (20) to thirty (30) years. The book or article should have had a major impact on the field. This award carries a $500 prize.
Award Committee: Suzanne Mettler, Cornell University; Joe Soss, University of Minnesota; Samuel Workman, University of Oklahoma
Recipient: Andrea Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyTitle: How Policies Make Citizens. Princeton University Press, 2003.
Best Paper on Public Policy AwardThe Best Paper on Public Policy Award recognizes the best paper on Public Policy given at the previous APSA Annual Meeting. This award carries a $500 prize.
Award Committee: Ping Xu, University of Rhode Island; Jake Haselswerdt, University of Missouri; Gwen Arnold, University of California, Davis
Recipients: Jonas Meckling, University of California, Berkeley and Jonas Nahm, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International StudiesTitle: “Strategic State Capacity: How States Counter Opposition to Climate Policy.” Presented at APSA 2020.
Recipients: Natalia Bueno, Emory University; Felipe Nunes, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais; Cesar Zucco, Fundacao Getulio VargasTitle: “Homeowners Unite? Homeownership, Values and Voice.” Presented at APSA 2020.
Theodore J. Lowi Policy Studies Journal Best Article AwardThe Theodore J. Lowi Policy Studies Journal Best Article Award is given to recognize an article of particular distinction published at any time in Policy Studies Journal. This award carries a prize of $500.
Award Committee: Domingo Morel, Rutgers University, Newark; Annelise Russell, University of Kentucky; Heather Rice, Slippery Rock University
Recipients: Sarah E. Anderson, University of California, Santa Barbara; Rob A. DeLeo, Bentley University; Kristin O’Donovan, Wayne State UniversityTitle: “Policy Entrepreneurs, Legislators, and Agenda Setting: Information and Influence.” Policy Studies Journal, 2020.
Excellence in Mentoring AwardThe Excellence in Mentoring Award has been established to recognize sustained efforts by a senior scholar to encourage and facilitate the career of emerging political scientists in the field of Public Policy. This award carries a $500 prize.
Award Committee: Lael Kaiser, University of Missouri; Paru Shah, University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee; Christopher Witko, Pennsylvania State University
Recipient: Richard Hall, University of Michigan
SECTION 5: Political Organizations and PartiesSamuel Eldersveld Career Achievement AwardThe Samuel Eldersveld Career Achievement Award recognizes a scholar whose lifetime professional work has made an outstanding contribution to the field
Award Committee: Eric Schickler (Chair), University of California, Berkeley; Corrine McConnaughy, Princeton University; John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Recipient: Richard Hall, University of Michigan
Leon Epstein Outstanding Book AwardThe Leon Epstein Outstanding book Award recognizes a book published in the last two calendar years that made an outstanding contribution to research and scholarship on political organizations and parties.
ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS 55
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ORGANIZED SECTION AWARDS
Award Committee: Hans Noel (Chair), Georgetown University; Zim Nwokora, Deakin University; Jennifer Nicoll Victor, George Mason University
Recipient: Nathan Kalmoe, Louisiana State UniversityTitle: With Ballots and Bullets: Partisanship and Violence in the American Civil War. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
POP/Party Politics Best Paper AwardThe POP/Party Politics Best Paper Award recognizes the best paper delivered on a Political Organizations and Parties-sponsored panel at the preceding APSA annual meeting.
Award Committee: Kira Sanbonmatsu (Chair), Rutgers University; Devin Fernandes, California State University, Chico; Anna Grzymala-Busse, Stanford University
Recipients: Wenyan Deng, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Zeyu Chris Peng, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyTitle: “Latinization of Organized Labor and Democratic Immigration Positions.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Jack Walker Journal Article AwardThe Jack Walker Journal Article Award recognizes an article published in the last two calendar years that makes an outstanding contribution to research and scholarship on political organizations and parties.
Award Committee: Rob Boatright (Chair), Clark University; Zhao Li, Princeton University; Maraam A. Dwidar, Syracuse University
Recipient: Mathias Poertner, Texas A&M UniversityTitle: “The Organizational Voter: Support for New Parties in Young Democracies.” American Journal of Political Science, August, 2020. https://doi.org/10.1111/ajps.12546
Emerging Scholars AwardThe Emerging Scholar Award is given to a scholar who has received his or her PhD within the last five years and whose career to date demonstrates unusual promise.
Award Committee: Seth Masket (Chair), University of Denver; Hye Young You, New York University; Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University
Recipient: Jake Grumbach, University of Washington
SECTION 6: Public AdministrationHerbert Kaufman AwardThe Herbert Kaufman Committee will select the best paper presented on a panel sponsored (or co-sponsored) by the Public Administration section at the APSA Annual Meeting each year. The section will follow APSA’s guidance on what constitutes a “presented paper’-papers that were uploaded to the APSA conference paper site, hosted by SSRN, or posted/presented in a virtual or alternative form are eligible for the Kaufman award.
Award Committee: George Krause (Chair), University of Georgia; Anna Amirkhanyan, American University; Kenicia Wright, University of Central Florida
Recipients: Kelsey Shoub, University of South Carolina; Katelyn E. Stauffer, University of South Carolina; Miyeon Song, University of South Carolina
Title: “Do Women Officers Police Differently? Evidence from Traffic Stops.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Herbert A. Simon Book AwardThe Herbert Simon Book Award is given for significant contributions to public administration scholarship. Books with publication dates of 2015, 2016 and 2017 are eligible for the 2021 award. The books orientation may be qualitative, quantitative, empirical, interpretive, ethnographic, historical, archival, normative, or theoretical. However, textbooks, revised editions of previously published books, and edited volumes are not eligible.Award Committee: Norma Riccucci (Chair), Rutgers University; Susan Miller, Arizona State University Simon Header, Pennsylvania State UniversityRecipients: Gary J. Miller, Washington University in St. Louis and Andrew B. Whitford, University of GeorgiaTitle: Above Politics: Bureaucratic Discretion and Credible Commitment. Cambridge University Press, 2016.
Paul Volcker Junior Scholar Research GrantThe APSA Organized Section for Public Administration invites applications and research proposals from junior scholars researching public administration issues affecting governance in the United States and abroad. Proposals will be judged on their potential to shed new light on important public administration questions, their scholarly and methodological rigor, and their promise for advancing practice and theory development. Individual grants are not renewable.
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Award Committee: Frank Thompson (Chair), Rutgers University; Hongtao Yi, Ohio State University; Miyeon Song, University of South Carolina
Recipient: Chengxin Xu, Seattle UniversityTitle: “A Field Experiment on Discrimination against Immigrants in the US Health Care Market.”
Recipients: Danbee Lee, University of Nebraska-Omaha and Minsung Micheal Kang, University of Nebraska-OmahaTitle: “Bureaucratic Reputation, Whistle Blowing Management, and the Roles of Accountability Organizations.”
SECTION 7: Conflict ProcessesBest Paper AwardThis award is given annually for the best paper written by one or more untenured scholars (graduate students, post-docs, or faculty) and presented as part of a conflict processes sponsored panel or poster session at the previous annual meeting. Papers are eligible only if all authors are untenured at the time the paper is presented.
Award Committee: Jun Koga Sudduth (Chair), University of Strathclyde; Kit Rickard, University College London; Laia Balcells, Georgetown University
Recipients: Michael Rubin, University of Connecticut; Daniel Arnon, Emory University; Richard McAlexander, University of PennsylvaniaTitle: “Social Cohesion and Community Displacement in Armed Conflict. Evidence from Palestinian Villages in the 1948 War.” International Relations.
Lifetime Achievement AwardThe Lifetime Achievement award is given every other year in recognition of scholarly contributions that have fundamentally improved the study of conflict processes.
Award Committee: Burcu Savun (Chair), University of Pittsburgh; Kristin Bakke, University College London; Daniel Reiter, Emory University
Recipient: Paul Huth, University of Maryland
J David Singer Data Innovation AwardThe Singer Award recognizes projects which contribute to the enterprise of systematic data based work on conflict, international or domestic. The two primary criteria are impact and innovation. Projects with high impact influence the research of many others by providing data sets or tools which are used widely in the field. Innovative projects change how we think about data in any number of ways, such as what we can collect as data, how we collect it, and how we analyze it. Projects which create public goods for the community of scholars who study conflict systematically are those that the award seeks to recognize.
Award Committee: Andrew Owsiak (Chair), University of Georgia; Jessica Maves Braithwaite, University of Arizona; Manuel Vogt, University College London
Recipients: Glenn Palmer, Pennsylvania State University; Charles Gochman, University of Pittsburgh; Zeev Maoz, University of California, Davis; J. David Singer, University of Michigan; Daniel Jones, University of Michigan; Stuart Bremer, Pennsylvania State University; Faten Ghosn, University of Arizona; Matthew Lane, RAND Corporation; Mikaela Karstens, Pennsylvania State University; Michael Kenwick, Rutgers University; Vito D’Orazio, University of Texas at Dallas; Roseanne McManus, Pennsylvania State UniversityTitle: The Militarized Interstate Disputes Data
SECTION 8: Representation and Electoral SystemsGeorge H. Hallett AwardThe George H. Hallett Award is given to the best book, which is at least ten years old, that has made a lasting contribution to the literature on representation and electoral systems.
Award Committee: Michael Saward, University of Warwick; Cynthia McClintock, George Washington University; Petia Kostadinova, University of Illinois-Chicago
Recipient: Alan I. Abramowitz, Emory UniversityTitle: The Disappearing Center. Yale University Press, 2010.
Lawrence Longley AwardThe Lawrence Longley Award is given to the best article on representation and electoral systems published in the previous year.
Award Committee: David Fortunato, University of California, San Diego; Carolina Plescia, University of Vienna; Meg Rincker, Purdue University Northwest
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Recipients: Saad Gulzar, Stanford University; Nicholas Haas, Aarhus University; Benjamin Pasquale, Independent ResearcherTitle: “Does Political Affirmative Action Work, and for Whom? Theory and Evidence on India’s Scheduled Areas.” American Political Science Review 114(4), 2020.
Leon Weaver AwardThe Leon Weaver Award is given to the best paper presented at the previous APSA on a conference panel sponsored by the Representation and Electoral Systems Section.
Award Committee: Robert Moser, University of Texas at Austin; Stephanie Holmsten, University of Texas at Austin; Malliga Och, Idaho State University
Recipients: Amy Catalinac, New York University and Lucia Motolinia, New York UniversityTitle: “Geographically-Targeted Spending in Mixed-Member Majoritarian Electoral Systems.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
SECTION 9: Presidents and Executive PoliticsThe Richard E. Neustadt Best Book AwardThe Richard E. Neustadt Award will be given for the best book on executive politics published during 2020.Award Committee: George C. Edwards III (Chair), Texas A&M University; Rebecca Dean, University of Texas at Arlington; Ian Ostrander, Michigan State University; Joel Sievert, Texas Tech University
Recipients: Paul M. Collins, Jr., University of Massachusetts Amherst and Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North TexasTitle: The President and the Supreme Court. Cambridge University Press, 2019.
George C. Edwards III Dissertation AwardThe George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation on executive politics completed and accepted during the previous two calendar years (January 1, 2019 – Dqecember 31, 2020). The recipient will receive a $250 award.
Award Committee: Shannon Bow O’Brien (Chair), University of Texas; Diane J. Heith, St. John’s University; Jennifer Selin, University of Missouri; Adam McMahon, Rider University
Recipient: David R. Miller, East Tennessee State UniversityTitle: “All the President’s Organized Interests.” Dissertation, Washington University in St. Louis, 2020.
Founders Award Honoring Bert Rockman for Best PaperThe Founders Award honoring Bert Rockman will be given for the best paper on executive politics authored by a PhD – holding scholar at the previous year’s (2020) APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Anna Pluta (Chair), Rowan University; Katie Dunn Tenpas, Brookings Institution; Ted Ritter, Virginia Union University; Gary Hollibaugh, Jr., University of Pittsburgh
Recipient: Kevin M. Baron, Austin Peay State UniversityTitle: “Informal and Private: Veto Threats Over the Freedom of Information Act.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Founders Award Honoring Erwin C. Hargrove for Best Graduate Student PaperThe Founders Award will be given for the best paper on executive politics presented by a Graduate Student at either the preceding year’s APSA annual meeting or at any of the regional meetings in 2019 or 2020.
Award Committee: Michelle Belco (Chair), University of Houston; Gbemende Johnson, Hamilton College; Laurie L. Rice, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville; Kevin Evans, Florida International University
Recipient: Nicholas G. Napolio, University of Southern CaliforniaTitle: “Executive Coalition Building.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
The Legacy AwardThe Legacy Award will be given to a living author for a book, essay, or article, published at least 10 years prior to the award year that has made a continuing contribution to the intellectual development of the fields of presidency and executive politics.
Award Committee: Gisela Sin (Chair), University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign; Christina M. Kinane, Yale University; Sarah Burns, Rochester Institute of Technology; Jeffrey Crouch, American University
Recipient: James P. Pfiffner, George Mason UniversityTitle: The Strategic Presidency: Hitting the Ground Running, 2d. ed. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1996.
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PEP Career Service AwardEvery four years during a presidential election year, the division shall form a committee to give an award to recognize career service to the study of the presidency. The committee shall be chaired by the division’s Vice President, and the criteria for the award shall be determined by the Steering Committee or its designees.
Award Committee: Brandon Rottinghaus (Chair), University of Houston; Karen Hult, Virginia Tech; Lori Cox Han, Chapman University; Mel Laracey, University of Texas at San Antonio
Recipients: Martha Joynt Kumar, Towson University and Tom Cronin, Colorado College
SECTION 10: Political MethodologyCareer Achievement AwardThe career achievement is the highest honor bestowed by the Society and recognizes the foundational, distinguished and sustained contributions to the field and the Society made by the recipients over their careers.
Award Committee: Jeff Lewis, University of California, Los Angeles; Fred Boehmke, University of Iowa; Michael Ward, Duke University
Recipient: Larry Bartels, Vanderbilt University
Emerging Scholar AwardThe Political Methodology Emerging Scholar Award honors a young researcher, within ten years of their degree, who is making notable contributions to the field of political methodology.
Award Committee: Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University; Burt Monroe, Pennsylvania State University; Tom Clark, Emory University
Recipient: Molly Roberts, University of California, San Diego
Harold F. Gosnell PrizeThe Gosnell Prize for Excellence in Political Methodology is awarded for the best work in political methodology presented at any political science conference during the preceding year.
Award Committee: Anand Sokhey, University of Colorado; Skylar Cranmer, Ohio State University; Naoki Egami, Princeton University
Recipients: Avidit Acharya, Stanford University; Kirk Bansak, University of California, San Diego; Jens Hainmueller, Stanford UniversityTitle: “Combining Outcome-Based and Preference-Based Matching: A Constrained Priority Mechanism.”
Society for Political Methodology Poster AwardRecognizes the best political methodology poster given at any political science conference in the preceding year.
Award Committee: John Londregan (Chair), Princeton University; Patrick Brandt, University of Texas at Dallas; Sarah Bouchat, Northwestern University; Thomas Gschwend, University of Mannheim; Charles Crabtree, Dartmouth College; Michael Bailey, Georgetown University; Erin Hartman, University of California, Los Angeles; Betsy Sinclair, Washington University in St. Louis
Methods CategoryRecipient: Melody Huang, University of California, Los AngelesTitle: “Leveraging Observational Outcomes To Improve the Generalization Of Experimental Results.”
Recipient: Nuannuan Xiang, University of MichiganTitle: “A Gaussian Process Model for Causal Inference with TSCS Data.”
Applications CategoryRecipient: Erin Rossiter, Washington University in St. LouisTitle: “The Consequences of Interparty Conversation on Outparty Affect and Stereotypes.”
Recipient: Luwei Ying, Washington University, St. LouisTitle: “Religiosity and Secularism: A Text-as-Data Approach to Recover Jihadist Groups’ Rhetorical Strategies.”
Faculty PosterRecipient: Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young UniversityTitle: “Using Latent Transition Analysis to Explain Donor Behavior.”
Statistical Software AwardThe Best Statistical Software Award recognizes individuals for developing statistical software that makes a significant research contribution.
Award Committee: Sarah Bouchat, Northwestern University; Graeme Blair, University of California, Los Angeles; Clayton Webb, University of Kansas; Nicholas Beauchamp, Northeastern University
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Recipient: Ted Enamorado, Washington University in St Louis; Kosuke Imai, Harvard University; Ben Fifield, ACLU Legal Analytics GroupTitle: fastlink
Warren Miller Article AwardThe Miller Prize for is awarded for the best work appearing in Political Analysis the preceding year.
Award Committee: Bear Braumoeller, Ohio State University; Alexandar Theodoridis, University of California, Merced; Patrick Brandt, University of Texas at Dallas; Jeff Gill, American University (ex officio)
Recipients: Reagan Mozer, Bentley University; Luke Miratrix, Harvard University; Aaron Russell Kaufman, New York University; L. Jason Anastasopoulos, University of Georgia
Title: “Matching with Text Data: An Experimental Evaluation of Methods for Matching Documents and of Measuring Match Quality.” Political Analysis, 28(4): 445-468. https://doi.org/10.1017/pan.2020.1
Political Analysis Outstanding Reviewer AwardThe Political Analysis Outstanding Reviewer Award recognizes individuals who have provided exemplary assistance to Political Analysis during the previous year. Outstanding Reviewers are those who provide excellent, timely and productive feedback for authors who have submitted manuscripts to Political Analysis. Outstanding Reviewers are also those who frequently review for the journal, and who provide the Editors with productive advice about the submissions they review.
Award Committee: Jeff Gill, American University; Lonna R. Atkeson, University of New Mexico; D. Sunshine Hillygus, Duke University; Daniel Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania; Xun Pang, Tsinghua University; Betsy Sinclair, Washington University in St. Louis
Recipient: Melissa Rogers, Claremont Graduate University
Excellence in Mentoring AwardThe Society for Political Methodology Excellence in Mentoring Award honors members of the Society who have demonstrated an outstanding commitment to mentoring and advising graduate and/or undergraduate students and, in particular, those from underrepresented groups.
Award Committee: David Darmofal, University of South Carolina; Amber Boydstun, University of California, Davis; Guillermo Rosas, Washington University in St. Louis
Recipients: Kosuke Imai, Harvard University and Rebecca Morton, New York University
Box-Stefensmeier and Garcia ICPSR Summer Program ScholarshipAward Committee: Mark Pickup, Simon Fraser University; Dave Peterson, Iowa State University; Kelsey Shoub, University of South Carolina
Recipients: Michelle Irving, Rutgers University; Melina Much, University of California, Irvine; Ashley Sorensen, University of Minnesota; Marcus Vinícius De Sá Torres, Universidade Federal de Pernambuco; Linh Phan, University of California, Davis; Yu-Hsien Sung, University of South Carolina
SECTION 11: Religion and PoliticsHubert Morken Book AwardThe Hubert Morken Award is given for the best book dealing with religion and politics published within the previous year. The criteria for the award include the originality of the argument presented, quality of the research, innovative methods, readability of the text and the policy or practical implications of the scholarship.
Award Committee: David Buckley, University of Louisville; Laura Dudley Jenkins, University of Cincinnati; Eric McDaniel, University of Texas at Austin
Recipient: Alexander Thurston, Georgetown UniversityTitle: Jihadists of North Africa and the Sahel: Local Politics and Rebel Groups. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Honorable Mention: John W. Compton, Chapman UniversityTitle: The End of Empathy: Why White Protestants Stopped Loving Their Neighbors. Oxford University Press, 2020.
Honorable Mentions: Amanda Hollis-Brusky, Pomona College and Joshua Wilson, University of DenverTitle: Separate but Faithful: The Christian Right’s Radical Struggle to Transform Law and Legal Culture. Oxford University Press, 2020.
Aaron Wildavsky Dissertation in Religion and Politics AwardThe Aaron Wildavsky Award recognizes the best dissertation in the field of religion and politics. Eligible dissertations have been defended in the last two years (2019 or 2020),and should make a distinctive contribution to the study of religion and politics, broadly understood.
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Award Committee: Rina Williams, University of Cincinnati; Kristina Teater, University of Cincinnati; Guadalupe Tuñón, Princeton University; Peter Henne, University of Vermont
Recipient: Alexandra Blackman, Cornell UniversityTitle: “The Politicization of Faith: Settler Colonialism, Education, and Political Identity in Tunisia.”
Honorable Mention: Alon Burstein, Hebrew University of JerusalemTitle: “Terrorizing God’s Enemies: The Influence of Religion on Terror Group Activity.”
Ted Jelen Best Journal Article AwardThis award is presented for the best article published in Politics and Religion in the 2020 calendar year. There are no nominations for this award; every article published in the journal in 2020 is a candidate.
Award Committee: Günes Murat Tezcür, University of Central Florida; Kristin Fabbe, Harvard Business School; Jacob Neiheisel, State University of New York at Buffalo
Recipient: Ajay Verghese, Middlebury CollegeTitle: “Taking Other Religions Seriously: A Comparative Survey of Hindus in India.” Politics and Religion 13(3), 2020, 604-638.
Honorable Mentions: Andrew R. Lewis, University of Cincinnati; William D. Blake, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Stephen T. Mockabee, University of Cincinnati; Amanda Friesen, Indiana University–Purdue University IndianapolisTitle: “American Constitutional Faith and the Politics of Hermeneutics.” Politics and Religion 13(1), 2020, 57-88.
Weber Best Conference Paper in Religion and Politics AwardWeber Best Paper in Religion and Politics Award recognizes the best paper dealing with religion and politics presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting (2020).
Award Committee: Jonathan Agensky, Ohio University; Steven Brooke, University of Wisconsin; Laura Vinson, Lewis & Clark College
Recipients: Tugba Bozcaga, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyTitle: “Imams and Businessmen: Islamist Service Provision in Turkey.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Honorable Mention: Kikue Hamayotsu, Northern Illinois UniversityTitle: “The Political Origins of Religious Regime Formation in Southeast Asia.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Susanne Hoeber Rudolph Outstanding Scholar in Religion and Politics AwardThe Susanne Hoeber Rudolph Outstanding Scholar Award recognizes a scholar who has made outstanding contributions to the field of religion and politics. These contributions should be through a combination of excellent and widely influential scholarship, policy input/impact, public engagement, service, teaching, and mentorship.
Award Committee: Jocelyne Cesari, Harvard Divinity School; Joel Fetzer, Pepperdine University; Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois Chicago
Recipients: Paul Djupe, Denison University and Jonathan Fox, Bar-Ilan University
SECTION 13: Urban and Local PoliticsDennis Judd Best Book AwardThe Best Book Award recognizes the best book on urban politics published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Sarah Reckhow, Michigan State University; Lester Spence, Johns Hopkins University; David Kaufman, ETZ Zurich
Recipient: Adam Auerbach, American UniversityTitle: Demanding Development: The Politics of Public Goods Provision in India’s Urban Slums. Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Honorable Mention: Xuefei Ren, Michigan State UniversityTitle: Governing the Urban in China and India: Land Grabs, Slum Clearance, and the War on Air Pollution. Princeton University Press, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa CruzTitle: Resisting Redevelopment: Protest in Aspiring Global Cities. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Best Dissertation AwardThe Best Dissertation Award is given annually for the best dissertation on urban politics accepted in the previous year.
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Award Committee: Eleonora Pasotti, University of California, Santa Cruz; Christopher Warshaw, George Washington University; Akira Drake Rodriguez, University of Pennsylvania
Recipient: Marshail Malik, Harvard UniversityTitle: “The Microfoundations of Identity Politics in Pakistan’s Megacity”
Honorable Mention: Tanu Kumar, College of William and MaryTitle: “How Welfare Shapes Beneficiaries’ Political and Economic Behavior: Evidence From Two Programs in India.”
Best Paper AwardUrban Affairs Review is sponsoring a $250 award for the Best Paper in Urban, Local, or Regional Politics presented at the American Political Science Association conference.
Award Committee: Philip Ashton, University of Illinois, Chicago; Mirya Holman, Tulane University; Mary Alice Haddad, Wesleyan University
Recipients: Rafaelle Bazurli, Ca’ Foscari University, Venice and David Kaufmann, Swiss Federal Institute of TechnologyTitle: “Asylum Policy-Making in European Cities.”
Norton Long Career Achievement AwardThe Norton Long Career Achievement Award is presented annually to a scholar who has made distinguished contributions to the study of urban politics over the course of a career through scholarly publication, the mentoring of students, and public service.
Award Committee: Margaret Weir, Brown University; Rodney Hero, Arizona State University; John Mollenkopf, City University of New York
Recipient: Terry Moe, Stanford University
Susan Clarke Young Scholars’ AwardThe Susan Clarke Young Scholars’ award recognizes scholars who completed their Ph.D. within the last three years (or are ABDs) and submitted a paper proposal for the 2020 APSA meeting to the 2020 Division Chairs.
Award Committee: Vlad Kogan, Ohio State University; Meg Rithmire, Harvard University; Christopher Gore, Ryerson University
Recipients: Maria Carreri, University of California, San Diego and Tanu Kumar, College of William and Mary
Clarence Stone Scholar AwardThe Clarence Stone Scholar Award recognizes up to two young scholars who are making a significant contribution to the study of urban politics. The award is to be given to up to two post-PhD scholars who are in their career (pre-tenure, or recently advanced within the last 3 years).
Award Committee: Jessica Trounstine, University of California, Merced; Anne Pitcher, University of Michigan; Kimberly Johnson, New York University
Recipients: Eduardo Moncada, Barnard College and Katherine Einstein, Boston University
SECTION 15: Science, Technology & Environmental PoliticsDon K. Price AwardThe Don K. Price Award is given for the best book on science, technology, and politics published in the last year.
Award Committee: Chris Weible (Chair), University of Colorado Denver; Louise Comfort, University of Pittsburgh; Kristin Taylor, Wayne State University
Recipient: Leah Stokes, University of California, Santa BarbaraTitle: Short-Circuiting Policy: Interest Groups and the Battle Over Clean Energy and Climate Policy in the American States. Oxford University Press, 2021.
Lynton Keith Caldwell PrizeThe Lynton Keith Caldwell Prize is given for the best book on environmental politics and policy published in the past three years.
Award Committee: Liz Shanahan (Chair), Montana State University; Eve Bratman, Franklin & Marshall College; Rebecca Bromley-Truijillo, Christopher Newport University
Recipient: Kimberly K. Smith, Carleton CollegeTitle: The Conservation Constitution, The conservation movement and constitutional change 1870-1930. University Press of Kansas, 2019.
Virginia M. Walsh Dissertation AwardThe Virginia Walsh Dissertation Award is named in honor of a young scholar who tragically passed away last year, is given for the best dissertations in the field of science, technology and environmental politics. Nominations should include full dissertation.
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Award Committee: Ramiro Berardo (Chair), Ohio State University; Leah Stokes, University of California, Santa Barbara; Jared Finnegan, Princeton University
Recipient: Alexander Gard-Murray, University of OxfordTitle: “Splitting the Check: A Political Economy of Climate Change Policy”
Paul A. Sabatier Best Conference Paper AwardThe Paul A. Sabatier Best Conference Paper Award is given for the best paper on science, technology, and environmental politics presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Elizabeth Koebele (Chair), University of Nevada, Reno; Erik Merkley, University of Toronto; Hongtao Yi, Ohio State University
Recipients: Saad Bulzar, Stanford University; Apoorva Lal, Stanford University; Benjamin Pasquale, Independent ResearcherTitle: “Representation and Forest Conservation: Evidence from India’s Scheduled Areas.” Paper Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
The Elinor Ostrom Career Achievement AwardThe Elinor Ostrom Career Achievement Award is given to an individual in recognition of their lifetime contribution to the study of science, technology, and environmental politics.
Award Committee: Matto Mildenberger, University of California, Santa Barbara; Aseem Prakash, University of Washington; Deserai Crow, University of Colorado, Denver
Recipient: Peter May, University of Washington
The Evan Ringquist Best Paper AwardThe Best Paper Award is given for the best paper published in a relevant journal in the last two years. Relevant journals include political science, public administration, public policy, interdisciplinary environmental science, and science and technology studies journals.
Award Committee: Sarah Anderson (Chair), University of California, Santa Barbara; Aditya Das Gupta, University of California, Merced; Geoboo Song, University of Arkansas
Recipient: Amanda Kennard, Stanford UniversityTitle: “The Enemy of My Enemy: When Firms Support Climate Change Regulation.” International Organization. 2020, 74(2), 187-221.
The Emerging Young Scholars AwardThe Emerging Young Scholar Award is given in recognition of a researcher, within ten years of their PhD degree, who is making notable contributions to the field of science, technology, and environmental politics.
Award Committee: Rachel Krause, University of Kansas; Mark Buntaine, University of California, Santa Barbara; Edella Schlager, University of Arizona
Recipients: Patrick Bayer, University of Strathclyde and Gwen Arnold, University of California, Davis
SECTION 16: Women, Gender, and Politics ResearchBest Dissertation PrizeThe Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation on women and politics completed and successfully defended in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Anne Runyan, University of Cincinnati; Isabel Castillo, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile; Catherine Wineinger, Western Washington University
Recipient: Kelly Kaitlin-Thompson, Purdue UniversityTitle: “There is Power in a Plaza: Social Movements, Democracy, and Spatial Politics.”
Best Paper AwardThe Best Paper Award is given for the best paper on women and politics at the previous year’s APSA conference. Any individual can nominate a paper for the award, including self-nominations. In addition, all papers presented in the Women and Politics Research Section and posted to the APSA conference paper website will be considered nominated.
Award Committee: Colleen Shogan, The David M. Rubenstein Center, White House Historical Association, and Women’s Suffrage Centennial Commission; Christine M. Slaughter, University of California, Los Angeles; Elena Gambino, Rutgers University
Recipients: Dr. Rebecca Sanders, University of Cincinnati and Dr. Laura Dudley Jenkins, University of CincinnatiTitle: “Control, Alt, Delete: Patriarchal Populist Attacks on International Women’s Rights.”
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The Okin-Young Award in the Feminist Political TheoryThe Okin-Young Award in Feminist Political Theory is jointly given by the Section, Foundations of Political Theory, and the Women’s Caucus for Political Science. The award commemorates the scholarly, mentoring, and professional contributions of Susan Moller Okin and Iris Marion Young to the development of the field of feminist political theory. This annual award recognizes the best paper on feminist theory published in an English language academic journal during the previous calendar year. Papers are considered by self-nomination or nomination by other individuals.
Award Committee: Dr. Mehwish Sarwari, Buffalo State University; Menaka Philips, Tulane University; Judith Grant; Ohio University
Recipient: Dr. Jemima Repo, Newcastle UniversityTitle: “Feminist Commodity Activism: The New Political Economy of Feminist Protest.”
Best Paper on Race and Intersectionality AwardBest Paper on Intersectionality, to be co-sponsored with the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics Section. This award is for the best paper addressing intersectionality presented at the previous year’s annual meeting. The scope of the award recognizes the roots of intersectional analysis in a critical analysis of the lived experiences of women of color, while also allowing for a more expansive reading of identity politics that takes into account multiple subjectivities and experiences, both within and outside the United States. Nomination Instructions: Self-nominations and nominations by others are welcome. To be considered for this award, a copy of the article should be sent electronically to each committee member by the deadline set by the Section.
Award Committee: Nadia E. Brown, Georgetown University; Kenicia Wright, University of Central Florida; Jamil Scott, Georgetown University; Ivy Cargile, California State University, Bakersfield
Recipient: Sally Nuamah, Northwestern UniversityTitle: “Public Perceptions of Black Girls and their Punitive Consequences.”
Public Engagement AwardPublic engagement award: An annual award to recognize the exemplary public-facing work of political scientists in the field of Women, Gender, and Politics. This award seeks to recognize significant efforts to serve a local community/do outreach on women, gender and politics, or efforts to diffuse knowledge beyond the classroom, and to make a social/political difference. While all faculty are eligible for this award, we especially welcome nominations of permanent and non-permanent faculty with teaching loads of 3-3 and above.
Award Committee: Lorna Bracewell, Flagler College; Alice Kang, University of Nebraska-Lincoln; Kanisha Bond, Binghamton University
Recipient: Dr. Karen L. Owen, University of West Georgia
Best Article AwardBest article published in Politics & Gender: An annual award to recognize the best article published in our section journal, Politics & Gender, during the previous year.
Award Committee: Kristin Williams, Clark University; Andrew Reynolds, Princeton University; Danielle Thomsen, University of California, Irvine
Recipient: Jennifer Shore, University of MannheimTitle: “Singled Out or Drawn In? Social Policies and Lone Mothers’ Political Engagement.”
SECTION 17: Foundations of Political TheoryDavid Easton AwardThe David Easton Award is given for a book that broadens the horizons of contemporary political science by engaging issues of philosophical significance in political life through any of a variety of approaches in the social sciences and humanities.
Award Committee: John McCormick, University of Chicago; James Martel, San Francisco State University; Lori Marso, Union College
Recipient: Cressida Heyes, University of AlbertaTitle: Anaesthetics of Experience. Duke University Press, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Mahmood MandaniTitle: Neither Settler Nor Native. Harvard University Press, 2020.
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First Book AwardThe First Book Award is given for a first book by a scholar in the early stages of his or her career in the area of political theory or political philosophy.
Award Committee: Elizabeth Anker, George Washington University; Lida Maxwell, Boston University; Yves Winter, McGill University
Recipient: Kyong-Min Son, University of DelawareTitle: The Eclipse of the Demos: The Cold War and the Crisis of Democracy before Neoliberalism. University Press of Kansas, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Sara Rushing, Montana State UniversityTitle: The Virtues of Vulnerability. Oxford University Press, 2020.
The Okin-Young Award in the Feminist Political TheoryThe Okin-Young Award in Feminist Political Theory is jointly given by the Section, Foundations of Political Theory, and the Women’s Caucus for Political Science. The award commemorates the scholarly, mentoring, and professional contributions of Susan Moller Okin and Iris Marion Young to the development of the field of feminist political theory. This annual award recognizes the best paper on feminist theory published in an English language academic journal during the previous calendar year. Papers are considered by self-nomination or nomination by other individuals.
Award Committee: Dr. Mehwish Sarwari, Buffalo State University; Menaka Philips, Tulane University; Judith Grant; Ohio University
Recipient: Dr. Jemima Repo, Newcastle UniversityTitle: “Feminist Commodity Activism: The New Political Economy of Feminist Protest.”
SECTION 18: Information Technology and PoliticsBest Dissertation in the APSA Information Technology and Politics SectionThe Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation in the area of Information Technology and Politics defended April 1 or later of the previous calendar year (after April 1, 2020 for the 2021 award).
Award Committee: Xu Xu, Stanford University; Abigail Coplin, Vassar College; Matthew Placek, University of South Carolina Upstate
Recipient: Josh Simons, Harvard UniversityTitle: “Democracy against Prediction: Citizen Rule in the Age of Machine Learning.”
Best Paper in the APSA Information Technology and Politics SectionBest paper presented in information technology and politics at the previous year’s APSA.
Award Committee: Michael M. Franz, Bowdoin College; Gregory J. Martin, Stanford University; Travis N. Ridout, Washington State University
Recipients: Annelise Russell, University of Kentucky and Whitney Hua, University of Southern CaliforniaTitle: “Tweeting Red: Angry Emotional Appeals in Congress.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Best Article in the APSA Information Technology and Politics SectionBest article published in Information Technology and Politics published in the previous calendar year (i.e. 2020 for 2021’s award call; must have appeared in an issue – articles that are published as online first should be considered for the year in which they are published in their final version).
Award Committee: Jennifer M. Larson, Vanderbilt University; Sharon Meraz, University of Illinois; Stephen Meserve, Northern Arizona University
Recipients: Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania; Macartan Humphreys, Columbia University and WZB Berlin, Gabriella Sacramone-Lutz, Columbia UniversityTitle: “Information Technology and Political Engagement: Mixed Evidence from Uganda.” Journal of Politics 82(4), 2020. https://doi.org/10.1086/708339
Best Book in the APSA Information Technology and Politics SectionThe Best Book Award recognizes the best book in the area of Information Technology and Politics. The contest is limited to books published in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Nils Weidmann, University of Konstanz; Espen Geelmuyden Rod, Uppsala University; Molly Roberts, University of California, San Diego
Recipient: Rachel K. Gibson, University of ManchesterTitle: When the Nerds Go Marching in: How Digital Technology Moved from the Margins to the Mainstream of Political Campaigns. Oxford University Press, 2020, Print ISBN-13: 9780195397789.
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Best Student Paper in the APSA Information Technology and Politics SectionBest student paper presented in information technology and politics at the previous year’s APSA.
Award Committee: Heather Hughes, University of Haifa; Chris Barrie, Edinburgh University; Kira Pronin, University of Pittsburgh
Recipients: Katharina Heger, Leipzig University and Christian P. Hoffmann, Leipzig UniversityTitle: “Women’s Online Political Participation: Empowerment Through a Feminist Identity.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
SECTION 19: International SecurityKenneth N. Waltz Dissertation AwardThe Kenneth N. Waltz Dissertation Award is a yearly award given by the International Security section to the best defended dissertation on the study of international security and arms control.
Award Committee: Sumit Ganguly (Chair), Indiana University; Brian Blankenship, University of Miami; Roseanne McManus, Pennsylvania State University; Peter Henne, University of Vermont; Daniel Gressang, Embry Riddle Aeronautical University
Recipient: Renanah Miles Joyce, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard UniversityTitle: “Exporting Might and Right: Great Power Security Assistance and Developing Militaries.” 2020.
Joseph J. Kruzel Memorial Award for Public ServiceThe Joseph Kruzel Memorial Award for Distinguished Public Service is awarded to a scholar with a distinguished career in national security affairs both as an academic and a public servant. It is given to memorialize Joseph Kruzel, a security studies scholar and policy official who was killed while on a diplomatic mission to Bosnia.
Award Committee: Gale Mattox (Chair), United States Naval Academy; Wayne Bert; Bruce Jentleson, Duke University; David A. Cooper, US Naval War College; Meredith Reid Sarkees, Global Women’s Leadership in International Security
Recipient: Susan Shirk, University of California, San Diego
Best International Security ArticleThe International Security organized section of Best Article Award seeks to recognize the best peer-reviewed articles in the field of international security and security studies each year.
Award Committee: Charles Boehmer (Chair), University of Texas at El Paso; James McCormick, Iowa State University; Ryuta Ito, Keio University; Erica De Bruin, Hamilton University; Jackie Kerr, Stanford University
Co-Recipient: Daniel Altman, Georgia State UniversityTitle: “The Evolution of Territorial Conquest After 1945 and the Limits of the Territorial Integrity Norm.” International Organization, 74(3), 2020: 490- 522. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020818320000119
Co-Recipient: Annette Idler, University of OxfordTitle: “The Logic of Illicit Flows In Armed Conflict Explaining Variation in Violent Nonstate Group Interactions in Colombia.” World Politics, 72(3), July 2020: 335-376. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0043887120000040
Best International Security Book by Non-Tenured FacultyAwarded to best international security themed book published in 2020 by a scholar who has not been awarded tenure.
Award Committee: Ryan Burke (Chair), United States Air Force Academy; Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University; Brian J Phillips, University of Essex; Katherine Barbieri, University of South Carolina
Recipient: Barbara Elias, Bowdoin CollegeTitle: Why Allies Rebel: Defiant Local Partners in Counterinsurgency Wars. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
SECTION 20: Comparative PoliticsLuebbert Book PrizeAwarded annually for the best book published in the field of comparative politics.
Award Committee: Dawn Teele (Chair), University of Pennsylvania; Jason Brownlee, University of Texas at Austin; Jana Morgan, University of Tennessee; Lucan Way, University of Toronto
Recipient: Rachel Brulé, Boston UniversityTitle: Women, Property, and Power. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
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Luebbert Article PrizeAwarded annually for the best article published in the field of comparative politics during 2019 and 2020.
Award Committee: Gabrielle Kruks-Wisner (Chair), University of Virginia; Carl Henrik Knutsen, University of Oslo; David Doyle, University of Oxford
Recipient: Daniel Gingerich, University of VirginiaTitle: “Ballot Reform as Suffrage Restriction: Evidence from Brazil’s Second Republic.” American Journal of Political Science, (2019) 63(4), 920-935.
Sage Paper PrizeAwarded to the best paper in comparative politics presented at the 2020 meeting of the American Political Science Association.
Award Committee: John Gerring (Chair), University of Texas at Austin; Junyan Jiang, Columbia University; Milada Vachudova, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipients: Nikhar Gaikwad, Columbia University; Erin Lin, Ohio State University; Noah Zucker, Columbia UniversityTitle: “Genocide and the Gender Gap in Political Representation.”
Lijphart/Przeworski/Verba Dataset AwardAwarded annually to a publicly-available dataset in the field of comparative politics. Nominations (including self-nominations) should be submitted directly to the committee. Please include a nomination letter, instructions on accessing the data set, and any publications or documents describing the data set.
Award Committee: George Tsebelis (Chair), University of Michigan; Jennifer Bussell, University of California, Berkeley; Ryan Carlin, Georgia State University
Recipients: Jacob Nyrup, Aarhus University and University of Oxford and Stuart Bramwell, University of OxfordTitle: “Who governs?”
Theda Skocpol Prize for Emerging ScholarsAwarded to a scholar up to ten years post-PhD whose work has made impactful empirical, theoretical and/or methodological contributions to the study of comparative politics.
Award Committee: Evelyne Huber (Chair), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Peter Hall, Harvard University; Yuen Yuen Ang, University of Michigan
Recipient: Amy Erica Smith, Iowa State University and Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
SECTION 21: European Politics and SocietyBest Book AwardThe Best Book Award is given for the best book on European politics and society published in 2020.
Award Committee: Christopher Way, Cornell University; Aina Gallego, Institut de Barcelona d’ Estudis Internacionals; Darius Orston, University of Toronto
Recipients: Isabela Mares, Yale University and Lauren Young, University of California, DavisTitle: Conditionality and Coercion: Electoral Clientelism in Eastern Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Honorable Mentions: Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich; Nils Redeker, University of Zurich; Ari Ray, European University InstituteTitle: The Politics of Bad Options: Why the Eurozone’s Problems Have Been So Hard to Resolve. Oxford University Press, 2020.
Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation AwardThe Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation on European politics and society filed in 2020.
Award Committee: Seth Jolly, Syracuse University; Alison Johnston, Oregon State University; Andreas Wiedemann, Princeton University
Recipient: Laura Jakli, University of California, BerkeleyTitle: “Estimating Extremism: New Measures of Extreme Party Preferences and Issue Positions?”
Honorable Mention: Diane Bolet, London School of EconomicsTitle: “‘All Politics is Local’: How Local Context Explains Radical Right Voting.”
Honorable Mention: Jan P. Vogler, University of VirginiaTitle: “The Political Economy of Public Bureaucracy: The Emergence of Modern Administrative Organizations.”
Best Article AwardThe Best Article Award is given for the best article dealing with European politics and society published in 2020.
Award Committee: Sergi Pardos-Prado, University of Glasgow; Alexandra Cirone, Cornell University; Tarik Abou-Chadi, University of Zurich
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Recipients: Nan Zhang, Max Planck Institute of Collective Goods and Melissa Lee, Princeton UniversityTitle: “Literacy and State–Society Interactions in Nineteenth-Century France.” American Journal of Political Science, 64(6) 1001–1016.Honorable Mentions: Francesc Amat, University of Barcelona, IPERG-UB; Carles Boix, Princeton University, IPERG-UB; Jordi Muñoz, University of Barcelona, IPERG-UB; Toni Rodon, Universitat Pompeu FabraTitle: “From Political Mobilization to Electoral Participation: Turnout in Barcelona in the 1930s.” Journal of Politics 82(4).
Best Paper AwardThe Best Paper Award is given for the best paper presented on European politics and society at the 2020 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association.
Award Committee: Jonathan Polk, Lund University; Daphne Halikiopoulou, University of Reading; Jeremy Ferwerda, Dartmouth College
Co-Recipients: Donghyun Danny Choi, University of Pittsburgh; Mathias Poertner, University of Texas A&M; Nicholas Sambanis, University of PennsylvaniaTitle: “The Hijab Penalty: Feminist Backlash to Muslim Immigrants.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Co-Recipient: Gemma Dipoppa, University of PennsylvaniaTitle: “How Criminal Organizations Expand to Strong States: Migrant Exploitation and Political Brokerage in Northern Italy.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
SECTION 22: State Politics and PolicyCareer Achievement AwardThis annual award is given to a political scientist who has made a significant lifetime contribution to the study of politics and policy in the American states.
Award Committee: Anthony Nownes (Chair), University of Tennessee; Brent Boyea, University of Texas at Arlington; Patricia Kirkland, Princeton University
Recipient: Lynda W. Powell, University of Rochester
Virginia Gray Book AwardThis annual award is given to the author(s) of the best political science book published on the subject of U.S. state politics or policy in the preceding three calendar years.
Award Committee: Edward L. Lascher, Jr. (Chair), California State University, Sacramento; Patrick Flavin, Baylor University; Kathleen Marchetti, Dickinson College
Recipient: Leah C. Stokes, University of California, Santa BarbaraTitle: Short Circuiting Policy: Interest Groups and the Battle Over Clean Energy and Climate Policy in the American States. Oxford University Press, 2020.
Christopher Z. Mooney Best Dissertation PrizeThis annual award is given to the author of the best PhD dissertation in American state politics and policy completed during the previous calendar year. The winner receives a plaque and $1000. Support for this prize comes from the annual return of the endowed Mooney Fund.
Award Committee: Shauna Reilly (Chair), Northern Kentucky University; Erin Heidt-Forsythe, Pennsylvania State University; Benjamin Melusky, Old Dominion University
Recipient: Scott LaCombe, Smith CollegeTitle: “Institutional Design and the Politics of U.S. States.”
State Politics and Policy Quarterly Best Paper Presented at a Professional MeetingThis annual award is given to the author(s) of the best paper on state politics and policy presented (or scheduled to have been presented) at any professional meeting in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Brianne Heidbreder (Chair), Kansas State University; James Avery, Stockton University; Gregory Shufeldt, Butler University
Recipients: Peter Bucchianeri, Vanderbilt University; Craig Volden, University of Virginia; Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt UniversityTitle: “Legislative Effectiveness in the American States.”
Recipient: Zoe Nemerever, University of California, San DiegoTitle: “Rural Representation in the American States.”
Best Journal Article AwardThis annual award is given to the author(s) of the best journal article on U.S. state politics or policy published during the previous calendar year in any peer-reviewed journal (book reviews, review essays, and chapters published in edited volumes are not eligible).
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Award Committee: William Franko (Chair), West Virginia University; Thomas J. Hayes, University of Connecticut; Abby Matthews, State University of New York at Buffalo
Recipients: Jeffrey J. Harden, University of Notre Dame and Justin H. Kirkland, University of VirginiaTitle: “Does Transparency Inhibit Political Compromise?” American Journal of Political Science, Early View, September, 2020.
Recipient: Srinivas Parinandi, University of ColoradoTitle: “Policy Inventing and Borrowing among State Legislatures.” American Journal of Political Science 64(4): 852-868. 2020.
SECTION 23: Political CommunicationDoris Graber Outstanding Book AwardThe Doris Graber Outstanding Book Award is given to the most outstanding book in the field of political communication that was published in the past decade.
Award Committee: Abby Jones (Chair), AJ Research; Sharon Jarvis, University of Texas at Austin; Bob Boynton, University of Iowa
Recipients: Bethany Albertson, University of Texas at Austin and Shana Kushner Gadarian, Syracuse UniversityTitle: Anxious Politics: Democratic Citizenship in a Threatening World. Cambridge University Press, 2015.
Paul Lazarsfeld Best Paper AwardThe Paul Lazarsfeld Award recognizes the best paper on political communication presented at the previous year’s APSA annual meeting or Political Communication preconference.
Award Committee: Sean Richey (Chair), Georgia State University; Mel Atkinson, University of North Carolina, Charlotte; Alcides Velasquez, University of Kansas
Recipient: Sumitra Badrinathan, University of Pennsylvania and University of OxfordTitle: “Educative Interventions to Combat Misinformation: Evidence from a Field Experiment in India.”
Timothy E. Cook Best Graduate Student Paper AwardThe Timothy E. Cook Award recognizes the best paper on political communication presented by a graduate student at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting or Political Communication pre-conference. Preference will be given to papers presented in the Political Communication Section.
Award Committee: David Weaver (Chair), Boise State University; Chrysi Dagoula, University of Groningen; Emily Sydnor, Southwestern University
Recipient: Erin Rossiter, Washington UniversityTitle: “The Consequences of Interparty Conversation on Outparty Affect and Stereotypes.“
Thomas E. Patterson Best Dissertation AwardThe Thomas E. Patterson Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation completed in the field of political communication in the previous year.
Award Committee: Ashley Muddiman (Chair), University of Kansas; Jill Edy, University of Oklahoma; Juan Larrosa Fuentes, Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Occidente
Recipient: Yini Zhang, State University of New York at BuffaloTitle: “A Network Approach to Understanding Public Attention, Public Opinion and Communication Flows In The Digital Media System.” University of Wisconsin – Madison, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Sarah Shugars, New York UniversityTitle: “Reasoning Together: Network Methods for Political Talk and Normative Reasoning.”
Honorable Mention: Alyt Damstra, University of AmsterdamTitle: “Economic News. How It’s Made and How It Matters.”
Walter Lippmann Best Published Article AwardThe Walter Lippmann Best Published Article Award recognizes the best article published in the field of political communication in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Rosalee Clawson (Chair), Purdue University; Nuri Kim, Nanyang Technological University; Seth Goldman, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Recipients: Jason C. Coronel, Ohio State University; Shannon Poulsen, Ohio State University; Matthew D. Sweitzer, Ohio State UniversityTitle: “Investigating the Generation and Spread of Numerical Misinformation: A Combined Eye Movement Monitoring and Social Transmission Approach.” Human Communication Research, 2020.
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Honorable Mention: Andrew Guess, Princeton University; Michael Lerner, University of Michigan; Benjamin Lyons, University of Utah; Jacob Montgomery, Washington University in St. Louis; Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College; Jason Reifler, University of Exeter; Neelanjan Sircar, Ashoka UniversityTitle: “A Digital Media Literacy Intervention Increases Discernment Between Mainstream and False News In The United States And India.” PNAS, 117, 15536-15545.
Murray Edelman Lifetime Distinguished Career AwardThe Murray Edelman Distinguished Career Award recognizes a lifetime contribution to the study of Political Communication.
Award Committee: Sarah Oates (Chair), University of Maryland; Josh Pasek, University of Michigan; Eunji Kim, Vanderbilt University
Recipient: Pippa Norris, Harvard University
SECTION 24: Politics and HistoryJ. David Greenstone Book PrizeThe J. David Greenstone Book Prize recognizes the best book in history and politics in the past two calendar years.
Award Committee: Chris Howard, The College of William & Mary; Chloe Thurston, Northwestern University; James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Co-Recipient: Henrik Spruyt, Northwestern UniversityTitle: The World Imagined: Collective Beliefs and Political Order in the Sinocentric, Islamic and Southeast Asian International Societies. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Co-Recipients: Boris Heersink, Fordham University and Jeff Jenkins, University of Southern CaliforniaTitle: Republican Party Politics and the American South, 1865-1968. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Mary Parker Follett PrizeThe Mary Parker Follett Prize recognizes the best article on Politics and History published in the previous year.
Award Committee: Alexandra Cirone, Cornell University; Daniel Galvin, Northwestern University; Kathleen Sullivan, Ohio University
Recipient: Agustina S. Paglayan, University of California, San DiegoTitle: “The Non-Democratic Roots of Mass Education: Evidence from 200 Years.” American Political Science Review, 115(1), February 2021,179 – 198.
Walter Dean Burnham Dissertation AwardThe Walter Dean Burnham Award is given for the best dissertation in the field of Politics and History.
Award Committee: Matthew Berkman, Oberlin College; Lee Ann Banaszak, Pennsylvania State University; Alexis Walker, St. Martin’s University
Recipient: Brendan McElroy, University of MichiganTitle: “Peasants and Parliaments: Agrarian Reform in Eighteenth Century Europe.” Harvard University Press?.
Best Paper AwardAn award for the best paper in Politics and History presented at the previous annual meeting.
Award Committee: Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Isabela Mares, Yale University, Daniel Schlozman, Johns Hopkins University
Recipient: Matthew Denney, Yale UniversityTitle: “‘To Wage a War’: Crime, Race, and State-Making in the Age of FDR.”
SECTION 25: Political EconomyMcGillivray Best Paper AwardThe McGillivray Best Paper Award is given for the best paper in Political Economy presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: In Song Kim (Chair), Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Rabia Malik, University of Essex; Fiona Shen-Bayh, The College of William and Mary
Recipients: Nikhar Gaikwad, Columbia University; Erin Lin, Ohio State University; Noah Zucker, Columbia UniversityTitle: “Genocide and the Gender Gap in Political Representation.”
Michael Wallerstein AwardThe Michael Wallerstein Award is given for the best published article in Political Economy in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Nita Rudra (Chair), Georgetown University; Saumitra Jha, Stanford University; Elias Dinas, University of Oxford/EUI
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Recipient: Agustina S. Paglayan, University of California, San DiegoTitle: “The non-democratic roots of mass education: evidence from 200 years.” American Political Science Review 115(1) 2021: 179-198.
Honorable Mention: Francesc Amat, Universitat de Barcelona and Pablo Beramendi, Duke UniversityTitle: “Democracy under High Inequality: Capacity, Spending, and Participation.” The Journal of Politics 82(3) 2020: 859-878.
Mancur Olson Best Dissertation AwardThe Best Dissertation Award, named for Mancur Olson, is given for the best dissertation in political economy completed in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Jan Pierskalla (Chair), Ohio State University; Robin Harding, Oxford University; Guadalupe Tuñon, Princeton UniversityRecipient: Jorge Mangonnet, Columbia UniversityTitle: “Property Formation, Labor Repression, and State Capacity in Imperial Brazil.” Columbia University, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Tugba Bozcaga, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyTitle: “Essays on the Political Economy of Service Provision.” Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2020.
William H. Riker Book AwardThe Best Book Award, named for William H. Riker, is given for the best book on political economy published during the past three calendar years.
Award Committee: Frances Rosenbluth (Chair), Yale University; Avi Acharya, Stanford University; Lauren Young, University of California, Davis
Recipient: Anne Meng, University of VirginiaTitle: Constraining Dictatorship: From Personalized Rule to Institutionalized Regimes. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Guillermo Trejo, University of Notre Dame and Sandra Ley, Centro de Investigación y Docencia EconómicasTitle: Votes, Drugs and Violence: The Political Logic of Criminal Wars in Mexico. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
SECTION 27: New Political ScienceChristian Bay AwardThe Christian Bay Award recognizes the best paper presented on a new political science panel at the previous year’s annual meeting.
Award Committee: Gregory Koutnik (Chair), University of Pennsylvania; Lucrecia Garcia-Iommi, Fairfield University; John Berg, Suffolk University (Emeritus)
Recipient: Joanna Wuest, Princeton UniversityTitle: “The Impossibility of Liberation: Queer Political Thought Since the New Left?”
Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven AwardThe Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven Award recognizes an activist group, in the region of the annual meeting, that puts the ideals of the New Political Science Section, “to make the study of politics relevant to the struggle for a better world,” into practice.
Award Committee: Michael Forman (Chair), University of Washington; Kevin Funk, Trinity College; Edwin Daniel Jacob, Arizona State University; Frances Fox Piven (Honorary), The Graduate Center, City University of New York (Emeritus)
Recipient: Familias Unidas por la Justicia, Burlington, Washington
Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement AwardThe Charles A. McCoy Career Achievement Award recognizes a progressive political scientist who has had a long, successful career as a writer, teacher, and activist.
Award Committee: Rosalind Petchesky (Chair), Hunter College, City University of New York; Laura Katz Olson, Lehigh University; Terrell Carver, Bristol University; F. Peter Wagner, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
Recipient: Cornel West, Union Theological Seminary
Michael Harrington Book AwardThe Michael Harrington Book Award recognizes an outstanding book that demonstrates how scholarship can be used in the struggle for a better world.
Award Committee: Joseph Peschek (Chair), Hamline University; James Simmons, University of Wisconsin – Oshkosh; Andrew Scerri, Virginia Tech University; Matthew Evans, Northwest Arkansas Community College; Rebecca Tarlau (Honorary), Pennsylvania State University
Recipient: Albena Azmanova, University of Kent, Brussels School of International StudiesTitle: Capitalism on Edge: How Fighting Precarity Can Achieve Radical Change Without Crisis or Utopia. Columbia University Press, 2020.
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Stephen Eric Bronner Dissertation AwardFor an outstanding Political Science dissertation finished within the previous year of the APSA Meeting which exemplifies the commitment to use scholarship in the struggle for a better world.
Award Committee: Lucas Pinheiro (Chair), University of Chicago; William Sokoloff, University of Texas Rio Grande Valley; Mindy Peden, John Carroll University; Stephen Eric Bronner (Honorary), Rutgers University (Emeritus)
Recipient: Matt York, University College, Cork, IrelandTitle: “Imagining New Worlds: (R)evolutionary Love and Radical Social Transformation in the 21st Century.”
SECTION 28: Political PsychologyRobert E. Lane Book AwardThe Robert E. Lane Award for the best book in political psychology published in the past year.
Award Committee: Ashley Jardina, Duke University; Alex Theodoridis, University of Massachusetts Amherst; Cindy Kam, Vanderbilt University
Recipient: Nichole M. Bauer, Louisiana State UniversityTitle: The Qualifications Gap: Why Women Must Be Better than Men to Win Political Office. Cambridge University Press.
Best Dissertation AwardThe Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation in political psychology filed during the previous year.
Award Committee: Hakeem Jefferson, Stanford University; Eunji Kim, Vanderbilt University; Jennifer Merolla, University of California, Riverside
Recipient: Matt Nelsen, University of ChicagoTitle: “Educating for Empowerment: Race, Socialization, and Reimagining Civic Education.” Northwestern University.
Best Paper AwardThe Best Paper Award is given to the most outstanding paper in political psychology delivered at the previous year’s Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Steven Moore, Wesleyan University; Steven Webster, Indiana University; Allison Anoll, Vanderbilt University
Recipient: Elizabeth Connors, University of South CarolinaTitle: “Social Context Shapes Affective Polarization.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Distinguished Junior Scholar AwardThe APSA Political Psychology section gives Distinguished Junior Scholar Awards as grants to junior scholars (graduate students or those no more than seven years since receiving their PhD) to help fund their travel to the APSA meeting.
Award Committee: Brian F. Harrison, University of Minnesota; Christopher Federico, University of Minnesota; Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Recipients: Chryl Laird, Bowdoin College and Nic Dias, University of Pennsylvania
Hazel Gaudet Erskine Career Achievement AwardThis award recognizes a scholar whose lifetime scholarship and service to the profession has made an outstanding contribution to the field of political psychology.
Award Committee: Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles; Michael Tesler, University of California, Irvine; Cecilia Mo, University of California, Berkeley
Recipient: Shanto Iyengar, Stanford University
SECTION 29: Political Science EducationThe Craig L. Brians Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Research and MentorshipEstablished in 2014 in memory of Dr. Craig L. Brians, this award is given annually to a faculty member who demonstrates commitment to and excellence in encouraging and developing scholarship among undergraduate students, and in mentoring undergraduate students in preparation for graduate school or public-affairs related careers.
Award Committee: J. Cherie Strachan, Central Michigan University and Megan Becker, University of Southern California
Recipient: Judithanne McLauchlan, University of South Florida
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The Best APSA Conference Paper AwardThis award is given annually at the section meeting held in conjunction with the APSA annual meeting to the author(s) who present at the previous year’s annual APSA annual meeting, either in an oral session or poster session.
Award Committee: Maureen Feeley, University of California, San Diego and Matthew Platt, Morehouse College
Recipients: Christopher L. Brown, Georgia State University; Jeannie Grussendorf, Georgia State University; Michael Shea, Georgia State University; Clark DeMas, Georgia State UniversityTitle: “Changing the Paradigm? Creating an Adaptive Course to Improve Student Engagement and Outcomes in Introductory Political Science Classes.”
The Lifetime Achievement AwardThis award may be given at the annual section meeting held at the APSA annual meeting. The awardee must have a strong record of long-standing, exceptional, and extensive contributions to the goals of the section, including the promotion of the teaching and learning in the discipline and the scholarship of teaching.
Award Committee: Terry Gilmour, Midland College; Megan Becker, University of Southern California; Rachel Bzostsek Walker, Collin College; Maureen Feeley, University of California, San Diego; Mark Carl Rom, Georgetown University; J. Cherie Strahan, Central Michigan University; Patrick McKinlay, Morningside College
Recipient: Michelle Deardorff, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
The Distinguished Service AwardThis award may be given at the section meeting held at the APSA meeting. The awardee has a strong record of exceptional and extensive contributions to the goals of the section, including the promotion of teaching and learning in the discipline and the scholarship of teaching.
Award Committee: Terry Gilmour, Midland College; Megan Becker, University of Southern California; Rachel Bzostsek Walker, Collin College; Maureen Feeley, University of California, San Diego; Mark Carl Rom, Georgetown University; J. Cherie Strahan, Central Michigan University; Patrick McKinlay, Morningside College
Recipient: Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University – Corpus Christi
SECTION 30: Politics, Literature, and FilmWilson Carey McWilliams AwardThe Wilson Carey McWilliams Award for Best Paper in Politics, Literature and Film.
Award Committee: Rob Watkins, Columbia College Chicago; Katie Robiadek, Hood College; Eunji Kim, Vanderbilt University
Recipient: Elizabeth Barringer, Bard CollegeTitle: “Skulls and Flags: Contemporary Appropriations of Marvel’s Punisher”
Pamela Jensen AwardThe Dr. Pamela Grande Jensen Award for Best Book in Politics, Literature and Film.
Award Committee: Lori Marso, Union College; James Martel, San Francisco State University; Judith Grant, Ohio State University
Recipient: Michael J. Shapiro, University of Hawai‘i at ManoaTitle: Punctuations: How the Arts Think the Political. Duke University Press, 2019.
SECTION 31: Foreign PolicyBest Paper AwardRecognizing an outstanding paper submitted at the 2020 APSA Annual Convention that was submitted to and presented on a Foreign Policy Section Panel.
Award Committee: Danielle Lupton, Colgate University; Brent Sasley, University of Texas at Arlington; Anthony Lopez, Washington State University
Recipients: Kathleen Powers, Dartmouth College and Dan Altman, Georgia State UniversityTitle: “The Puzzle of Coercion Failure: How Psychology Explains Resistance to Threats.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Best Graduate Student Paper AwardRecognizing an outstanding paper, written by a graduate student, submitted at the 2020 APSA Annual Convention that was submitted to and presented on a Foreign Policy Section Panel.
Award Committee: Jacqueline Hazelton, Naval War College; Nola Hayes, University of Southern California; Dov Levin, The University of Hong Kong
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Recipient: Rachel Myrick, Stanford UniversityTitle: “Do External Threats Unite or Divide?” Presented at the 2019 APSA Annual Meeting.Honorable Mention: Naima Green-Riley, Harvard UniversityTitle: “How Perilous are Paper Fans? Public Diplomacy through Confucius Classrooms and Implications for Chinese Influence.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Best Book AwardResearch-based book published by a scholarly press during the preceding two years.
Award Committee: Christine Sixta Rinehart, University of South Carolina; A. Burcu Bayram, University of Arkansas; Thomas M. Dolan, University of Central Florida
Recipient: Brian Rathbun, University of Southern CaliforniaTitle: Reasoning of State: Realists, Romantics, and Rationality in International Relations. Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Honorable Mention: Danielle Lupton, Colgate UniversityTitle: Reputation for Resolve: How Leaders Signal Determination in International Politics. Cornell University Press, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Sebastian Schmidt, Johns Hopkins UniversityTitle: Armed Guests: Territorial Sovereignty and Foreign Military Basing. Oxford University Press, 2020.
SECTION 32: Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting BehaviorPhilip E. Converse Book AwardFor an outstanding book in the field published at least 5 years before.Award Committee: Christopher Karpowitz. Bingham Young University; Tim Ryan, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Susan Banducci, University of Exeter
Recipients: Samara Klar, University of Arizona and Yanna Krupnikov, SUNY Stony Brook UniversityTitle: Independent Politics: How American Disdain for Parties Leads to Political Inaction. Cambridge University Press, 2016.
Emerging Scholars AwardRecognizing a top scholar in the field who is within 10 years of the PhD.
Award Committee: Eva Anduiza (Chair), Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona; Brendan Nyhan, Dartmouth College; Peter Loewen, University of Toronto
Recipients: Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University and Lauren Davenport, Stanford University
Best Paper AwardRecognizing an EPOVB paper delivered at APSA 2020.
Award Committee: Yanna Krupnikov (Chair), State University of New York at Stony Brook; Ruth Dassonneville, University of Montreal; Airo Hino, Waseda University
Recipient: Mathias Poertner, Texas A&M UniversityTitle: “Does Political Representation Increase Participation? Evidence from Party Candidate Lotteries in Mexico.”
Best Article in Political BehaviorRecognizing the best article published during 2020 in the EPOVB Section journal Political Behavior.
Award Committee: Barry Burden (Chair), University of Wisconsin – Madison; Cecilia Mo, University of California, Berkeley; Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Co-Recipients: Rachel Bernhard. University of California, Davis and Sean Freeder, University of California, BerkeleyTitle: “The More You Know: Voter Heuristics and the Information Search.” Political Behavior, 42: 603-623, 2020.
Co-Recipients: Nicole Yadon, Ohio State University and Mara C. Ostfeld, University of MichiganTitle: “Shades of Privilege: The Relationship between Skin Color and Political Attitudes Among White Americans.” Political Behavior, 42, 2020.
John Sullivan AwardRecognizing a paper delivered by a graduate student on an APSA 2020 EPOVB panel.
Award Committee: Michael Tesler (Chair), University of California, Irvine; Elizabeth C. Connors, University of South Carolina; Liliana Mason, University of Maryland
Recipient: Mike Cowburn, Freie Universität BerlinTitle: “Ideological Difference & Party Destabilization in Congressional Primary Contests.”
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SECTION 33: Race, Ethnicity and PoliticsBest Book AwardThe REP Section’s annual book awards recognize the very best research exploring the multiple junctures between politics and issues of race, ethnicity, immigration, and indigeneity, as well as their intersections with other axes of identity and marginalization.
Award Committee: Matt Barreto, University of California, Los Angeles; Rene Rocha, University of Iowa; Karam Dana, University of Washington Bothell
Co-Recipients: Ismail White, Princeton University and Chryl Laird, University of MarylandTitle: Steadfast Democrats: How Social Forces Shape Black Political Behavior. Princeton University Press, 2020.
Co-Recipients: Mark D. Ramirez, Arizona State University and David A. M. Peterson, Iowa State UniversityTitle: Ignored Racism: White Animus Toward Latinos. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Best Paper AwardThe Best Paper Award is given for the best paper on Race, Ethnicity, and Politics presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Hannah Walker, University of Texas at Austin; Yamil Velez, Columbia University; John Kuk, University of Oklahoma
Co-Recipients: Nicole Yadon, Ohio State University and Mara Ostfeld, University of MichiganTitle: “¿Mejorando La Raza?: The Political Undertones Of Latinos’ Skin Color In The U.S.”
Co-Recipients: Chinbo Chong, Indiana University and Tanika Raychaudhuri, Princeton UniversityTitle: “Group-based belief systems about the racial order: Racial stereotypes and Asian American partisan identification.”
SECTION 34: International History and PoliticsRobert L. Jervis and Paul W. Schroeder Best Book AwardThis award is for the best book on International History and Politics. The award may be granted to a single- authored or multi-authored book, or to an edited volume, and will be given to works published in the calendar year prior to the year of the APSA meeting at which the award is presented.
Award Committee: Etel Solingen, University of California, Irvine; Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University; Ahmet Kuru, San Diego State University
Recipient: Kyle Lascurettes, Lewis and Clark CollegeTitle: Orders of Exclusion: Great Powers and the Strategic Sources of Foundational Rules in International Relations. Oxford University Press.
Recipient: Dov Levin, University of Hong KongTitle: Meddling at the Ballot Box: The Causes and Effects of Partisan Electoral Interventions. Oxford University Press.
Honorable Mention: Lora Viola, Freie Universität BerlinTitle: The Closure of the International System. Cambridge University Press.
Outstanding Article Award in International History and PoliticsThe Outstanding Article Award in International History and Politics recognizes exceptional peer-reviewed journal articles representing the mission of the International History and Politics Section of the American Political Science Association, including innovative work that brings new light to events and processes in international politics, encourages interdisciplinary conversations between political scientists and historians, and advances historiographical methods. The Outstanding Article Award is given to a published article that appeared in print in the calendar year preceding the APSA meeting at which the award is presented (2020).
Award Committee: Timothy Crawford (Chair), Boston College; Sarah Parkinson, Johns Hopkins University; Eric Hundman, New York University, Shanghai
Recipient: Yasuhiro Izumikawa, Chuo UniversityTitle: “Network Connections and the Emergence of the Hub-and-Spokes Alliance System in East Asia.” International Security, 2020, 45(2), 7-50.
SECTION 35: Democracy and AutocracyBest Article AwardSingle-authored or co-authored articles focusing on democratization and/or the development and dynamics of democracy and authoritarianism, published in print in 2020 are eligible.
Award Committee: Tarek Masoud (Chair), Harvard University; Amanda Edgell, University of Alabama; Aditya Dasgupta, University of California, Merced
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Co-Recipients: Vilde Lunnan Djuve, University of Oslo; Carl Henrik Knutsen, University of Oslo; Tore Wig, University of OsloTitle: “Patterns of Regime Breakdown Since the French Revolution,” Comparative Political Studies, 2020.
Co-Recipients: Matthew Graham, George Washington University and Milan Svolik, Yale UniversityTitle: “Democracy in America? Partisanship, Polarization, and the Robustness of Support for Democracy in the United States.” American Political Science Review, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Sharan Grewal, College of William and MaryTitle: “From Islamists to Muslim Democrats: The Case of Tunisia’s Ennahda.” American Political Science Review, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Robin Harding, University of OxfordTitle: “Who Is Democracy Good For? Elections, Rural Bias, and Health and Education Outcomes in Sub-Saharan Africa.” Journal of Politics, 2020.
Best Book AwardGiven for the best book focusing on democratization and/or the development and dynamics of democracy and authoritarianism, published in print in 2020.
Award Committee: Irfan Nooruddin (Chair), Georgetown University; Mariela Daby, Reed College; Danny Choi, University of Pittsburgh
Co-Recipients: Guillermo Trejo, University of Notre Dame and Sandra Ley, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, MexicoTitle: Votes, Drugs, and Violence.
Co-Recipient: Daniel Mattingly, Yale UniversityTitle: The Art of Political Control.
Best Fieldwork AwardThis prize rewards dissertation students who conduct innovative and difficult fieldwork on the topics of democratization and/or the development and dynamics of democracy and authoritarianism.
Award Committee: Kurt Weyland (Chair), University of Texas at Austin; Natalie Letsa, University of Oklahoma; Basak Taraktas, Bogaziçi University
Recipient: Mashail Malik, Harvard UniversityTitle: “The Microfoundations of Identity Politics in Pakistan’s Megacity.”
Honorable Mention: Michelle Weitzel, University of BaselTitle: “Drones, Sirens, and Prayer Calls: Unheard Consequences of a Politics of Sound.”
Best Paper AwardGiven to the best paper on democratization and/or the development and dynamics of democracy and authoritarianism presented at the 2020 APSA Convention.
Award Committee: Adrienne LeBas (Chair), American University; Matt Winters, University of Illinois; Howard Sanborn, Virginia Military Institute
Recipients: Nikhar Gaikwad, Columbia University; Erin Lin, Ohio State University; Noah Zucker, Columbia UniversityTitle: “Genocide and the Gender Gap in Political Representation.”
Juan Linz Best Dissertation AwardGiven for the best dissertation on democratization and/or the development and dynamics of democracy and authoritarianism completed and accepted in the two calendar years immediately prior to the 2021 APSA Annual Meeting (i.e., 2019 or 2020).
Award Committee: Ozge Kemahlioglu (Chair), Sabancı University; Francisco Garfias, University of California, San Diego; Carl LeVan, American University
Recipient: Christopher Carter, University of California, BerkeleyTitle: “States of Extraction: The Emergence and Effects of Indigenous Autonomy in the Americas.”
Honorable Mention: Jane Esberg, Princeton UniversityTitle: “Strategies of Repression in Pinochet’s Chile.”
SECTION 36: Human RightsBest Dissertation AwardDissertation making the greatest contribution to the field of human rights in the previous calendar year. Please send a copy to each member of the committee.
Award Committee: Marijke Breuning, University of North Texas; Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College; Brian Greenhill, State University of New York at Albany,
Recipient: Anthony DeMattee, Indiana UniversityTitle: “Domesticating Civil Society: How and Why Governments Use Laws to Regulate CSOs.” Indiana University, 2020.
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Best Book AwardThis competition is open to all books on human rights written by a political scientist and published in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: George Andreopoulos (chair), City University of New York; Alison Dundes Renteln, University of Southern California; Lucrecia García Iommi, Fairfield University
Recipients: Adam Chilton, University of Chicago and Mila Versteeg, University of VirginiaTitle: How Constitutional Rights Matter. Oxford University Press, 2020.
Best Paper AwardThis award recognizes the best paper presented on a Human Rights Section Panel at the APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Brian Greenhill, State University of New York at Albany; Karen Zivi, Grand Valley State University; Shareen Hertel, University of Connecticut
Recipients: Xinyuan Dai, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Alexandros Tokhi, WBZ Berlin Social Science CenterTitle: “New Democracies, Sovereignty Costs, and Commitment to Human Rights Treaties.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
SECTION 38: Sexuality and PoliticsCynthia Weber Best Conference Paper AwardThe Best Conference Paper Award recognizes the best paper exploring sexuality and politics presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting
Award Committee: Edward Kammerer, Idaho State University; Scott Nicholas Siegel, San Francisco State University; Anne Louise Schotel, University of Amsterdam
Recipient: Shih-chan Dai, University of Massachusetts AmherstTitle: “Describing Sexual Minority and Gay Rights: A Longitudinal Analysis of Pro-and Anti-Gay Rights Groups’ Online Messages in Taiwan.”
Kenneth Sherrill Best Dissertation AwardThe Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation on sexuality and politics completed and successfully defended in the previous two calendar years. The award is open to all scholarship that falls under the broad rubric of sexuality and politics, including studies concerning the regulation of sexuality, political responses to the regulation of sexuality, the uses of sexuality as a political construct, the intersections of sexuality with gender, race, and class, or LGBT politics and mobilizations.
Award Committee: Mellissa Michelson, Menlo College; Katherine McCabe, Rutgers University; Camilla Reutersward, University of Sussex
Recipient: Andrew Proctor, University of MinnesotaTitle: “Coming out to Vote: LGBT Mobilization in the Two-Party System, 1986-2016.” Ph.D. Princeton University
Graduate Student AwardNominated by membership.
Recipient: Isabel Felix Gonzales, University of California, Riverside
SECTION 39: Health Politics and PolicyLeonard S. Robins Award for the Best Paper on Health Politics and PolicyThe section’s Best Paper on Health Politics and Policy Award is named in honor of Leonard S. Robins, who through his presence and gentle questioning at virtually every health politics panel graciously nurtured the scholarship of both junior and senior scholars. The award recognizes the best paper on any subject that fits under the rubric of Health Politics and Policy presented at the previous annual APSA meeting.
Award Committee: Sue Tolleson-Rinehart, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Andrew Kelly, California State University, East Bay; Edward Miller, University of Massachusetts Boston; Juliana Pacheco, University of Iowa
Recipients: Kristin Lunz Trujillo, University of Minnesota and Matthew Motta, Oklahoma State UniversityTitle: “How Internet Access Drives Global Vaccine Skepticism.” International Journal of Public Opinion Research. https://doi.org/10.1093/ijpor/edab012
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Outstanding Public Engagement in Health Policy AwardThe Outstanding Public Engagement in Health Policy Award is offered to an individual who has contributed to health and health care system improvement through sustained engagement in the political and policy making process.
Award Committee: Sarah Gollust (Chair), University of Minnesota; Susan Moffitt, Brown University; Harold Pollack, University of Chicago; Matt Kavanagh, Georgetown University; Deborah Stone, Brandeis University
Recipient: Timothy S. Jost, Washington and Lee University
SECTION 40: Canadian PoliticsMildred Schwartz Lifetime Achievement in the Study of Canadian PoliticsThe Mildred A. Schwartz Lifetime Achievement Award goes to scholars who have made significant contributions through their career to the study of Canadian politics, either through development of political analysis of Canada or through incorporating Canada as a significant case in comparative political analyses.
Award Committee: Matthew Lebo, University of Western Ontario and Antoine Yoshinaka, State University of New York at Buffalo
Recipient: Elisabeth Gidengil, McGill University
SECTION 41: Political NetworksThe Political Ties AwardAwarded to the best article published on political networks in the past year.
Award Committee: Marina Duque (Chair), Florida State University; Cantay Caliskan, Denison University; Justin Kirkland, University of Virginia
Recipients: Adam Michael Auerbach, American University and Tariq Thachil, University of PennsylvaniaTitle: “Cultivating Clients: Reputation, Responsiveness, and Ethnic Indifference in India’s Slums.” American Journal of Political Science, 64(3): 471-487. July 2020.
Best Book AwardAwarded to the best article published on political networks in the past year.
Award Committee: Michael Kenney (Chair), University of Pittsburgh; Yunkyu Sohn, Waseda University; Sandra Gonzalez Bailon, University of Pennsylvania
Recipients: Andy Baker, University of Colorado, Boulder; Barry Ames, University of Pittsburgh; Lucio Renno, University of BrasíliaTitle: Persuasive Peers: Social Communication and Voting in Latin America. Princeton University Press 2020.
Best Conference Paper AwardThis award is given annually to the best paper on political networks presented by a faculty person delivered at a political science conference in the previous year.
Award Committee: Debra Leiter (Chair), University of Missouri, Kansas City; Melina Platas, New York University; Hyunjin (Jin) Song, Yonsei University
Recipients: Ted Hsuan Yun Chen, Aalto University and University of Helsinki; Ali Salloum, Aalto University; Antti Gronow, University of Helsinki; Tuomas Ylä-Anttila, University of Helsinki; Mikko Kivelä, Aalto UniversityTitle: “Polarization of Climate Politics Results from Partisan Sorting: Evidence from Finnish Twittersphere.”
John Sprague AwardAwarded to the best paper on political networks presented by a graduate student at a conference in the past year.
Award Committee: Taylor Carlson (Chair), Washington University in St. Louis; Sarah Shugars, New York University; Sahar Abi-Hassan, Mills College
Recipient: Taegyoon Kim, Pennsylvania State UniversityTitle: “Violent Political Rhetoric on Twitter.”
Career Achievement AwardAward Committee: Betsy Sinclair (Chair), Washington University in St. Louis; Cesi Cruz, University of British Columbia and University of California, Los Angeles; Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania
Recipient: Scott McClurg, Southern Illinois University
SECTION 42: Experimental ResearchBest Dissertation AwardThe Best Dissertation Award recognizes the best dissertation completed in the previous calendar year that utilizes experimental methods on substantive questions about politics or makes a fundamental contribution to experimental methods.
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Award Committee: Brendan Nyhan (Chair), Dartmouth College; Tesalia Rizzo, University of California, Merced; Darin Christensen, University of California, Los Angeles
Recipient: Tara Slough, New York UniversityTitle: “Essays on the Distributive Politics of Bureaucracy.”
Best Paper AwardThe Best Paper Award recognizes a paper that was scheduled to be presented at APSA in the previous year and features experimental research.
Award Committee: Alex Theodoridis (Chair), University of Massachusetts Amherst; Lucy Martin, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; Salma Mousa, Stanford University and Yale University
Recipients: Robert A. Blair, Brown University; Manuel Moscoso, Brown University; Andres Vargas Castillo, Yale University; Michael Weintraub, Universidad de los AndesTitle: “After Rebel Governance: A Field Experiment in Security and Justice Provision in Rural Colombia.”
Honorable Mention: Mathias Poertner, Texas A&M University and London School of Economics and Political ScienceTitle: “Does Political Representation Increase Participation? Evidence from Party Candidate Lotteries in Mexico.”
Best Book AwardThe Best Book Award recognizes the best book published in 2020 that either uses or is about experimental research methods in the study of politics.
Award Committee: Evan Lieberman (Chair), Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Samara Klar, University of Arizona; Gareth Nellis, University of California, San Diego
Recipient: Ana Bracic Michigan State UniversityTitle: Breaking the Exclusion Cycle: How to Promote Cooperation between Majority and Minority Ethnic Groups. Oxford University Press, 2020.
Public Service AwardMany experiments only occur thanks to the assistance of non-researchers who provide access to resources and data. This award recognizes a special form of public service, the facilitation of randomized experiments in political science by those outside the academy.
Award Committee: Dan Hopkins (Chair), University of Pennsylvania; Page Gardner, Women’s Voices Women Vote Action Fund (WVWVAF) and Voter Participation Center (VPC); Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania
Recipient: David Yokum, The Policy Lab, Brown University
Rebecca Morton Award for Best JEPS ArticleThis award is for the best research article published in the previous year in the Journal of Experimental Political Science.
Award Committee: Kevin Arceneaux, Sciences Po, Paris; Bert Bakker, University of Amsterdam; Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis
Recipients: Florian Foos, London School of Economics and Fabrizio Dilardi, University of ZurichTitle: “Does Exposure to Gender Role Models Increase Women’s Political Ambition? A Field Experiment with Politicians.” Journal of Experimental Political Science, 7(3): 157-166. Winter 2020, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/XPS.2019.21
Best Article with a Preregistration in JEPS AwardAward Committee: Kevin Arceneaux, Sciences Po, Paris; Bert Bakker, University of Amsterdam; Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis
Recipients: Daniel J. Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania; Cheryl R. Kaiser, University of Washington; Efrén O. Pérez, University of California, Los Angeles; Sara Hagá, Universidade de Lisboa; Corin Ramos, University of Texas at El Paso; Michael Zárate, University of Texas at El PasoTitle: “Does Perceiving Discrimination Influence Partisanship among U.S. Immigrant Minorities? Evidence from Five Experiments.” Journal of Experimental Political Science, 7(2): 112 – 136, Summer 2020, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/XPS.2019.14.
Best Replication in JEPS AwardAward Committee: Kevin Arceneaux, Sciences Po, Paris; Bert Bakker, University of Amsterdam; Cheryl Boudreau, University of California, Davis
Recipients: Costas Panagopoulos, Northeastern University and Kendall Bailey, Northeastern UniversityTitle: “‘Friends-and-Neighbors” Mobilization: A Field Experimental Replication and Extension.” Journal of Experimental Political Science, Volume 7(1),13-26, Spring 2020, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/XPS.2019.1.
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SECTION 43: Migration and CitizenshipBest Book AwardAward for best book on migration and/or citizenship published in the previous year (i.e., copyright and printed in 2020).
Award Committee: Ines Valdez (Chair), Ohio State University; Janice Fine, Rutgers University-New Brunswick; Loren Landau, University of Oxford
Co-Recipients: Allan Colbern, Arizona State University and S. Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California, RiversideTitle: Citizenship Re-Imagined. A New Framework for State Rights in the United States. New York: Cambridge University Press.
Co-Recipient: Lauren Duquette-Rury, Wayne State UniversityTitle: Exit and Voice. The Paradox of Cross-Border Politics in Mexico. Berkeley: University of California Press.
Best Article AwardAward for best article on migration and/or citizenship published (i.e., printed) in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Kimberly Morgan (Chair), George Washington University; Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania; Agustin Goenaga, Lund University
Co-Recipients: Aala Abdelgadir, Stanford University and Vasiliki Fouka, Stanford UniversityTitle: “Political Secularism and Muslim Integration in the West: Assessing the Effects of the French Headscarf Ban.” American Political Science Review, 2020, 114(3):707-723.
Co-Recipients: Rafaela M. Dancygier, Princeton University and Yotam Margalit, Tel Aviv UniversityTitle: “The Evolution of the Immigration Debate: Evidence from a New Data Set of Party Positions Over the Last Half-Century.” Comparative Political Studies, 2020, 53(5): 734–774.
Best Dissertation AwardAward for best dissertation on migration and/or citizenship accepted in the previous calendar year.
Award Committee: Lina Newton (Chair), Hunter College, CUNY; Colin M. Brown, Northeastern University; Beth Elise Whitaker, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Recipient: Elif Naz Kayran, Institut De Hautes Études Internationales et Du DeveloppementTitle: “Political Responses and Electoral Behaviour at Times of Socioeconomic Risk Inequalities and Immigration.”
Best Graduate PaperAward for best paper on migration and/or citizenship presented by a graduate student at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting (either as part of a panel or poster session).
Award Committee: Christine Brenner (Chair), University of Massachusetts Boston; Barbara Buckinx, Princeton University; James Hollifield, Southern Methodist UniversityRecipient: Aala Abdelgadir, Stanford UniversityTitle: “The Dynamics of Refugee Return: Syrian Refugees and Their Migration Intentions.”
SECTION 45: Class and InequalityBest Paper AwardFor the best paper presented at a panel sponsored by (or co-sponsored by) the Class and Inequality Section at the 2020 virtual APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Kris-Stella Trump (Chair), University of Memphis; Christopher Ojeda, University of California, Merced; Patricia Posey, University of Chicago
Recipients: Lucia Motolinia, New York University; Marko Klašnja, Georgetown University; Simon Weschle, Syracuse UniversityTitle: “The Political Selection Effects of Campaign Finance Rules.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.Best Paper on Economic and Social InequalityFor best paper among those presented on any panel at the 2020 virtual APSA annual meeting (regardless of which section sponsored the panel) that discusses the intersection of economic inequality and other social inequalities (e.g., racial, ethnic, gender, sexual orientation).
Award Committee: Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University; Jennifer Erkulwater, University of Richmond; Jesse Rhodes, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Recipient: Alice Xu, Harvard UniversityTitle: “Segregation and the Spatial Externalities of Inequality: A Theory of Collateral Cooperation for Public Goods in Cities.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
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SECTION 46: Ideas, Knowledge and PoliticsBest Book AwardThis award recognizes the best recent book on empirical or normative aspects of the causal role of ideas or knowledge claims in politics or government.
Award Committee: Paul M. D. Gunn (Chair), Goldsmith’s, University of London; Hélène Landemore, Yale University; Adam B. Lerner, Royal Holloway, University of London
Recipient: Vivien Schmidt, Boston UniversityTitle: Europe’s Crisis of Legitimacy. Oxford University Press, 2020.
Section 47: American Political ThoughtBest Book in American Political ThoughtWinner of The Best Book in American Political Thought Award will be chosen every year by the section council.
Award Committee: Dennis Rasmussen, Syracuse University; Lee Ward, Baylor University; Nora Hanagan, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Recipient: Bob Pepperman Taylor, University of VermontTitle: Lessons From Walden. Notre Dame Press, 2020.
Best Article in American Political ThoughtThe winner of The Best Article in American Political Thought Award will be chosen every year by the Section Council from among the articles published in the journal American Political Thought the preceding year.Award Committee: Steven B. Smith, Yale University; Helena Rosenblatt, The City University of New York; Justin Crowe, Williams College
Recipient: Lucy Williams, Brigham Young UniversityTitle: “Blasting Reproach and All-Pervading Light: Frederick Douglass’s Aspirational American Exceptionalism.” American Political Thought, Summer 2020.
SECTION 48: International CollaborationBest Article AwardThe Best Article Award is given for the best article on international colla
Award Committee: Judith L. Goldstein (Chair), Stanford University; Inken Von Borzykowski, University College London; Idean Salehyan, University of North Texas
Co-Recipients: Terrance L Chapman, University of Texas at Austin and Stephen Chaudoin, Harvard UniversityTitle: “Public Reactions to International Legal Institutions: The International Criminal Court in a Developing Democracy.” Journal of Politics, 82:4.
Co-Recipients: Erin Graham, Drexel University and Alexandria Serdaru, Case Western Reserve UniversityTitle: “Power, Control and the Logic of Substitution in Institutional Design: The Case of International Climate Finance.” International Organization, 74, 2020.
Best Book AwardThe Best Book Award is given for the best book on international collaboration published in 2020.
Award Committee: Ayse Kaya Orloff (Chair), Swarthmore College; Marina Henke, Hertie School; Chad Rector, Marymount University
Recipients: Allison Carnegie, Columbia University and Austin Carson, University of ChicagoTitle: Secrets in Global Governance. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
Honorable Mention: Giovanni Mantilla, Cambridge UniversityTitle: Lawmaking Under Pressure. Cornell University Press, 2020.
Best Dissertation AwardThe Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation on international collaboration for a Ph.D. awarded in 2020.Award Committee: Soo Yeon Kim (Chair), National University of Singapore; David Doyle, University of Oxford; Rupal Mehta, University of Nebraska-Lincoln
Recipient: Renanah Miles Joyce, Columbia UniversityTitle: “Exporting Might and Right Great Power Security Assistance and Developing Militaries.”
Distinguished Mentor AwardThe Distinguished Mentor Award is given for excellence in mentoring graduate students and junior faculty in the study of international collaboration.
Award Committee: Carolina Garriga (Chair), University of Essex; Cullen Hendrix, University of Denver; James Raymond Vreeland, Princeton University
Recipient: Kenneth Scheve, Yale University
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SECTION 49: Middle East and North Africa PoliticsBest Book on MENA PoliticsTwo awards are given by this committee: One for the best book published in 2020 on MENA Politics, and one for best book on MENA politics by a first-time author.
Award Committee: Lisa Wedeen (Chair), University of Chicago; Nadya Hajj, Wellesley College; Peter Krause, Boston College
Recipient: Noora Lori, Boston UniversityTitle: Offshore Citizens: Permanent Temporary Status in the Gulf. Cambridge University Press, 2019.
Best MENA Politics APSA PaperAward for best paper on MENA Politics presented at the 2020 Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Mazen Hassan (chair), Cairo University; May Darwich, Birmingham University; Dina Bishara, Cornell University
Recipients: Tugba Bozcaga, Harvard University and Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyTitle: “Imams and Businessmen- Islamist Service Provision in Turkey.”
Best Dissertation on MENA PoliticsAward for Best Dissertation on MENA Politics Defended in 2020.
Award Committee: Steven Brooke (Chair), University of Wisconsin- Madison; Nadine Sika, American University of Cairo; Bozena Welbourne, Smith College
Recipient: Lillian Frost, Virginia Tech UniversityTitle: “Ambiguous Citizenship: Protracted Refugees and the State in Jordan.”
Honorable Mention: Scott Williamson, Bocconi UniversityTitle: “The King Can Do No Wrong: Delegation and Blame Under Authoritarian Rule.”
Best Article on MENA PoliticsAward for the best article on MENA Politics published in 2020.
Award Committee: Neil Ketchley (Chair), University of Oslo; Kevin Koehler, NATO Defense College; Melani Cammett, Harvard University
Recipient: Max Gallien, University of SussexTitle: “Informal Institutions and the Regulation of Smuggling in North Africa.” Perspectives on Politics.
Recipient: Rich Nielsen, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyTitle: The Case of Female Salafi Preachers.” American Journal of Political Science.
SECTION 51: Education Politics and PolicyBest Education Politics and Policy PaperRecognizes the best paper on education politics and/or education policy presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Linda White, University of Toronto; Jason Giersch, University of North Carolina at Charlotte; Ben Ross Schneider, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Recipient: David Lopez, New York UniversityTitle: “The Informational Foundations of Mass Education: State Formation, Legibility, and Centralization Since the 19th Century.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting.
Best Education Politics and Policy DissertationRecognizes the best dissertation on education politics and/or education policy presented at the previous year’s APSA Annual Meeting.
Award Committee: Sarah Reckhow, Michigan State University; Mneesha Gellman, Emerson College; Vladimir Kogan, Ohio State University
Recipient: Matthew Nelsen, University of ChicagoTitle: “Educating for Empowerment: Race, Socialization, and Reimagining Civic Education.” Ph.D. Dissertation submitted to Northwestern University in June 2020.
Best Book on Education Politics and PolicyRecognizes the best book on education politics and/or education policy published in the previous two years.
Award Committee: Ben Ansell, Oxford University and Diana Owen, Georgetown University
Recipient: Ursula Hackett, Royal Holloway, University of LondonTitle: America’s Voucher Politics: How Elites Learned to Hide the State. Cambridge University Press, 2020.
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2020-2021 CAMPUS TEACHING AWARD RECIPIENTS 83
ACADEMIC YEAR 2020-2021 CAMPUS TEACHING AWARD RECIPIENTS
Recipients:
Kevin Anderson, Eastern Illinois University Faculty Laureate
Emmanuel Balogun, Skidmore College Skidmore College President’s Award
Galya Ben-Arieh, Northwestern University Farrell Award for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching & Weinberg College Community Building Teaching Award
Ñusta Carranza Ko, University of Baltimore Mentor of the Year
Stefanie Chambers, Trinity College Thomas Church Brownell Prize for Teaching Excellence
Jean Clipperton, Northwestern University Weinberg College Arts and Sciences Alumni Teaching Awards
Niva Golan-Nadir, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya (IDC)Excellence in Teaching Award, Lauder School of Government, Diplomacy and Strategy
Josh Gubler, Brigham Young Univeristy Early Career Teaching Award
Ramazan Kilinç, University of Nebraska at Omaha Outstanding Teaching and Instructional Creativity Award
Risa Kitagawa, Northeastern University College of Social Sciences and Humanities Outstanding Teaching Award
Mona Kleinberg, University of Massachusetts, Lowell Teaching Excellence Award
Carrie LeVan, Colby College Charles Bassett Teaching Award
Mary McGrath, Northwestern University R. Barry Farrell Faculty Award for Excellence in Mentoring
Sara Moller, Seton Hall University School of Diplomacy Teacher of the Year Award
Margot Morgan, Indiana University Southeast Indiana University Trustees Teaching Award
Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago Faculty Award for Excellence in Graduate Teaching and Mentoring
Wendy Pearlman, Northwestern University Charles Deering McCormick Professor
Anastassiya Perevezentseva, American University William C. Olson Award for Outstanding Teaching by a PhD Student
Erin Rowland Carlin, Eastern Illinois University Student’s Distinguished Professor Award
Shin Kue Ryu, Idaho State University Master Teacher
Monica Schneider, Miami University 2021 Outstanding Professor Award
Laura Merrifield Wilson, University of Indianapolis Teacher of the Year
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 83 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
84 APSA LIFE MEMBERS 2021
APSA LIFE MEMBERS
Seiichi SumiChieko Kitagawa OtsuruMoon-Cho RheeBernabe AfricaDr. Harold M. WallerDr. Paul J. RichDr. Karl H. NassmacherDr. Lawrence E. RoseProfessor Holli A. SemetkoDr. Wu Teh-Yao HeadA S. OsorioDr. Paul S. HerrnsonDr. James MacGregor BurnsDr. Frances BurkeMorris FiorinaDennis F. ThompsonDr. Jorge I. DominguezMaria E. De FranciscisDr. Kathryn SikkinkDr. Rogers M. SmithFaith H. EikaasDr. Joseph LaPalombaraDr. William P. BrandonDr. Leonard A. ColeDorothy GuyotLynn T. WhiteDr. Amy GutmannMr. C. W. Boodey, Jr.Dr. Roy LickliderDr. Gary KingWilliam A. GlaserDr. Steven J. BramsDuane E. WilderDr. Donna E. ShalalaDr. Philippa StrumDr. Benjamin R. BarberLisa AndersonJoan C. TrontoDr. George C. Edwards, IIIDr. Linda K. QuestHoward A. ScarrowDr. Jeffrey A. SegalDr. Mary L. (Molly) ShanleyRichard G. NiemiLarry M. BartelsDr. David L. WeimerBarry M. MitnickVance KritesKenneth P. MartinDr. David H. KoehlerLenneal J. HendersonMark MellmanDr. Gale A. MattoxBruce L.R. Smith
Raoul KulbergCatherine E. RudderSamuel KernellPaul E. PetersonWilliam C. Mithoefer, Jr.Professor Michael J. MalbinDr. Michael A. BrintnallAllen SchickDr. Maurice C. WoodardDr. Patricia FlorestanoProfessor Richard S. KatzDr. Mark E. RushMr. James B. WilliamsLewis GulickCharles O. JonesLarry J. SabatoDr. William R. KeechDr. Gordon P. WhitakerMary C. ThornberryProfessor Roger C. Lowery, Ph.D.Charles S. Bullock, IIIMichael NelsonFreddie C. ColstonDr. Herbert F. WeisbergDr. John A. ClarkDr. Samuel C. PattersonJohn H. KesselDr. Welling HallDr. R. Vladimir SteffelDavid C. LeegeDr. Edward G. CarminesJohn W. SmithMasaaki KataokaJohn H. RomaniCharles PressVirginia SapiroDr. John H. AldrichJane MansbridgePeter J. KosibaRex J. SwartzWilliam W. Adams, Jr.Myrta J. AndersonH. Edward FlentjeSusan WelchCharles D. HadleyDr. Henry B. SirgoDr. Luis Ricardo FragaDr. Bob DarcyDr. James L. GibsonDr. Chi HuangDr. Robert HarmelMary R. MattinglyDr. Thomas E. CroninJames H. Steele
Dr. Leonard E. GoodallDavid A. LakeJames H. LareGerald H. KramerDr. Lawrence S. RothenbergWallace H. BestRonald H. ChilcoteKeith KrehbielProfessor Bruce J. Bueno de MesquitaDr. George TsebelisRobert A. PackenhamVictor V. JamesCurtis H. O’SullivanDr. Quansheng ZhaoDennis ChongMr. Donald P. GreenDae-Sook SuhDr. Tomonori MorikawaFrederick E. EllisDr. Bruce J. DicksonHarriet B. ApplewhiteSimon D. JackmanDr. Rosemary O’LearyDr. Peter C. StoneJames E. KatzJohn T. WoolleyDr. Martha FinnemoreIkuo KabashimaScott MainwaringGerald GammJosep M. ColomerDr. Klaus ArmingeonDr. Myron J. AronoffDr. Scott Sigmund GartnerDolph SantelloGary M. SeguraForrest MaltzmanDali L. YangDr. Kathleen Hall JamiesonRandall W. StoneStephen D. AnsolabehereProfessor Michael Jones-CorreaDr. Andrew D. MartinDr. Dan ReiterVickie LangohrBryn RosenfeldDr. Pei-te LienDr. Nolan McCartyDr. Daniel P. CarpenterWendy K. Tam ChoDr. David A. SiegelDr. Eric D. LawrenceProfessor Thomas L. BrunellLeonel Fernandez
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APSA LIFE MEMBERS 2021 85
APSA LIFE MEMBERS
Professor Kenneth R. BenoitPeter AndreasDr. Strom ThackerProfessor Isabela MaresDr. Moshe HaspelJose J. SanmartinDr. Jennifer M. JensenWard J. ThomasDr. Matthew GabelDr. Joseph R. ReisertSteven Shmuel LockAlan SiaroffCraig VoldenDr. Cliff CarrubbaDr. Clement M. HenryDr. James H. AndersonDr. Clifford BobMr. Anibal Perez-LinanDr. Megan MullinDr. Adam J. BerinskyDr. Jennifer JeritDr. Michael R. TomzDr. Kenneth F. ScheveMr. Andrew SablDr. Page FortnaDr. Samuel A. ChambersDr. Jason BarabasDr. Loren R. CassChristian R. GroseAdam P. LiffCharles T. MathewesBrian J. GlennDr. Tamir MoustafaDr. Barbara KoremenosKinch HoekstraDr. Elizabeth BeaumontDr. Allan RosenbaumDr. John M. SidesDr. Tim ButheDavid LehenyMarkus PriorDr. Ronald R. KrebsWillem MaasDr. Evelyn M. SimienDavid A. SingerEvan PivonkaDr. Macartan HumphreysDr. Hahrie C. HanDr. Jennet KirkpatrickDr. Kevin ArceneauxMarc HoogheDr. Douglas A. OllivantDr. Hans NoelTeppei Yamamoto
Dr. Cas MuddeChristina DavisMichaele L. FergusonDr. Tulia G. FalletiNathan J. KellyNita RudraJamil F. Al-DandanyKosuke ImaiProfessor Devra Coren MoehlerDr. Claes H. de VreeseJoshua EisenmanRobert E. KellyDr. Idean SalehyanJana MorganWilliam HurstDr. Jason P. CasellasChikako Kawakatsu UekiQuinn MechamDr. Stephen B. LongDr. Edmund J. MaleskyDr. Jessica Luce TrounstineDr. Lisa BlaydesDr. Brandon L. BartelsDr. Alisa KesselDr. Bridget CogginsDr. Costas PanagopoulosDr. Walter F. BaberProfessor Sota KatoDr. Thad DunningDr. Eliot DickinsonJens HainmuellerDr. Laura SjobergJohn Andrew DonaldsonProfessor John CraigProfessor Sonal S. PandyaDr. Min ShuDr. Douglas L. KrinerDr. Christina M. GreerDr. Thomas PepinskyProfessor Jai Kwan JungRebecca HamlinFeryal M. CherifProfessor Tom ClarkDr. Jennifer Hayes ClarkChris Zepeda-MillanJohn GasperMr. Brian A. SmithDr. James Edward Monogan, IIIDr. Christopher C. HullDr. Megan Ming FrancisDaniel M. ButlerDr. Chris KoskiProf Christian BreunigDino Pinterpe Christenson
Professor Manny P. TeodoroNeil NarangDr. Diqing LouDr. Akshay ManglaProfessor Claire AnnesleyDr. Stefanie WalterDr. David C. WilsonDr. Jan RovnyDr. Nicholas CarnesMichael K. MillerProfessor Kristin Grace MichelitchDr. Nicholas BeauchampDr. Justin B. LitkeCatherine GoetzeGuacayarima Sosa MachadoDr. Kent E. FreezeDr. Desha GirodDr. Jesse DriscollIan OstranderProfessor Lynette H. OngDr. Jeffrey ChurchDr. Phillip M AyoubDr. Daniel M. SmithDr. Jeffrey E. GreenChris KendallDr. Diana Z. O’BrienRyan PhillipsDr. Alessandro NaiDr. Jonas BunteHyo Joon ChangDavid SzakonyiHirofumi NakanoRenato Lima-De-OliveiraAnthony L. LarsonDr. Chris HanrettyDr. Brian F. Harrison, Ph.D.Mohammed AlsaudDr. Ulrich SiebererDr. Mathias PoertnerJonathan Lee StranoDr. Dawn L. TeeleChristina Seung-Mee KimDr. Elizabeth MendenhallJonathan HomolaDr. Mneesha GellmanDr. Matthew NanesDr. PJ HenryYeaji KimNikhar GaikwadDr. Ludek SekyraHannah RidgeDr. Rod K. BrunsonThe Honorable Kevin F. JuraProf. Homero Gil de Zúñiga
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 85 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
86 APSA 2021 EXHIBITION HALL
APSA 2021 EXHIBITION HALLWASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER - EXHIBIT HALL
For your safety, APSA’s Exhibit Hall will feature widened, one-way aisles and full-length side drape between exhibit booths.
CWF
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CAREER FAIR
AM POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSN - ANNUAL MTG & EXHIBITION - 09/30/21 - 10/02/21WASHINGTON STATE CONVENTION CENTER - 4B - SEATTLE, WA
Exhibit Hall Hours:Thursday, September 30, 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Friday, October 1, 9:00 a.m. – 6:00 p.m.Saturday, October 2, 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m.
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 86 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
EXHIBITOR LISTING 87
Association for the Study of Nationalities*nationalities.org
Brookings Institution Press #307brookings.edu/bipress
Cambridge University Press #200, #201cambridge.org
Coherent Digital #303coherentdigital.net
De Gruyter*cloud.newsletter.degruyter.com/social_sciences
Duke University Press*dukeupress.edu
Georgetown University Press*press.georgetown.edu
Georgetown University Press publishes authors whose ideas will shape our collective future and inspire readers to know the world better. Our publishing embodies Georgetown University’s ideals of academic excellence, intellectual inquiry, and service for the common good.
See our complete list of political science books here and use promo code TESM for a 30% discount on any purchases through November 1, 2021.
For guidelines about how to submit a proposal, please visit our website.
Harvard University Press*www.hup.harvard.edu
I.B. Tauris, an imprint of Bloomsbury*www.bloomsbury.com
Ingram Academic Services #208www.ingramacademic.com
Institute for Humane Studies #207theihs.org
International Monetary Fund*www.IMF.org/pubs
International Political Science Association (IPSA*) www.ipsa.org
Liberty Fund, Inc. #109libertyfund.org
Lynne Rienner Publishers*www.rienner.com
McGill-Queen’s University Press #213mqup.ca
MIT Press #301mitpress.mit.edu
Midwest Political Science Association (MPSA) #214mpsanet.org
NYU Press #103nyupress.org
Oxford University Press #209global.oup.com
Penguin Random House* preducation.com
Polity* politybooks.com
Princeton University Press*press.princeton.edu/subjects/political-science
Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and Institute #301ronaldreaganinstitute.org
Roper Center for Public Opinion Research at Cornell University #312ropercenter.cornell.edu
Rowman & Littlefield & Lexington Books #300www.rowman.com
EXHIBITOR LISTING
* Exhibitors with an asterisk are virtual only.
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88 EXHIBITOR LISTING
Sona Systems #306www.sona-systems.com
Soomo Learning #308www.soomolearning.com
Springer Nature*www.palgrave.com
Stanford University Press*www.sup.org
StataCorp #106stata.com
SUNY Press #101sunypress.edu
Temple University Press #309tupress.temple.edu
University of Michigan Press*press.umich.edu
University of Pennsylvania Press*pennpress.org
University of Toronto Press*utorontopress.com
University Press of Kansas #212kansaspress.ku.edu
W.W. Norton & Company #206wwnorton.com
Woodrow Wilson Center*www.wilsoncenter.org
Yale University Press #207yalebooks.com
EXHIBITOR LISTING
* Exhibitors with an asterisk are virtual only.
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 88 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
ADVERTISEMENTS 89
ADVERTISEMENTS
Thank You to the 2021 Annual Meeting Advertisers
Association for the Study of Nationalities
Council on Foreign Relations
Duke University Press
HarperCollins Publishers
Harvard University Press
Lexington Books
Princeton University Press
Rowman & Littlefield
Stanford University Press
StataCorp
SUNY Press
Temple University Press
University of California Press
University of Chicago Press
University of Michigan Press
University of Toronto Press
West Academic
Yale University Press
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 89 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
Who Joins APSA?
APSA’s member benefits are designed to ensure that all of our members receive the highest value for their membership. Our membership is comprised of:
Faculty, students, K-12 educators, consultants, researchers, retired members
Undergraduate and Graduate Departments
Libraries, research institutes, think tanks, embassies, and non-governmental organizations
INDIVIDUAL MEMBERS:
DEPARTMENTALMEMBERS:
INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS:
The American Political Science Association promotes scholarly research and discourse across the field, of political science, while continuing to promote, and expand professional opportunities. A membership in APSA enables access to benefits, programs, and services that will help you stay abreast with evolving methodologies, research topics, and approaches in the field and allow you to have a direct impact on the discipline.
Go to www.apsanet.org to become a member today!
American Pol i t ica l Sc ience Associat ion • 1527 New Hampshire Ave, Washington, DC, 20036-1206 • www.apsanet.org
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 90 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
FEATURING:
+ PubLIC SCHOLARSHIP
+ MEMBER SPOTLIGHTS
+ NEWS OF THE DISCIPLINE
+ IN MEMORIAMS
+ ASSOCIATION UPDATES
+ and more!
Political Science Today
Digital editions are available at www.apsanet.org/today.
Update your mailing address at:
www.apsanet.org/userhome
Political Science Today publishes every February, May,
August, and November in print and online.
THE MEMBER NEWS MAGAZINE OF THE APSA
www.apsanet.org/to�ay
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 91 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
Apply this Fall for the 2022-23 CFP fellowship year!
Congressional Fellowship Program Advisory Committee
Michelle Chin* Joan Claybrook*Richard Cohen Charles E. Cook, Jr. Menna Demessie* Robert Dole Ronald D. Elving*Vic Fazio David GergenLee H. Hamilton Gerald Kovach Paul Light*Rep. David Price James Thurber*
* Former APSA Congressional Fellow
The APSA Congressional Fellowship Program is a highly selective, nonpartisan program devoted to expanding knowledge and awareness of Congress. Since 1953, it has brought select scholars to Capitol Hill to experience Congress through fellowship placements on congressional staffs. Fellows begin their fellowship year with a comprehensive four-week orientation with congressional experts and policy leaders. Fellows then serve full-time assignments as legislative aides in the House of Representatives or Senate.
The fellowship year also features:
• Winter and spring seminar series on Congress;
• Visit to the district or state of a Member of Congress;
• Optional programs in Annapolis, Maryland, and Ottawa, Canada
QUALIFICATIONS: Applications are welcome from political scientists who have completed a PhD in the last 15 years or will have defended a dissertation in political science by November of the fellowship year.
The program is open to scholars in all subfields within political science who can show a scholarly interest in Congress and policymaking.
FELLOWSHIP YEAR: Orientation begins in November 2022. Office placements run until August 15, 2023. Candidates may apply for two optional programs—a research fellowship and a course on Congress and foreign policy—that run from September to October 2022.
STIPEND: $54,000 for the 9.5-month fellowship period, plus a travel allowance.
APPLICATION PROCEDURE: The application period opens in October 2021. Applications must be submitted online and include:
• a detailed CV• 500-word personal statement;• the names and contact
information for three references• a writing sample
To learn more, visit us online at www.apsanet.org/cfp.
APSA Congressional Fellowship Program
American Political Science Association • 1527 New Hampshire Ave., NW, Washington, DC, 20036-1206 • www.apsanet.org
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 92 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
The American Political Science Association (APSA) has several major programs aimed at enhancing diversity within the discipline and identifying and aiding students and faculty from under-represented backgrounds in the political science field. These programs include:
Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) (Undergraduate Juniors)The RBSI Program is an annual, intensive five-week program held at Duke University. It is designed to introduce to the world of doctoral study in political science those undergraduate students from under-represented racial and ethnic groups or those interested in broadening participation in political science and pursuing scholarship on issues affecting underrepresented groups or issues of tribal sovereignty and governance. Application deadline: January of each year. For more information, visit www.apsanet.org/rbsi.
APSA Diversity Fellows Program (DFP) (Undergraduate Seniors or MA and PhD students) (Fall Cycle for seniors and MA Students, Spring Cycle for PhD students) DFP is a fellowship competition for individuals from underrepresented backgrounds applying to or in the early stages of doctoral programs in political science, designed to increase the number of individuals from under-represented backgrounds with PhD’s in political science. Application deadline: October and March of each year. For more information, visit www.apsanet.org/dfp.
Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP) (Undergraduates and Departmental members)The MSRP was created to identify undergraduate students from under-represented backgrounds who are interested in, or show potential for, graduate study and, ultimately, to help further diversify the political science profession. For more information, visit www.apsanet.org/msrp.
APSA Mentoring ProgramThe Mentoring Program connects undergraduate, graduate students, and junior faculty to experienced and senior members of the profession for professional development mentoring. APSA membership is required for mentors. APSA staff makes mentor matches twice a year: once at the beginning of the fall semester and once at the beginning of the spring semester. To request a mentor or be a mentor, visit www.apsanet.org/mentor.
APSA Status CommitteesAPSA Status Committees develop and promote agendas and activities concerning the professional development and current status of under-represented communities within the political science discipline. For a listing of all APSA status committees, visit www.apsanet.org/status-committees.
For more information on all Diversity and Inclusion Programs and to read the APSA Diversity and Inclusion Report, visit us online at www.apsanet.org/diversityprograms. Please contact Kimberly Mealy, PhD, Senior Director of Diversity and Inclusion Programs with any questions [email protected].
To contribute to an APSA Fund, such as the Ralph Bunche Endowment Fund, visit us at www.apsanet.org/bunchefund, or the Hanes Walton Jr. Fund, visit www.apsanet.org/donate.
American Pol i t ica l Sc ience Associat ion • 1527 New Hamsphire Ave. , NW, Washington, DC, 20036-1206 • www.apsanet.org
APSA Diversity & Inclusion Programs
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 93 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
The APSA Mentoring Program is an opportunity for all political scientists to network and share experience, advice and insights about career planning, scholarship, and a variety of professional issues such as:
• Selecting a dissertation committee• Publishing and research• Non-academic careers • Life as junior faculty member • Balancing family and work
APSA seeks mentors that provide professional advice to undergraduates, graduate students, and junior faculty in the profession, specifically in non-academic careers and international relations, and to mentor Ralph Bunche Scholars (RBSI) and/or APSA Diversity Fellows (MFP).
Matching ProcessAPSA accepts mentor requests for short-term (one semester) and long-term (one academic year) mentoring. Matched mentors and mentees are encouraged to continue the relationship beyond the official APSA mentoring period if they find it mutually beneficial.
The APSA staff makes mentor matches twice a year: once at the beginning of the fall semester (for short term and long term matches) and once at the beginning of the spring semester (for short term matches). Matches are made on a first-come, first-served based on suitability of the match profile and mentor availability.
Find a Mentor or Become a Mentor
American Pol i t ica l Sc ience Associat ion • 1527 New Hampshire Ave, Washington, DC, 20036-1206 • www.apsanet.org
Apply today! Submit an online application to become or request a mentor at www.apsanet.org/mentor.
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 94 26/09/2021 2:02 AM
Named in honor of the 1950 Nobel Peace Prize winner, former APSA President, and thefirst African American to receive a Ph.D in political science, Dr. Ralph J. Bunce, the RBSIencourages students to pursue academic careers in political science. The 2021 institutewas held completely online due to restrictions related to COVID-19. During the program,RBSI scholars, take graduate level political science and methods courses and engage inoriginal research.
The program culminates in a research paper and poster presentation at the APSAAnnual Meeting. To date, there are over 500 RBSI Alumni, many of whom are on facultyat colleges and universities across the country. Now in its 35th year, the RBSI program istraditionally held at Duke University, under the director of Dr. Paula D. McClain.
To learn more about the Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI), please visit www.apsanet.org/rbsi.
Congratulations to the 2021 APSA Ralph Bunche Summer Institute Scholars
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 95 26/09/2021 2:03 AM
FIND TEACHING MATERIALS ON
APSA's new online teaching library allowspolitical science educators to easily find & shareteaching materials from syllabi to simulations.
#OERs - all resources are available at no charge
Easily search for & browse materials based on topic,course level, or assignment type.
Find curated collections, JPSE & PS linked resources, & regular political science education commentary
Get Involved - submit resources, author blogs, join ourwebinars & participate in our symposia!
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 96 26/09/2021 2:03 AM
Spring Centennial CenterResearch Grants Eligibility: APSA members indepartments that do not grant PhDs,and/or who are contingent faculty.Awards up to $2,500Applications due: April 15, 2022
Summer Centennial CenterResearch Grants Eligibility: All APSA members,including faculty, graduate students,and undergraduate studentsAwards from 2,500 to 10,000Applications due: June 15, 2022
Growing Democracy Grants Eligibility: Faculty from communitycolleges, liberal arts colleges,comprehensive and researchuniversities that aim to strengthen tiesto their communities and advance civicengagement and political efficacyAwards up to $6,000Applications due: January 5, 2022
Research Partnerships on Critical Issues Program Eligibility: A collaborative team of atleast four academic and four appliedteam members (eight total) with at leasttwo academic team members who arepolitical scientists Awards up to $10,000Applications due: January 5, 2022
Peer to Peer PedagogicalPartnerships Grants Program Eligibility: A team of political sciencefaculty from different institutions in thesame geographic area. The teams mustinclude one PI from a communitycollege and one organizer from aresearch-intensive institutionAwards up to $15,000Applications due: January 5, 2022
The Centennial Center for Political Science andPublic Affairs offers thirteen different grants toassist APSA members with the costs of research,including travel, interviews, access to archives, orcosts for a research assistant. Funds can also beused to assist scholars in publishing their research.
These include grant opportunities to supporttraditional research, and to support larger projects,including collaborations to produce innovativeteaching materials, research partnerships betweenpractitioners and academic experts on pressingpublic issues, and community-oriented programsaimed at enhancing civic engagement and efficacy.
WINTER GRANT CYCLE
SPRING & SUMMER
The APSA CentennialCenter for Political Scienceand Public Affairs
Learn more and apply for Centennial Center grants at connect.apsanet.org/centennialcenter.
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 97 26/09/2021 2:03 AM
APSA Preprints is a free prepublication
platform for early research outputs in political
science and related disciplines.
Key Benefits
Upload your 2021 Annual Meeting paper today!
Submit the latest version of your
preprint directly to a journal!
Visit preprints.apsanet.org to learn more
Obtain a DOI
Comment on papers
Track metrics & share on
social media
Rapid turnaround (3-5 days)
Prepare your paper for peer
review
Free to post and browse
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 98 26/09/2021 2:03 AM
New APSA Publications!TEACHING CIVIC ENGAGEMENT
GLOBALLY
ELIZABETH C. MATTOALISON RIOS MILLETT MCCARTNEY
ELIZABETH A. BENNION
ALASDAIR BLAIRTAIYI SUNDAWN MICHELE WHITEHEAD
EDITED BY
AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION
EDITED BY
Renée Van Vechten, Bobbi Gentry, & John C. Berg
AMERICAN POLITICAL SCIENCE ASSOCIATION
Political Science InternshipsTowards Best Practices
Teaching Civic Engagement Globally
In this new volume, teacher-scholars from around the world share insights and provide innovative examples of courses, programs, and practices that prepare students for effective civic engagement across diverse political contexts.
apsanet.org/teachingcivicengagement
Political Science Internships: Towards
Best Practices
This edited volume offers a set of “best practices” for political science internships
for faculty, students, and administrators by grounding recommendations and
standards in pedagogical research.
apsanet.org/internshipbook
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 99 26/09/2021 2:03 AM
MSRP Departmental Benefits
• Access to the MSRP Recruiting Departments listserv
• Access to the MSRP database to recruit undergraduates to your PhD program
• A link to your PhD program on the APSA website and sent to MSRP students
• Participation in the MSRP Best Practices meeting
Enroll Students in the MSRP Database
Faculty are also invited to submit student names and contact information to the Minority Student Recruitment database. Or students may enroll themselves or ask their undergraduate advisor to sponsor them.
Join the APSA Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP)
Become a 2021-2022 APSA MSRP Recruiting Department!The APSA Minority Student Recruitment Program (MSRP) advances the benefits of diversity within the political science profession. The program connects undergraduate students from under-represented
backgrounds interested in graduate study with MSRP recruiting departments.
Contact [email protected] for more information. To enroll your PhD department or to submit student names, visit www.apsanet.org/msrp.
RESPECT
ESPECTFUL
QUITABLE
AFE
ROFESSIONAL
THICAL
ONDUCT
OWARDS ALL
The RESPECT Campaign encourages
“professional respect” by and towards all
APSA annual meeting attendees and
participants at all times. Respect stands for
Respectful, Equitable, Safe, Professional,
and Ethical Conduct Towards All. The
APSA Sexual Harassment Survey Report
and Anti-Harassment Policy (code of
conduct) address the importance of
facilitating a climate of respect at the
annual meeting.
To learn more about APSA RESPECT, visit
our website at connect.apsanet.org/respect.
The presence of APSA resources like the
meetings Ombuds and the onsite Bystander
Intervention training also embody this
message.
APSA RESPECT
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 100 26/09/2021 2:03 AM
The APSA Ombuds will be available during the 2021 APSA Annual Meeting, to speak with any meeting attendee on a variety of topics including, but not limited to, consultation with any meeting attendees who believe that they have experienced any form of harassment, or have concerns about violations of the sexual harassment provisions of the APSA anti-harassment policy while participating in the 2021 APSA Annual Meeting.
The APSA Ombuds will be available via email at [email protected] for consultation or to set up a Zoom appointment. For more information about the APSA Annual meeting Ombuds, please visit us online at www.apsanet.org/ombuds. The role of the APSA Meetings Ombuds is to:
• confidentially hear and discuss your concerns with you• provide you with valuable guidance and resources for understanding what constitutes sexual harassment and other forms of harassment• provide information on, and help explain, options for reporting sexual harassment to APSA,• outline other avenues and information for pursuing such a complaint• offer support and guidance even if you elect to pursue no complaint procedures or reporting whatsoever
David Rasch, University of California, Santa Barbara David Rasch is the Associate Ombuds at UCSB. David received his BA in Philosophy from Colgate University, and a PhD in Counseling Psychology from the California Institute of Integral Studies. He recently retired from Stanford University where he served as University Ombuds for 14 years, and now lives in Ojai. Prior to his work as ombuds, he was Director of Stanford’s Faculty/Staff Counseling Center. David is on the Board of Directors for CO-OP, which oversees the testing and certification process for the organizational ombuds profession. In addition to his ombuds work, David also consults and teaches on topics related to writing productivity.
American Pol i t ica l Sc ience Associat ion • 1527 New Hampshire Ave, Washington, DC, 20036-1206 • www.apsanet.org
Meet the 2021 Annual Meeting Ombuds
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Rethink, Restructure, and Reconnect: Towards A Post-Pandemic Political Science
September 15 –18Montreal, Québec, Canada
25749_APSA-2021_FM.indd 102 26/09/2021 2:03 AM
Publish your research in the Science family of journals
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MINORITY PARTY MISERYPolitical Powerlessness and Electoral DisengagementJacob F.H. Smith
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Campaign of the CenturyKennedy, Nixon, and the Election of 1960Irwin F. Gellman
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DivisionPanels
THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
“T” indicates a Theme PanelSee Page 179 for Meetings and Receptions Details
Theme Panels102.1 117TH APSA ANNUAL MEETING Thu 6:30 pm
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS:"ENGAGED PLURALISM: THEIMPORTANCE OFCOMMITMENT"
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6C42.1 ADVANCES IN PROBABILISTIC Wed 6:00 am
NETWORK DATA ANALYSISRoom: Virtual115.1 ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF Fri 8:00 am
GENDER INEQUALITY INPOLITICS (LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6C49.1 CAN DEMOCRATIC Wed 10:00 am
INNOVATIONS DEEPENDEMOCRACY IN DIVERSESOCIETIES?
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Democratic InnovationsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 3: Normative Theory
208.1 CHALLENGING PARADIGMS IN Sun 8:00 amTHE STUDY OF BUREAUCRACY
Room: WSCC, 614108.1 CUTTING-EDGE RESEARCH Fri 6:00 am
METHODS IN CLIMATEGOVERNANCE RESEARCH
Room: Virtual32.1 DATA POSSIBILITIES, Tue 10:00 am
REPLICATION, ANDTRANSPARENCY: READY FORTHE CHALLENGES?
Room: Virtual83.1 DEMOCRATIC AND Thu 12:00 pm
REVOLUTIONARY PEDAGOGYRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A208.2 EMOTIONS, BELIEFS, AND Sun 8:00 am
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR INPLURALISTIC SOCIETIES
Room: WSCC, 609211.1 ENHANCING PLURALISM BY Sun 10:00 am
UNDERSTANDING SYSTEMICBIASES
Room: WSCC, 211188.1 EQUITY IN CAMPAIGNS Sat 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual49.2 FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES AT Wed 10:00 am
THE NATIONAL SCIENCEFOUNDATION
Room: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 125
75.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS MINI- Thu 10:00 amCONFERENCE: INDIGENOUSPOLITICAL PARTICIPATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Indigenous Studies Network
55.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS MINI- Wed 2:00 pmCONFERENCE: SELF-DEFINITION IS SELF-DETERMINATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Indigenous Studies Network
62.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS Thu 6:00 amVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE:INDIGENOUS AUTONOMY ANDSOVEREIGNTY: PRACTICES OFGOVERNANCE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Indigenous Studies Network
89.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS Thu 2:00 pmVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE:NATIVE LANDS, NATIVEWATERS: THE POLITICS OFCLIMATE CHANGE AND NATIVENATIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Indigenous Studies Network
49.3 INDIGENOUS POLITICS Wed 10:00 amVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE:SETTLER COLONIALISM,INDIGENOUS POLITICS, ANDPOLITICAL SCIENCE: CRITICALHISTORIES AND NEWDIRECTIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Indigenous Studies Network
213.1 INTERPRETIVIST POLITICAL Sun 12:00 pmSCIENCE: CONVERSATIONS ONMETHODS ANDMETHODOLOGIES
Room: Virtual31.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 8:00 am
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE: BURDENS ANDRISKS OF INTERSECTIONALACTIVISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
37.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 2:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL AGENCYAND STRUCTURE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
25.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 6:00 amSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONALCONSCIOUSNESS ANDCOALITION POLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
32.2 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 10:00 amSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONALMOBILIZATION ANDREPRESENTATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
39.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 4:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL PRAXIS ANDSOLIDARITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
36.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 12:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE: LATINX ANDLATIN AMERICANINTERSECTIONAL PRAXIS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
83.2 LOCAL POLITICS AT THE Thu 12:00 pmFOREFRONT OF AMERICA'SFIGHT FOR RACIAL EQUALITY(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban Politics
141.1 MEASURING MISPERCEPTIONS Fri 2:00 pmAND MISINFORMED BELIEFS
Room: Virtual55.2 METHODOLOGICAL Wed 2:00 pm
CONSIDERATIONS FORSTUDYING DIVERSEIDENTITIES
Room: Virtual
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126 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
89.2 METHODOLOGICAL Thu 2:00 pmPLURALISM
Room: Virtual150.1 (MIS)INFORMATION IN GREAT Fri 4:00 pm
POWER COMPETITION ANDDEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE
Room: WSCC, 609160.1 OPPOSITION STRATEGIES TO Sat 6:00 am
OVERCOMEAUTOCRATIZATION INPOLARIZED DEMOCRACIES
Room: Virtual70.1 PANDEMIC POLITICS, VACCINE Thu 8:00 am
POLITIES: COMPARINGOUTBREAKS, ERAS, ANDGEOGRAPHIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Co-sponsored by Division 48: Health Politics & HealthPolicy
62.2 PITIED BUT IGNORED? Thu 6:00 amDISCRIMINATION TOWARDDISABLED PEOPLE IN POLITICSAND POLICY
Room: Virtual182.1 PLENARY ADDRESS: Sat 12:00 pm
APPRECIATING ANDLEVERAGING THE DIVERSITYOF POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6C132.1 PLENARY ADDRESS: RUNNING Fri 12:00 pm
AN ELECTION DURING APANDEMIC
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6C174.1 PLURAL APPROACHES TO Sat 10:00 am
UNDERSTANDING COVID-19RESPONSE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 29: State Politics and Policy
70.2 PLURALISTIC APPROACHES TO Thu 8:00 amCOMPLEX INFERENTIALCHALLENGES
Room: WSCC, 60998.1 PLURALIZING POLITICAL Thu 4:00 pm
THEORY: CONTEMPORARYQUEER CONTRIBUTIONS
Room: Virtual42.2 POLITICAL BEHAVIOR ACROSS Wed 6:00 am
DISCIPLINARY BOUNDARIESRoom: Virtual167.1 RACE, RACISM AND THE Sat 8:00 am
POLITICS OF IDENTITY(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, 613167.2 RECLAIMING CAUSALITY IN Sat 8:00 am
POLITICAL SCIENCE(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6C
DivisionPanels
75.2 RESHAPING CAPITALIST Thu 10:00 amDEMOCRACIES
Room: Virtual75.3 SEXUAL HARASSMENT AND Thu 10:00 am
ASSAULT DURING FIELDRESEARCH
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
174.2 SUPPORT FOR Sat 10:00 amREPRODUCIBILITY INPOLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: Virtual98.2 THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS Thu 4:00 pm
OF EMPIRICAL MODELSRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A
Co-sponsored by Division 51: Experimental Research
150.2 THE PLURALISTIC POLITICS OF Fri 4:00 pmRESOURCE EXTRACTION(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CCo-sponsored by Division 13: Politics of Communist andFormer Communist Countries
25.2 THE PROBLEM OF Tue 6:00 amKNOWLEDGE CUMULATION
Room: Virtual195.1 THE U.S. CAMPAIGN FINANCE Sat 4:00 pm
SYSTEM AND CONSEQUENCESFOR REPRESENTATION(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CCo-sponsored by Division 35: Political Organizations andParties
108.2 UNEQUAL ACCESS? VOTING Fri 6:00 amAND PARTICIPATION OFDISABLED PEOPLE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT ANDPHILOSOPHY
38.1 ACTION AND AESTHETICS IN Tue 2:00 pmTHE TRADITION OF AMERICANPOLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 41: Politics, Literature, and Film
134.1 AFFECT, FEELING, AND Fri 12:00 pmIDENTITY IN THE HISTORY OFPOLITICAL THOUGHT (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual26.1 A ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES Tue 6:00 am
HANKINS' "VIRTUE POLITICS"(2019)
Room: Virtual57.1 A WOMAN'S SPHERE(S): Wed 2:00 pm
GENDER AND CITIZENSHIP INTHE HISTORY OF POLITICALTHOUGHT
Room: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 127
85.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Thu 12:00 pmTHEORY: PLURALIZING AGLOBAL FIELD OF INQUIRYVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan ACo-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of Political Theory
26.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Tue 6:00 amTHEORY VIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE: ABOLITION ANDFUTURITY
Room: Virtual38.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Tue 2:00 pm
THEORY VIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE:CARTOGRAPHIES OF THOUGHTIN COMPARATIVE VIEW
Room: Virtual43.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Wed 6:00 am
THEORY VIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE: COMPARATIVEPOLITICAL THEORY AND THECOMPARATIVE STUDY OFRELIGION AND POLITICS
Room: Virtual33.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Tue 10:00 am
THEORY VIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE:DEVELOPMENTALIMAGINARIES ANDDECOLONIAL POSSIBILITIES
Room: Virtual51.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Wed 10:00 am
THEORY VIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE: TAKING STOCKAT 24: COMPARATIVEPOLITICAL THEORY IN 2021AND BEYOND
Room: Virtual71.1 DEMOCRACY AND Thu 8:00 am
LEGITIMACY IN ANCIENTGREECE
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan B152.1 DEMOCRACY, FREEDOM, AND Fri 4:00 pm
PLURALISM IN THE DIGITALAGE
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan ACo-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
212.1 DEMOCRATIC Sun 10:00 amREPRESENTATION: ITSADVOCATES AND CRITICS INMODERN POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: Sheraton, Willow A218.26 DUTY AND CARE IN HUMAN Sun 2:00 pm
DEVELOPMENTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 41: Politics, Literature, and Film
209.1 ECONOMIES OF VIOLENCE IN Sun 8:00 amMODERN STATECRAFT
Room: Sheraton, Willow A
91.1 ENMITY, WAR, AND PEACE IN Thu 2:00 pmTHE HISTORY OF POLITICALTHOUGHT
Room: Virtual33.2 HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON Tue 10:00 am
THE MEANINGS ANDCHALLENGES OF PLURALISM(1355-1752)
Room: Virtual218.1 LIBERALISM AS TRADITION: Sun 2:00 pm
EDUCATION, ECONOMY,EMPIRE
Room: Virtual190.1 LOGICS OF COLONIALISM AND Sat 2:00 pm
PRACTICES OF EMANCIPATIONRoom: Virtual212.2 MODES OF RESISTANCE: Sun 10:00 am
DISSIDENCE, REBELLION, ANDREVOLUTIONARY STRUGGLE
Room: Sheraton, Willow B183.1 MONSTERS, AMAZONS, AND Sat 12:00 pm
BODIES POLITIC: NEW WORKON HOBBES
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan A143.1 NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL Fri 2:00 pm
THEORY: EXPERIMENTATION,CANON DYNAMICS, ANDREINVENTION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 41: Politics, Literature, and Film
99.38 ORIENTING TO OTHERS Thu 4:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 3A
Co-sponsored by Division 41: Politics, Literature, and Film
168.1 PLURALIST COMMUNITIES AND Sat 8:00 amTHE PROBLEM OF SHAREDLIFE
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan A215.1 PLURALIZING EURIPIDES: Sun 12:00 pm
GREEK TRAGEDY ANDPOLITICAL THEORY
Room: Virtual120.1 POLITICAL THOUGHT AND Fri 10:00 am
PHILOSOPHY VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual168.2 PRACTICAL REFORM DEBATES Sat 8:00 am
IN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURYPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual77.1 RACHEL Z. FRIEDMAN'S Thu 10:00 am
"PROBABLE JUSTICE: RISK,INSURANCE, AND THEWELFARE STATE"
Room: Virtual
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128 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
117.1 READING FEMININE Fri 8:00 amEXCLUSIONS BACK INTO THECANON (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual168.32 RELIGION AND POLITICAL Sat 8:00 am
THEORYRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
117.2 RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE, Fri 8:00 amRELIGIOUS PRACTICE, ANDPOLITICAL AUTHORITY
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan ACo-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
168.3 RETHINKING NIHILISM: NEW Sat 8:00 amINTERPRETATIONS OF 20TH-CENTURY POLITICALTHOUGHT
Room: Sheraton, Willow B63.1 REVISITING MODERATION IN Thu 6:00 am
POLARIZED TIMESRoom: Virtual99.1 SEEING, HEARING, AND Thu 4:00 pm
SPEAKING: POLITICALTHEORIES OF JUDGMENT ANDCOMMUNITY
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan A33.3 SIMON GILHOOLEY'S "THE Tue 10:00 am
ANTEBELLUM ORIGINS OF THEMODERN CONSTITUTION"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 56: American Political Thought
190.2 TAE-YEOUN KEUM'S "PLATO Sat 2:00 pmAND THE MYTHIC TRADITIONIN POLITICAL THOUGHT"
Room: Virtual168.42 THE FEDERALIST AND Sat 8:00 am
AMERICAN CONSTITUTIONALDEVELOPMENT
Room: WSCC, 618Co-sponsored by Division 56: American Political Thought
77.2 THEORIES OF SOVEREIGNTY: Thu 10:00 amBODIN, HOBBES, MAZZINI, ANDTOCQUEVILLE
Room: Virtual209.2 THE POLITICAL THEORY OF Sun 8:00 am
SENTIMENTS AND PASSIONSRoom: Sheraton, Willow B162.1 TRANSNATIONAL POLITICAL Sat 6:00 am
THOUGHTRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OFPOLITICAL THEORY
77.3 AUTHOR-MEETS-CRITICS: Thu 10:00 amBENJAMIN L. MCKEAN,"DISORIENTINGNEOLIBERALISM"
Room: Virtual
DivisionPanels
176.1 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Sat 10:00 amEILEEN HUNT BOTTING'S"ARTIFICIAL LIFE AFTERFRANKENSTEIN"
Room: Virtual197.1 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Sat 4:00 pm
HAGAR KOTEF'S "THECOLONIZING SELF"
Room: WSCC, 60485.2 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Thu 12:00 pm
JENNIE IKUTA'S "CONTESTINGCONFORMITY"
Room: WSCC, 608218.2 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Sun 2:00 pm
KATRINA FORRESTER'S "INTHE SHADOW OF JUSTICE"
Room: Virtual91.2 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Thu 2:00 pm
MAURO J. CARACCIOLI'S"WRITING THE NEW WORLD"
Room: Virtual162.2 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: ON Sat 6:00 am
CAMILA VERGARA'S“SYSTEMIC CORRUPTION"
Room: Virtual205.1 BETWEEN TRUST AND Sun 6:00 am
CONTESTATIONRoom: Virtual117.3 BODIES, AGENCY, MASTERY Fri 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 604122.1 COMEDY AND POLITICAL Fri 10:00 am
THEORYRoom: Virtual109.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Fri 6:00 am
THEORY: METHODS ANDAPPROACHES
Room: Virtual85.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Thu 12:00 pm
THEORY: PLURALIZING AGLOBAL FIELD OF INQUIRYVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan ACo-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
215.2 DANGEROUS DESIRES: DREAMS Sun 12:00 pmOF OTHERNESS
Room: Virtual26.3 DELIBERATION AND Tue 6:00 am
PLURALISMRoom: Virtual134.2 DEMOCRACY AND Fri 12:00 pm
DICTATORSHIPRoom: WSCC, 611117.4 DEMOCRACY, BORDERS, AND Fri 8:00 am
IMMIGRATIONRoom: WSCC, 611
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 129
152.2 DEMOCRACY, (IN)EQUALITY, Fri 4:00 pmCOHESION
Room: WSCC, 61151.2 EXAMINING CAPITALISM Wed 10:00 amRoom: Virtual63.2 FANON TODAY Thu 6:00 amRoom: Virtual38.3 FOUNDATIONS OF AMERICAN Tue 2:00 pm
POLITICAL THOUGHTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 56: American Political Thought
81.1 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL Thu 11:30 amTHEORY VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual168.4 FROM CAPTIVITY TO Sat 8:00 am
ABOLITION: INCARCERATIONAND POLITICAL THEORY
Room: WSCC, 60843.2 HETERODOX MARXISMS Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual33.4 HOW DO WE SOLVE A Tue 10:00 am
PROBLEM LIKE CLIMATECHANGE?
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Environmental Politics and Theory
190.3 INDIGENOUS POLITICAL Sat 2:00 pmTHOUGHT AND PLURALISM
Room: Virtual33.5 IN SEARCH OF THE CONCRETE Tue 10:00 am
UNIVERSAL: EVALUATINGBENHABIB'S THEORETICALVISION
Room: Virtual209.3 INSURGENT IMAGINARIES Sun 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 608109.2 LORNA BRACEWELL'S "WHY Fri 6:00 am
WE LOST THE SEX WARS:SEXUAL FREEDOM IN THE`METOO ERA"
Room: Virtual168.5 ON KEVIN DUONG'S "THE Sat 8:00 am
VIRTUES OF VIOLENCE"Room: WSCC, 4C1109.3 PAULINA OCHOA'S "ON Fri 6:00 am
BORDERS: TERRITORIES,LEGITIMACY, AND THE RIGHTSOF PLACE"
Room: Virtual143.2 PLURALISM AS A DEMOCRATIC Fri 2:00 pm
COMMITMENTRoom: Virtual176.2 POLITICAL THEOLOGIES AND Sat 10:00 am
NEW FORMS OF CRITIQUERoom: Virtual
212.3 POLITICAL THEORIES OF Sun 10:00 amREPRODUCTION
Room: WSCC, 60891.3 POLITICAL THEORY, Thu 2:00 pm
DISCIPLINE, AND METHODRoom: Virtual26.4 PRACTICING DEMOCRACY, Tue 6:00 am
TRAINING CITIZENSRoom: Virtual183.2 QUEERING NATURE, ECO- Sat 12:00 pm
AFFECTS, AND DECENTERINGTHE HUMAN IN THEANTHROPOCENE
Room: WSCC, 604Co-sponsored by Environmental Politics and Theory
205.2 RACIAL CAPITALISM, Sun 6:00 amDECOLONIZATION, ANDTRANSNATIONAL WHITESUPREMACY
Room: Virtual63.3 REALISTIC PLURALISM: WHAT Thu 6:00 am
CAN WE EXPECT FROMELECTIONS?
Room: Virtual190.4 REINVIGORATING Sat 2:00 pm
DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACYTHROUGH DEMOCRATICINNOVATION AND PROTEST
Room: Virtual209.4 RESPONSIBILITY IN A TIME OF Sun 8:00 am
DISINFORMATIONRoom: WSCC, 21185.3 RHETORIC, POLITICS, AND Thu 12:00 pm
HOBBESRoom: WSCC, 60491.4 RIOT AND RESISTANCE: FOR Thu 2:00 pm
GOOD OR FOR ILLRoom: Virtual215.3 SAFE SPACE BEYOND Sun 12:00 pm
SECURITY STATES: HOWBLACK FREEDOM MOVEMENTSMESSAGES MATTER
Room: Virtual63.4 SINJA GRAF'S HUMANITY OF Thu 6:00 am
UNIVERSAL CRIMERoom: Virtual215.32 STRUGGLES OVER RACIAL Sun 12:00 pm
EQUALITY AND MULTIRACIALDEMOCRACY IN AMERICA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 56: American Political Thought
212.4 TECHNOLOGY BETWEEN Sun 10:00 amLIBERATION AND DOMINATION
Room: WSCC, 603168.6 THE POSSIBILITIES AND LIMITS Sat 8:00 am
OF ELECTIONSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4
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130 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
109.4 THE RELEVANCE OF EARLY Fri 6:00 amMODERN THOUGHT INCONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVE
Room: Virtual212.5 THE SCALE AND SCOPE OF Sun 10:00 am
DEMOCRACYRoom: WSCC, 607219.3 UNTANGLING THE MESS: THE Sun 2:00 pm
PROMISE AND PERIL OF ECO-PROGRESSIVE POLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Environmental Politics and Theory
183.3 WHERE IS SETTLER Sat 12:00 pmCOLONIALISM IN ANABOLITION DEMOCRACY?
Room: WSCC, 607152.3 WOMEN IN AND OUT OF Fri 4:00 pm
POWERRoom: WSCC, 612
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY49.1 CAN DEMOCRATIC Wed 10:00 am
INNOVATIONS DEEPENDEMOCRACY IN DIVERSESOCIETIES?
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Democratic InnovationsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
38.4 CHALLENGING PLURALISM: Tue 2:00 pmPOLITICAL VIOLENCE ANDSABOTAGE
Room: Virtual162.3 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL Sat 6:00 am
THEORY: PERSPECTIVES FROMCHINESE PHILOSOPHY
Room: Virtual33.6 DEBATING PLURALISM IN A Tue 10:00 am
WORLD OF MANY WORLDSRoom: Virtual122.2 DISAPPOINTED HOPES: Fri 10:00 am
RECLAIMING THE PROMISE OFRESISTANCE
Room: Virtual205.3 GLOBALIZATION, Sun 6:00 am
COSMOPOLITANISM, AND NON-WESTERN THEORY
Room: Virtual209.5 JUSTICE, INSTITUTIONS, AND Sun 8:00 am
DEMOCRATICACCOUNTABILITY
Room: WSCC, 616109.5 LIBERATION, DOMINATION, Fri 6:00 am
RESISTANCERoom: Virtual117.5 LISTENING, SPACE, BOUNDARY Fri 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 616
DivisionPanels
71.2 MATERNAL POLITICS AGAINST Thu 8:00 amTHE GRAIN
Room: WSCC, 3B179.2 NORMATIVE THEORY VIRTUAL Sat 10:30 am
POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual117.6 ON DEMOCRACY: HOPE, Fri 8:00 am
DESIRE, CONSENT, ANDRESTRAINT
Room: WSCC, 618143.3 OPPRESSION, RACE, AND Fri 2:00 pm
RESILIENCERoom: Virtual152.4 PATHOLOGY TO PLURALITY: Fri 4:00 pm
RE-THINKING THE POLITICSOF SELF-DESTRUCTIVEVIOLENCE
Room: WSCC, 618190.5 PLURALISM AND Sat 2:00 pm
INTERSECTIONAL POLITICSRoom: Virtual134.3 PLURALIZING FEMINISM Fri 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 61899.2 ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION ON Thu 4:00 pm
CHANDRAN KUKATHAS'S"IMMIGRATION ANDFREEDOM"
Room: WSCC, 2B176.3 THEATRES OF TRUTH: Sat 10:00 am
AGAINST INTERPRETIVEHEGEMONIES
Room: Virtual218.3 THE ENVIRONMENT, THE Sun 2:00 pm
PLANET, AND CLIMATE CRISISRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICALTHEORY
209.6 ACCOUNTABILITY, CRISIS AND Sun 8:00 amEXCUSE-MAKING
Room: Sheraton, Ballard71.3 CAUSES OF WAR (PRE- Thu 8:00 am
RECORDED)Room: Virtual162.4 COORDINATION AND Sat 6:00 am
INFORMATIONRoom: Virtual134.4 DOMESTIC ORIGINS OF Fri 12:00 pm
CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 3A91.5 FORMAL MODELS OF Thu 2:00 pm
ALLIANCE AND RIVALRY INCONFLICT
Room: Virtual212.6 FORMAL MODELS OF Sun 10:00 am
DIPLOMACY AND CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 609
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125.2 FORMAL THEORY VIRTUAL Fri 10:30 amPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual57.2 GOVERNMENT Wed 2:00 pm
ACCOUNTABILITY TO CITIZENSRoom: Virtual38.5 GRASSROOTS POLITICS Tue 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual152.5 MONEY AND SPECIAL Fri 4:00 pm
INTEREST INFLUENCE INPOLITICS
Room: WSCC, 619117.7 MULTI-DIMENSIONALITY IN Fri 8:00 am
POLICY PROBLEMSRoom: WSCC, 607176.4 POLITICAL COMPETITION AND Sat 10:00 am
CONFLICTRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY168.7 ALL ABOUT POPULISM Sat 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 60671.4 ATTITUDES TOWARDS Thu 8:00 am
IMMIGRANTSRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom D38.6 CANDIDATE ASSESSMENT Tue 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual57.3 DISCRIMINATION AND Wed 2:00 pm
PREJUDICERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
218.4 ELITE RHETORIC Sun 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual197.2 EMOTIONS Sat 4:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 60351.3 EMOTIONS AND POLITICAL Wed 10:00 am
PSYCHOLOGYRoom: Virtual212.7 GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONS Sun 10:00 amRoom: WSCC, 3B117.8 IMPROVING DECISION-MAKING Fri 8:00 amRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom D205.4 INTERGROUP CONTACT AND Sun 6:00 am
CONFLICTRoom: Virtual109.6 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Fri 6:00 am
AND LEADERSHIPRoom: Virtual190.6 NEW APPROACHES FOR Sat 2:00 pm
PREJUDICE REDUCTION ANDDEPOLARIZATION
Room: Virtual143.4 PARTISANSHIP Fri 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual
134.5 PARTISANSHIP AND SOCIAL Fri 12:00 pmIDENTITY
Room: WSCC, 60685.4 PERSONALITY AND Thu 12:00 pm
PREDISPOSITIONSRoom: Sheraton, Aspen33.7 POLICY ATTITUDES Tue 10:00 amRoom: Virtual91.6 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY AND Thu 2:00 pm
RACERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
80.2 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY Thu 11:00 amVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual77.4 POLITICAL TRUST AND Thu 10:00 am
TOLERANCERoom: Virtual99.3 PSYCHOLOGY OF COVID-19 Thu 4:00 pmRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom D162.5 THE ORIGINS AND Sat 6:00 am
CONSEQUENCES OF IDEOLOGYRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY122.3 BACKLASH AND BLAME: Fri 10:00 am
POLITICAL COSTS ANDCONSEQUENCES
Room: Virtual143.5 BRIBERY AND CORRUPTION Fri 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual71.5 BUREAUCRACIES Thu 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 612209.7 BUYING INFLUENCE: Sun 8:00 am
POLITICAL ECONOMY OFLOBBYING AND CAMPAIGNCONTRIBUTIONS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 1190.7 COVID AND THE POLITICAL Sat 2:00 pm
ECONOMY OF PANDEMICRESILIENCE
Room: Virtual183.4 ECONOMIC ATTITUDES AND Sat 12:00 pm
PERCEPTIONSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5109.7 FACETS OF INEQUALITY Fri 6:00 amRoom: Virtual218.5 FORMAL MODELING IN Sun 2:00 pm
POLITICAL SCIENCE:EPISTEMOLOGY ANDMETHOD(S) MINI-CONFERENCE: CHOOSINGMETHOD(S) OF FORMALMODELING
Room: Virtual
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132 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
205.5 FORMAL MODELING IN Sun 6:00 amPOLITICAL SCIENCE:EPISTEMOLOGY ANDMETHOD(S) MINI-CONFERENCE:EPISTEMOLOGICAL PLACE OFFORMAL MODELS
Room: Virtual215.4 FORMAL MODELING IN Sun 12:00 pm
POLITICAL SCIENCE:EPISTEMOLOGY ANDMETHOD(S) MINI-CONFERENCE: THIN VERSUSTHICK NARRATIVES,GENERALIZABILITY VERSUSBEST EXPLANATIONS,CONNECTIONS TO PROCESSTRACING
Room: Virtual33.8 GENDER, REPRESENTATION, Tue 10:00 am
AND LEADERSHIPRoom: Virtual38.7 GOVERNANCE AND STATE Tue 2:00 pm
CAPACITYRoom: Virtual43.3 HISTORICAL POLITICAL Wed 6:00 am
ECONOMYRoom: Virtual85.5 LEGACIES OF CONFLICT AND Thu 12:00 pm
REPRESSIONRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4180.1 NEW DIRECTIONS IN Sat 11:00 am
POLITICAL ECONOMYVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual99.4 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON Thu 4:00 pm
POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5117.9 NEW WORK ON THE Fri 8:00 am
HISTORICAL POLITICALECONOMY OF ASIA
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 5134.6 PARTY ACTIVISTS, Fri 12:00 pm
RECRUITMENT AND PARTY-BUILDING
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 577.5 PERSPECTIVES ON "THE Thu 10:00 am
POLITICS OF BAD OPTIONS" BYWALTER, RAY & REDEKER
Room: Virtual109.8 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Fri 6:00 am
INNOVATIONRoom: Virtual212.8 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sun 10:00 am
POPULISMRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 3
DivisionPanels
152.6 POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, Fri 4:00 pmPOLITICAL ECONOMY, ANDREPRESENTATION
Room: WSCC, 30351.4 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS Wed 10:00 amRoom: Virtual212.9 STATEBUILDING AND Sun 10:00 am
CONSOLIDATIONRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 1218.6 STATE CAPACITY IN Sun 2:00 pm
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES:CHINA AND BEYOND
Room: Virtual57.4 THE CAUSES AND Wed 2:00 pm
CONSEQUENCES OF STATEPOWER IN THE PERIPHERY
Room: Virtual209.8 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sun 8:00 am
DEMOCRATIC BACKSLIDINGAND MALAPPORTIONMENT
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C168.8 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sat 8:00 am
INEQUALITY: FROM CAMPAIGNFINANCE TO RADICAL VOTING(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual162.6 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sat 6:00 am
VOTINGRoom: Virtual91.7 VOTING AND ACCOUNTABILITY Thu 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY168.9 APPETITIVE STATES Sat 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 617152.7 AUTHOR-MEETS-CRITICS: Fri 4:00 pm
DANIEL CARPENTER'S"DEMOCRACY BY PETITION"
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6A190.8 COALITIONAL POLITICS AND Sat 2:00 pm
DISABILITY RIGHTSRoom: Virtual99.5 DEMOCRATIC RESILIENCE: Thu 4:00 pm
CAN THE US WITHSTANDRISING POLARIZATION?
Room: WSCC, 61238.8 DEMOCRATIZING MARKETS Tue 2:00 pm
AFTER NEOLIBERALISM:RECLAIMING ANTITRUST FORDEMOCRACY
Room: Virtual212.10 DISCURSIVE INSTITUTIONALIST Sun 10:00 am
APPROACHES TO APD: IDEAS,IDENTITIES, INSTITUTIONS
Room: WSCC, 2A
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134.7 DOES THE STATE WORK FOR Fri 12:00 pmTHE PEOPLE?
Room: Sheraton, Willow B215.5 DOWN WITH THE CROWN Sun 12:00 pmRoom: Virtual162.7 HISTORICAL MEMORY AND Sat 6:00 am
REMEMBERING INDEMOCRATIC ANDAUTHORITARIAN POLITICS
Room: Virtual190.9 INTERPRETING RACIAL Sat 2:00 pm
POLITICS IN THE USA TODAYRoom: Virtual57.5 LEGACIES OF WORK – SOCIAL Wed 2:00 pm
POLICY, EMPLOYMENT, ANDREGIMES OF INEQUALITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Labor Politics
26.5 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON Tue 6:00 amPARTIES AND PARTISANSHIP
Room: Virtual85.6 ORGANIZING WITH AND Thu 12:00 pm
AGAINST THE STATERoom: WSCC, 606173.1 POLITICS AND HISTORY Sat 10:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual85.39 POWER SHIFTS: CONGRESS Thu 12:00 pm
AND PRESIDENTIALREPRESENTATION BY JOHNDEARBORN (LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6BCo-sponsored by Division 56: American Political Thought
143.6 RACIAL FORMATIONS, Fri 2:00 pmCOLONIALISM, AND AMERICANCITIZENSHIP
Room: Virtual64.4 ROUNDTABLE ON "THE Thu 6:00 am
CAMBRIDGE HANDBOOK OFLABOR AND DEMOCRACY"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping CountriesCo-sponsored by Division 44: Democracy and AutocracyCo-sponsored by Labor Politics
152.8 STATE CAPACITY BEYOND Fri 4:00 pmTAXATION
Room: WSCC, 61638.32 STATE FORMATION THROUGH Tue 2:00 pm
THE LENS OF COLONIALISMAND MISSIONARY MOVEMENTS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
63.5 THE GENESIS OF Thu 6:00 amREPRESENTATIVEINSTITUTIONS
Room: Virtual
91.8 THE LEGACIES OF HISTORICAL Thu 2:00 pmVIOLENCE
Room: Virtual183.5 THE LONG CIVIL RIGHTS Sat 12:00 pm
MOVEMENT: LESSONS ANDLEGACIES
Room: WSCC, 3A117.10 WHITE BACKLASH AND STATE Fri 8:00 am
VIOLENCERoom: WSCC, 2A43.4 WHO GETS TO VOTE? Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 8: POLITICALMETHODOLOGY
71.6 ADVANCES IN MACHINE Thu 8:00 amLEARNING (I)
Room: WSCC, 60338.9 ADVANCES IN MACHINE Tue 2:00 pm
LEARNING (II)Room: Virtual178.1 BEYOND OBSERVABILITY: Sat 10:00 am
INNOVATIONS IN MEASURING'INVISIBLE' POLITICALVIOLENCE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by IPSA Research Committee on Conceptsand Methods
209.9 CAUSAL INFERENCE Sun 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 2A215.6 COVID-19 POLICY AND Sun 12:00 pm
BEHAVIORRoom: Virtual57.6 CROWDSOURCING Wed 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual51.5 EMBEDDINGS Wed 10:00 amRoom: Virtual109.9 EMBEDDINGS IN MULTIPLE Fri 6:00 am
LANGUAGESRoom: Virtual168.10 ESTIMATION AND PREDICTION Sat 8:00 am
(PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual183.6 GEOGRAPHY AND SPATIAL Sat 12:00 pm
ANALYSISRoom: WSCC, 612162.8 IMAGES AS DATA Sat 6:00 amRoom: Virtual176.5 IMPROVING SURVEY Sat 10:00 am
EXPERIMENTS AND ANALYSISRoom: Virtual134.8 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 12:00 pm
CONFERENCE: CRIMINALLEGAL INTERSECTIONS ANDBOUNDARIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and Courts
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134 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
Co-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
117.11 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 8:00 amCONFERENCE: DESCRIPTIVEREPRESENTATION IN THECRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
152.9 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 4:00 pmCONFERENCE: IN-PERSONJUNIOR SCHOLAR POSTERSESSION
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
122.4 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 10:00 amCONFERENCE: POLICYIMPLEMENTATION ANDDISCRETION IN THE CRIMINALLEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
143.7 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 2:00 pmCONFERENCE: ROUNDTABLE:POLITICAL SCIENCE FOR THEPUBLIC GOOD
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
26.6 MEASUREMENT USING ONLINE Tue 6:00 amDATA
Room: Virtual85.7 MEASURING POLITICAL Thu 12:00 pm
PREFERENCESRoom: WSCC, 401205.6 METHODS TO STUDY Sun 6:00 am
ACCOUNTABILITY ANDCRIMINAL JUSTICE
Room: Virtual99.6 METHODS TO STUDY Thu 4:00 pm
DIVERSITYRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB218.7 MODELS FOR TSCS, TIME, AND Sun 2:00 pm
DURATION DATARoom: Virtual38.10 OBSERVATIONAL AND Tue 2:00 pm
EXPERIMENTAL CAUSALINFERENCE
Room: Virtual85.8 OBSERVATIONAL CAUSAL Thu 12:00 pm
INFERENCERoom: WSCC, 603
DivisionPanels
139.1 POLITICAL METHODOLOGY Fri 1:30 pmVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual75.3 SEXUAL HARASSMENT AND Thu 10:00 am
ASSAULT DURING FIELDRESEARCH
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
212.11 SOCIAL MEDIA AND Sun 10:00 amPOLARIZATION
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C197.3 UNDERSTANDING VOTE Sat 4:00 pm
CHOICERoom: Sheraton, Aspen
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCEEDUCATION
170.1 AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 Sat 8:00 amCREDITS
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
26.7 CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Tue 6:00 amPEDAGOGY ACROSS THEGLOBE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 58: Civic Engagement
199.1 CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON Sat 4:00 pmTEACHING
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
192.1 DIVERSIFIED APPROACHES TO Sat 2:00 pmSIMULATION AND GAMES INTHE CLASSROOM I
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
199.2 DIVERSIFIED APPROACHES TO Sat 4:00 pmSIMULATIONS AND GAMES INTHE CLASSROOM II(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
51.6 GLOBAL CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Wed 10:00 amEDUCATION: IDEAS,DIRECTIONS, AND CALLS FORACTION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 58: Civic Engagement
143.8 INSIDE THE CLASSROOM: Fri 2:00 pmINCLUSIVENESS, EFFICACY,AND IDEOLOGY
Room: Virtual192.2 MAKING IT REAL: TAKING Sat 2:00 pm
ACTION IN TEACHINGRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C
Co-sponsored by TLC at APSA
199.3 MULTIPLE METHODS FOR Sat 4:00 pmCIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
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192.3 NEW STRATEGIES FOR Sat 2:00 pmINCREASED TEACHINGEFFECTIVENESS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
152.10 ONE OF A KIND MEETS THE Fri 4:00 pmTIES THAT BIND US
Room: WSCC, 310199.4 OPENING UP THE PLAYBOOK: Sat 4:00 pm
BROADENING APPROACHES TOTEACHING POLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
99.7 OPEN-SOURCE EDUCATIONAL Thu 4:00 pmRESOURCES FOR POLITICALSCIENCE EDUCATION
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6C192.4 OUT OF YOUR CHAIR AND Sat 2:00 pm
INTO THE STREETS: ACTIVEAPPROACHES TO CIVICENGAGEMENT
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
77.6 PLURALISM MEETS Thu 10:00 amPLURALISM: ETHNOGRAPHY,DECOLONIZATION, AND CIVICENGAGEMENT
Room: Virtual85.9 REFLECTIONS ON EMERGENCY Thu 12:00 pm
ELEARNING AND PANDEMICPEDAGOGY
Room: WSCC, 611178.3 SHARING PEDAGOGY: Sat 10:00 am
INTERNATIONAL SERVICE-LEARNING NETWORK DURINGCOVID
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by TLC at APSA
134.9 TEACHING UNDERGRADUATE & Fri 12:00 pmGRADUATE POLITICALMETHODOLOGY
Room: WSCC, 60888.2 VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION: Thu 2:00 pm
POLITICAL SCIENCEEDUCATION
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS197.4 AGRICULTURE, THE Sat 4:00 pm
ENVIRONMENT, AND RURALCONFLICT
Room: WSCC, 3A134.10 ARE WE SEEING A Fri 12:00 pm
GENERATIONAL SHIFT INSOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS?
Room: WSCC, 612Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics
205.7 AUTHORITARIAN Sun 6:00 amDURABILITY & ADAPTABILITY
Room: Virtual152.11 AUTHORITARIAN Fri 4:00 pm
RESPONSIVENESS IN CHINA,RUSSIA AND VIETNAM
Room: WSCC, 3B71.7 AUTOCRACY AND PUBLIC Thu 8:00 am
POLICYRoom: WSCC, 607209.10 BUILDING AUTOCRACY: NEW Sun 8:00 am
THEORETICAL INSIGHTS ANDEMPIRICAL FINDINGS
Room: WSCC, 60326.8 CENSORSHIP Tue 6:00 amRoom: Virtual212.12 CLIENTELISM Sun 10:00 amRoom: WSCC, 60671.8 COMMUNITY NETWORKS, Thu 8:00 am
CLIENTELISM, ANDPARTICIPATION (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual51.7 COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF Wed 10:00 am
ETHNICITY, RELIGION, ANDNATIONALISM
Room: Virtual186.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS: Sat 1:30 pm
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION IRoom: Virtual187.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS: Sat 2:00 pm
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION IIRoom: Virtual99.8 CONTROVERSIAL CONCEPTS: Thu 4:00 pm
HOW TO DEFINE AND DELIMIT"COUP" AND "FASCISM"
Room: WSCC, 60726.9 CORRUPTION Tue 6:00 amRoom: Virtual38.11 COVID-19 IN COMPARATIVE Tue 2:00 pm
CONTEXTRoom: Virtual183.7 CRIMINAL GOVERNANCE IN Sat 12:00 pm
SOUTH AMERICARoom: WSCC, 61151.8 CULTURAL FOUNDATIONS OF Wed 10:00 am
STATE BUILDINGRoom: Virtual43.5 DEMOCRACY AND DISCONTENT Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual43.6 ELECTIONS AND PROTESTS Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual143.9 EMERGING RESEARCH ON Fri 2:00 pm
GENDER AND POLITICALPARTICIPATION INDEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: Virtual
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136 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
122.13 EXECUTIVE POLITICS IN THE Fri 10:00 amCOMPARATIVE CONTEXT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
51.9 EXPLAINING VARIATIONS IN Wed 10:00 amTHE SUCCESS OF PANDEMICRESPONSES
Room: Virtual168.11 GENDER IN COMPARATIVE Sat 8:00 am
POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 604197.5 GRASSROOTS POLITICS: Sat 4:00 pm
COLLECTIVE ACTION, ELITES,AND LOCAL POLITICALBEHAVIOR
Room: WSCC, 607152.45 HOW THE STATE SHAPES Fri 4:00 pm
SOCIETY: COMPARATIVEEDUCATION POLITICS
Room: WSCC, 205Co-sponsored by Division 59: Education Politics and Policy
109.20 IDENTITY FORMATION AND Fri 6:00 amMAINTENANCE INCOMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
176.6 IMMIGRATION, Sat 10:00 amDOCUMENTATION, AND SOCIALPROTECTION IN COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVE
Room: Virtual168.12 IN-GROUP/OUT-GROUP Sat 8:00 am
POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 401212.45 LAND AND POLITICS IN AFRICA Sun 10:00 amRoom: WSCC, 401
Co-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
109.10 MEDIA INFLUENCES ON Fri 6:00 amPOLITICS
Room: Virtual117.12 NATURAL RESOURCES AND Fri 8:00 am
DEMOCRACYRoom: WSCC, 612209.11 PANDEMIC EFFECTS Sun 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 612212.13 PARTIES & LEGISLATURES Sun 10:00 amRoom: WSCC, 61291.9 PERSONALISM Thu 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual71.9 POLITICS BEYOND THE LEFT- Thu 8:00 am
RIGHT SPECTRUMRoom: WSCC, 401183.8 POPULISM Sat 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 606
DivisionPanels
63.6 POPULISM, PLURALISM, Thu 6:00 amPATRIOTISM: MIGRATIONMANAGEMENT & POLITICALCHANGE
Room: Virtual33.9 PRO-DEMOCRACY PROTESTS Tue 10:00 amRoom: Virtual99.9 PROTEST, DEMOCRACY, AND Thu 4:00 pm
AUTONOMY: THE CASE OFHONG KONG
Room: WSCC, 611162.9 PROTEST & POLITICAL Sat 6:00 am
VIOLENCERoom: Virtual85.25 RACISM AND POLITICAL Thu 12:00 pm
ATTITUDES IN LATIN AMERICARoom: WSCC, 205
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
134.11 REGIME TYPE Fri 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 401205.8 REPRESSION AND CENSORSHIP Sun 6:00 amRoom: Virtual218.8 REVOLUTIONS AND Sun 2:00 pm
STATEBUILDING:TRANSFORMING POLITICALAND SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS
Room: Virtual215.7 STATE STRENGTH Sun 12:00 pmRoom: Virtual122.5 SUB-NATIONAL POLITICS Fri 10:00 amRoom: Virtual215.8 THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS Sun 12:00 pm
OF THE POLICERoom: Virtual26.10 THE CONDITIONAL POLITICAL Tue 6:00 am
CONSEQUENCES OFINTERGROUP CLEAVAGES INSOUTHEAST ASIA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics
152.12 THE CONTOURS OF POLITICAL Fri 4:00 pmPOLARIZATION IN 21STCENTURY LATIN AMERICA
Room: WSCC, 40157.7 THE POLITICS OF Wed 2:00 pm
COMBATTING POVERTYRoom: Virtual33.29 THE STATE AND TRADITIONAL Tue 10:00 am
GOVERNANCE NEXUS:EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROMAFRICA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
109.11 TRUST Fri 6:00 amRoom: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 137
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICSOF DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
215.9 AGENTS OF ACCOUNTABILITY: Sun 12:00 pmMONITORS AND CLAIMANTS INACCOUNTABILITY PROCESSES
Room: Virtual99.10 CAMPAIGN FINANCE IN Thu 4:00 pm
DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIESRoom: WSCC, 4C4183.9 CASH TRANSFERS AND Sat 12:00 pm
SUBSIDIES IN DEVELOPINGDEMOCRACIES ANDINDIGENOUS STATES(RECORDED)
Room: Virtual143.10 CIVIL SOCIETY AND LOCAL Fri 2:00 pm
POLITICAL PLURALISM:EVIDENCE FROM COLOMBIA
Room: Virtual77.7 CIVIL SOCIETY AND Thu 10:00 am
SUBNATIONAL RESPONSES TOTHE COVID-19 PANDEMIC INTHE AMERICAS
Room: Virtual63.7 CLIENTELISM AND Thu 6:00 am
DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS 1Room: Virtual209.12 CLIENTELISM AND Sun 8:00 am
DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS 2Room: Conference Center, Skagit 5197.6 CLIENTELISM AND FORMAL Sat 4:00 pm
POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS INDEVELOPING COUNTRIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 2162.10 COMPARATIVE EFFECTS OF Sat 6:00 am
COVID-19 ON POLITICALBEHAVIOR IN DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES
Room: Virtual152.13 COMPARATIVE ETHNIC Fri 4:00 pm
POLITICSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5218.9 COMPARATIVE ETHNIC Sun 2:00 pm
POLITICS 2Room: Virtual88.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF Thu 2:00 pm
DEVELOPING COUNTRIESVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION 1
Room: Virtual94.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF Thu 2:30 pm
DEVELOPING COUNTRIESVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION 2
Room: Virtual117.13 COMPARATIVE URBAN Fri 8:00 am
POLITICSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2
38.12 COMPROMISING DEMOCRACY: Tue 2:00 pmAGENTS OF DEMOCRATICREGRESSION IN SOUTHEASTASIA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics
209.13 CONTRASTING EXPECTED AND Sun 8:00 amACTUAL POLITICAL BEHAVIORIN AFRICA AND THE MIDDLEEAST
Room: WSCC, 606212.14 CRIME, POLICING AND Sun 10:00 am
MILITARIZATION STRATEGIESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4168.13 DECENTRALIZATION AND SUB- Sat 8:00 am
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENTRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2215.10 EXAMINING THE STATE OF Sun 12:00 pm
INDIA'S DEMOCRACYRoom: Virtual117.19 FOREIGN AID AND NGOS IN Fri 8:00 am
DEVELOPING COUNTRIESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
51.10 GENDER AND POLITICS IN THE Wed 10:00 amGLOBAL SOUTH 1
Room: Virtual176.7 GENDER AND POLITICS IN THE Sat 10:00 am
GLOBAL SOUTH 2Room: Virtual197.7 IDENTITY AND INEQUALITY IN Sat 4:00 pm
SOUTHEAST ASIARoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 1
Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics
183.41 LINKAGES OF THE STATE: Sat 12:00 pmBROKERS, CITIZENOBSERVERS, AND POLITICALCONNECTIONS
Room: WSCC, 619Co-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
85.10 MANAGING POWER AND Thu 12:00 pmCRISES IN XI JINPING'S CHINA(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual190.10 NEW FRONTIERS IN THE STUDY Sat 2:00 pm
OF CRIME AND VIOLENCERoom: Virtual71.10 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON Thu 8:00 am
STATEBUILDINGRoom: WSCC, 60633.10 POLICING AND PLURALISM IN Tue 10:00 am
SOUTH ASIARoom: Virtual99.11 POLITICAL ACTIVISM IN THE Thu 4:00 pm
TWENTY FIRST CENTURY (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual
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138 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
57.8 POLITICAL ATTITUDES AND Wed 2:00 pmCOALITIONS IN COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVE
Room: Virtual143.11 POLITICAL INEQUALITY: Fri 2:00 pm
CAUSES AND EFFECTS (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual51.11 POLITICAL PREFERENCES AND Wed 10:00 am
PUBLIC OPINION INCOMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: Virtual38.13 POLITICS OF Tue 2:00 pm
INDUSTRIALIZATION ANDECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
Room: Virtual43.7 POLITICS OF PRE- Wed 6:00 am
DISTRIBUTION ANDREDISTRIBUTION
Room: Virtual71.41 PROBING IDENTITY AND Thu 8:00 am
POLITICAL COMMUNITYACROSS AFRICA
Room: WSCC, 303Co-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
64.4 ROUNDTABLE ON "THE Thu 6:00 amCAMBRIDGE HANDBOOK OFLABOR AND DEMOCRACY"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 44: Democracy and AutocracyCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and HistoryCo-sponsored by Labor Politics
33.11 STATE CAPACITY AND STATE Tue 10:00 amBUILDING
Room: Virtual117.14 STATE CAPACITY IN Fri 8:00 am
COMPARATIVE LENSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 191.29 TERRITORY, POLITICS, AND Thu 2:00 pm
POWER IN AFRICARoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
77.8 THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE Thu 10:00 amOF SOCIAL PROTECTION INAFRICA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
212.15 THE CONSEQUENCES OF Sun 10:00 amCREDIT CLAIMING (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual168.14 THE LOCAL POLITICS OF Sat 8:00 am
SERVICE PROVISION IN THEMIDDLE EAST AND NORTHAFRICA (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual168.15 THE POLITICS OF THE COVID- Sat 8:00 am
19 PANDEMICRoom: WSCC, 615
DivisionPanels
205.9 VIOLENT DEMOCRACY IN THE Sun 6:00 amGLOBAL SOUTH: EVIDENCEFROM MEXICO
Room: Virtual134.12 WHO REPRESENTS, WHO GETS Fri 12:00 pm
REPRESENTED: POLITICS INTHE DEVELOPING WORLD
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 2
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OFCOMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES
162.11 ACCOUNTABILITY IN HYBRID Sat 6:00 amAND AUTHORITARIANREGIMES
Room: Virtual183.10 CHINESE POLITICS MINI- Sat 12:00 pm
CONFERENCE: CHANGINGMODES AND MEASURES OFSTATE CAPACITY IN CHINA
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4197.8 CHINESE POLITICS MINI- Sat 4:00 pm
CONFERENCE: CHINA ON THEGLOBAL STAGE: POLICIES ANDREACTIONS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4168.16 CHINESE POLITICS MINI- Sat 8:00 am
CONFERENCE: CHINA'SRESPONSE TO COVID-19:BUREAUCRACY, GOVERNANCEAND PUBLIC OPINION
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4176.8 CHINESE POLITICS MINI- Sat 10:00 am
CONFERENCE: DIMENSIONS OFDISSENT: PROTEST INCONTEMPORARY CHINA
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4190.11 CHINESE POLITICS MINI- Sat 2:00 pm
CONFERENCE: THE POLITICALECONOMY OF STATE-BUSINESSRELATIONS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 451.12 DEBATING THE NATURE AND Wed 10:00 am
IMPACT OF POST-COMMUNISTCIVIL SOCIETY
Room: Virtual63.8 ELECTORAL POLITICS IN Thu 6:00 am
PUTIN'S RUSSIARoom: Virtual26.11 FROM PLURALISM TO Tue 6:00 am
POLARIZATION: PUBLICOPINION AND POLICYPREFERENCES
Room: Virtual33.12 GOVERNMENT AND CITIZEN Tue 10:00 am
RESPONSES TO THE COVID-19PANDEMIC
Room: Virtual
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26.12 HOW THE STATE DEALS WITH Tue 6:00 amOPPOSITION
Room: Virtual205.10 INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND Sun 6:00 am
POLITICAL CONTROL IN CHINARoom: Virtual43.8 MANAGED PLURALISM IN Wed 6:00 am
COMMUNIST AND POST-COMMUNIST STATES
Room: Virtual63.9 MASS MOBILIZATION AND Thu 6:00 am
PROTESTS IN COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVE
Room: Virtual77.9 NATIONAL IDENTITY, NATION- Thu 10:00 am
BUILDING, AND NATIONALISMIN POST-COMMUNIST SETTINGS
Room: Virtual43.9 PANDEMIC POLICY & Wed 6:00 am
ELECTORAL SUPPORT INEASTERN EUROPE & LATINAMERICA
Room: Virtual209.14 PARTIES, PLURALISM, AND Sun 8:00 am
ELECTORAL POLITICS IN POST-COMMUNIST SETTINGS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 2162.12 PLURAL PATHWAYS: CHINESE Sat 6:00 am
INVESTMENT, COMMUNIST &POST-COMMUNISTDEVELOPMENTALISM
Room: Virtual134.13 POLITICAL AFFAIRS THROUGH Fri 12:00 pm
THE LENS OF RUSSIAN MEDIARoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3140.1 POLITICS OF COMMUNIST & Fri 2:00 pm
FORMER COMMUNISTCOUNTRIES VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION I
Room: Virtual146.1 POLITICS OF COMMUNIST & Fri 2:30 pm
FORMER COMMUNISTCOUNTRIES VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION II
Room: Virtual152.14 REVEALING SCHEMES: Fri 4:00 pm
CONSPIRACY THEORIES ANDPOLITICS IN THE POST-SOVIETREGION (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual212.16 THE IMPACT OF COVID ON Sun 10:00 am
AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS:EVIDENCE FROM RUSSIA
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 2150.2 THE PLURALISTIC POLITICS OF Fri 4:00 pm
RESOURCE EXTRACTIONRoom: WSCC, Ballroom 6C
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
109.12 THE SUBNATIONAL TURN (I): Fri 6:00 amDECENTRALIZATION ANDPOLITICAL ECONOMY
Room: Virtual71.11 THE SUBNATIONAL TURN (II): Thu 8:00 am
REFORMS, POLICYINNOVATION, AND ELECTIONS
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 585.11 TWO APPROACHES TO Thu 12:00 pm
AUTOCRACY: THE CASE OFRUSSIA (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual117.15 WOMEN IN CHINESE POLITICS Fri 8:00 am
(PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICSOF ADVANCED INDUSTRIALDEMOCRACIES
43.10 COALITION AND CABINET Wed 6:00 amPOLITICS
Room: Virtual87.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICS: Thu 1:30 pm
ADVANCED INDUSTRIALSOCIETIES VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual33.13 LINKING DESCRIPTIVE AND Tue 10:00 am
SUBSTANTIVEREPRESENTATION
Room: Virtual99.12 POLITICAL ELITES AND Thu 4:00 pm
POLITICAL CAREERSRoom: WSCC, 211176.9 POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES AND Sat 10:00 am
POLARIZATIONRoom: Virtual183.11 POLITICAL INFORMATION AND Sat 12:00 pm
POLITICAL ENGAGEMENTRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah152.15 PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR Fri 4:00 pm
REDISTRIBUTION REVISITEDRoom: WSCC, 211143.12 RESPONSIVENESS AND Fri 2:00 pm
POLITICAL EFFICACY INADVANCED DEMOCRACIES
Room: Virtual205.11 SUPPORT FOR DEMOCRACY Sun 6:00 am
AND DISTRIBUTIVE POLICIESRoom: Virtual212.17 WELFARE STATE SUPPORT IN Sun 10:00 am
TIMES OF CRISISRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB
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140 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICSAND SOCIETY
134.14 A RESPONSE DELAYED: Fri 12:00 pmPOLITICAL SCIENCE AND THEHOLOCAUST
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom D71.12 CHALLENGES TO THE RULE OF Thu 8:00 am
LAW IN EUROPE (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual183.12 CITIZENSHIP AND SOCIETY Sat 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 617134.15 COVID POLITICS Fri 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 2A85.12 EU POLITICS IN Thu 12:00 pm
CONTEMPORARY EUROPERoom: WSCC, 616205.12 EUROPEAN POLITICAL Sun 6:00 am
ECONOMYRoom: Virtual128.1 EUROPEAN POLITICS AND Fri 11:30 am
SOCIETY VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual122.6 EUROPEAN UNION POLITICS Fri 10:00 amRoom: Virtual43.11 EUROPE'S CRISIS OF Wed 6:00 am
LEGITIMACY: GOVERNING BYRULES AND RULING BYNUMBERS
Room: Virtual26.13 IMMIGRATION AND DIVERSITY Tue 6:00 am
IN EUROPERoom: Virtual183.13 INSTITUTIONS AND EUROPEAN Sat 12:00 pm
POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 2A110.1 LEADERSHIP, MEDIA, POLITICS, Fri 6:00 am
AND PANDEMICS: THE ITALIANCASE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Conference Group on Italian Politics andSociety
197.9 LIBERAL DEMOCRACY IN Sat 4:00 pmEUROPE: THREATS ANDRESPONSES (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual134.16 MEMORY & THE FUTURE OF Fri 12:00 pm
EUROPE: RUPTURE ANDINTEGRATION IN THE WAKE OFTOTAL WAR (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual117.16 POLITICAL ECONOMY IN Fri 8:00 am
CONTEMPORARY WESTERNEUROPE
Room: WSCC, 606
DivisionPanels
109.13 POLITICAL PARTIES IN Fri 6:00 amCONTEMPORARY EUROPE
Room: Virtual99.13 POLITICAL PARTIES IN EUROPE Thu 4:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 606209.15 POPULISM, POWER, Sun 8:00 am
ACCOUNTABILITY, ANDOPPOSITION (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual124.1 REMEMBERING ROBERT Fri 10:00 am
ELGIE: A SCHOLARLYRETROSPECTIVE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by French Politics Group
51.13 SOCIAL INVESTMENT IN Wed 10:00 amEDUCATION: IMPLICATIONSFOR EQUALITY AND SOCIALSOLIDARITY
Room: Virtual215.11 SOCIO-ECONOMIC CONFLICTS Sun 12:00 pm
AND POLITICAL BEHAVIORRoom: Virtual176.10 THE EU'S RESPONSE TO THE Sat 10:00 am
COVID-19 PANDEMIC: THEISSUE OF DEMOCRATICLEGITIMACY
Room: Virtual162.13 THE WANING OF EUROPEAN Sat 6:00 am
STUDIES IN THE US: SHOULDWE WORRY? WHY? WHAT TODO?
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONALPOLITICAL ECONOMY
33.14 ANALYZING THE Tue 10:00 amGLOBALIZATION BACKLASH:NEW EXPLANATIONS
Room: Virtual38.14 CENTRAL BANKS AND THEIR Tue 2:00 pm
OBJECTIVESRoom: Virtual215.12 COMPETITION AND ANTITRUST Sun 12:00 pm
POLICY IN INTERNATIONALRELATIONS
Room: Virtual218.10 CONSEQUENCES OF ECONOMIC Sun 2:00 pm
CRISISRoom: Virtual205.13 DESIGNING ECONOMIC Sun 6:00 am
COERCIONRoom: Virtual162.14 DOMESTIC AND Sat 6:00 am
INTERNATIONAL INSTITUTIONSAND FOREIGN INVESTMENT
Room: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 141
26.14 DOMESTIC SOURCES AND Tue 6:00 amINTERNATIONALIMPLICATIONS OF AGLOBALIZING CHINA
Room: Virtual71.13 ECONOMIC COERCION IN Thu 8:00 am
GLOBAL POLITICSRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan A197.10 ENGLAND'S CROSS OF GOLD: Sat 4:00 pm
KEYNES, CHURCHILL, & THEGOVERNANCE OF ECONOMICBELIEFS (LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6A85.13 EXCHANGE RATES AND Thu 12:00 pm
GOVERNMENT CREDIBILITYRECONSIDERED
Room: WSCC, 60799.14 GLOBAL RULES AND ILLICIT Thu 4:00 pm
ECONOMIC FLOWSRoom: WSCC, 604134.17 GOVERNANCE IMPLICATIONS Fri 12:00 pm
OF MULTINATIONAL FIRMACTIVITY
Room: WSCC, 603122.7 INTERNATIONAL Fri 10:00 am
ORGANIZATIONS:BUREAUCRACY AND BEHAVIOR
Room: Virtual181.1 INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL Sat 11:30 am
ECONOMY VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual143.13 IPE THEORY IN TRANSITION Fri 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual197.11 LABOR AND TRADE Sat 4:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 606168.17 LOBBYING AND FIRM Sat 8:00 am
INFLUENCERoom: WSCC, 607109.14 LOCAL EFFECTS OF TRADE Fri 6:00 am
AND FOREIGN INVESTMENTENTRY
Room: Virtual183.14 MIGRATION: CAUSES AND Sat 12:00 pm
CONSEQUENCESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 351.14 NEW RESEARCH ON IMF Wed 10:00 am
PROGRAMS: DESIGN,IMPLEMENTATION, ANDIMPACT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
209.16 POLICYMAKERS AS Sun 8:00 amINDIVIDUALS
Room: WSCC, 3A
43.12 POLITICAL CONNECTIONS AND Wed 6:00 amPOLICY INFLUENCE
Room: Virtual218.11 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sun 2:00 pm
ECONOMIC STATECRAFTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
63.10 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Thu 6:00 amGLOBALIZATION IN SOUTHASIA
Room: Virtual91.10 POLITICS OF THE U.S.-CHINA Thu 2:00 pm
TRADE WARRoom: Virtual176.11 PRODUCTION NETWORKS AND Sat 10:00 am
MARKET PROTECTIONRoom: Virtual212.18 RULE OF LAW AND Sun 10:00 am
INTERNATIONAL FINANCERoom: WSCC, 3A176.12 SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND Sat 10:00 am
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICPOLICY
Room: Virtual117.17 SOVEREIGN DEBT: MANAGING Fri 8:00 am
EXPECTATIONSRoom: WSCC, 60399.15 SOVEREIGN DEBT, PUBLIC Thu 4:00 pm
PERCEPTIONS, AND GLOBALNORMS
Room: WSCC, 40151.15 STATES, MARKETS, AND Wed 10:00 am
FOREIGN AIDRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
212.19 STRATEGIC MULTINATIONALS Sun 10:00 amAND DOMESTIC POLITICS
Room: WSCC, 611190.12 TALKING ABOUT MARKETS Sat 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual109.16 THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE Fri 6:00 am
OF ECONOMICMULTILATERALISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
215.13 THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AND Sun 12:00 pmTHE WELFARE STATE
Room: Virtual152.16 THE POLITICS AND Fri 4:00 pm
CONSEQUENCES OF TRADEAGREEMENT DESIGN
Room: WSCC, 603Co-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
77.10 THE POLITICS OF Thu 10:00 amPOLITICALLY CONNECTEDFIRMS
Room: Virtual
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142 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
117.18 THE POLITICS OF THE Fri 8:00 amBACKLASH AGAINSTGLOBALIZATION: DISCOURSE,AND ATTITUDES
Room: WSCC, 31085.14 THE WORLD UNDER Thu 12:00 pm
FINANCIALIZATIONRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB209.17 TRADE AGREEMENTS, Sun 8:00 am
NEGOTIATIONS, ANDINSTITUTIONAL DESIGN(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
205.14 TRANSNATIONAL PRIVATE Sun 6:00 amGOVERNANCE UNDER STRESS:THE CASE OFSTANDARDIZATION
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONALCOLLABORATION
99.16 AVOIDING RUPTURE IN THE Thu 4:00 pmGLOBAL ORDER: IS PLURALISMPOSSIBLE? (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual57.9 CHINA AND COERCION IN Wed 2:00 pm
INTERNATIONAL POLITICSRoom: Virtual33.15 CITIZEN OPINION ON Tue 10:00 am
INTERNATIONALCOOPERATION
Room: Virtual205.15 COMPLEXITIES OF Sun 6:00 am
INTERNATIONALCOOPERATION AND LAW
Room: Virtual209.18 COMPLIANCE AND DEFIANCE Sun 8:00 am
WITH INTERNATIONALCOMMITMENTS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3212.20 COOPERATION AND Sun 10:00 am
INFLUENCE INLNTERNATIONAL REGIMECOMPLEXES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5168.18 DYNAMIC EVOLUTION OF Sat 8:00 am
INTERNATIONAL REGIMECOMPLEXES (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual117.19 FOREIGN AID AND NGOS IN Fri 8:00 am
DEVELOPING COUNTRIESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3
Co-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
77.11 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE AND Thu 10:00 amDEVELOPMENT
Room: Virtual
DivisionPanels
71.14 INDIVIDUALS AND Thu 8:00 amINSTITUTIONS UNDERINTERNATIONAL LAW
Room: WSCC, 205Co-sponsored by Division 21: Conflict Processes
26.15 INTERNATIONAL ACTORS AND Tue 6:00 amPUBLIC ATTITUDES TOWARDCOOPERATION
Room: Virtual130.1 INTERNATIONAL Fri 12:00 pm
COLLABORATION VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual176.13 INTERNATIONAL Sat 10:00 am
COOPERATION ANDRESISTANCE IN HUMANRIGHTS PROMOTIONCAMPAIGNS
Room: Virtual183.15 INTERNATIONAL Sat 12:00 pm
COOPERATION FOR SECURITYAND STABILITY
Room: Sheraton, Aspen117.20 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN Fri 8:00 am
RIGHTS COURTS AND THEPOLITICS OF MOBILIZATIONAND BACKLASH
Room: Sheraton, AspenCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and Courts
38.15 INTERNATIONAL LAW AND Tue 2:00 pmSECOND-ORDER COMPLIANCE
Room: Virtual91.11 INTERNATIONAL LAW: Thu 2:00 pm
PRECISION, DELEGATION ANDCOMPLIANCE
Room: Virtual134.46 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS IN Fri 12:00 pm
AFRICARoom: Sheraton, Ballard
Co-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
109.15 LEGISLATIVE POLITICS OF THE Fri 6:00 amUNITED NATIONS
Room: Virtual134.18 LIVING WITH THE Fri 12:00 pm
CONSEQUENCES OF CLIMATECHANGE
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6B85.15 MANAGING INTERDEPENDENCE Thu 12:00 pm
IN THE DIGITAL AGE(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6ACo-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
209.19 NAVIGATING INSTITUTIONAL Sun 8:00 amCOMPLEXITY IN WORLDPOLITICS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 143
197.12 NETWORKS AND COERCION IN Sat 4:00 pmINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Room: WSCC, 61351.14 NEW RESEARCH ON IMF Wed 10:00 am
PROGRAMS: DESIGN,IMPLEMENTATION, ANDIMPACT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
218.11 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sun 2:00 pmECONOMIC STATECRAFT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
212.30 PROMOTING HUMAN RIGHTS: Sun 10:00 amTHE ROLE OF LAW ANDCOURTS
Room: WSCC, 2BCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and Courts
152.17 PUBLIC OPINION AND Fri 4:00 pmINTERNATIONALCOOPERATION
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 571.19 SOCIETY AND INSTITUTIONS Thu 8:00 am
AFTER CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C2
Co-sponsored by Division 21: Conflict Processes
51.15 STATES, MARKETS, AND Wed 10:00 amFOREIGN AID
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
212.39 SURVEILLANCE AND SECURITY Sun 10:00 amIN A NETWORKED AGE
Room: WSCC, 310Co-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
109.16 THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE Fri 6:00 amOF ECONOMICMULTILATERALISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
152.16 THE POLITICS AND Fri 4:00 pmCONSEQUENCES OF TRADEAGREEMENT DESIGN
Room: WSCC, 603Co-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
209.17 TRADE AGREEMENTS, Sun 8:00 amNEGOTIATIONS, ANDINSTITUTIONAL DESIGN(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONALSECURITY
117.21 21ST CENTURY DETERRENCE Fri 8:00 amRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah
26.16 ALLIANCES AND WAR: Tue 6:00 amCOOPERATION,COMPLICATION, ANDCONFLICT AMONG ALLIES
Room: Virtual71.15 ALLIANCES, PARTNERSHIPS, Thu 8:00 am
AND TECHNOLOGYRoom: WSCC, 4C4134.19 ALLIANCE STRATEGIES: HOW Fri 12:00 pm
STATES MANAGE THEIRSECURITY ALLIANCES
Room: Sheraton, Issaquah109.17 ARMED GROUPS AND Fri 6:00 am
INTERNATIONAL SECURITYRoom: Virtual51.16 ARMS AND PROFIT Wed 10:00 amRoom: Virtual57.10 AUTHORITARIANISM, Wed 2:00 pm
POPULISM, AND FOREIGNPOLICY
Room: Virtual152.18 CHINA AND GREAT POWER Fri 4:00 pm
COMPETITION: SECURITY,ECONOMY, AND INSTITUTION
Room: WSCC, 60843.13 CHINA'S RISE Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual117.22 COOPERATION AND CONFLICT Fri 8:00 am
IN RESPONSE TO EMERGINGTHREATS
Room: WSCC, 4C138.16 CRISIS DYNAMICS Tue 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual176.14 CROSS-DOMAIN Sat 10:00 am
OPPORTUNITIES AND THREATSRoom: Virtual33.16 CYBER CONFLICT Tue 10:00 amRoom: Virtual168.19 DISAGGREGATING THE CIVIL- Sat 8:00 am
MILITARY DIVIDERoom: WSCC, 4C4183.16 DISRUPTION DEFERRED? — Sat 12:00 pm
HYPE, COMPLEXITY, ANDBUREAUCRACY IN MILITARYINNOVATION
Room: WSCC, 4C1197.13 DYNAMICS OF REBEL Sat 4:00 pm
CONSOLIDATION INFRAGMENTED CIVILCONFLICTS
Room: WSCC, 4C1205.16 ECONOMIC SANCTIONS AND Sun 6:00 am
ECONOMIC COSTSRoom: Virtual209.20 ESCALATION AND MEDIATION Sun 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 4C1
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144 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
85.16 EVALUATING GRAND Thu 12:00 pmSTRATEGY
Room: WSCC, 4C443.14 GENDER AND INTERNATIONAL Wed 6:00 am
SECURITYRoom: Virtual162.15 GREAT POWER COMPETITION Sat 6:00 amRoom: Virtual99.17 IDENTITY FRAMES, STANDING, Thu 4:00 pm
AND CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C171.16 INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE Thu 8:00 am
CHALLENGES OF EMERGINGTECHNOLOGIES
Room: WSCC, 4C1134.20 INTERNATIONAL ORDER AND Fri 12:00 pm
REPERTOIRES OF POWERPOLITICS
Room: WSCC, 60777.12 INTERNATIONAL ORDERS IN Thu 10:00 am
EAST ASIARoom: Virtual212.21 INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND Sun 10:00 am
THE ROLE OF IDEOLOGY INREVOLUTIONS
Room: WSCC, 4C1119.1 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY: Fri 8:30 am
ASSESSING AND IMPROVINGCOUNTERING VIOLENTEXTREMISM PROGRAMSVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual114.1 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY: Fri 8:00 am
MILITARIES BEYOND THEBATTLEFIELD VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual122.8 INTERSTATE POWER Fri 10:00 am
DYNAMICSRoom: Virtual85.17 MILITARY TRAINING, NORMS, Thu 12:00 pm
AND PROFESSIONALIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 4C1218.12 NEGOTIATIONS WITH STATE Sun 2:00 pm
AND NON-STATE ACTORSRoom: Virtual215.14 NEW RESEARCH ON LEADERS Sun 12:00 pm
IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICSRoom: Virtual63.11 NORMS AND WAR Thu 6:00 amRoom: Virtual143.14 NOVEL SURVEY EXPERIMENTS Fri 2:00 pm
IN NUCLEAR POLITICSRoom: Virtual
DivisionPanels
99.18 NUCLEAR WEAPONS, NEW Thu 4:00 pmTECHNOLOGIES, AND THERISKS OF CRISIS ESCALATION
Room: WSCC, 4C2205.17 POSSIBILITIES AND Sun 6:00 am
LIMITATIONS OF PUBLIC ANDFACE-TO-FACE DIPLOMACY
Room: Virtual168.20 PROSPECTS FOR REBOOTING Sat 8:00 am
ARMS CONTROL FOR TODAY'SGREAT POWER NUCLEARCOMPETITION
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6B162.16 PUBLIC OPINION AND Sat 6:00 am
CONFLICT PROPENSITYRoom: Virtual63.12 PUBLIC OPINION AND Thu 6:00 am
INTERNATIONAL SECURITYRoom: Virtual51.17 RACE AND LIBERAL FOREIGN Wed 10:00 am
POLICYRoom: Virtual197.14 RADICAL EXTREMISM Sat 4:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 60851.18 REGIONAL SECURITY EAST Wed 10:00 am
ASIA/SOUTH ASIARoom: Virtual152.19 RESURGENCE OF GREAT Fri 4:00 pm
POWER COMPETITIONRoom: WSCC, 607176.15 SECURITY COOPERATION Sat 10:00 amRoom: Virtual134.21 SECURITY IN MULTI-ETHNIC Fri 12:00 pm
SYSTEMSRoom: WSCC, 604209.21 SECURITY INSTITUTIONS Sun 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 60426.17 SHADOW OF VIOLENCE Tue 6:00 amRoom: Virtual190.13 SHIFTING NUCLEAR BALANCE Sat 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual43.15 SOCIAL ORGANIZATION IN Wed 6:00 am
REGULAR AND IRREGULARARMED FORCES
Room: Virtual212.22 TEXT-AS-DATA AND Sun 10:00 am
HISTORICAL FOREIGN POLICYDECISION MAKING
Room: WSCC, 4C4152.20 THE ANATOMY OF CONFLICT: Fri 4:00 pm
CAMPAIGN ANALYSIS,WARGAMING, AND CONFLICTDATA
Room: WSCC, 60491.12 THE SECOND IMAGE Thu 2:00 pm
REVERSEDRoom: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 145
122.9 THE UNITED NATIONS AND Fri 10:00 amGLOBAL NORMS
Room: Virtual183.17 TIME IN INTERNATIONAL Sat 12:00 pm
RELATIONSRoom: WSCC, 608212.23 US RETRENCHMENT IN THE Sun 10:00 am
MIDDLE EAST: PROSPECTS ANDIMPLICATIONS
Room: WSCC, 604
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY71.17 ASSESSING THE CHINESE- Thu 8:00 am
AMERICAN RIVALRYRoom: WSCC, 615152.36 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Fri 4:00 pm
BEFORE THE WEST: RISE ANDFALL OF EASTERN WORLDORDERS (LIVESTREAMED)
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CCo-sponsored by Division 43: International History andPolitics
38.17 BUREAUCRATIC ACTORS IN Tue 2:00 pmFOREIGN POLICYMAKING
Room: Virtual63.13 CONGRESSIONAL INFLUENCE Thu 6:00 am
ON AMERICAN FOREIGNPOLICYMAKING
Room: Virtual168.21 DEMONSTRATIONS OF Sat 8:00 am
REPUTATION ANDCOMMITMENT IN FOREIGNPOLICY
Room: WSCC, 30399.19 EXPANDING THE UNIVERSE OF Thu 4:00 pm
FOREIGN POLICYMAKINGCASES
Room: WSCC, 615122.10 FOREIGN ELECTION Fri 10:00 am
INTERFERENCERoom: Virtual87.1 FOREIGN POLICY: Thu 1:30 pm
COMPETITION AND RIVALRY ININTERNATIONAL POLITICSVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual152.21 KNOWLEDGE AND Fri 4:00 pm
TECHNOLOGY AS INPUTS INFOREIGN POLICYMAKING
Room: WSCC, 606197.15 LEADERS, DOMESTIC Sat 4:00 pm
CONSTRAINTS, AND FOREIGNPOLICY PRIORITIES
Room: Sheraton, Willow B176.16 MANAGING INTERNATIONAL Sat 10:00 am
ALLIANCESRoom: Virtual
212.24 NEW APPROACHES TO Sun 10:00 amSTUDYING CHINESE FOREIGNPOLICY
Room: WSCC, 61533.19 PRESIDENTIAL INFLUENCE IN Tue 10:00 am
U.S. FOREIGN POLICYRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
162.17 PUBLIC AUDIENCES AS Sat 6:00 amCONSTRAINTS ON FOREIGNPOLICYMAKING
Room: Virtual109.23 PUBLIC OPINION ABOUT Fri 6:00 am
INTERNATIONAL EVENTS ANDORGANIZATIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 37: Public Opinion
215.15 PUBLIC OPINION AND FOREIGN Sun 12:00 pmPOLICY
Room: Virtual190.14 RACE AND RACISM IN Sat 2:00 pm
FOREIGN POLICYRoom: Virtual117.23 RETRENCHMENT FROM THE Fri 8:00 am
GLOBAL ORDER? US FOREIGNPOLICY UNDER TRUMP ANDBEYOND
Room: Virtual134.22 THE EFFECTS OF LEADERS' Fri 12:00 pm
GENDER ON FOREIGN POLICYDECISIONMAKING
Room: WSCC, 61957.11 THEORY AND PRACTICE OF Wed 2:00 pm
FOREIGN-POLICY RELEVANTRESEARCH
Room: Virtual209.22 USE OF FORCE IN THE Sun 8:00 am
FOREIGN POLICY TOOLKITRoom: WSCC, 617
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES134.23 ADVANCES IN CONFLICT Fri 12:00 pm
PROCESSESRoom: WSCC, 4C163.14 ADVANCES IN UNDERSTANDING Thu 6:00 am
BARGAINING AND CONFLICTRoom: Virtual26.18 ANASTASIA SHESTERININA'S Tue 6:00 am
“MOBILIZING INUNCERTAINTY”
Room: Virtual176.17 A ROUNDTABLE IN HONOR OF Sat 10:00 am
LEE ANN FUJJI'S "SHOW TIME"Room: Virtual
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146 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
99.20 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: Thu 4:00 pmMILITARY COUPS AND REGIMESURVIVAL
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 285.18 BOTTOM-UP AND TOP-DOWN Thu 12:00 pm
APPROACHES TO POLITICALECONOMY OF INTERSTATECONFLICT (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual162.18 CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF Sat 6:00 am
PROXY WARFARERoom: Virtual176.18 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Sat 10:00 am
OF CIVILIAN VICTIMIZATIONRoom: Virtual205.18 CHOICES AND CONSEQUENCES Sun 6:00 am
IN ALLIANCE DYNAMICSRoom: Virtual215.16 CLIMATE AND HEALTH Sun 12:00 pm
CHALLENGES TO CONFLICTPREVENTION
Room: Virtual26.19 COMMUNAL VIOLENCE Tue 6:00 am
DURING CIVIL WARRoom: Virtual117.24 COMMUNICATION AND Fri 8:00 am
COORDINATION UNDERCONFLICT
Room: WSCC, 4C2176.29 CONFLICT AND CONSTRAINTS: Sat 10:00 am
NEW INSIGHTS FROM AFRICANPOLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
205.19 CONFLICT, GENDER AND Sun 6:00 amPOLITICAL REPRESENTATION
Room: Virtual74.1 CONFLICT PROCESSES 1 Thu 10:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual79.1 CONFLICT PROCESSES 2 Thu 10:30 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual80.1 CONFLICT PROCESSES 3 Thu 11:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER ROOMRoom: Virtual168.22 CRIMINAL POLITICS IN BRAZIL Sat 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 4C2134.24 CRISIS ESCALATION AND Fri 12:00 pm
PREVENTIONRoom: WSCC, 4C2152.22 DIPLOMACY AND CONFLICT IN Fri 4:00 pm
THE MIDDLE EASTRoom: WSCC, 4C2183.18 DIPLOMACY IN CONFLICT Sat 12:00 pm
RESOLUTIONRoom: WSCC, 4C2
DivisionPanels
197.16 DOMESTIC AND Sat 4:00 pmINTERNATIONALREVERBERATIONS OFPROLIFERATION
Room: WSCC, 3B57.12 ELECTIONS, CONFLICT, AND Wed 2:00 pm
VIOLENCERoom: Virtual215.17 EVALUATING ELECTORAL Sun 12:00 pm
VIOLENCERoom: Virtual109.18 EXTREMIST VIOLENCE IN THE Fri 6:00 am
U.S. AND ABROADRoom: Virtual212.25 FEMALE FIGHTERS IN COMBAT Sun 10:00 am
AND ON THE BALLOTRoom: WSCC, 4C2168.23 GOVERNANCE, LAW, AND Sat 8:00 am
CONFLICT: LEGAL PLURALISMIN POST-CONFLICT SETTINGS
Room: WSCC, 4C351.19 HOMELANDS AND Wed 10:00 am
TERRITORIAL CONFLICTRoom: Virtual71.14 INDIVIDUALS AND Thu 8:00 am
INSTITUTIONS UNDERINTERNATIONAL LAW
Room: WSCC, 205Co-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
152.23 INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL Fri 4:00 pmBARGAINING AMONG REBELGROUPS
Room: WSCC, 4C4122.11 JOSEPH M. BROWN'S "FORCE Fri 10:00 am
OF WORDS: THE LOGIC OFTERRORIST THREATS"
Room: Virtual33.17 LEADER-BASED APPROACHES Tue 10:00 am
TO INTERNATIONAL CONFLICTRoom: Virtual162.19 LONG-TERM SOCIAL AND Sat 6:00 am
POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES OFWORLD WAR I AND II
Room: Virtual197.17 MEDIA, CONTENTION, AND Sat 4:00 pm
CONFLICT IN THE MIDDLEEAST AND NORTH AFRICA(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual38.18 MOBILIZATION AND RELIGION Tue 2:00 pm
IN ARMED CONFLICTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
134.25 MODES AND CONSEQUENCES Fri 12:00 pmOF STATE REPRESSION
Room: WSCC, 4C4
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 147
43.16 NATIONALISM, ORIGIN MYTHS, Wed 6:00 amAND VIOLENCE
Room: Virtual117.25 NEGOTIATING BOUNDARIES IN Fri 8:00 am
IRRoom: WSCC, 4C4122.12 NEW IDEAS IN THE STUDY OF Fri 10:00 am
GENOCIDE – INSIGHTS FROMOMAR MCDOOM'S BOOK ONRWANDA
Room: Virtual26.20 ORDER AND VIOLENCE IN THE Tue 6:00 am
INTERNATIONAL SYSTEMRoom: Virtual212.26 ORIGINS AND LEGACIES OF Sun 10:00 am
VIOLENCERoom: WSCC, 4C3218.13 POLITICAL CAUSES AND Sun 2:00 pm
PERSONAL CONSEQUENCES OFVIOLENCE: RESEARCH FROMSOUTH ASIA
Room: Virtual183.19 POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN Sat 12:00 pm
DEMOCRACIESRoom: WSCC, 4C3143.15 POST-CONFLICT Fri 2:00 pm
INSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURESRoom: Virtual85.19 REBEL GOVERNANCE: Thu 12:00 pm
INSTITUTIONS AND BEHAVIORSRoom: WSCC, 4C371.18 REGIME DURABILITY IN THE Thu 8:00 am
FACE OF COUPSRoom: WSCC, 4C399.21 RELATIONAL APPROACHES TO Thu 4:00 pm
THE STUDY OF CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C3212.32 RELIGION AND VIOLENCE Sun 10:00 amRoom: Sheraton, Aspen
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
190.15 SECURING STATE REFORM IN Sat 2:00 pmFRAGILE STATES
Room: Virtual63.15 SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN WAR Thu 6:00 am
AND PEACERoom: Virtual71.19 SOCIETY AND INSTITUTIONS Thu 8:00 am
AFTER CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C2
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
117.26 SOLIDARITY AND BACKLASH Fri 8:00 amEFFECTS FROM PROTESTS
Room: WSCC, 608
197.18 STRATEGIES TO PREVENT Sat 4:00 pmVIOLENCE AND EXTREMISM:LATEST EVIDENCE AND NEWFRONTIERS
Room: WSCC, 4C4162.20 TERRITORY, BOUNDARIES, AND Sat 6:00 am
GOVERNANCERoom: Virtual209.23 THE CHANGING NATURE OF Sun 8:00 am
INTERSTATE TERRITORIALCONFLICT AND ITSMANAGEMENT
Room: WSCC, 4C391.13 THE EVOLUTION OF WAR Thu 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual43.17 THE FUTURE OF CIVIL WAR Wed 6:00 am
STUDIESRoom: Virtual209.24 THE IMPLICATIONS OF REBEL Sun 8:00 am
GOVERNANCERoom: WSCC, 4C477.13 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT Thu 10:00 am
ECONOMIES, ORGANIZEDCRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE:CRIMINAL AND EXTRA-LEGALGOVERNANCE
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 499.22 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT Thu 4:00 pm
ECONOMIES, ORGANIZEDCRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE:NEW RESEARCH IN CRIMINALPOLITICS: CRIMINALCOMPETITION AND VIOLENCE
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 471.20 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT Thu 8:00 am
ECONOMIES, ORGANIZEDCRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCEROUNDTABLE
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 491.14 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT Thu 2:00 pm
ECONOMIES, ORGANIZEDCRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE:STATE RESPONSES TO ILLICITECONOMIES, ORGANIZEDCRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 485.20 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT Thu 12:00 pm
ECONOMIES, ORGANIZEDCRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE:THE METHODS AND ETHICS OFRESEARCH ON CRIMINAL ANDEXTRA-LEGAL ACTORS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4
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148 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
218.14 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT Sun 2:00 pmMARKETS
Room: Virtual183.20 THE ROLE OF PUBLIC OPINION Sat 12:00 pm
IN INTERNATIONAL CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C451.20 THE STRUCTURE OF ARMED Wed 10:00 am
GROUPSRoom: Virtual57.13 TRADE COMPLEXITY, Wed 2:00 pm
RESOURCE DEPENDENCE,MARKETS AND POLITICALCONFLICT
Room: Virtual57.14 TRANSITIONING FROM Wed 2:00 pm
CONFLICT TO PEACE: THECASE OF COLOMBIA
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES85.21 CANDIDACIES, CAMPAIGNS, Thu 12:00 pm
AND BEHAVIOR IN THEAMERICAN CONTEXT
Room: WSCC, 617197.19 CLASS, GENDER AND Sat 4:00 pm
LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR INCOMPARATIVE ENVIRONMENTS
Room: WSCC, 61533.18 COMMITTEE DYNAMICS IN Tue 10:00 am
THE U.S.Room: Virtual143.17 CONSTRAINTS ON EXERCISES Fri 2:00 pm
OF EXECUTIVE POWERRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
99.23 CUES AND SIGNALS TO Thu 4:00 pmCONSTITUENTS AND FELLOWLEGISLATORS
Room: WSCC, 20538.19 IDEOLOGY IN TIMES OF Tue 2:00 pm
POLARIZATIONRoom: Virtual209.25 IMPLICATIONS OF Sun 8:00 am
PARTISANSHIP IN THE U.S.CONGRESS
Room: WSCC, 61877.14 INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO Thu 10:00 am
EUROPEAN LEGISLATIVEPROCESSES
Room: Virtual134.26 INTERBRANCH RELATIONS IN Fri 12:00 pm
LATIN AMERICARoom: WSCC, 615113.2 LEGISLATIVE POLITICS Fri 7:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual
DivisionPanels
43.18 LEGISLATIVE PRODUCTIVITY Wed 6:00 amIN THE U.S.
Room: Virtual143.16 LEGISLATORS AND THEIR Fri 2:00 pm
CONSTITUENTSRoom: Virtual152.24 OVERSIGHT, DELEGATION, Fri 4:00 pm
BARGAINING, AND CONTROLBY THE U.S. CONGRESS
Room: WSCC, 61751.21 POLICY PREFERENCES, Wed 10:00 am
CONFLICT, AND LEGISLATIVESPEECH
Room: Virtual63.16 POLITICAL ELITES, ECONOMIC Thu 6:00 am
INEQUALITY AND UNEQUALREPRESENTATION
Room: Virtual71.21 SPEECHES AND POSITION Thu 8:00 am
TAKING IN A COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVE
Room: WSCC, 616218.15 STRATEGIC AND TACTICAL Sun 2:00 pm
LEGISLATIVE COALITIONSRoom: Virtual212.27 STRATEGIC CHOICES IN Sun 10:00 am
CHANGING ENVIRONMENTSRoom: WSCC, 617168.24 THE CAUSES AND Sat 8:00 am
CONSEQUENCES OFLAWMAKING EFFECTIVENESSIN CONGRESS (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS ANDEXECUTIVE POLITICS
91.15 ASSESSING THE PRESIDENT'S Thu 2:00 pmIMPACT ON THE POLITICALSYSTEM
Room: Virtual143.23 BIDEN'S CATHOLICISM: Fri 2:00 pm
POLITICS, RELIGION, ANDAMERICAN PLURALISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
143.17 CONSTRAINTS ON EXERCISES Fri 2:00 pmOF EXECUTIVE POWER
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 22: Legislative Studies
122.13 EXECUTIVE POLITICS IN THE Fri 10:00 amCOMPARATIVE CONTEXT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative Politics
212.28 MANAGING THE WHITE HOUSE Sun 10:00 amAND FEDERAL AGENCIES
Room: Sheraton, IssaquahCo-sponsored by Division 24: Public Administration
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 149
134.27 PHANTOMS OF A Fri 12:00 pmBELEAGUERED REPUBLIC: THEDEEP STATE AND THE UNITARYEXECUTIVE
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B152.25 POLITICS OF RULEMAKING IN Fri 4:00 pm
THE ADMINISTRATION STATERoom: WSCC, 2A209.26 POLITICS OF THE UNILATERAL Sun 8:00 am
PRESIDENCYRoom: WSCC, 30333.19 PRESIDENTIAL INFLUENCE IN Tue 10:00 am
U.S. FOREIGN POLICYRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 20: Foreign Policy
43.19 PRESIDENTIAL LEADERSHIP Wed 6:00 amAND THE MAKINGS OF PUBLICPOLICY
Room: Virtual164.1 PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE Sat 6:30 am
POLITICS VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual71.22 QUESTIONS OF EXECUTIVE Thu 8:00 am
POWER: FOUNDATIONS,ASSUMPTIONS, AND RHETORIC
Room: Sheraton, Issaquah197.20 THE IMPACT OF Sat 4:00 pm
POLITICIZATION AND THEBUDGET ON FEDERALAGENCIES
Room: Sheraton, BallardCo-sponsored by Division 24: Public Administration
183.21 THE PRESIDENCY AND Sat 12:00 pmELECTORAL CONNECTIONS
Room: WSCC, 303Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
215.18 THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE Sun 12:00 pmTHEORY: A DANGER TOCONSTITUTIONALGOVERNMENT
Room: Virtual190.16 VACANCIES, DELAYS, AND Sat 2:00 pm
LEGISLATIVE CONSTRAINTS INPRESIDENTIAL APPOINTMENT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 24: Public Administration
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION209.27 ACCOUNTABILITY AND Sun 8:00 am
PERFORMANCERoom: WSCC, 61985.22 BUREAUCRATIC AGENCIES AND Thu 12:00 pm
POLITICAL PRESSURESRoom: WSCC, 30326.21 CROSS-SECTOR Tue 6:00 am
RELATIONSHIPSRoom: Virtual
91.16 EQUITY AND ACCESS Thu 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual122.14 GOVERNMENT AGENCIES AND Fri 10:00 am
THE COVID PANDEMICRoom: Virtual215.19 INTERNATIONAL Sun 12:00 pm
BUREAUCRATS:REPRESENTATION, AGENCYAND POWER IN GLOBALGOVERNANCE
Room: Virtual197.21 LOCAL GOVERNMENT Sat 4:00 pm
AGENCIESRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah212.28 MANAGING THE WHITE HOUSE Sun 10:00 am
AND FEDERAL AGENCIESRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah
Co-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
152.26 POPULISM, DEMOCRATIC Fri 4:00 pmBACKSLIDING, AND PUBLICADMINISTRATION
Room: WSCC, 62067.2 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: Thu 7:00 am
TOPICS IN PUBLICADMINISTRATION ANDBUREAUCRACY VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual168.25 PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF Sat 8:00 am
BUREAUCRATIC PROGRAMSAND AGENCIES
Room: Sheraton, Ballard134.28 REPRESENTATIVE Fri 12:00 pm
BUREAUCRACYRoom: WSCC, 2B197.20 THE IMPACT OF Sat 4:00 pm
POLITICIZATION AND THEBUDGET ON FEDERALAGENCIES
Room: Sheraton, BallardCo-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
190.16 VACANCIES, DELAYS, AND Sat 2:00 pmLEGISLATIVE CONSTRAINTS INPRESIDENTIAL APPOINTMENT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
162.21 WHY THEY DO WHAT THEY Sat 6:00 amDO? INFLUENCES ONBUREAUCRATIC LEADERSHIPAND MANAGEMENT
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY71.23 ADVANCES IN LAW Thu 8:00 am
ENFORCEMENT POLICYRESEARCH
Room: WSCC, 2A
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150 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
152.27 ASSESSING INCLUSION AND Fri 4:00 pmDIVERSITY IN THE POLICYPROCESS
Room: Sheraton, Issaquah57.15 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Wed 2:00 pm
MALLORY SORELLE'S"DEMOCRACY DECLINED"
Room: Virtual43.29 ENDURING LESSONS IN Wed 6:00 am
EDUCATION POLITICS ANDPOLICY FROM THE COVID-19PANDEMIC
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 59: Education Politics and Policy
212.29 IMPLEMENTATION IS POLITICS: Sun 10:00 amEFFECTS OF VARIATION INSTATE CANNABIS POLICY
Room: WSCC, 619134.8 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 12:00 pm
CONFERENCE: CRIMINALLEGAL INTERSECTIONS ANDBOUNDARIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
117.11 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 8:00 amCONFERENCE: DESCRIPTIVEREPRESENTATION IN THECRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
152.9 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 4:00 pmCONFERENCE: IN-PERSONJUNIOR SCHOLAR POSTERSESSION
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
122.4 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 10:00 amCONFERENCE: POLICYIMPLEMENTATION ANDDISCRETION IN THE CRIMINALLEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
143.7 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 2:00 pmCONFERENCE: ROUNDTABLE:POLITICAL SCIENCE FOR THEPUBLIC GOOD
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
DivisionPanels
176.19 NEW APPROACHES TO Sat 10:00 amENVIRONMENTAL POLICYRESEARCH
Room: Virtual33.20 PLURAL APPROACHES TO Tue 10:00 am
EDUCATION AND EQUALITYRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 59: Education Politics and Policy
38.20 PUBLIC POLICY AND THE Tue 2:00 pmPOLITICS OF DISASTER: NEWDIRECTIONS, NEW RESEARCH
Room: Virtual183.22 PUBLIC POLICY AND THE Sat 12:00 pm
RESPONSE TO COVID-19Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 1164.2 PUBLIC POLICY VIRTUAL Sat 6:30 am
POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual168.26 THE MANY ANGLES OF POLICY Sat 8:00 am
FEEDBACKRoom: WSCC, 2A
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS38.21 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Tue 2:00 pm
"JUDGING INEQUALITY"Room: Virtual43.20 CITIZENS ACROSS BORDERS: Wed 6:00 am
THE ROLE OF COURTS INMIGRATION AND ASYLUM
Room: Virtual218.16 COMPARATIVE LEGAL Sun 2:00 pm
MOBILIZATIONRoom: Virtual143.18 COURT OPINION LANGUAGE Fri 2:00 pm
AND INFLUENCERoom: Virtual117.27 COURTS AND JUDGES IN THE Fri 8:00 am
NEWS AND `NEW' MEDIARoom: WSCC, 40191.17 COURTS, CAMPAIGNS, AND Thu 2:00 pm
ELECTORAL POLITICSRoom: Virtual99.24 COURTS IN CONTEXT: Thu 4:00 pm
EXAMINING JUDICIAL ANDLEGAL HIERARCHIES
Room: WSCC, 603209.28 COURTS IN TRANSITION, Sun 8:00 am
COURTS IN CRISISRoom: WSCC, 3B82.1 DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS Thu 12:00 pm
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual183.23 GENDER AND JUDGING: COURT Sat 12:00 pm
DECISION-MAKING IN NEWCONTEXTS
Room: WSCC, 401
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 151
117.20 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN Fri 8:00 amRIGHTS COURTS AND THEPOLITICS OF MOBILIZATIONAND BACKLASH
Room: Sheraton, AspenCo-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
190.17 JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR AND Sat 2:00 pmPOLICY: INSTITUTIONALRULES, LAW, AND GROUPDYNAMICS
Room: Virtual168.27 JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE AND Sat 8:00 am
JUDICIALIZATION:RETHINKING THE RULE OFLAW
Room: WSCC, 612134.8 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 12:00 pm
CONFERENCE: CRIMINALLEGAL INTERSECTIONS ANDBOUNDARIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
117.11 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 8:00 amCONFERENCE: DESCRIPTIVEREPRESENTATION IN THECRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
152.9 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 4:00 pmCONFERENCE: IN-PERSONJUNIOR SCHOLAR POSTERSESSION
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
122.4 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 10:00 amCONFERENCE: POLICYIMPLEMENTATION ANDDISCRETION IN THE CRIMINALLEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
143.7 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 2:00 pmCONFERENCE: ROUNDTABLE:POLITICAL SCIENCE FOR THEPUBLIC GOOD
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
134.29 LAWYERS AND EXTERNAL Fri 12:00 pmACTORS IN THE JUDICIALPROCESS
Room: WSCC, 61691.18 MENTORING IN LAW & Thu 2:00 pm
COURTS: GOALS, CHALLENGES,AND OPPORTUNITIES
Room: Virtual176.20 NEW MEASURES IN JUDICIAL Sat 10:00 am
POLITICSRoom: Virtual71.24 POLITICS OF FEDERAL Thu 8:00 am
JUDICIAL SELECTIONRoom: WSCC, 604212.30 PROMOTING HUMAN RIGHTS: Sun 10:00 am
THE ROLE OF LAW ANDCOURTS
Room: WSCC, 2BCo-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
57.16 PUBLIC OPINION, COURT Wed 2:00 pmLEGITIMACY, AND SUPPORTFOR THE RULE OF LAW
Room: Virtual218.17 RACE, GENDER, AND THE Sun 2:00 pm
JUDICIARYRoom: Virtual63.17 SEPARATION OF POWERS AND Thu 6:00 am
INTERBRANCH RELATIONSHIPSRoom: Virtual218.18 THE POLITICS OF AMBIGUITY: Sun 2:00 pm
CONSISTENCY AND DISPARITYACROSS THE SUBFIELD DIVIDE
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAWAND JURISPRUDENCE
63.18 POLITICS AND Thu 6:00 amCONSTITUTIONALISM
Room: Virtual117.28 THE STRUCTURAL MECHANICS Fri 8:00 am
OF CONSTITUTIONALISMRoom: WSCC, 2B183.24 WOMEN'S LIVES AND Sat 12:00 pm
CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTSRoom: WSCC, 2B
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM ANDINTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
33.21 A PATCHWORK OF Tue 10:00 amGOVERNANCE FOR ACOMPLEX WORLD
Room: Virtual91.28 CITIZENSHIP REIMAGINED: A Thu 2:00 pm
NEW FRAMEWORK FOR STATERIGHTS IN THE UNITED STATES
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 52: Migration & Citizenship
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152 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
69.2 FEDERALISM AND Thu 7:30 amINTERGOVERNMENTALRELATIONS VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual99.25 POLITICAL BEHAVIOR AND Thu 4:00 pm
PUBLIC OPINION UNDERFEDERALISM
Room: WSCC, 310215.20 SOCIETIES BEHIND Sun 12:00 pm
SECESSIONIST CONFLICTSRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS ANDPOLICY
99.26 ELECTION ADMINISTRATION: Thu 4:00 pmIMPACT OF VOTING RULES INTHE STATES
Room: WSCC, 60938.22 GENDER DYNAMICS ON THE Tue 2:00 pm
CAMPAIGN TRAIL AND IN THESTATEHOUSE
Room: Virtual190.18 LABORATORIES OF Sat 2:00 pm
DEMOCRACY: ADVANCES INPOLICY DIFFUSION RESEARCH
Room: Virtual122.15 NEW METHODOLOGICAL Fri 10:00 am
APPROACHES IN STATEPOLITICS RESEARCH
Room: Virtual183.25 PARTIES, INSTITUTIONS, AND Sat 12:00 pm
POLARIZATION IN AMERICANSTATE POLITICS
Room: Sheraton, Ballard174.1 PLURAL APPROACHES TO Sat 10:00 am
UNDERSTANDING COVID-19RESPONSE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
134.30 POLICY ADOPTION AND Fri 12:00 pmRESPONSIVENESS: A VIEWFROM THE STATES
Room: WSCC, 620215.21 RACE, PLACE, AND IDENTITY Sun 12:00 pm
IN STATE POLITICS ANDPOLICY
Room: Virtual209.29 STATE-LEVEL POLITICAL Sun 8:00 am
DEVELOPMENT: CHANGINGVOTERS, PARTIES, ANDACTIVISTS
Room: WSCC, 611180.2 VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION: Sat 11:00 am
STATE POLITICS AND POLICYRoom: Virtual
DivisionPanels
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS168.28 CITIZEN PARTICIPATION AND Sat 8:00 am
PARTNERSHIP IN URBANPOLITICS
Room: WSCC, 616209.30 DYNAMICS OF RACIAL Sun 8:00 am
SEPARATION AND SOLIDARITYRoom: WSCC, 40185.23 HOUSING, EQUITY, AND THE Thu 12:00 pm
BUILT ENVIRONMENTRoom: WSCC, 620134.8 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 12:00 pm
CONFERENCE: CRIMINALLEGAL INTERSECTIONS ANDBOUNDARIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
117.11 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 8:00 amCONFERENCE: DESCRIPTIVEREPRESENTATION IN THECRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
152.9 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 4:00 pmCONFERENCE: IN-PERSONJUNIOR SCHOLAR POSTERSESSION
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
122.4 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 10:00 amCONFERENCE: POLICYIMPLEMENTATION ANDDISCRETION IN THE CRIMINALLEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
143.7 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 2:00 pmCONFERENCE: ROUNDTABLE:POLITICAL SCIENCE FOR THEPUBLIC GOOD
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
91.19 LINKING RACIAL CAPITALISM Thu 2:00 pmAND URBAN POLITICS
Room: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 153
83.2 LOCAL POLITICS AT THE Thu 12:00 pmFOREFRONT OF AMERICA'SFIGHT FOR RACIAL EQUALITY
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
43.21 MOBILITY AND IMMIGRATION: Wed 6:00 amCITIES AS ACTORS IN THEIMMIGRANT EXPERIENCE
Room: Virtual134.31 NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE Fri 12:00 pm
RIGHT TO THE CITYRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB143.19 POWER AND POLITICS IN Fri 2:00 pm
URBAN SPACERoom: Virtual51.22 PROMOTING PLURALISM Wed 10:00 am
THROUGH CIVICALLYENGAGED RESEARCH
Room: Virtual183.26 SECURING THE CITY?: Sat 12:00 pm
POLICING, EQUITY, ANDACCOUNTABILITY
Room: WSCC, 62099.27 THE POWER OF INTERESTS IN Thu 4:00 pm
LOCAL ECONOMICDEVELOPMENT
Room: WSCC, 303112.1 URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS: Fri 6:30 am
NEW DIRECTIONS IN URBANPOLITICS RESEARCH VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual38.23 URBAN INSTITUTIONAL Tue 2:00 pm
GEOGRAPHIES: SPATIALSTRUCTURE & POLITICS
Room: Virtual215.22 WHO GETS TO CONTEST Sun 12:00 pm
LOCAL ELECTIONS?:GATEKEEPERS ANDREPRESENTATION
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, ANDPOLITICS RESEARCH
85.24 AMERICAN POLITICS AND Thu 12:00 pmGENDER
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan B63.19 COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF Thu 6:00 am
GENDER AND POLITICSRoom: Virtual162.31 COMPARING QUEER POLITICS Sat 6:00 amRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & PoliticsCo-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
91.20 CONFLICT AND GENDER Thu 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual
57.17 EMOTIONS, FASHION, AND Wed 2:00 pmREDEFINING POLITICS
Room: Virtual168.29 EXPLAINING WOMEN'S Sat 8:00 am
INCLUSION AND EXCLUSIONRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah109.19 GENDER AND AUTHORITARIAN Fri 6:00 am
POLITICS: A COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVE
Room: Virtual77.15 GENDER AND DECISION- Thu 10:00 am
MAKINGRoom: Virtual122.16 GENDER AND INTERNATIONAL Fri 10:00 am
RELATIONSRoom: Virtual143.25 GENDER AND VOTING Fri 2:00 pm
BEHAVIORRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
71.25 GENDER, CRISIS AND Thu 8:00 amPOLITICAL POWER (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual143.20 GENDERED POLICY IN THE Fri 2:00 pm
HOME AND THE STATERoom: Virtual99.28 GENDERED POLITICAL Thu 4:00 pm
ECONOMYRoom: Sheraton, Willow A205.20 GENDERED PUBLIC POLICY Sun 6:00 am
AND ATTITUDESRoom: Virtual215.23 GENDERED STRATEGIES AND Sun 12:00 pm
POLITICAL OUTCOMESRoom: Virtual85.31 GENDER & PUBLIC OPINION Thu 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 615
Co-sponsored by Division 37: Public Opinion
183.27 GENDER QUOTAS, WOMEN'S Sat 12:00 pmPOLITICAL PARTICIPATION,AND LEADERSHIP
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan B218.19 GENDER, RELATIONAL HARM, Sun 2:00 pm
AND JUSTICE: LEGACIES OFPOLITICAL VIOLENCE
Room: Virtual209.31 GENDER, VIOLENCE, AND Sun 8:00 am
POLITICAL CRISESRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan A57.18 INTERSECTIONAL Wed 2:00 pm
CANDIDATES,COMMUNICATION, ANDREPRESENTATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
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99.29 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Thu 4:00 pmINTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan B31.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 8:00 am
SOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE: BURDENS ANDRISKS OF INTERSECTIONALACTIVISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
37.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 2:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL AGENCYAND STRUCTURE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
25.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 6:00 amSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONALCONSCIOUSNESS ANDCOALITION POLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
32.2 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 10:00 amSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONALMOBILIZATION ANDREPRESENTATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
39.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 4:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL PRAXIS ANDSOLIDARITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
36.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 12:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE: LATINX ANDLATIN AMERICANINTERSECTIONAL PRAXIS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
190.19 MODES OF REPRESENTATION Sat 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual218.20 MOTHERHOOD AND POLITICS Sun 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual134.32 POLICY AND POLITICS OF Fri 12:00 pm
GENDERRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan A
DivisionPanels
176.21 POLITICAL RESOURCES AND Sat 10:00 amGENDER
Room: Virtual162.22 REPRESENTATION AND Sat 6:00 am
GENDER IN COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVE
Room: Virtual152.28 STATES, FEMINISM AND Fri 4:00 pm
ADVOCACYRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B117.29 THE INTERSECTIONAL Fri 8:00 am
POLITICS OF THE PRIVATERoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan B190.20 THE LOGIC AND MEANING OF Sat 2:00 pm
GENDERRoom: Virtual77.16 TOWARD PLURALISM IN REP/ Thu 10:00 am
ELECTIONS RESEARCH: BLACKWOMEN IN ELECTORALPOLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
51.23 TWITTER, MOBILIZATION, AND Wed 10:00 amNORMS
Room: Virtual43.22 VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual69.1 WOMEN AND POLITICS Thu 7:30 am
RESEARCH VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual152.42 WOMEN, GENDER, AND Fri 4:00 pm
POLITICS IN AFRICARoom: Sheraton, Ballard
Co-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
152.3 WOMEN IN AND OUT OF Fri 4:00 pmPOWER
Room: WSCC, 612Co-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of Political Theory
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, ANDPOLITICS
134.33 ASIAN AMERICAN ATTITUDES Fri 12:00 pmAND ANTI-ASIAN SENTIMENTIN THE TRUMP ERA
Room: WSCC, 609Co-sponsored by Asian Pacific American Caucus
123.1 ASIAN AMERICAN POLITICS IN Fri 10:00 amCONTEMPORARY US SOCIETY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Asian Pacific American Caucus
49.1 CAN DEMOCRATIC Wed 10:00 amINNOVATIONS DEEPENDEMOCRACY IN DIVERSESOCIETIES?
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Democratic InnovationsCo-sponsored by Division 3: Normative TheoryCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
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168.30 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Sat 8:00 amOF CONTEMPORARYIMMIGRATION POLICY
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan B176.22 CLAIRE JEAN KIM'S RACIAL Sat 10:00 am
TRIANGULATION THEORY: ATWO DECADE RETROSPECTIVE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 42: New Political Science
143.21 COVID-19 AND THE RACIAL Fri 2:00 pmPOLITICS OF A PANDEMIC
Room: Virtual212.31 CROSS-RACIAL SOLIDARITY Sun 10:00 am
AND LINKED FATERoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan A57.3 DISCRIMINATION AND Wed 2:00 pm
PREJUDICERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 5: Political Psychology
197.22 EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH Sat 4:00 pmABOUT ATTITUDES TOWARDPLURALISM ANDDISCRIMINATION
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 3Co-sponsored by Division 51: Experimental Research
183.28 HARD WHITE: THE Sat 12:00 pmMAINSTREAMING OF RACISMIN AMERICAN POLITICS
Room: WSCC, 613152.29 HARRIS, OBAMA, AND THE Fri 4:00 pm
POLITICS OF MULTIRACIALS INAMERICA
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan B168.31 IDENTITY AND DIVERSITY IN Sat 8:00 am
ANTI-PLURALIST TIMESRoom: Sheraton, Aspen109.20 IDENTITY FORMATION AND Fri 6:00 am
MAINTENANCE INCOMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative Politics
183.31 INSTITUTIONS AND INCLUSION Sat 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 211
Co-sponsored by Division 34: Representation and ElectoralSystems
57.18 INTERSECTIONAL Wed 2:00 pmCANDIDATES,COMMUNICATION, ANDREPRESENTATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
31.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 8:00 amSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE: BURDENS ANDRISKS OF INTERSECTIONALACTIVISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
37.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 2:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL AGENCYAND STRUCTURE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
25.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 6:00 amSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONALCONSCIOUSNESS ANDCOALITION POLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
32.2 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 10:00 amSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONALMOBILIZATION ANDREPRESENTATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
39.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 4:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL PRAXIS ANDSOLIDARITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
36.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND Tue 12:00 pmSOCIAL MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE: LATINX ANDLATIN AMERICANINTERSECTIONAL PRAXIS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
134.8 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 12:00 pmCONFERENCE: CRIMINALLEGAL INTERSECTIONS ANDBOUNDARIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
117.11 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 8:00 amCONFERENCE: DESCRIPTIVEREPRESENTATION IN THECRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban Politics
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156 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
Co-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
152.9 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 4:00 pmCONFERENCE: IN-PERSONJUNIOR SCHOLAR POSTERSESSION
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
122.4 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 10:00 amCONFERENCE: POLICYIMPLEMENTATION ANDDISCRETION IN THE CRIMINALLEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
143.7 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI- Fri 2:00 pmCONFERENCE: ROUNDTABLE:POLITICAL SCIENCE FOR THEPUBLIC GOOD
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
143.22 LATINXS IN THE 2020 Fri 2:00 pmPRESIDENTIAL ELECTION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting BehaviorCo-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science
176.32 LENSES ON WHITE Sat 10:00 amNATIONALISM AND POLITICALVIOLENCE IN THE U.S.
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 56: American Political Thought
218.21 MORE THAN LEISURE AND Sun 2:00 pmPLAY: RACE AND GENDERPOLITICS IN AMERICAN SPORT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 37: Public Opinion
123.4 OLD, WHITE AND MALE? Fri 10:00 amDOCUMENTINGEXCLUSIONARY NETWORKS INTHE PROFESSION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Women's Caucus for Political Science
57.19 PARTISANSHIP AND VOTING Wed 2:00 pmAMONG BLACK AMERICANS
Room: Virtual91.21 POLICING, POLITICS, AND Thu 2:00 pm
PARTICIPATIONRoom: Virtual91.6 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY AND Thu 2:00 pm
RACERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 5: Political Psychology
DivisionPanels
190.21 PRISONS, PUNISHMENT AND Sat 2:00 pmPOLITICAL PARTICIPATION
Room: Virtual99.30 PROMOTING Thu 4:00 pm
METHODOLOGICALPLURALISM: INTERPRETIVEMETHODS AND RACIALPOLITICS
Room: WSCC, 620Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies & Methods
209.32 PUTTING WHITE RACIAL Sun 8:00 amATTITUDES IN CONTEXT
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan B71.26 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND Thu 8:00 am
AMERICAN POLITICALDEVELOPMENT
Room: Sheraton, Willow A166.1 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND Sat 7:30 am
POLITICS VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual183.29 RACE, PARTY, AND Sat 12:00 pm
GEOGRAPHYRoom: Sheraton, Willow A
Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
43.23 RACE, REPRESENTATION, AND Wed 6:00 amINSTITUTIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 34: Representation and ElectoralSystems
51.24 RACE, VOTER SUPPRESSION, Wed 10:00 amAND INSTITUTIONS' IMPACTON VOTERS AND OUTCOMES
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
215.24 RACIAL ATTITUDES FROM Sun 12:00 pmPOLICY TO PROTEST
Room: Virtual218.24 RACIAL JUSTICE Sun 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 38: Political Communication
85.25 RACISM AND POLITICAL Thu 12:00 pmATTITUDES IN LATIN AMERICA
Room: WSCC, 205Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative Politics
122.17 RELIGIOUS IDENTITIES Fri 10:00 amRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
85.26 REPRESENTATION OR Thu 12:00 pmPANDERING? ELECTEDOFFICIALS, CANDIDATES, ANDPARTIES
Room: Sheraton, Willow ACo-sponsored by Division 34: Representation and ElectoralSystems
77.17 THE CENTRALITY OF RACE IN Thu 10:00 amPUBLIC OPINION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 37: Public Opinion
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 157
77.16 TOWARD PLURALISM IN REP/ Thu 10:00 amELECTIONS RESEARCH: BLACKWOMEN IN ELECTORALPOLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
122.26 U.S. EDUCATION SYSTEMS AND Fri 10:00 amANTI-BLACK RACISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 59: Education Politics and Policy
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS143.23 BIDEN'S CATHOLICISM: Fri 2:00 pm
POLITICS, RELIGION, ANDAMERICAN PLURALISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
190.22 CHRISTIANITY AND POLITICS Sat 2:00 pmIN LATIN AMERICA ANDAFRICA: CROSS-REGIONALDIALOGUE
Room: Virtual109.27 ISLAM, CIVIL SOCIETY, AND Fri 6:00 am
THE MALIAN CRISIS:UNDERSTANDING NON-STATEACTORS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
63.20 IS RELIGION THE BLIND SPOT Thu 6:00 amOF POPULISM?
Room: Virtual38.18 MOBILIZATION AND RELIGION Tue 2:00 pm
IN ARMED CONFLICTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 21: Conflict Processes
183.30 RELIGION AND MOBILIZATION Sat 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 618117.30 RELIGION AND PLURALISM Fri 8:00 amRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB168.32 RELIGION AND POLITICAL Sat 8:00 am
THEORYRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB
Co-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
66.1 RELIGION AND POLITICS Thu 6:30 amVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual212.32 RELIGION AND VIOLENCE Sun 10:00 amRoom: Sheraton, Aspen
Co-sponsored by Division 21: Conflict Processes
143.29 RELIGIOUS AGENCY AND Fri 2:00 pmCONFLICT UNDERCOLONIALISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 43: International History andPolitics
38.24 RELIGIOUS FREEDOM AND Tue 2:00 pmRIGHTS
Room: Virtual122.17 RELIGIOUS IDENTITIES Fri 10:00 amRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
117.2 RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE, Fri 8:00 amRELIGIOUS PRACTICE, ANDPOLITICAL AUTHORITY
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan ACo-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
85.27 RELIGIOUS MINORITIES Thu 12:00 pmRoom: Sheraton, Ballard152.30 RELIGIOUS NATIONALISM Fri 4:00 pm
(PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 43: International History andPolitics
85.28 SECULAR SURGE: A NEW Thu 12:00 pmFAULT LINE IN AMERICANPOLITICS
Room: Virtual205.21 SURVEYS AND MEASUREMENT Sun 6:00 am
OF RELIGIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 37: Public Opinion
109.21 THE AMBIVALENCE OF THE Fri 6:00 amSACRED: EMPIRICAL STUDIESON RELIGION, CONFLICT, ANDPEACE
Room: Virtual99.31 US CHRISTIANITY Thu 4:00 pmRoom: Sheraton, Ballard
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION ANDELECTORAL SYSTEMS
91.22 COMPARING AMERICAN Thu 2:00 pmNOMINATING SYSTEMS(VIRTUAL)
Room: Virtual117.31 CONSTRAINTS ON ELECTION Fri 8:00 am
ADMINISTRATIONRoom: WSCC, 211183.31 INSTITUTIONS AND INCLUSION Sat 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 211
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
215.25 INSTITUTIONS AND INCLUSION Sun 12:00 pm(VIRTUAL)
Room: Virtual122.18 ISSUES IN REDISTRICTING Fri 10:00 am
REFORM (VIRTUAL)Room: Virtual209.33 PIPELINES AND PERCEPTIONS: Sun 8:00 am
GENDER REPRESENTATION INCOMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Room: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB
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158 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
99.32 POLITICS OF ELECTORAL Thu 4:00 pmSYSTEM REFORM
Room: WSCC, 61743.23 RACE, REPRESENTATION, AND Wed 6:00 am
INSTITUTIONSRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
134.34 REACTIONS TO RANKED- Fri 12:00 pmCHOICE VOTING
Room: WSCC, 31033.22 REPRESENTATIONAL AND Tue 10:00 am
DISTRIBUTIONALCONSEQUENCES OFELECTORAL SYSTEMS(VIRTUAL)
Room: Virtual179.1 REPRESENTATION AND Sat 10:30 am
ELECTORAL SYSTEMS VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual85.26 REPRESENTATION OR Thu 12:00 pm
PANDERING? ELECTEDOFFICIALS, CANDIDATES, ANDPARTIES
Room: Sheraton, Willow ACo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
DIVISION 35: POLITICALORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
152.31 COMPARATIVE PARTY Fri 4:00 pmFORMATIONS
Room: WSCC, 2B197.23 COMPARATIVE PARTY Sat 4:00 pm
POLARIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 612176.23 CONTEMPORARY MOVEMENTS Sat 10:00 am
AND ISSUESRoom: Virtual63.21 EXPERIMENTS IN PARTIES AND Thu 6:00 am
POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONSRESEARCH
Room: Virtual71.27 INTEREST GROUPS, PARTIES, Thu 8:00 am
AND THE POLICIES FOR WHICHTHEY ADVOCATE
Room: WSCC, 617117.32 LOBBYING AND STRATEGY Fri 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 615215.26 LOBBYISTS AND LOBBYING, Sun 12:00 pm
STRATEGIES AND GOALSRoom: Virtual212.33 MOVEMENTS AND Sun 10:00 am
DEMOCRACY INCONTEMPORARY CONTEXT
Room: WSCC, 616
DivisionPanels
33.23 NATIONALISM, Tue 10:00 amAUTHORITARIANISM, ANDPARTIES
Room: Virtual134.35 PARTIES AND CHANGING Fri 12:00 pm
ORGANIZATIONSRoom: WSCC, 303176.24 PARTIES AND Sat 10:00 am
REPRESENTATIONRoom: Virtual122.19 PARTIES, DIVISIVE ISSUES, AND Fri 10:00 am
NEW TECHNOLOGIESRoom: Virtual85.29 PARTIES, POLARIZATION, AND Thu 12:00 pm
CLIENTISMRoom: WSCC, 618143.24 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS Fri 2:00 pm
AND PARTIES IN HISTORICALCONTEXT
Room: Virtual107.1 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS Fri 6:00 am
AND PARTIES VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual57.20 SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND Wed 2:00 pm
PARTIES, CRISIS AND CHANGERoom: Virtual183.32 STATE & LOCAL PARTIES IN Sat 12:00 pm
TRANSITION: NEWSTRUCTURES, TECHNOLOGIES,AND COALITIONS
Room: WSCC, 603195.1 THE U.S. CAMPAIGN FINANCE Sat 4:00 pm
SYSTEM AND CONSEQUENCESFOR REPRESENTATION
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTINGBEHAVIOR
176.25 A RESEARCH DESIGN FOR Sat 10:00 amSTUDYING THE IMPACT OFFACEBOOK ON THE 2020ELECTION
Room: Virtual209.34 CANDIDATES' PERSONAL Sun 8:00 am
CHARACTERISTICS AND THEIRPERFORMANCE
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 2134.36 (COMPULSORY) CIVIC DUTY Fri 12:00 pm
AND TURNOUTRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 299.33 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS Thu 4:00 pm
IN THE UNITED STATESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2212.34 CONSTITUENCY-LEVEL Sun 10:00 am
POLITICSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 159
197.24 COVID-19 AND VOTING Sat 4:00 pmBEHAVIOR
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 4209.35 DIMENSIONS OF ELECTORAL Sun 8:00 am
COMPETITIONRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 357.21 DONALD TRUMP AND VOTERS Wed 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual95.2 ELECTIONS AND VOTING Thu 3:00 pm
BEHAVIOR: ELECTORALCAMPAIGNS, SYSTEMS, ANDSTRATEGY VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual95.1 ELECTIONS AND VOTING Thu 3:00 pm
BEHAVIOR: VOTER TURNOUTAND CHOICES VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual218.22 ELECTIONS DURING THE Sun 2:00 pm
COVID-19 PANDEMICRoom: Virtual38.25 ELECTION VIOLENCE Tue 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual117.33 EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF Fri 8:00 am
U.S. VOTERSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 263.22 FIELD AND NATURAL Thu 6:00 am
EXPERIMENTS ON ELECTORALBEHAVIOR
Room: Virtual85.30 FORECASTING ELECTIONS Thu 12:00 pmRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 243.24 FOSTERING VOTER TURNOUT Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 58: Civic Engagement
143.25 GENDER AND VOTING Fri 2:00 pmBEHAVIOR
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
71.28 HOW CAMPAIGNS SHAPE Thu 8:00 amVOTERS
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 263.30 IMMIGRANT POLITICAL Thu 6:00 am
PARTICIPATION AND VOTERBEHAVIOR IN HOST SOCIETIES
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 52: Migration & Citizenship
162.23 INEQUALITY AND VOTING Sat 6:00 amBEHAVIOR
Room: Virtual143.22 LATINXS IN THE 2020 Fri 2:00 pm
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science
152.32 LOCAL ELECTION Fri 4:00 pmADMINISTRATION AND THEVOTER EXPERIENCE
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 2183.33 MAKING IT EASIER TO VOTE Sat 12:00 pmRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4
Co-sponsored by Division 58: Civic Engagement
152.33 PAPERS THAT STUDY VOTING Fri 4:00 pmBEHAVIOR WITH CLEVERIDENTIFICATION STRATEGIES
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 471.29 PARTY POLARIZATION IN Thu 8:00 am
CANADA AND THE UNITEDSTATES
Room: Sheraton, Willow B26.22 POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES OF Tue 6:00 am
ELECTION TIMINGRoom: Virtual91.23 PROTESTS AND VOTING Thu 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual183.29 RACE, PARTY, AND Sat 12:00 pm
GEOGRAPHYRoom: Sheraton, Willow A
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
51.24 RACE, VOTER SUPPRESSION, Wed 10:00 amAND INSTITUTIONS' IMPACTON VOTERS AND OUTCOMES
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
109.22 REALIGNMENT? HOW BREXIT Fri 6:00 amRESHAPED BRITISH VOTINGBEHAVIOUR
Room: Virtual33.24 SINCERE AND STRATEGIC Tue 10:00 am
VOTERSRoom: Virtual215.27 THE CAUSES OF VOTE Sun 12:00 pm
SWITCHINGRoom: Virtual168.33 THE LEGACY OF 2020 FOR HOW Sat 8:00 am
AMERICA VOTES(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6A183.21 THE PRESIDENCY AND Sat 12:00 pm
ELECTORAL CONNECTIONSRoom: WSCC, 303
Co-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
108.2 UNEQUAL ACCESS? VOTING Fri 6:00 amAND PARTICIPATION OFDISABLED PEOPLE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
43.25 VOTING FOR POPULISTS Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual99.34 YOUNG VOTERS Thu 4:00 pmRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4
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160 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION197.25 ATTITUDES TOWARD Sat 4:00 pm
POLITICAL PROTEST ANDVIOLENCE
Room: WSCC, 61743.26 CITIZENS' PERSPECTIVES ON Wed 6:00 am
DEMOCRACYRoom: Virtual134.37 CLASS, ECONOMIC Fri 12:00 pm
INEQUALITY, & PUBLICOPINION
Room: WSCC, 617Co-sponsored by Division 55: Class and Inequality
218.23 ELITE CUES & MOTIVATED Sun 2:00 pmREASONING
Room: Virtual91.24 FREE SPEECH, CENSORSHIP, & Thu 2:00 pm
SELF-CENSORSHIPRoom: Virtual85.31 GENDER & PUBLIC OPINION Thu 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 615
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
212.35 GOVERNMENT Sun 10:00 amRESPONSIVENESS: REAL ANDPERCEIVED
Room: WSCC, 303162.24 IMMIGRATION ATTITUDES Sat 6:00 amRoom: Virtual209.36 INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO Sun 8:00 am
UNDERSTANDING VOTERPREFERENCES
Room: WSCC, 615176.31 INTERSECTIONAL RESEARCH Sat 10:00 am
ON CLASS AND INEQUALITYRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 55: Class and Inequality
205.22 METHODS TO BETTER Sun 6:00 amREPRESENT THE PUBLIC
Room: Virtual215.28 MISINFORMATION AND Sun 12:00 pm
CONSPIRACY THEORIESRoom: Virtual218.21 MORE THAN LEISURE AND Sun 2:00 pm
PLAY: RACE AND GENDERPOLITICS IN AMERICAN SPORT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
57.22 NEW FRAMEWORKS FOR THE Wed 2:00 pmSTUDY OF GROUPS ANDPOLITICAL OPINION
Room: Virtual38.26 PLURALISM IN ATTITUDES Tue 2:00 pm
TOWARD AMERICANGOVERNMENT
Room: Virtual
DivisionPanels
71.30 POLITICAL OPINION DURING A Thu 8:00 amPANDEMIC
Room: WSCC, 611190.23 POLITICS AND PUBLIC OPINION Sat 2:00 pm
IN THE AMERICAN WESTRoom: Virtual109.23 PUBLIC OPINION ABOUT Fri 6:00 am
INTERNATIONAL EVENTS ANDORGANIZATIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 20: Foreign Policy
172.1 PUBLIC OPINION VIRTUAL Sat 9:30 amPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual209.37 RECONSIDERING IDEOLOGY IN Sun 8:00 am
MASS PUBLICSRoom: WSCC, 310183.34 RECONSIDERING Sat 12:00 pm
POLARIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 615205.21 SURVEYS AND MEASUREMENT Sun 6:00 am
OF RELIGIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
77.17 THE CENTRALITY OF RACE IN Thu 10:00 amPUBLIC OPINION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
117.34 WHAT DETERMINES VIEWS ON Fri 8:00 amCONTEMPORARY POLITICALISSUES?
Room: WSCC, 617
DIVISION 38: POLITICALCOMMUNICATION
117.35 CENSORSHIP, CONTENT Fri 8:00 amMODERATION, ANDGOVERNMENTACCOUNTABILITY
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B190.24 COVID COMMUNICATION AND Sat 2:00 pm
POLITICSRoom: Virtual57.23 COVID COMMUNICATION Wed 2:00 pm
STRATEGIESRoom: Virtual85.33 CRISES IN DIGITAL Thu 12:00 pm
JOURNALISMRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah
Co-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
209.38 CUES THAT MATTER Sun 8:00 amRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B63.23 DEMOCRACY UNDER Thu 6:00 am
PRESSURE: DIVERSEPERSPECTIVES ANDAPPROACHES
Room: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 161
43.27 (DE)POLARIZATION? Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual218.25 DIGITAL ADVOCACY Sun 2:00 pm
STRATEGIESRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
99.37 DISINFORMATION ACROSS Thu 4:00 pmPLATFORMS AND CONTEXTS
Room: Sheraton, IssaquahCo-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
183.35 ELECTION CAMPAIGNS: Sat 12:00 pmADVERTISING, PROPAGANDA,AND MEDIA
Room: Sheraton, Willow B162.25 ELECTION CAMPAIGN Sat 6:00 am
STRATEGIESRoom: Virtual71.31 ELITE COMMUNICATION: Thu 8:00 am
CONGRESS, CANDIDATES, ANDEXPERTS
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A215.29 ELITES, MEDIA, AND PUBLIC Sun 12:00 pm
OPINIONRoom: Virtual205.23 FACT-CHECKING AND Sun 6:00 am
MISINFORMATIONCORRECTION
Room: Virtual212.36 IMMIGRATION AND NATIONAL Sun 10:00 am
IDENTITYRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan B26.23 INFORMATION DIET AND ITS Tue 6:00 am
EFFECTSRoom: Virtual212.37 JOURNALISTIC NORMS AND Sun 10:00 am
PRACTICESRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B122.20 MEDIA AND POLARIZATION Fri 10:00 amRoom: Virtual134.38 MEDIA IN THE TIME OF COVID Fri 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 3B143.26 MISINFORMATION: EFFECTS Fri 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual33.25 MISINFORMATION: HOW AND Tue 10:00 am
WHY MISINFORMATION ISSPREAD
Room: Virtual197.26 MISINFORMED? WHO, HOW, Sat 4:00 pm
AND WHYRoom: WSCC, 30371.32 NEWS BIAS, REPRESENTATION Thu 8:00 am
AND ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: Sheraton, Aspen168.34 NEWS ENGAGEMENT Sat 8:00 amRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5
152.34 POLARIZATION EXPLAINED Fri 4:00 pmRoom: Sheraton, Aspen126.1 POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Fri 11:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION IRoom: Virtual126.2 POLITICAL COMMUNICATION Fri 11:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION IIRoom: Virtual168.35 POLITICS IN THE DIGITAL AGE Sat 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 603
Co-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
77.18 POPULIST POLITICS Thu 10:00 amRoom: Virtual63.24 PROPAGANDA AND INFLUENCE Thu 6:00 am
CAMPAIGN OPERATIONSRoom: Virtual218.24 RACIAL JUSTICE Sun 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
85.32 RALLIES, PROTESTS, AND Thu 12:00 pmMOBILIZATION
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom D99.35 UNDERSTANDING EMOTIONS Thu 4:00 pmRoom: Sheraton, Willow B
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY,AND ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS
152.35 ADVANCES IN THEORIES OF Fri 4:00 pmTHE POLICY PROCESS
Room: WSCC, 615197.27 ADVOCACY, VOTING, AND Sat 4:00 pm
MOBILIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 61699.36 BEYOND CARBON PRICING: Thu 4:00 pm
STRATEGIES FOR ENACTINGREGULATORY CLIMATEPOLICIES
Room: WSCC, 616143.27 CLIMATE CHANGE POLITICS: Fri 2:00 pm
THE VIEW FROM JUNIORSCHOLARS
Room: Virtual122.21 FROM FRAMING TO SHAMING: Fri 10:00 am
GENERATING SUPPORT FORENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
Room: Virtual26.24 GOVERNING UNCERTAINTY: Tue 6:00 am
POLITICAL, SOCIAL, ANDTECHNOLOGICALCHALLENGES
Room: Virtual51.25 INEQUALITY, HEALTH Wed 10:00 am
DISPARITIES, ANDENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE
Room: Virtual
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162 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
77.19 INFLUENCE OF DISASTER ON Thu 10:00 amPUBLIC POLICY
Room: Virtual71.33 NATURAL DISASTERS AND THE Thu 8:00 am
POLITICS OF INFRASTRUCTURERoom: WSCC, 61863.25 POLITICAL AND SOCIAL Thu 6:00 am
BARRIERS TO CONSERVATIONAND ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY
Room: Virtual212.38 REGULATORY POLITICS AND Sun 10:00 am
EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIPRoom: WSCC, 618165.2 SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND Sat 7:00 am
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICYVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual183.36 SUBNATIONAL ISSUES IN Sat 12:00 pm
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICYRoom: WSCC, 616117.36 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Fri 8:00 am
DEFORESTATIONRoom: WSCC, 619190.25 THE POLITICS OF ADAPTATION Sat 2:00 pm
GOVERNANCE: EMERGING SUB-NATIONAL CHALLENGES
Room: Virtual38.27 TRANSBOUNDARY Tue 2:00 pm
GOVERNANCE ANDPOLICYMAKING
Room: Virtual209.39 WATER POLITICS AND Sun 8:00 am
GOVERNANCERoom: Sheraton, Aspen
DIVISION 40: INFORMATIONTECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS
205.24 CIVIC MEDIA: LOCAL Sun 6:00 amGOVERNMENT AND ELECTEDOFFICIALS' USE OF DIGITALTOOLS
Room: Virtual85.33 CRISES IN DIGITAL Thu 12:00 pm
JOURNALISMRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah
Co-sponsored by Division 38: Political Communication
51.26 CRISTIAN VACCARI AND Wed 10:00 amAUGUSTO VALERIANI'S"OUTSIDE THE BUBBLE" (OUP,2021)
Room: Virtual209.40 CRUSHING DIGITAL Sun 8:00 am
PLURALISM: THE EVOLVINGDIGITAL PRACTICES OFAUTHORITARIANISM (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual
DivisionPanels
152.1 DEMOCRACY, FREEDOM, AND Fri 4:00 pmPLURALISM IN THE DIGITALAGE
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan ACo-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
183.37 DIGITAL ACTIVISM AND Sat 12:00 pmCOLLECTIVE ACTION
Room: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB218.25 DIGITAL ADVOCACY Sun 2:00 pm
STRATEGIESRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 38: Political Communication
99.37 DISINFORMATION ACROSS Thu 4:00 pmPLATFORMS AND CONTEXTS
Room: Sheraton, IssaquahCo-sponsored by Division 38: Political Communication
33.26 EXTREMISM AND Tue 10:00 amPOLARIZATION ONLINE
Room: Virtual134.39 INDUSTRY/ACADEMIC Fri 12:00 pm
RESEARCH ON FACEBOOKCONTENT AND USE INELECTION 2020
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan B125.1 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY Fri 10:30 am
AND POLITICS VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual63.26 INTERNET POLICY AND Thu 6:00 am
GOVERNANCERoom: Virtual85.15 MANAGING INTERDEPENDENCE Thu 12:00 pm
IN THE DIGITAL AGERoom: WSCC, Ballroom 6A
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
168.36 NEW DATA, NEW PLATFORMS: Sat 8:00 amCUTTING EDGE CAMPAIGNS,ADVOCACY, AND GOVERNANCE
Room: WSCC, 3A168.35 POLITICS IN THE DIGITAL AGE Sat 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 603
Co-sponsored by Division 38: Political Communication
197.28 POPULISM GOES DIGITAL Sat 4:00 pmRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB212.39 SURVEILLANCE AND SECURITY Sun 10:00 am
IN A NETWORKED AGERoom: WSCC, 310
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
176.26 THE POLITICAL EFFECTS OF Sat 10:00 amSOCIAL MEDIA
Room: Virtual162.26 THE POLITICS OF Sat 6:00 am
MODERATIONRoom: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 163
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE,AND FILM
38.1 ACTION AND AESTHETICS IN Tue 2:00 pmTHE TRADITION OF AMERICANPOLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
218.26 DUTY AND CARE IN HUMAN Sun 2:00 pmDEVELOPMENT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
143.1 NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL Fri 2:00 pmTHEORY: EXPERIMENTATION,CANON DYNAMICS, ANDREINVENTION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
99.38 ORIENTING TO OTHERS Thu 4:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 3A
Co-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
159.3 POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND Sat 6:00 amFILM VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual168.37 TROPES AND TOOLS OF Sat 8:00 am
TELLING TALES ABOUTPOLITICAL MOVEMENT(S)
Room: WSCC, 619Co-sponsored by Division 52: Migration & Citizenship
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICALSCIENCE
57.24 ADORNO, BENJAMIN, AND Wed 2:00 pmQUERYING THE UNREASON INCONTEMPORARY POLITICS
Room: Virtual176.22 CLAIRE JEAN KIM'S RACIAL Sat 10:00 am
TRIANGULATION THEORY: ATWO DECADE RETROSPECTIVE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
190.26 CRITICAL, RADICAL AND Sat 2:00 pmUTOPIAN PEDAGOGY
Room: Virtual66.2 EMERGENT WORK IN NEW Thu 6:30 am
POLITICAL SCIENCE VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual51.27 MAKING AND UNMAKING Wed 10:00 am
CARCERAL POWER:IMAGINING NEW MODES OFJUSTICE
Room: Virtual
85.34 NEOLIBERALISM AND Thu 12:00 pmGOVERNANCE IN THE GLOBALSOUTH
Room: WSCC, 612197.29 NORMALIZING FASCISM IN THE Sat 4:00 pm
FACE OF PLURALISMRoom: WSCC, 211143.28 RE-IMAGINING CAPITALISM & Fri 2:00 pm
POST-CAPITALISMRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Labor Politics
162.27 RETHINKING SOVEREIGNTY, Sat 6:00 amPOWER AND JUSTICE FROM ACRITICAL PERSPECTIVE
Room: Virtual218.27 SHORTCOMINGS OF Sun 2:00 pm
DEMOCRACY AND THE PATHFORWARD
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONALHISTORY AND POLITICS
197.30 AGENCY AND Sat 4:00 pmMARGINALIZATION INCONSTRUCTIONS OFGOVERNANCE
Room: WSCC, 618152.36 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Fri 4:00 pm
BEFORE THE WEST: RISE ANDFALL OF EASTERN WORLDORDERS
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CCo-sponsored by Division 20: Foreign Policy
117.37 CONTENDING EXPLANATIONS Fri 8:00 amOF CHINA'S BEHAVIOR
Room: WSCC, 620162.28 FACTORS AND CAUSES Sat 6:00 am
SHAPING GREAT POWERSRoom: Virtual205.25 PATHS OF LEGITIMIZATION Sun 6:00 am
AND DE-LEGITIMIZATIONRoom: Virtual143.29 RELIGIOUS AGENCY AND Fri 2:00 pm
CONFLICT UNDERCOLONIALISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
152.30 RELIGIOUS NATIONALISM Fri 4:00 pm(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
165.1 STATE BEHAVIOR Sat 7:00 amTHROUGHOUT HISTORY:DIVERSE FACTORS OFINFLUENCE VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual
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164 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
218.28 THE EMERGENCE AND Sun 2:00 pmCONTINUITY OFCOLONIALISMS: AGENCY ANDDOMINATION
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY ANDAUTOCRACY
43.28 AUTHORITARIAN ELITES AND Wed 6:00 amSURVIVAL
Room: Virtual63.27 AUTHORITARIAN Thu 6:00 am
GOVERNMENT & DEMOCRATICBACKSLIDING
Room: Virtual209.41 AUTHORITARIAN Sun 8:00 am
PROPAGANDA & CENSORSHIPRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4183.38 AUTHOR MEETS CRITIC: Sat 12:00 pm
"CONSTRAININGDICTATORSHIP" BY ANNEMENG
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 2215.30 AUTOCRACIES AND Sun 12:00 pm
INTERNATIONALORGANIZATIONS
Room: Virtual147.1 AUTOCRACY & DEMOCRACY Fri 3:00 pm
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual85.35 BRYN ROSENFELD'S "THE Thu 12:00 pm
AUTOCRATIC MIDDLE CLASS"Room: Conference Center, Skagit 5205.26 BUREAUCRACY, INSTITUTIONS, Sun 6:00 am
AND AUTHORITARIAN RULERoom: Virtual162.29 CENSORSHIP, DISSENT AND Sat 6:00 am
LEGITIMATION UNDERAUTOCRACY
Room: Virtual218.29 CONCEPTUALIZING AND Sun 2:00 pm
MEASURING DEMOCRACY ANDDEMOCRATIC BACKSLIDING
Room: Virtual190.27 CREEPING Sat 2:00 pm
AUTHORITARIANISM: HOWWOULD-BE AUTOCRATSSUBVERT DEMOCRACY
Room: Virtual134.40 DEMANDS AND DISTRIBUTION Fri 12:00 pm
UNDER AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 485.37 DEMOCRACYS RESILIENCE Thu 12:00 pm
AND STAGNATION: THE ROLEOF OPPOSITION PARTIES
Room: Sheraton, Willow BCo-sponsored by Division 53: African Politics
DivisionPanels
71.34 DEMOCRATIZATION AND Thu 8:00 amREGIME CHANGE
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 499.39 DISASTER & DICTATORSHIP: Thu 4:00 pm
COVID-19 AND BEYONDRoom: Sheraton, Aspen197.31 ELECTIONS UNDER Sat 4:00 pm
AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2212.40 ELITES & SUCCESSION UNDER Sun 10:00 am
DEMOCRACY & AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5109.24 INTERNATIONAL DIMENSIONS Fri 6:00 am
OF AUTHORITARIAN RULERoom: Virtual63.28 LEGISLATURES & Thu 6:00 am
PARLIAMENTARY POLITICSUNDER AUTOCRACY
Room: Virtual26.25 LOCAL AND REGIONAL Tue 6:00 am
DYNAMICS OF AUTOCRACYRoom: Virtual117.38 OUTPUTS OF AUTOCRACY: Fri 8:00 am
POLICY AND INEQUALITYRoom: WSCC, 303162.30 POLARIZATION, POPULISM AND Sat 6:00 am
THREATS TO LIBERALDEMOCRACY
Room: Virtual77.20 POLITICAL ATTITUDES OF Thu 10:00 am
BUREAUCRATS AND REGIMETRANSITIONS
Room: Virtual63.29 POLITICAL PARTIES UNDER Thu 6:00 am
AUTOCRACYRoom: Virtual26.26 POWER-SHARING, Tue 6:00 am
PERSONALIZATION, ANDREGIME STABILITY UNDERAUTOCRACY
Room: Virtual168.38 PUBLIC OPINION UNDER Sat 8:00 am
AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2152.37 PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR Fri 4:00 pm
AUTOCRACY AND DEMOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2134.41 REPRESSION, MOBILIZATION Fri 12:00 pm
AND PROTEST UNDERAUTOCRACY
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 164.4 ROUNDTABLE ON "THE Thu 6:00 am
CAMBRIDGE HANDBOOK OFLABOR AND DEMOCRACY"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping CountriesCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and History
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 165
Co-sponsored by Labor Politics
212.41 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF Sun 10:00 amDEMOCRATIZATION: AQUANTITATIVE-HISTORICALAPPROACH
Room: WSCC, 614168.39 THREATS TO GLOBAL Sat 8:00 am
DEMOCRACYRoom: WSCC, 21171.35 TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE IN Thu 8:00 am
COMPARATIVE ANDHISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual91.25 VIOLENT AND NONVIOLENT Thu 2:00 pm
RESISTANCE: TACTICALCHOICES AND PRACTICALCONSEQUENCES
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS205.27 HUMAN RIGHTS AND Sun 6:00 am
PLURALISMRoom: Virtual33.27 HUMAN RIGHTS AND SEX Tue 10:00 am
TRAFFICKINGRoom: Virtual212.42 HUMAN RIGHTS AROUND THE Sun 10:00 am
WORLDRoom: WSCC, 613183.39 HUMAN RIGHTS, MIGRANTS, Sat 12:00 pm
AND THE LAWRoom: WSCC, 3B112.2 HUMAN RIGHTS ON A Fri 6:30 am
NATIONAL ANDINTERNATIONAL SCALEVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual122.22 INNOVATIONS IN TEACHING Fri 10:00 am
HUMAN RIGHTS: ROUNDTABLEHONORING DR. BETHANYBARRATT
Room: Virtual71.36 LEGAL PLURALISM Thu 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 21199.40 PLURALISTIC JUSTICE: Thu 4:00 pm
CITIZEN/STATE RELATIONSHIPSAFTER HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES
Room: WSCC, 2A91.26 THE HUMAN RIGHTS Thu 2:00 pm
RESPONSIBILITIES OFPROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONS
Room: Virtual38.28 THE RICH DIVERSITY OF Tue 2:00 pm
CONTEMPORARY WORK INHUMAN RIGHTS
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS152.38 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Fri 4:00 pm
JAMES MAHONEY'S "THELOGIC OF SOCIAL SCIENCE"(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual143.30 COLLABORATIVE Fri 2:00 pm
METHODOLOGY FORPOLITICAL SCIENCE: ACRITICAL EXPLORATION
Room: Virtual61.1 ETHICS AND EPISTEMOLOGY Thu 6:00 am
IN POLITICAL SCIENCEVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual205.28 PROCESS TRACING AND Sun 6:00 am
CAUSAL MECHANISMSRoom: Virtual176.27 QUALITATIVE RESEARCH: Sat 10:00 am
RETHINKING BOUNDARIES ANDEXPANDING FRONTIERS
Room: Virtual57.25 RECONSIDERING THE FIELD: Wed 2:00 pm
RESEARCHERS, SUBJECTS, ANDPOSITIONALITY
Room: Virtual33.28 RETHINKING COMPARISON IN Tue 10:00 am
THE SOCIAL SCIENCES:PROMISES AND POSSIBILITIES
Room: Virtual197.32 TEXT ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES Sat 4:00 pm
AND RHETORICRoom: WSCC, 61958.2 "YES, AND": GRADUATE Wed 2:00 pm
STUDENTS CONDUCTINGQUALITATIVE METHODSDURING/AFTER COVID
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies & Methods
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY & POLITICS58.5 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: ERIN Wed 2:00 pm
MAYO ADAM'S "QUEERALLIANCES"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
162.31 COMPARING QUEER POLITICS Sat 6:00 amRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
77.21 LGBTQ POLITICAL UNITY AND Thu 10:00 amDIVISION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
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166 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
61.2 LGBTQ POLITICS IN REVIEW Thu 6:00 amVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual71.37 MOVEMENT AND MOBILIZING Thu 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 608
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
134.42 OPPOSITION IN ACTION Fri 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 614
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
190.28 QUEER(ING) CANDIDATES Sat 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
121.8 TRANS JUSTICE 2021: ERASING Fri 10:00 amTRANS YOUTH THROUGHPUBLIC POLICY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings andReceptionsCo-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS &HEALTH POLICY
99.41 BEYOND COVID-19: THE Thu 4:00 pmINFLUENCE OF INFECTIOUSDISEASES ON PUBLIC HEALTHPOLICY (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual152.39 COVID-19 AND DISPARITIES Fri 4:00 pm
(PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual61.3 HEALTH POLICY AND POLITICS Thu 6:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual117.39 HOW FRAMING SHAPES Fri 8:00 am
ABORTION, COVID-19, ANDMEDICAID POLITICS
Room: WSCC, 3A70.1 PANDEMIC POLITICS, VACCINE Thu 8:00 am
POLITIES: COMPARINGOUTBREAKS, ERAS, ANDGEOGRAPHIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
57.26 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS, Wed 2:00 pmPOLICIES, AND PUBLIC HEALTH
Room: Virtual26.27 PUBLIC OPINION AND THE Tue 6:00 am
COVID-19 PANDEMICRoom: Virtual71.38 PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF AND Thu 8:00 am
GOVERNMENT RESPONSES TOHEALTH CRISES
Room: WSCC, 620
DivisionPanels
91.27 RACE, HEALTH POLICY, AND Thu 2:00 pmDISPARITIES IN POLITICALVOICE
Room: Virtual212.43 THE POPULIST RADICAL Sun 10:00 am
RIGHT: NATIONAL HEALTHPOLICIES AND GLOBALTRENDS (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual218.30 WHO USES PUBLIC HEALTH Sun 2:00 pm
RESOURCES AND WHO IS SEENAS DESERVING OF DOING SO
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS152.40 ELECTORAL BEHAVIOUR IN Fri 4:00 pm
CANADARoom: WSCC, 61338.29 LONGITUDINAL ASSESSMENTS Tue 2:00 pm
OF CANADIAN POLITICSRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS162.32 NETWORKS AND POLICY ON A Sat 6:00 am
GLOBAL SCALERoom: Virtual134.43 NEW FRONTLINES: MODELING Fri 12:00 pm
INTERDEPENDENCE DURINGINTRASTATE CONFLICTS
Room: WSCC, 613107.2 POLITICAL NETWORKS Fri 6:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTALRESEARCH
197.22 EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH Sat 4:00 pmABOUT ATTITUDES TOWARDPLURALISM ANDDISCRIMINATION
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 3Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
134.44 EXPERIMENTS IN ELITE Fri 12:00 pmBEHAVIOR
Room: WSCC, 21138.30 EXPERIMENTS IN EMPATHY Tue 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual205.29 EXPERIMENTS IN INEQUALITY, Sun 6:00 am
FAIRNESS, ANDREDISTRIBUTION
Room: Virtual209.42 EXPERIMENTS IN Sun 8:00 am
INFORMATION ANDACCOUNTABILITY
Room: Virtual99.42 EXPERIMENTS IN INTER- Thu 4:00 pm
GROUP RELATIONSRoom: WSCC, 614
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 167
109.25 EXPERIMENTS IN LAB-STYLE Fri 6:00 amGAMES
Room: Virtual168.40 EXPERIMENTS IN Sat 8:00 am
METHODOLOGYRoom: WSCC, 620190.29 EXPERIMENTS IN Sat 2:00 pm
REPRESENTATIONRoom: Virtual77.22 EXPERIMENTS IN SOUTH ASIAN Thu 10:00 am
POLITICSRoom: Virtual98.2 THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS Thu 4:00 pm
OF EMPIRICAL MODELSRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A
Co-sponsored by Theme Panel
159.1 VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION: Sat 6:00 amEXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION &CITIZENSHIP
143.31 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: Fri 2:00 pmLAMIS ABDELAATY'S"DISCRIMINATION ANDDELEGATION"
Room: Virtual91.28 CITIZENSHIP REIMAGINED: A Thu 2:00 pm
NEW FRAMEWORK FOR STATERIGHTS IN THE UNITED STATES
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 28: Federalism andIntergovernmental Relations
57.27 CONFLICT AND DIVISION IN Wed 2:00 pmTHE PUBLIC OPINION ANDGOVERNANCE OF MIGRATION
Room: Virtual71.39 CONTEMPLATING THE Thu 8:00 am
OPENNESS AND CLOSURE OFCITIZENSHIP AND BORDERS I
Room: Sheraton, Ballard176.28 CONTEMPLATING THE Sat 10:00 am
OPENNESS AND CLOSURE OFCITIZENSHIP AND BORDERS II
Room: Virtual209.43 DIASPORIC ENGAGEMENTS Sun 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 60738.31 ELITES, IMMIGRATION POLICY, Tue 2:00 pm
AND THE POLITICS OFDIVISION
Room: Virtual218.31 GOVERNANCE OF Sun 2:00 pm
IMMIGRATION ANDEMIGRATION IN INSTITUTIONS
Room: Virtual
134.45 IMMIGRANT AND REFUGEE Fri 12:00 pmINCORPORATION IN TURKEY
Room: Sheraton, AspenCo-sponsored by Division 57: Middle East and NorthAfrican Politics
77.23 IMMIGRANT DETENTION AND Thu 10:00 amDEPORTATION
Room: Virtual197.33 IMMIGRANT INCORPORATION Sat 4:00 pm
IN THE EU AND USRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 363.30 IMMIGRANT POLITICAL Thu 6:00 am
PARTICIPATION AND VOTERBEHAVIOR IN HOST SOCIETIES
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
122.23 INDIGENEITY, SETTLER Fri 10:00 amCOLONIALISM, ANDPOSTCOLONIALITY
Room: Virtual168.41 INTERROGATIONS OF Sat 8:00 am
CITIZENSHIP ANDNATIONALITY IN THE GLOBALSOUTH (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual71.42 MENA DIASPORAS, Thu 8:00 am
AUTHORITARIANISM ANDACTIVISM IN EXILE (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 57: Middle East and NorthAfrican Politics
205.30 MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP Sun 6:00 amIN EAST ASIA
Room: Virtual159.2 MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP Sat 6:00 am
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual152.41 MIGRATION AND RESTRICTION Fri 4:00 pm
IN THE GLOBAL SOUTHRoom: Sheraton, Willow B122.24 MIGRATION AND THE COVID-19 Fri 10:00 am
CRISISRoom: Virtual117.40 MIGRATION, REFUGEES, AND Fri 8:00 am
(HUMAN) RIGHTSRoom: Sheraton, Willow B85.36 MONEY MATTERS IN Thu 12:00 pm
MIGRATIONRoom: WSCC, 2B190.30 NATIVISM AND NATIONALISM Sat 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual51.28 NATURALIZATION AND THE Wed 10:00 am
DRIVERS OF NATURALIZATIONRoom: Virtual71.40 PRIVILEGING MIGRANTS' Thu 8:00 am
VOICESRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB
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168 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
212.44 REBECCA HAMLIN'S Sun 10:00 am"CROSSING: HOW WE LABELAND REACT TO PEOPLE ONTHE MOVE"
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 2183.40 REFUGEES AND LOCAL Sat 12:00 pm
POLITICS (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual109.26 ROUNDTABLE ON Fri 6:00 am
"UNDERSTANDING GLOBALMIGRATION"
Room: Virtual168.37 TROPES AND TOOLS OF Sat 8:00 am
TELLING TALES ABOUTPOLITICAL MOVEMENT(S)
Room: WSCC, 619Co-sponsored by Division 41: Politics, Literature, and Film
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS67.1 AFRICAN POLITICS VIRTUAL Thu 7:00 am
POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual176.29 CONFLICT AND CONSTRAINTS: Sat 10:00 am
NEW INSIGHTS FROM AFRICANPOLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 21: Conflict Processes
122.25 CONSEQUENCES OF AFRICAN Fri 10:00 amELECTORAL INTEGRITY
Room: Virtual85.37 DEMOCRACYS RESILIENCE Thu 12:00 pm
AND STAGNATION: THE ROLEOF OPPOSITION PARTIES
Room: Sheraton, Willow BCo-sponsored by Division 44: Democracy and Autocracy
134.46 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS IN Fri 12:00 pmAFRICA
Room: Sheraton, BallardCo-sponsored by Division 17: International Collaboration
109.27 ISLAM, CIVIL SOCIETY, AND Fri 6:00 amTHE MALIAN CRISIS:UNDERSTANDING NON-STATEACTORS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and Politics
212.45 LAND AND POLITICS IN AFRICA Sun 10:00 amRoom: WSCC, 401
Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative Politics
183.41 LINKAGES OF THE STATE: Sat 12:00 pmBROKERS, CITIZENOBSERVERS, AND POLITICALCONNECTIONS
Room: WSCC, 619Co-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
DivisionPanels
71.41 PROBING IDENTITY AND Thu 8:00 amPOLITICAL COMMUNITYACROSS AFRICA
Room: WSCC, 303Co-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
38.32 STATE FORMATION THROUGH Tue 2:00 pmTHE LENS OF COLONIALISMAND MISSIONARY MOVEMENTS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and History
91.29 TERRITORY, POLITICS, AND Thu 2:00 pmPOWER IN AFRICA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
77.8 THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE Thu 10:00 amOF SOCIAL PROTECTION INAFRICA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
33.29 THE STATE AND TRADITIONAL Tue 10:00 amGOVERNANCE NEXUS:EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROMAFRICA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative Politics
152.42 WOMEN, GENDER, AND Fri 4:00 pmPOLITICS IN AFRICA
Room: Sheraton, BallardCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE,AND POLITICS
109.28 EMPIRICAL ORIGINS OF Fri 6:00 amPOLITICAL IDEAS
Room: Virtual87.3 IDEAS AND KNOWLEDGE AS Thu 1:30 pm
CAUSAL VARIABLES VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual176.30 POLITICAL THEORY AND Sat 10:00 am
POLITICAL IDEASRoom: Virtual205.31 POPULISM: COMPLEX Sun 6:00 am
CONCEPTS AND INNOVATIVEMETHODS
Room: Virtual190.31 THE IDEA OF JUSTICE IN Sat 2:00 pm
DEMOCRACY: THE 50THANNIVERSARY OF JOHNRAWLS' THEORY OF JUSTICE
Room: Virtual
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY85.38 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES Thu 12:00 pm
OF CIVIL SERVICE REFORMRoom: WSCC, 2A
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113.1 CLASS AND INEQUALITY Fri 7:00 amVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual134.37 CLASS, ECONOMIC Fri 12:00 pm
INEQUALITY, & PUBLICOPINION
Room: WSCC, 617Co-sponsored by Division 37: Public Opinion
77.24 INEQUALITY AND THE Thu 10:00 amPOLITICS OF CONSUMER DEBTAND DEBT RELIEF
Room: Virtual212.46 INFORMATION AND POLITICAL Sun 10:00 am
ENGAGEMENTRoom: Sheraton, Ballard
Co-sponsored by Labor Politics
176.31 INTERSECTIONAL RESEARCH Sat 10:00 amON CLASS AND INEQUALITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 37: Public Opinion
215.31 NEW DIRECTIONS IN Sun 12:00 pmCOMPARATIVE POLITICALINEQUALITY RESEARCH
Room: Virtual92.3 ORGANIZED LABOR IN Thu 2:00 pm
CONTEMPORARY AMERICANPOLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Labor Politics
57.28 OVERCOMING BARRIERS TO Wed 2:00 pmINTERSECTIONAL RESEARCHON ECONOMIC INEQUALITY &POLITICS
Room: Virtual152.43 POLITICS OF PERSONAL Fri 4:00 pm
EXPERIENCERoom: WSCC, 3A117.41 ROUNDTABLE ON “THE Fri 8:00 am
AMERICAN POLITICALECONOMY: POLITICS,MARKETS, AND POWER”
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C143.32 THE ECONOMIC OTHER: Fri 2:00 pm
INEQUALITY IN THEAMERICAN POLITICALIMAGINATION
Room: Virtual38.33 WEALTH, BUSINESS, AND Tue 2:00 pm
POLITICAL POWERRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 56: AMERICAN POLITICALTHOUGHT
125.3 AMERICAN POLITICAL Fri 10:30 amTHOUGHT VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: Virtual
38.3 FOUNDATIONS OF AMERICAN Tue 2:00 pmPOLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of Political Theory
176.32 LENSES ON WHITE Sat 10:00 amNATIONALISM AND POLITICALVIOLENCE IN THE U.S.
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
85.39 POWER SHIFTS: CONGRESS Thu 12:00 pmAND PRESIDENTIALREPRESENTATION BY JOHNDEARBORN
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6BCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and History
33.3 SIMON GILHOOLEY'S "THE Tue 10:00 amANTEBELLUM ORIGINS OF THEMODERN CONSTITUTION"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
215.32 STRUGGLES OVER RACIAL Sun 12:00 pmEQUALITY AND MULTIRACIALDEMOCRACY IN AMERICA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of Political Theory
168.42 THE FEDERALIST AND Sat 8:00 amAMERICAN CONSTITUTIONALDEVELOPMENT
Room: WSCC, 618Co-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST ANDNORTH AFRICAN POLITICS
51.29 FRAMING AND NEGOTIATING Wed 10:00 amSTATE-SOCIETY RELATIONS INTHE MENA
Room: Virtual152.44 HISTORICAL POLITICAL Fri 4:00 pm
ECONOMY OF THE MIDDLEEAST
Room: WSCC, 614134.45 IMMIGRANT AND REFUGEE Fri 12:00 pm
INCORPORATION IN TURKEYRoom: Sheraton, Aspen
Co-sponsored by Division 52: Migration & Citizenship
117.42 INNOVATIONS IN MENA Fri 8:00 amSURVEY RESEARCH IN THEAGE OF COVID (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual71.42 MENA DIASPORAS, Thu 8:00 am
AUTHORITARIANISM ANDACTIVISM IN EXILE (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 52: Migration & Citizenship
173.2 MENA VIRTUAL POSTER Sat 10:00 amSESSION
Room: Virtual
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170 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
33.30 NEW APPROACHES TO MENA Tue 10:00 amRESEARCH FOR COVID-19 ANDBEYOND
Room: Virtual218.32 POLITICAL BEHAVIOR IN THE Sun 2:00 pm
MIDDLE EASTRoom: Virtual85.40 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE Thu 12:00 pm
MENA REGION: A PLURALISTAPPROACH
Room: WSCC, 310109.29 REGIME DYNAMICS IN THE Fri 6:00 am
MIDDLE EASTRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 58: CIVIC ENGAGEMENT26.7 CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Tue 6:00 am
PEDAGOGY ACROSS THEGLOBE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
159.4 CIVIC ENGAGEMENT VIRTUAL Sat 6:00 amPOSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual43.24 FOSTERING VOTER TURNOUT Wed 6:00 amRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
51.6 GLOBAL CIVIC ENGAGEMENT Wed 10:00 amEDUCATION: IDEAS,DIRECTIONS, AND CALLS FORACTION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
183.33 MAKING IT EASIER TO VOTE Sat 12:00 pmRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4
Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
85.41 THE IMPACT OF (HIGHER) Thu 12:00 pmEDUCATION ON POLITICALOUTCOMES (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: WSCC, 61438.34 THE ROLE OF EDUCATION IN Tue 2:00 pm
CIVIC ENGAGEMENTRoom: Virtual
DIVISION 59: EDUCATION POLITICSAND POLICY
107.3 CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES Fri 6:00 amAND THE DISTRIBUTION OFFEDERAL EDUCATION FUNDINGVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: Virtual43.29 ENDURING LESSONS IN Wed 6:00 am
EDUCATION POLITICS ANDPOLICY FROM THE COVID-19PANDEMIC
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 25: Public Policy
DivisionPanels
152.45 HOW THE STATE SHAPES Fri 4:00 pmSOCIETY: COMPARATIVEEDUCATION POLITICS
Room: WSCC, 205Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative Politics
33.20 PLURAL APPROACHES TO Tue 10:00 amEDUCATION AND EQUALITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 25: Public Policy
122.26 U.S. EDUCATION SYSTEMS AND Fri 10:00 amANTI-BLACK RACISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 171
RELATED GROUP PANELS
AGING POLICY AND POLITICS GROUP92.1 POPULATION AGING AND Thu 2:00 pm
COVID-19Room: Virtual
AMERICAN PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY INSTITUTE72.1 CONSTITUTIONAL Thu 8:00 am
INTERPRETATION ANDORIGINALISM TODAY
Room: WSCC, 2B
ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS134.33 ASIAN AMERICAN ATTITUDES Fri 12:00 pm
AND ANTI-ASIAN SENTIMENTIN THE TRUMP ERA
Room: WSCC, 609Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
123.1 ASIAN AMERICAN POLITICS IN Fri 10:00 amCONTEMPORARY US SOCIETY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
ASSOCIATION FOR POLITICS AND THE LIFESCIENCES78.1 EVOLUTIONARY APPROACHES Thu 10:00 am
TO POLITICSRoom: Virtual
ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN POLITICALSTUDIES44.1 PUBLIC OPINION AND Wed 6:00 am
DEMOCRATIC POLITICS INSOUTH KOREA AND BEYOND
Room: Virtual
BRITISH POLITICS GROUP163.1 BRITAIN BEYOND BORIS AND Sat 6:00 am
BREXIT: THE FUTURETRAJECTORY OF POLITICS INTHE UK
Room: Virtual206.1 REPRESENTATION, WELFARE, Sun 6:00 am
AND THE STATE IN THEUNITED KINGDOM
Room: Virtual
CAMPAIGN FINANCE RESEARCH GROUP58.1 CAMPAIGN FINANCE AND Wed 2:00 pm
DEMOCRACY: DILEMMAS ANDSOLUTIONS
Room: Virtual27.1 NEW & OLD VOICES IN THE Tue 6:00 am
HEAVENLY CHORUS: POWER,PARTICIPATION & CAMPAIGNFINANCE
Room: Virtual
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172 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF FEDERALISM
CENTER FOR THE STUDY OFSTATESMANSHIP (FORMERLY NATIONALHUMANITIES INSTITUTE)27.2 BASIC SYMBOLS AT 50: Tue 6:00 am
LOOKING BACKWARD ANDFORWARD AT AMERICANPOLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: Virtual
CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE27.3 RETURNING MILITARY Tue 6:00 am
NECESSITY TO JUST WARSTATECRAFT
Room: Virtual
CIVIC STUDIES191.1 THE CRISES OF THE REPUBLIC: Sat 2:00 pm
COMPARING FOUR THREATSAND THE UPSWING
Room: Virtual
CIVIL SOCIETY, POLICY, AND POWER64.1 DOES CIVIL SOCIETY REALLY Thu 6:00 am
SERVE DEMOCRACY?Room: Virtual78.2 PHILANTHROPY IN PERILOUS Thu 10:00 am
TIMES: HELP OR HINDRANCE?Room: Virtual123.2 REPRESSION TO REGULATION: Fri 10:00 am
THE STATE & CIVIL SOCIETYAROUND THE GLOBE
Room: Virtual
CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OFSTATESMANSHIP AND POLITICALPHILOSOPHY72.2 ANTI-DISCRIMINATION IN Thu 8:00 am
AMERICAN POLITICSRoom: Virtual210.1 DEVELOPMENTS AMONG Sun 8:00 am
STRAUSSIANS STUDYINGMEDIEVAL POLITICALPHILOSOPHY
Room: Virtual118.1 DIVERSITY AND Fri 8:00 am
DISCRIMINATION IN HIGHEREDUCATION
Room: Virtual135.1 LIBERALISM AND THE Fri 12:00 pm
AMERICAN FOUNDINGRoom: Virtual
RelatedGroup
Panels
153.1 NEW PERSPECTIVES IN Fri 4:00 pmAMERICAN POLITICALTHOUGHT & DEVELOPMENT
Room: Virtual216.1 THE 2020 ELECTIONS AND THE Sun 12:00 pm
STATE OF AMERICANCONSERVATISM
Room: Virtual169.1 THE ANCIENTS' CRITIQUE OF Sat 8:00 am
THE MODERNSRoom: Virtual184.1 THE MODERNS' CRITIQUE OF Sat 12:00 pm
THE ANCIENTSRoom: Virtual219.1 THE SUPREME COURT'S Sun 2:00 pm
CURRENT AND FUTUREDIRECTION
Room: Virtual100.1 WHO REALLY RULES Thu 4:00 pm
AMERICA?Room: Virtual
COMMITTEE ON VIABLE CONSTITIONALISM
COMPARATIVE URBAN POLITICS27.4 CITY AND LOCAL Tue 6:00 am
GOVERNANCE IN CHINARoom: Virtual
CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICSAND SOCIETY110.1 LEADERSHIP, MEDIA, POLITICS, Fri 6:00 am
AND PANDEMICS: THE ITALIANCASE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 15: European Politics and Society
CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES27.5 AUTHORITARIANISM SUPPORT Tue 6:00 am
AND DEMOCRATICCITIZENSHIP IN TAIWAN
Room: Virtual44.2 CHINA AND TAIWAN: Wed 6:00 am
CHALLENGES ANDOPPORTUNITIES
Room: Virtual64.2 CHINA-TAIWAN RELATIONS Thu 6:00 am
AND WORLD POLITICSRoom: Virtual177.1 CROSS-STRAIT CONFLICT AND Sat 10:00 am
PUBLIC PERCEPTIONRoom: Virtual110.2 MEDIA AND POLITICAL Fri 6:00 am
POLARIZATION IN TAIWANRoom: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 173
34.1 PERSONALITY, GENERATION, Tue 10:00 amAND POLITICAL BEHAVIOR INTAIWAN
Room: Virtual78.3 POLICYMAKING AND Thu 10:00 am
RESPONSIVENESS IN TAIWANDURING COVID-19 PANDEMIC
Room: Virtual52.1 POLICY PREFERENCE AND Wed 10:00 am
GOVERNANCE IN TAIWANRoom: Virtual123.3 POLITICAL INSTITUTION AND Fri 10:00 am
TAIWAN'S DEMOCRACYRoom: Virtual163.2 THE TAIWAN VOTERS Sat 6:00 amRoom: Virtual
CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES163.3 CRITICAL APPROACHES TO Sat 6:00 am
THE STUDY OF THE CRISIS INPOLITICS AND POLICYMAKING
Room: Virtual
DEMOCRATIC INNOVATIONS49.1 CAN DEMOCRATIC Wed 10:00 am
INNOVATIONS DEEPENDEMOCRACY IN DIVERSESOCIETIES?
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 3: Normative TheoryCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
34.2 EXPERIMENTING WITH Tue 10:00 amDELIBERATIVE MINI-PUBLICS
Room: Virtual44.3 WHAT GOOD ARE Wed 6:00 am
DEMOCRATIC INNOVATIONS?EVIDENCE FROM AROUND THEWORLD
Room: Virtual
DISASTERS AND CRISES219.2 FRONTIERS IN DISASTER AND Sun 2:00 pm
CRISES RESEARCH: BEYONDCOVID-19
Room: Virtual
ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS AND THEORY34.3 BEYOND NATURE: Tue 10:00 am
CONTINGENCY, EXTRACTIVELOGICS, AND THINKING LIKE ALANDSCAPE
Room: Virtual33.4 HOW DO WE SOLVE A Tue 10:00 am
PROBLEM LIKE CLIMATECHANGE?
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of Political Theory
191.2 POSSIBILITIES FOR CLIMATE Sat 2:00 pmJUSTICE IN A NON-IDEALWORLD
Room: Virtual183.2 QUEERING NATURE, ECO- Sat 12:00 pm
AFFECTS, AND DECENTERINGTHE HUMAN IN THEANTHROPOCENE
Room: WSCC, 604Co-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of Political Theory
219.3 UNTANGLING THE MESS: THE Sun 2:00 pmPROMISE AND PERIL OF ECO-PROGRESSIVE POLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of Political Theory
ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY72.3 CIVIL RELIGION, Thu 8:00 am
INTERNATIONAL PLURALISM,AND STATESMANSHIP
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 592.2 CONSTITUTIONAL STRESS Thu 2:00 pm
TESTS IN AN AGE OFPOPULISM: ROUNDTABLE
Room: Virtual27.6 ERIC VOEGELIN POLITICAL Tue 6:00 am
READINGS: FROM THEANCIENT GREEKS TO MODERNTIMES
Room: Virtual153.2 GLENN HUGHES'S "FROM Fri 4:00 pm
DICKINSON TO DYLAN:TRANSCENDENCE INMODERNIST LITERATURE"
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 386.1 INTERSECTING THEMES IN Thu 12:00 pm
CLASSICAL POLITICALTHOUGHT
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5100.2 KIERKEGAARD AND Thu 4:00 pm
DEMOCRATIC THEORY: DAVIDWALSH'S "PRIORITY OF THEPERSON"
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5118.2 LIVING LIFE AS THE Fri 8:00 am
DISCLOSURE OF ORDERRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5144.1 NALIN RANASINGHE'S Fri 2:00 pm
ODYSSEYRoom: Virtual169.2 NATURAL LAW AND NATURAL Sat 8:00 am
RIGHTSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5184.2 POLITICAL THEORY AS A Sat 12:00 pm
RESOURCE FOR POLITICALCHALLENGES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5
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174 THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS
52.2 SYMBOLS OF HISTORICAL Wed 10:00 amORDER IN ERIC VOEGELIN'S“ISRAEL AND REVELATION”
Room: Virtual206.2 THE INFLUENCE AND Sun 6:00 am
RECEPTION OF ERICVOEGELIN'S PHILOSOPHY INBRAZIL
Room: Virtual198.1 THINKING WITH VOEGELIN Sat 4:00 pm
TODAYRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5
FEDERALIST SOCIETY FOR LAW ANDPUBLIC POLICY STUDIES198.2 METHODOLOGICAL Sat 4:00 pm
PLURALISM, LIBERTY, AND THERULE OF LAW
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 5
GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICALSCIENTISTS110.3 CHALLENGES IN CHINA'S Fri 6:00 am
EXTERNAL RELATIONS TODAYRoom: Virtual52.3 DOMESTIC CHALLENGES IN XI Wed 10:00 am
JINPING'S CHINARoom: Virtual
IBERIAN POLITICS110.4 POLITICS IN IBERIA: Fri 6:00 am
CHALLENGES, CHANGES, ANDCHOICES
Room: Virtual
INDIGENOUS STUDIES NETWORK75.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS MINI- Thu 10:00 am
CONFERENCE: INDIGENOUSPOLITICAL PARTICIPATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
55.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS MINI- Wed 2:00 pmCONFERENCE: SELF-DEFINITION IS SELF-DETERMINATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
62.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS Thu 6:00 amVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE:INDIGENOUS AUTONOMY ANDSOVEREIGNTY: PRACTICES OFGOVERNANCE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
RelatedGroup
Panels
89.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS Thu 2:00 pmVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE:NATIVE LANDS, NATIVEWATERS: THE POLITICS OFCLIMATE CHANGE AND NATIVENATIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
49.3 INDIGENOUS POLITICS Wed 10:00 amVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE:SETTLER COLONIALISM,INDIGENOUS POLITICS, ANDPOLITICAL SCIENCE: CRITICALHISTORIES AND NEWDIRECTIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Theme Panel
INTELLIGENCE STUDIES GROUP206.3 TOPICS AND APPROACHES IN Sun 6:00 am
STUDYING INTELLIGENCERoom: Virtual
INTERNATIONAL CHURCHILL SOCIETY(FORMERLY THE CHURCHILL CENTRE)219.4 CHURCHILL ON WAR ON LAND Sun 2:00 pm
AND AT SEARoom: Virtual
INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES &METHODS64.3 INTERPRETIVE APPROACHES Thu 6:00 am
TO POLITICAL SCIENCERoom: Virtual99.30 PROMOTING Thu 4:00 pm
METHODOLOGICALPLURALISM: INTERPRETIVEMETHODS AND RACIALPOLITICS
Room: WSCC, 620Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
58.2 "YES, AND": GRADUATE Wed 2:00 pmSTUDENTS CONDUCTINGQUALITATIVE METHODSDURING/AFTER COVID
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 46: Qualitative Methods
JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP58.3 A REGION OF REGIMES Wed 2:00 pm
PROSPERITY & PLUNDER INASIA: CONTRIBUTION OF T.J.PEMPEL
Room: Virtual110.5 GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE, Fri 6:00 am
CAPACITY, AND LEADERSHIP INJAPAN
Room: Virtual
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 175
LABOR POLITICS212.46 INFORMATION AND POLITICAL Sun 10:00 am
ENGAGEMENTRoom: Sheraton, Ballard
Co-sponsored by Division 55: Class and Inequality
57.5 LEGACIES OF WORK – SOCIAL Wed 2:00 pmPOLICY, EMPLOYMENT, ANDREGIMES OF INEQUALITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and History
92.3 ORGANIZED LABOR IN Thu 2:00 pmCONTEMPORARY AMERICANPOLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 55: Class and Inequality
143.28 RE-IMAGINING CAPITALISM & Fri 2:00 pmPOST-CAPITALISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 42: New Political Science
64.4 ROUNDTABLE ON "THE Thu 6:00 amCAMBRIDGE HANDBOOK OFLABOR AND DEMOCRACY"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping CountriesCo-sponsored by Division 44: Democracy and AutocracyCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and History
LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE92.4 LATINO POLITICS IN 2021 Thu 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual143.22 LATINXS IN THE 2020 Fri 2:00 pm
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and Voting Behavior
LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDYGROUP219.5 NEW VOICES IN ELECTION Sun 2:00 pm
LAWRoom: Virtual58.4 REDISTRICTING IN THE 2020S: Wed 2:00 pm
MORE OF THE SAME OR A NEWSTORY?
Room: Virtual
LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL ANDTRANSGENDER CAUCUS58.5 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: ERIN Wed 2:00 pm
MAYO ADAM'S "QUEERALLIANCES"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & Politics
162.31 COMPARING QUEER POLITICS Sat 6:00 amRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & Politics
77.21 LGBTQ POLITICAL UNITY AND Thu 10:00 amDIVISION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & Politics
71.37 MOVEMENT AND MOBILIZING Thu 8:00 amRoom: WSCC, 608
Co-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & Politics
134.42 OPPOSITION IN ACTION Fri 12:00 pmRoom: WSCC, 614
Co-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & Politics
190.28 QUEER(ING) CANDIDATES Sat 2:00 pmRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & Politics
121.8 TRANS JUSTICE 2021: ERASING Fri 10:00 amTRANS YOUTH THROUGHPUBLIC POLICY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by APSA Panels and All Meetings andReceptionsCo-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & Politics
MCCONNELL CENTER FOR POLITICALLEADERSHIP216.2 VIRTUE & LEADERSHIP IN THE Sun 12:00 pm
HISTORY OF POLITICALTHOUGHT
Room: Virtual
POLITICA219.6 LAWYERS, GUNS, & MONEY: Sun 2:00 pm
CONSENT, PATRIOTISM, &MONEY IN MEDIEVALPOLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: Virtual
POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP206.4 FORECASTING THE 2021 Sun 6:00 am
GERMAN FEDERAL ELECTIONRoom: Virtual78.4 LESSONS LEARNED FROM THE Thu 10:00 am
2020 US PRESIDENTIALELECTION FORECASTS
Room: Virtual144.2 POLITICAL FORECASTING Fri 2:00 pm
METHODOLOGYRoom: Virtual44.4 POLITICAL FORECASTING: Wed 6:00 am
TEACHING AND PRACTICERoom: Virtual
PROJECT ON THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION58.6 WHOSE REGIME? WHICH Wed 2:00 pm
CONSTITUTION?Room: Virtual
PUBLIUS THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM163.4 FEDERALISM IN A TIME OF Sat 6:00 am
PRESIDENTIAL TRANSITIONRoom: Virtual
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SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT198.3 PLATO ON PHILOSOPHY AND Sat 4:00 pm
LAWRoom: WSCC, 2B100.3 THE SOCRATIC RESPONSE TO Thu 4:00 pm
THE LIMITATIONS OFPOLITICAL LIFE
Room: WSCC, 60892.5 WHAT ARE THE ELEMENTS OF Thu 2:00 pm
CLASSICAL POLITICS?Room: Virtual
SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS134.10 ARE WE SEEING A Fri 12:00 pm
GENERATIONAL SHIFT INSOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS?
Room: WSCC, 612Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative Politics
38.12 COMPROMISING DEMOCRACY: Tue 2:00 pmAGENTS OF DEMOCRATICREGRESSION IN SOUTHEASTASIA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
44.5 GROUP IDENTITY AND Wed 6:00 amBEHAVIOR IN SOUTHEASTASIAN CONTEXT
Room: Virtual197.7 IDENTITY AND INEQUALITY IN Sat 4:00 pm
SOUTHEAST ASIARoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 1
Co-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
206.5 NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE Sun 6:00 amSTUDY OF CONFLICT ANDPLURALISM IN SOUTHEASTASIA
Room: Virtual26.10 THE CONDITIONAL POLITICAL Tue 6:00 am
CONSEQUENCES OFINTERGROUP CLEAVAGES INSOUTHEAST ASIA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative Politics
VICTIMS OF COMMUNISM MEMORIALFOUNDATION216.3 SITUATION IN XINJIANG: Sun 12:00 pm
FORCED LABOR, SEXUALVIOLENCE, AND ORGANHARVESTING
Room: Virtual
WALTER BAGEHOT RESEARCH COUNCIL ONNATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY64.5 IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE Thu 6:00 am
2020 ELECTIONS: LOOKINGFORWARD
Room: Virtual
RelatedGroup
Panels
WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE123.4 OLD, WHITE AND MALE? Fri 10:00 am
DOCUMENTINGEXCLUSIONARY NETWORKS INTHE PROFESSION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
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THEME, DIVISION AND RELATED GROUP PANELS 177
Meetings
andReceptions
MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS
APSA MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS (ALPHA)APSA Meetings and Receptions by AlphaAPSA Asia Workshops, SEAREG, SEAPRG September 30, 2021& Friends Reception (Sheraton, Ballard) Thu 7:30 pmAPSA Awards Reception in Seattle (Invite September 29, 2021Only) (WSCC, Ballroom 6C) Wed 6:00 pmAPSA Council Meeting (WSCC, Ballroom 6E) September 29, 2021
Wed 8:00 amAPSA Executive Committee Meeting (WSCC, September 28, 2021307 and 308) Tue 5:00 pmAPSA Graduate Student Happy Hour (Sheraton, October 2, 2021Cirrus Ballroom) Sat 6:30 pmAPSA International Attendee Reception September 30, 2021(Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom) Thu 8:30 pmAPSA Member Appreciation Reception (WSCC, October 1, 2021Exhibit Hall 4B) Fri 3:00 pmAPSA Opening Reception (WSCC, Ballroom September 30, 20216E) Thu 7:30 pmAPSR Editorial Team Meeting (WSCC, 205) September 28, 2021
Tue 7:00 amAPSR Reception (Sheraton, Aspen) September 30, 2021
Thu 7:30 pmAssociation Leaders Meeting (WSCC, 208) September 30, 2021
Thu 10:00 amCareer Fair and Coffee (WSCC, Exhibit Hall September 30, 20214B) Thu 2:00 pmClass and Inequality Section Reception October 1, 2021(Sheraton, Ballard) Fri 7:30 pmDepartment Chairs' Networking Luncheon October 1, 2021(Invite Only) (Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A) Fri 11:30 amEngaged Methodological Pluralism Reception October 1, 2021for Task Force/Oxford Handbook (Invite Only) Fri 6:00 pm(Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom)Eric Voegelin Society Business Meeting October 2, 2021(Sheraton, Willow A) Sat 6:30 pmEric Voegelin Society Reception (Sheraton, October 2, 2021Aspen) Sat 7:30 pmHealth Politics and Policy Reception (WSCC, October 1, 20214C1) Fri 7:30 pmInstitute for Humane Studies Reception September 30, 2021(Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A) Thu 7:30 pmInternational Security Section 19 Business October 1, 2021Meeting (All Welcome) (Sheraton, Willow B) Fri 6:30 pmInternational Security Section 19 Reception and October 1, 2021Award Ceremony (Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A) Fri 7:30 pmJack Miller Center Reception (Sheraton, Grand October 1, 2021Ballroom D) Fri 7:30 pmJoint Book Launch Reception: Internships in October 1, 2021Political Science and Teaching Civic Fri 7:30 pmEngagement Globally (WSCC, 401)MENA Politics Reception (Sheraton, Madrona) October 1, 2021
Fri 6:00 pmNew Member and First Time Attendee September 30, 2021Breakfast (Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom) Thu 7:00 amPolitical Communication Section Reception October 1, 2021(Sheraton, Cedar Room AB) Fri 7:30 pmPolitical Science Education Section In-Person October 1, 2021Business Meeting (WSCC, 3B) Fri 6:30 pm
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MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS 179
Presidential Task Force on New Partnerships October 1, 2021Reception (Invite Only) (Sheraton, Issaquah) Fri 7:30 pmPS: Political Science & Politics Reception September 30, 2021(WSCC, 620) Thu 7:30 pmReligion and Politics Section Reception September 30, 2021(WSCC, 618) Thu 7:30 pmScience, Technology & Environmental Politics October 1, 2021Reception (WSCC, 4C3) Fri 7:30 pmSPSA Meet and Greet (Sheraton, Metropolitan October 2, 2021B) Sat 7:30 pmStanford Internet Observatory Happy Hour October 2, 2021(Sheraton, Ballard) Sat 7:30 pmState Politics & Policy Section Business September 30, 2021Meeting (WSCC, 4C3) Thu 6:30 pmTLC at APSA Reception (Sheraton, Grand October 2, 2021Ballroom A) Sat 5:30 pmUCLA Political Science Reception (Sheraton, October 2, 2021Metropolitan A) Sat 7:30 pmUrban and Local Politics Section Reception September 30, 2021(Sheraton, Cedar Room AB) Thu 7:30 pm
APSA MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS(BY TIME)APSA Meetings and Receptions by TimeAPSR Editorial Team Meeting (WSCC, 205) September 28, 2021
Tue 7:00 amAPSA Executive Committee Meeting (WSCC, September 28, 2021307 and 308) Tue 5:00 pmAPSA Council Meeting (WSCC, Ballroom 6E) September 29, 2021
Wed 8:00 amAPSA Awards Reception in Seattle (Invite September 29, 2021Only) (WSCC, Ballroom 6C) Wed 6:00 pmNew Member and First Time Attendee September 30, 2021Breakfast (Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom) Thu 7:00 amAssociation Leaders Meeting (WSCC, 208) September 30, 2021
Thu 10:00 amCareer Fair and Coffee (WSCC, Exhibit Hall September 30, 20214B) Thu 2:00 pmState Politics & Policy Section Business September 30, 2021Meeting (WSCC, 4C3) Thu 6:30 pmAPSA Opening Reception (WSCC, Ballroom September 30, 20216E) Thu 7:30 pmAPSA Asia Workshops, SEAREG, SEAPRG September 30, 2021& Friends Reception (Sheraton, Ballard) Thu 7:30 pmAPSR Reception (Sheraton, Aspen) September 30, 2021
Thu 7:30 pmInstitute for Humane Studies Reception September 30, 2021(Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A) Thu 7:30 pmPS: Political Science & Politics Reception September 30, 2021(WSCC, 620) Thu 7:30 pmReligion and Politics Section Reception September 30, 2021(WSCC, 618) Thu 7:30 pmUrban and Local Politics Section Reception September 30, 2021(Sheraton, Cedar Room AB) Thu 7:30 pmAPSA International Attendee Reception September 30, 2021(Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom) Thu 8:30 pmDepartment Chairs' Networking Luncheon October 1, 2021(Invite Only) (Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A) Fri 11:30 amAPSA Member Appreciation Reception October 1, 2021
(WSCC, Exhibit Hall 4B) Fri 3:00 pmEngaged Methodological Pluralism Reception October 1, 2021for Task Force/Oxford Handbook (Invite Only) Fri 6:00 pm(Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom)MENA Politics Reception (Sheraton, Madrona) October 1, 2021
Fri 6:00 pmInternational Security Section 19 Business October 1, 2021Meeting (All Welcome) (Sheraton, Willow B) Fri 6:30 pmPolitical Science Education Section In-Person October 1, 2021Business Meeting (WSCC, 3B) Fri 6:30 pmClass and Inequality Section Reception October 1, 2021(Sheraton, Ballard) Fri 7:30 pmHealth Politics and Policy Reception (WSCC, October 1, 20214C1) Fri 7:30 pmInternational Security Section 19 Reception and October 1, 2021Award Ceremony (Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A) Fri 7:30 pmJack Miller Center Reception (Sheraton, Grand October 1, 2021Ballroom D) Fri 7:30 pmJoint Book Launch Reception: Internships in October 1, 2021Political Science and Teaching Civic Fri 7:30 pmEngagement Globally (WSCC, 401)Political Communication Section Reception October 1, 2021(Sheraton, Cedar Room AB) Fri 7:30 pmPresidential Task Force on New Partnerships October 1, 2021Reception (Invite Only) (Sheraton, Issaquah) Fri 7:30 pmScience, Technology & Environmental Politics October 1, 2021Reception (WSCC, 4C3) Fri 7:30 pmTLC at APSA Reception (Sheraton, Grand October 2, 2021Ballroom A) Sat 5:30 pmAPSA Graduate Student Happy Hour (Sheraton, October 2, 2021Cirrus Ballroom) Sat 6:30 pmEric Voegelin Society Business Meeting October 2, 2021(Sheraton, Willow A) Sat 6:30 pmEric Voegelin Society Reception (Sheraton, October 2, 2021Aspen) Sat 7:30 pmSPSA Meet and Greet (Sheraton, Metropolitan October 2, 2021B) Sat 7:30 pmStanford Internet Observatory Happy Hour October 2, 2021(Sheraton, Ballard) Sat 7:30 pmUCLA Political Science Reception (Sheraton, October 2, 2021Metropolitan A) Sat 7:30 pm
APSA SHORT COURSES (ALPHA)APSA Short Courses by AlphaāMeTooPoliSci ADVANCE Workshop September 30, 2021(WSCC, 208) Thu 4:00 pm
APSA SHORT COURSES (BY TIME)APSA Short Courses by TimeāMeTooPoliSci ADVANCE Workshop September 30, 2021(WSCC, 208) Thu 4:00 pm
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180 MEETINGS AND RECEPTIONS
DailySchedule
DAILY SCHEDULE
Tuesday, September 21, 2021VirtualTuesday, 9:00 AM to 10:00 AMAPSA Events1.1 EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH SECTION
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Tuesday, 11:00 AM to 12:00 PMAPSA Events2.1 REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Tuesday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events3.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual3.2 POLITICAL NETWORKS BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual3.3 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION SECTION BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Tuesday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PMAPSA Events4.1 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual4.2 LAW AND COURTS BUSINESS MEETING AND
RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event4.3 PUBLIC POLICY SECTION BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Wednesday, September 22, 2021VirtualWednesday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events5.1 CANADIAN POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual5.2 CIVIL SOCIETY RELATED GROUP BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual5.3 DEPARTMENT SERVICES COMMITTEE
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual5.4 EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual5.5 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual5.6 LATINO CAUCUS BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual
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DAILY SCHEDULE 181
5.7 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE PUBLICATIONSEXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETING
Room: VirtualChair: Nancy Sue Love, Appalachian State University
Sarah Surak, Salisbury University5.8 POLITICS & GENDER EDITORIAL BOARD
MEETINGRoom: VirtualChair: Christina Wolbrecht, University of Notre Dame
Susan Franceschet, University of Calgary5.9 PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
EXECUTIVE BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual5.10 URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS SECTION
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual5.11 WOMEN'S CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PMAPSA Events6.1 LGBTQ CAUCUS BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event6.2 POLITICAL METHODOLOGY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual6.3 PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual6.4 PS: POLITICAL SCIENCE & POLITICS BOARD
MEETINGRoom: Virtual Platform, Off-Platform Virtual Event (2)Chair: Marah Schlingensiepen, APSA
Paul Gronke, Reed College6.5 RELIGION AND POLITICS SECTION BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Wednesday, 4:00 PM to 5:00 PMAPSA Events7.1 FOREIGN POLICY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Thursday, September 23, 2021VirtualThursday, 9:00 AM to 10:00 AMAPSA Events8.1 SEXUALITY AND POLITICS BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events9.1 AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PM
9.2 CONFLICT PROCESSES BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual9.3 DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual9.4 ELECTIONS, PUBLIC OPINION AND VOTING
BEHAVIORRoom: VirtualChair: Ann N. Crigler, University of Southern California
Yusaku Horiuchi, Dartmouth College9.5 HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event9.6 JPSE EDITORIAL BOARD MEETINGRoom: VirtualChair: Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Joseph W. Roberts, Roger Williams University9.7 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual9.8 QUALITATIVE AND MULTI-METHOD
RESEARCH BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual9.9 RESEARCH4IMPACT INFORMATION SESSIONRoom: Virtual Platform, Off-Platform Virtual Event (2)Chair: Adam Seth Levine, Johns Hopkins University9.10 SECTION 01: FEDERALISM AND
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS BUSINESSMEETING
Room: Virtual9.11 SECTION 16 WOMEN, GENDER AND POLITICS
RESEARCH BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PMAPSA Events10.1 CIVIC ENGAGEMENT BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual10.2 COMMUNITY COLLEGE CAUCUS MEETINGRoom: VirtualChair: Erin E. Richards, Cascadia Community College10.3 CONTINGENT FACULTY STATUS COMMITTEE
MEETINGRoom: VirtualChair: Jennapher Lunde Seefeldt, Augustana University
Maria Isabel Puerta, Valencia College10.4 EDUCATION POLITICS AND POLICY
SECTION'S BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual10.5 LABOR POLITICS BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual10.6 LEGISLATIVE STUDIES SECTION BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Thursday, 3:00 PM to 4:00 PMAPSA Events11.1 CIVIC ENGAGEMENT RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual11.2 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
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Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:00 PMAPSA Events12.1 APSA MENTORING AND NETWORKING
RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual12.2 LGBTQ CAUCUS, SEXUALITY & POLITICS, AND
LGBT STATUS COMMITTEE JOINT RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event12.3 SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS RELATED
GROUP BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Friday, September 24, 2021VirtualFriday, 8:00 AM to 9:00 AMAPSA Events13.1 POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Friday, 9:00 AM to 10:00 AMAPSA Events14.1 AFRICAN POLITICS CONFERENCE GROUP-
DIVISION 53- AFRICAN POLITICS BUSINESSMEETING
Room: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:00 AMAPSA Events15.1 CLASS & INEQUALITY BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events16.1 APSA COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF
COMMUNITY COLLEGES IN THE PROFESSIONBUSINESS MEETING
Room: Virtual16.2 BINGHAMTON UNIVERSITY MEETINGRoom: VirtualChair: Olga V. Shvetsova, SUNY, Binghamton University
Michael A. Allen, Boise State University16.3 HUMAN RIGHTS SECTION BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual Platform, Off-Platform Virtual Event (2)16.4 INDIGENOUS STUDIES NETWORK BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual16.5 INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS
(IHAP) BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual16.6 MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual16.7 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE EDITORIAL BOARD
MEETINGRoom: VirtualChair: Nancy Sue Love, Appalachian State University
Judith Grant, Ohio University16.8 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY SECTION BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
16.9 POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM BUSINESSMEETING
Room: Virtual16.10 SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY BUSINESSMEETING
Room: Virtual
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:00 PMAPSA Events17.1 APSA RACIAL AND ETHNIC POLITICS
SECTION BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Friday, 3:00 PM to 4:00 PMAPSA Events18.1 PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICS EDITORIAL
BOARD MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:00 PMAPSA Events19.1 APSA WORKING GROUP ON INEQUALITY IN
EAST ASIARoom: VirtualChair: Jong-sung You, Gachon University
Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego19.2 ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS (APAC)
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual19.3 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual19.4 JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual
Monday, September 27, 2021VirtualMonday, 6:00 AM to 9:00 AMAPSA Events20.1 MANAGING AND SHARING QUALITATIVE
DATA (QMMR 5)Room: Virtual Off-Platform EventChair: Sebastian Karcher, Syracuse UniversityPart: Diana Kapiszewski, Georgetown University
Monday, 9:00 AM to 10:00 AMAPSA Events21.1 POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP BUSINESS
MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event21.2 THE IMPORTANCE OF DEVELOPING TIES
BETWEEN POLITICAL SCIENCEASSOCIATIONS
Room: Virtual Off-Platform EventChair: Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre DamePart: Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State University
Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, University of EssexRodney E. Hero, Arizona State UniversityMarianne R. Kneuer, University of HildesheimHelen V. Milner, Princeton University
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DAILY SCHEDULE 183
Monday, 9:00 AM to 3:30 PMAPSA Events22.1 PLURALISM AND THE POLITICS OF REFORM:
ACHIEVING MULTI-RACIAL, MULTI-PARTYDEMOCRACY
Room: Virtual Platform, Off-Platform Virtual Event (3)Chair: Michael Latner, California Polytechnic State University,
San Luis ObispoPart: Holly Ann Garnett, Royal Military College of Canada
Alex Keena, Virginia Commonwealth UniversityJack Santucci, Drexel UniversitySam Rosenfeld, Colgate UniversityOJ Semans, Four DirectionsAndrea Benjamin, University of OklahomaFernando Arturo Tormos Aponte, University ofMaryland Baltimore CountyLee Drutman, New AmericaHeather Stoll, University of California, Santa BarbaraHannah Walker, University of Texas at Austin
Monday, 11:00 AM to 3:00 PMAPSA Events23.1 TEACHING THE PRESIDENCY WHEN
DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY IS QUESTIONEDRoom: Virtual Off-Platform EventChair: Scott L. McLean, Quinnipiac UniversityPart: Nancy Kassop, SUNY New Paltz
Yu Ouyang, Purdue University Northwest
Monday, 12:00 PM to 4:00 PMAPSA Events24.1 IMPROVISATIONAL PLURALISM IN FIELD
RESEARCH 1: PRE-FIELD PLANNING (QMMR 1)Room: Virtual Platform, Off-Platform Virtual Event (2)Chair: Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa CruzPart: Jesse Driscoll, University of California, San Diego
Gareth Nellis, University of California, San DiegoJennifer Cyr, Universidad Torcuato di Tella
Tuesday, September 28, 2021VirtualTuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AMTheme Panels25.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND SOCIAL
MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL CONSCIOUSNESS ANDCOALITION POLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Jared Loggins, Brown UniversityDisc: Janni L. Aragon, University of Victoria
Papers: The ABB, SNCC, and BLM and Intersectionality:Between Black Radical Tradition & IntersectionalityDarryl Clark Thomas, Pennsylvania State UniversityBlack Gay Everyman: The Subject of AIDSMarcus Lee, University of Chicago
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
On Publicity and Publication: Intersectionality,Autonomy, and Authority in Lesbian FeministPublishing, 1976-1989Elena Gambino, Rutgers University, New BrunswickIs Intersectional Racial Justice Organising Possible inthe UK? Confronting Generic IntersectionalityAshlee Christoffersen, University of Edinburgh
25.2 THE PROBLEM OF KNOWLEDGECUMULATION
Room: VirtualChair: John Gerring, University of Texas, AustinDisc: Erin Hartman, UC Berkeley
Julio Saul Solís Arce, WZB Berlin Social ScienceCenter
Papers: Accidental Cumulation in Studies of Clientelism,Corruption, and GovernanceMiriam A. Golden, European University InstituteStephane Wolton, London School of EconomicsMeta-Analysis in Domains Where Many Studies AreProprietary: Voter TurnoutDonald P. Green, Columbia UniversityThomas Leavitt, Columbia UniversityLoosely Coordinated Studies in Evidence-BasedPolicymakingJacob Bowers, University of Illinois, Urbana-ChampaignThe ĄRolling MetaketaďApproach to KnowledgeAccumulationMacartan Humphreys, Columbia UniversityCyrus Samii, New York UniversityAlexandra Scacco, WZB Berlin Social Science CenterAnna Maria Wilke, Columbia UniversityJulio Saul Solís Arce, WZB Berlin Social ScienceCenter
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY26.1 A ROUNDTABLE ON JAMES HANKINS'
"VIRTUE POLITICS" (2019)Room: VirtualChair: David Ragazzoni, Columbia University
JAMES WARREN HANKINS, Harvard UniversityPart: Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy SchoolAnnabel Brett, University of CambridgeMichelle Tolman Clarke, Dartmouth CollegeVickie B. Sullivan, Tufts UniversityRyan Balot, University of Toronto
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY26.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY VIRTUAL
MINI-CONFERENCE: ABOLITION ANDFUTURITY
Room: VirtualChair: Adam J. Dahl, University of Massachusetts, AmherstDisc: Adam J. Dahl, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Papers: The Abolition Democracy: James Baldwin and thePromise of PluralismGauri Wagle, Royal Holloway University of LondonFrom Just War to Just Markets: Free Trade and theRacialization of SlaveryIsaac Gabriel Salgado, University of Pennsylvania
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Convergent Ideologies: Anti- and Neo-ColonialRepublicanism in the American BorderlandsArturo Chang, University of TorontoIdeology Critique and Comparative Political TheoryJoshua Simon, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY26.3 DELIBERATION AND PLURALISMRoom: VirtualChair: John S. Dryzek, University of CanberraDisc: Tamar Malloy, University of Colorado Boulder
Samuel Ely Bagg, Nuffield College
Papers: Beyond Free Speech: The Educational Mission of theUniversityAlexandru Marcoci, University of DundeeAlexandra Oprea, Australian National UniversityDeliberative Reasoning and the Resolution of(Apparently) Deep DifferencesSimon J. Niemeyer, University of CanberraA Deliberative Framework for Judging RecognitionClaimsDiana Elena Popescu, King's College LondonMust Deliberation Be Civil?Jeffrey Howard, University College London
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY26.4 PRACTICING DEMOCRACY, TRAINING
CITIZENSRoom: VirtualChair: Stephen Siu Kay On, National Sun Yat-Sen UniversityDisc: David W. McIvor, Colorado State University
Papers: Li Zhi and the Project of Confucian DemocracyJohn T. Lombardini, College of William & MaryParticipatory Democracy: A Wellspring of Esteem,Standing, and CohesionEmmett James McGroarty, The Catholic Universityof AmericaImpartiality, Emotion and Judgment: The NormativeValidity of Situated ReasoningAberdeen BerryTraining Citizens: Progressivism, Social Efficiency, andSelf-HelpChristie L. Maloyed, University of Louisiana atLafayette
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY26.5 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON PARTIES AND
PARTISANSHIPRoom: VirtualChair: David Karol, University of MarylandDisc: Daniel Schlozman
Papers: Democracy vs Partisanship?: Understanding RegimeContention in the United StatesAmel F. Ahmed, University of Massachusetts,AmherstExplaining Longevity and Decline: The OntarioConservative Party 1934-1985Keith Douglas Brownsey, Mount Royal UniversityThe Rise of Programmatic Partisanship in the UnitedStates, 1856-2020Katherine Krimmel, Barnard College, ColumbiaUniversity
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
From Interest Group Liberalism to Asymmetric Politics:A Meta-analysisCarter A. Wilson, Northern Michigan University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY26.6 MEASUREMENT USING ONLINE DATARoom: VirtualChair: Gloria Gennaro, ETHDisc: Pablo Barbera, University of Southern California
Papers: Measuring Politicians' Activity and Influence on TwitterPaul C. Bauer, Mannheim Centre for EuropeanSocial ResearchNetwork Embedding Methods for Large Networks inPolitical ScienceMegan Brown, New York UniversityZhanna Terechshenko, New York UniversityRachel Connolly, Center for Social Media andPoliticsAngela Lai, New York UniversityTianxin Ji, New York UniversityJonathan Nagler, New York UniversityJoshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityRichard Bonneau, NYUStudying Information-Seeking About Female Politicianswith WikipediaTheresa Gessler, University of ZurichViolent Political Rhetoric on TwitterTae Gyoon Kim, Penn State University
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION26.7 CIVIC ENGAGEMENT PEDAGOGY ACROSS
THE GLOBERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 58: Civic EngagementChair: Taiyi Sun, Christopher Newport UniversityDisc: Nicole Webster
Dick Simpson, University of Illinois, Chicago
Papers: Teaching Group-Oriented Foreign Policy Analysis forCivic EngagementDmitry Lanko, St. Petersburg State UniversityThe Effects of Teaching DemocracyGeorgia PanagiotidouTheodore Chadjipadelis, Aristotle UniversityThessalonikiUnderstanding UndergraduatesĀPerceptions of CivicEngagement Across CountriesSharon Mary Feeney, Technological University (TU)DublinJohn W. Hogan, Technological University Dublin
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS26.8 CENSORSHIPRoom: VirtualChair: Joel R. Campbell, Troy UniversityDisc: Semuhi Sinanoglu, University of Toronto
Papers: Cultural Censorship and Trust in AfricaKelly GrenierDigital Media Influence on Media Freedom in CentralAmericaGabriella M. Pruitt de Santos, University ofMassachusetts, Lowell
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Digital Surveillance, State Weakness, and AutocraticPolitics in VenezuelaSamuel Handlin, Swarthmore CollegeWhere is the Barking Dog? Understanding DigitalSuppression of Voices of DissentWilliam J. Long, Georgia State UniversityRebekah Dowd, Midwestern State University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS26.9 CORRUPTIONRoom: VirtualChair: Sung Min Han, Hankuk University of Foreign StudiesDisc: Ramazan Kilinc, University of Nebraska-Omaha
Papers: Barking at the Moon: The Varying Effects of MiddleClass Size on CorruptionRaquel Chanto, University of OxfordInstitutional Legacy, Public Opinion, and the Rule ofLaw in Hong KongJing XuJian Xu, Emory UniversityPolitics by DenunciationAndrea Ceron, Università degli Studi di MilanoGiovanna Invernizzi, Columbia UniversityRemittances and Bureaucratic CorruptionBarry Maydom, Birkbeck College, University ofLondonAna Isabel Lopez Garcia, University of Konstanz
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS26.10 THE CONDITIONAL POLITICAL
CONSEQUENCES OF INTERGROUP CLEAVAGESIN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics
Chair: Donald L. Horowitz, Duke UniversityDisc: Donald L. Horowitz, Duke University
Papers: Politicized Intolerance: The Case of the 2019Presidential Election in IndonesiaRisa Toha, Yale-NUSAim Sinpeng, University of SydneyDimitar D Gueorguiev, Syracuse UniversityDoes Candidate Language Ability Mitigate the NegativeImpact of Ethnicity?Steven Matthew Oliver, Yale-NUS CollegeJiayun Elvin Ong, National University of SingaporeRealigned with Ethnic Parties? Explaining Support forNLD among Minority VotersKai-Ping Huang, National Taiwan UniversityNationalist Rhetoric in Southeast Asia: A TextualAnalysis ApproachJoel Sawat Selway, Brigham Young UniversityKirk A. Hawkins, Brigham Young UniversityAdam Roberts, Columbia University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES26.11 FROM PLURALISM TO POLARIZATION:
PUBLIC OPINION AND POLICY PREFERENCESRoom: VirtualChair: Chengzuo Tang, Duke UniversityDisc: Rachel Vanderhill, Wofford College
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Polarization in Elite Discourses of COVID-19 onChinese Social MediaTianguang Meng, Tsinghua UniversityKaiping Zhang, Tsinghua UniversitySiyao ZHENG, Tsinghua UniversityScapegoating: A Text-Mining Study on DiversionaryCollective Actions in ChinaChelsea C. Chou, National Taiwan UniversityVoting and Socially Valued Goods: Do Citizens RewardIncumbents or Punish Them?Mikolaj Czesnik, SWPS UniversitySupport for Democracy and Economic Liberalism:Evidence from the South CaucasusValery Dzutsati, University of Kansas
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES26.12 HOW THE STATE DEALS WITH OPPOSITIONRoom: VirtualChair: Anton Sobolev, Yale UniversityDisc: Ellen Carnaghan, Saint Louis University
Ling Chen, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Loyalty Signaling and Agent Compliance in Autocracies:Evidence from Mao's ChinaJingyuan Qian, University of Wisconsin-MadisonYunpeng Bai, Yale UniversityAchieving Revolutionary Work in the Crevice(Pre-Recorded)Weiting Wu, Shih Hsin UniversityWinning Economic Elites in China: The Role of theUnited Front Work DepartmentZhu Zhang, Tulane UniversityNew Anti-Corruption Protests in Eastern Europe andWhy Politicians Ignore ThemNina Simeonova Barzachka, College of the HolyCross
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY26.13 IMMIGRATION AND DIVERSITY IN EUROPERoom: VirtualChair: Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina at
Chapel HillPapers: Inequality and Local Public Goods Provision: Evidence
from the United KingdomSelene CampionAre Immigrant Integration Programs Effective? Evidencefrom NorwayJeremy Ferwerda, Dartmouth CollegeHenning Finseraas, Norwegian University of Scienceand TechnologyPublic preferences for Immigration, Integration andNaturalization PoliciesMarc Helbling, University of MannheimFelix Jäger, University of MannheimRahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina atChapel HillRichard Traunmuller, Goethe University FrankfurtBoundaries of Solidarity: Immigrants, EconomicContributions, Welfare AttitudesGabriele Magni, Loyola Marymount University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY26.14 DOMESTIC SOURCES AND INTERNATIONAL
IMPLICATIONS OF A GLOBALIZING CHINARoom: Virtual
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Chair: Karl Yan, Zhejiang UniversityDisc: Wei Liang, Middlebury Institute of International Studies
Papers: Power Concentration: ChinaĀs Railway Modernization inthe Early 2000sKarl Yan, Zhejiang UniversityInnovation Champions: Making Industrial Policy Workin Chinalingnan heDaniel Mattingly, Yale UniversityJiahua YueLate Development and China's Reshaping ofInternational Credit GovernanceMuyang Chen, Peking UniversityUnraveling the BRI: ChinaĀs Motives and Impacts onDevelopmentJonas Gamso, Arizona State UniversityMichael Moffett, Thunderbird School of GlobalManagement
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION26.15 INTERNATIONAL ACTORS AND PUBLIC
ATTITUDES TOWARD COOPERATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Tobias Hofmann, Free University of BerlinDisc: Cleo Marie O'Brien-Udry, Yale University
Tobias Hofmann, Free University of Berlin
Papers: Can IOs Mobilize Support for Regulating "Big Tech"?Terrence Chapman, University of Texas, AustinHuimin Li, University of Texas at AustinInternational Organizations and Public Opinion:The Case of Climate ChangeBrian D. Greenhill, SUNY, University at AlbanyPeople-Centered Integration? CitizensĀExpectations forRegional OrganizationsPeter Penar, Davidson CollegeThe Responsive Public: How EU Decisions ShapePublic Opinion on Salient PoliciesChristoph Mikulaschek, Harvard University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY26.16 ALLIANCES AND WAR: COOPERATION,
COMPLICATION, AND CONFLICT AMONGALLIES
Room: VirtualChair: Dan Reiter, Emory UniversityDisc: Paul Poast, University of Chicago
Joshua Itzkowitz Shifrinson, Boston University
Papers: Testing the Trip WireJoshua Alley, University of VirginiaTodd S. Sechser, University of VirginiaSharing with Frenemies: Technology Sharing withGeopolitical RivalErik Sand, Naval War CollegeNATO and the Missile Defense ChallengeSanne Verschuren, Brown University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY26.17 SHADOW OF VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Carmela Lutmar, University of Haifa
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: EntanglingĀand āDisentanglingĀAlliances: MilitaryCooperation in the Age of Industrial ModernityAnatoly Levshin, Princeton UniversityU.S. Military Cues, Credibility, and DeterrenceAndrew Michael Kenealy, Duke UniversitySo Jin Lee, Duke UniversityVarieties of Counterinsurgency Strategies in LateNineteenth Century East AsiaSeo-Hyun Park, Lafayette CollegeThe Logic of Kidnapping in Civil WarBlair Welsh, University of Essex
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES26.18 ANASTASIA SHESTERININA'S “MOBILIZING IN
UNCERTAINTY”Room: VirtualChair: Samantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay College
Anastasia Shesterinina, The University of SheffieldPart: Kristin Marie Bakke, University College London
Janet I. Lewis, George Washington UniversityZachariah Cherian Mampilly, Baruch College, CUNYSarah E. Parkinson, Johns Hopkins UniversityLee Seymour, Université de MontréalSusan M. Thomson, Colgate University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES26.19 COMMUNAL VIOLENCE DURING CIVIL WARRoom: VirtualChair: Jana Krause, University of OsloDisc: Corinna Jentzsch, Leiden University
Sophia Dawkins, Yale University
Papers: State Dissolution, Societal Breakdown: From CommunalViolence to Civil War OnsetBenoit Siberdt, University of OxfordHow Communal Violence Shapes Civilian PeacekeepersĀActivities LocallyHannah Smidt, University of ZurichAllard Duursma, ETH ZurichFrontlines and Sidelines: WomenĀs Involvement inCommunal ViolenceHilary Matfess, Yale UniversityJakana Thomas, Michigan State University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES26.20 ORDER AND VIOLENCE IN THE
INTERNATIONAL SYSTEMRoom: VirtualChair: Eleonora Mattiacci, Amherst CollegeDisc: Eleonora Mattiacci, Amherst College
Benjamin Thomas Jones, The University of Mississippi
Papers: Hierarchy and War in the International System: Empiricsof Order and ConflictBear F. Braumoeller, Ohio State UniversityJared Falkenberg Edgerton, Ohio State UniversityStates as Firms: Reassessing the Waltzian Analogy inthe Global EraZhichao Tong, Sun Yat-sen UniversityWars in Flux: Mixing Methods to Capture Dynamism inArmed ConflictAnnette Iris Idler, Harvard UniversityKaterina Tkacova, University of OxfordWhat's Worth the Fight? Examining the Public Salienceof International ConflictsSoyoung Lee, Stanford University
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DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION26.21 CROSS-SECTOR RELATIONSHIPSRoom: VirtualChair: Kelly LeRouxDisc: Kelly LeRoux
Papers: Cross-Boundary Collaboration and Public ValueCreationAbdul-jabiru Adam, Yonsei UniversityYousueng Han, Yonsei UniversityService Area: How Much It Matters in Cross-SectoralCollaboration?Khaldoun AbouAssi, American University- School ofPublic AffairsTianyu Chen, American UniversityJocelyn M. Johnston, American UniversityKathryn Grossman, American UniversityTaking a Closer Look: The Role of Nonprofits in LocalPublic Service DeliveryScott Lamothe, University of OklahomaMeeyoung Lamothe, University of OklahomaCollective action and co-production of public services asalternative politics: The case of public transportation inIsraelNiva Golan-Nadir, Center for Policy Research,Rockefeller College of Public Affairs & Policy,The University at AlbanyTom Christensen
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR26.22 POLITICAL CONSEQUENCES OF ELECTION
TIMINGRoom: VirtualChair: Yuki Yanai, Kochi University of TechnologyDisc: Petra Schleiter, University of Oxford
Sarah F. Anzia, University of California-Berkeley
Papers: The Element of Surprise: Election Timing andOpposition PreparednessCharles McClean, Harvard UniversityManipulation of Election Timing and Popular Supportfor the GovernmentMasaaki Higashijima, Tohoku UniversityNaoki Shimizu, University of KochiHidekuni Washida, Toyo UniversityYuki Yanai, Kochi University of TechnologyStrategic Agenda Setting and Election Timing in theU.S. HouseStephanie A. Nail, Stanford UniversityElection Timing and Government Response to COVID-19Hidekuni Washida, Toyo UniversityYuki Yanai, Kochi University of Technology
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION26.23 INFORMATION DIET AND ITS EFFECTSRoom: VirtualChair: Stewart Matthew Coles, University of Illinois at Urbana-
ChampaignDisc: Simge Andi, University of Oxford
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Can Expert Information on COVID-19 Counteract(Mis)Information Diets?John M. Carey, Dartmouth CollegeAndrew Guess, Princeton UniversityBrendan Nyhan, Dartmouth CollegeJoseph Phillips, Pennsylvania State UniversityJason A. Reifler, University of ExeterPolitical News Diets and Political Attitudes in the 2019EU Elections in ItalySara Bentivegna, University of Rome "Sapienza"Rossella Rega, University of SienaOrazio Giancola, University of Roma "Sapienza"Estimating Media Effects Using an Ideologically DiverseNews Curation PlatformSota Kato, International University of JapanTakafumi Nakanishi, Musashino UniversityYoshifumi Seki, Gunosy IncBudrul Ahsan, Philips JapanShun Ibaragi, The Tokyo Foundation for PolicyResearchBanning the Alt-Right: A Reddit Case StudyVivian Ferrillo, Texas Tech University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS26.24 GOVERNING UNCERTAINTY: POLITICAL,
SOCIAL, AND TECHNOLOGICAL CHALLENGESRoom: VirtualChair: Nancy E. Wright, Pace UniversityDisc: Talbot M Andrews, University of Connecticut
Papers: A Crossnational Study of Political Correlates of DigitalContact Tracing PolicySo Young Kim, KAISTPoliticizing the Phase-Out: Political Framings andNuclear Energy in JapanIl Hyun Cho, Lafayette CollegeHow Sure Is Sure? Certainty and Ambiguity in Science-Based PolicymakingSara K Guenther, Montana State UniversityDeserai Anderson Crow, University of ColoradoDenverCooperation Under Uncertainty: The Behavioral Rootsof Environmental AgreementsColin Kuehl, Northern Illinois University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY26.25 LOCAL AND REGIONAL DYNAMICS OF
AUTOCRACYRoom: VirtualChair: Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Central European UniversityDisc: Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University
Papers: Covert Violence and Social Paralysis in AuthoritarianArgentinaMadeleine I Stevens, University of ChicagoLocal Politics of Authoritarian Consolidation: Evidencefrom Turkey's MunicipalitiesLisel S. Hintz, Johns Hopkins University SAISHarun Ercan, State University of New York atBinghamtonWeakly Institutionalized Decentralization and PoliticalCompetitionOzge Kemahlioglu, Sabanci UniversityResat Bayer, Koç University
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DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY26.26 POWER-SHARING, PERSONALIZATION, AND
REGIME STABILITY UNDER AUTOCRACYRoom: VirtualChair: Anne Meng, University of VirginiaDisc: Arturas Rozenas, New York University
Anne Meng, University of Virginia
Papers: The Logic of Judicial Appointments and Purges inAuthoritarian RegimesFiona Shen-Bayh, William & MaryDanny Choi, University of PittsburghTiming and the Target of Elite Purges in AutocraciesJun Koga Sudduth, University of StrathclydeRuling After Rebelling: Civilian Supremacy andAuthoritarian DurabilityAdam E. Casey, University of MichiganJean Lachapelle, University of OsloDan Slater, University of MichiganPersonalization of Power and Mass Uprisings inDictatorshipsJoseph Wright, Pennsylvania State UniversityJohn Joseph Chin, Carnegie Mellon UniversityWonjun Song, Seoul National University
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY26.27 PUBLIC OPINION AND THE COVID-19
PANDEMICRoom: VirtualChair: Matthew P. Motta, Oklahoma State UniversityDisc: Dominik Andrzej Stecula, Colorado State University
Papers: AmericansĀPerceptions of Health Disparities in theCOVID-19 PandemicSarah E. Gollust, University of MinnesotaRebekah NaglerErika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan UniversityUnderstanding Physician COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy:Politics, Race, and RuralityTimothy Herbert Callaghan, Texas A&M UniversityRobert Kirby Goidel, Texas A&MDavid J Washburn, Texas A&M University School ofPublic HealthHow Conspiratorial Thinking and MisinformationUndermine COVID-19 Vaccine UptakeChristina Farhart, Carleton CollegeKristin Kay Lunz Trujillo, Northeastern Universityand Harvard UniversityElla Douglas-DurhamJoseph Vitriol, Stony Brook University, HarvardUniversityExploring Health Care-Related Media and theImplications for ReformMargaret Tait, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
Related Groups27.1 CAMPAIGN FINANCE RESEARCH GROUP:
NEW & OLD VOICES IN THE HEAVENLYCHORUS: POWER, PARTICIPATION &CAMPAIGN FINANCE
Room: VirtualChair: Robin A. Kolodny, Temple UniversityDisc: Robert G. Boatright, Clark University
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: How Access PACs Devalue Female Members ofCongressEric S. Heberlig, University of North Carolina,CharlotteBruce A. Larson, Gettysburg CollegeRace, Gender, and Campaign Finance in the 2020 Stateand Federal ElectionsSarah Bryner, Center for Responsive PoliticsSmall Donors in U.S. ElectionsEric Manning, Princeton UniversityThe Impact of the Small-Donor Public FinancingProgram in DC Local ElectionsCraig B. Holman, Public CitizenThe Toothless Tiger: An Overview of the Issues thatAffect the FECKaren Denice Sebold, University of Arkansas,Fayetteville
27.2 CENTER FOR THE STUDY OF STATESMANSHIP(FORMERLY NATIONAL HUMANITIESINSTITUTE): BASIC SYMBOLS AT 50: LOOKINGBACKWARD AND FORWARD AT AMERICANPOLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: VirtualChair: Justin B. Litke, Catholic University of AmericaDisc: Jeffry H. Morrison, Christopher Newport University
Jason Ross, Liberty University
Papers: George Carey, Postwar American Conservatism, and theAmerican Political MindH. Lee Cheek, East Georgia State CollegeWillmoore Kendall and Rousseau: An ImportantRelationshipDavid B. Frisk, Alexander Hamilton InstituteThe Most Basic Symbol? A Self-Governing PeopleBruce P. Frohnen, Ohio Northern UniversityLincoln in Basic Symbols: Derailment or Perpetuation?Greg Weiner, Assumption College
27.3 CHRISTIANS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:RETURNING MILITARY NECESSITY TO JUSTWAR STATECRAFT
Room: VirtualChair: Kevin J. Cooney, Wilberforce International InstituteDisc: Eric Patterson, Regent University
Papers: Military Necessity: The Missing Link in Jus in BelloPauline M. Shanks Kaurin, US Naval War CollegeHiroshima: A Case study in Moral & Military NecessityMarc LiVecche, US Naval AcademyNatural Law & Just War: Intention, Proportionality,Discrimination, & NecessityJ. Daryl Charles, Acton InstituteMilitary Necessity: Conceptual CacophonyLouis Bujnoch, University of Glasgow
27.4 COMPARATIVE URBAN POLITICS: CITY ANDLOCAL GOVERNANCE IN CHINA
Room: VirtualChair: Kellee S. Tsai, Hong Kong University of Science and
TechnologyDisc: Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa Cruz
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Papers: Beyond Tiao-Kuai? Fragmented and Fused UrbanGovernance in ChinaKyle Alan Jaros, University of Notre DameIn the Name of Welfare: Local State and HousingWelfare Expansion in Urban ChinaNanxi Zeng, Johns Hopkins UniversityDigital Leviathan: The Emergence of PlatformAuthoritarianism in ChinaJingyang Huang, The Hong Kong University ofScience and TechnologyStaffing Leviathan: Homogenizing Cadre ManagementAcross a Fragmented Local StateHao Chen, University of Southern CaliforniaSaul Kriger Wilson, Harvard University
27.5 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:AUTHORITARIANISM SUPPORT ANDDEMOCRATIC CITIZENSHIP IN TAIWAN
Room: VirtualChair: Wei-chin Lee, Wake Forest UniversityDisc: Greg Chih-Hsin Sheen, New York University Abu
Dhabi
Papers: Protectionism, Nationalism, and Perceived U.S.Influence: Evidence from ChinaRonan Tse-min Fu, Academia SinicaWei-hao Huang, National sun-yat sen university
27.6 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: ERIC VOEGELINPOLITICAL READINGS: FROM THE ANCIENTGREEKS TO MODERN TIMES
Room: VirtualChair: Bernat Torres Morales, Universitat Internacional de
Catalunya, BarcelonaPart: Zdravko Planinc, McMaster University
Barry Cooper, University of CalgaryNicoletta Scotti Muth, Catholic University of SacroCuore, MilanThierry Gontier, University of Jean Moulin - Lyon 3Bjorn Thomassen, Roskilde University
28.1 ISRAELI DEMOCRACY UNDER STRESSRoom: VirtualChair: Oded Haklai, Queen's UniversityDisc: Maoz Rosenthal, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya
Papers: IsraelĀs Securitization Dilemma: BDS and the Battle forIsrael's LegitimacyRonnie May Olesker, St. Lawrence UniversityThe Effect of National Story Similarity on PeopleĀsSense of RepresentationYael Rivka Kaplan, Hebrew UniversityTamir Sheafer, Hebrew University of JerusalemShaul Rafael Shenhav, Hebrew University ofJerusalemTrust in the Judiciary: The Effect of PoliticalPolarizationMenachem Hofnung, Hebrew University of JerusalemNir Atmor, Zefat Academic College
28.2 POLITICAL CONFLICT AND COMPETITION INIRELAND
Room: VirtualChair: Peter C. Stone, Trinity College, DublinDisc: Yao Han, Tsinghua University
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Defeating Sectarianism: Continuity and Change inNorthern IrelandC. K. Martin Chung, Hong Kong Baptist UniversityExamining the Irish GE2020 Campaign on TwitterUsing an Images-as-Data ApproachJames P Cross, University College DublinMartijn Schoonvelde, European University InstituteDerek Greene, University College DublinStefan Müller, University College DublinHow Does the Conflict Structure Shape Issue Attention?Party Politics in IrelandChristoffer Green-Pedersen, University of AarhusConor Little, University of LimerickThe Lag Effect of Peace? WomenĀs Representation inthe Northern Ireland AssemblyTimothy J. White, Xavier UniversityKimberly B. Cowell-Meyers, American University
28.3 LATIN AMERICAS' DEMOCRACIES UNDERPRESSURE: POLARIZATION, FRAGMENTATION,VIOLENCE AND OTHER CHALLENGES
Room: VirtualChair: Marianne R. Kneuer, University of HildesheimDisc: Yuriko Takahashi, Waseda University
Papers: New Threats to Democracy in ArgentinaMartín D'Alessandro, Sociedad Argentina de AnálisisPolíticoThe Ideological Re-configurations of Peruvian VoterPreferences in the 21st century: Centrifugal PolarizationJesus Tovar, Universidad Autonoma del Estado deMexicoColombia: Polarization, Violence and the COVID-19PandemicCarolina María Horta Gaviria, 32256906Ecuador: From the Left-Turn, to Political PolarizationSimón Pachano, FLACSOMany Mexicos: Polarization or Fragmentation?Willibald Sonnleitner, El Colegio de Mexico
Tuesday, 6:00 AM to 2:00 PMAPSA Events29.1 MENA RDG (INVITE ONLY)Room: Virtual Off-Platform EventChair: Marc Lynch, George Washington University
Bassel Salloukh, Lebanese American UniversityLisel S. Hintz, Johns Hopkins University SAISStacey Sheridan Philbrick, University of Pennsylvania
Tuesday, 7:00 AM to 5:00 PMAPSA Events30.1 APSR EDITORIAL TEAM MEETINGRoom: WSCC, 205
Tuesday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AMTheme Panels31.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND SOCIAL
MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE: BURDENSAND RISKS OF INTERSECTIONAL ACTIVISM
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Traci Burch, Northwestern University
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Disc: Jean Beaman, University of California Santa BarbaraTiffany J. Willoughby-Herard, University of California-Irvine
Papers: How the Punishment of Black Women Affects the Civicand Political Participation of Black WomenSally Nuamah, Northwestern UniversityThe Lonely ActivistAkwugo Emejulu, University of WarwickLeah Bassel, University of LeicesterPrivilege and Protest: Race, Gender, and PoliticalResponses to ThreatJenn M. Jackson, Syracuse University
Tuesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AMTheme Panels32.1 DATA POSSIBILITIES, REPLICATION, AND
TRANSPARENCY: READY FOR THECHALLENGES?
Room: VirtualChair: Aya Kachi, University of BaselPart: Amber Ellen Boydstun, University of California, Davis
David D. Laitin, Stanford UniversityKazimierz M. Slomczynski, Ohio State UniversityIrina Tomescu-DubrowNicole Yadon, Ohio State University
32.2 INTERSECTIONALITY AND SOCIALMOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL MOBILIZATION ANDREPRESENTATION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Wendy G. Smooth, The Ohio State UniversityDisc: LaGina Gause, University of California, San Diego
Jamil Shatema Scott, Georgetown University
Papers: Representing a Movement: CongresswomenĀs IssueUptake of the 2017 āMeToo MovementKristen Essel, Brown UniversitySocial Movements or Elected Politicians? Ethnic/RacialMinoritized CitizensĀAssessments of Their PoliticalRepresentation in the NetherlandsJudith de JongLiza Mugge, University of AmsterdamCommunity and Connections: Black Lives Matter'sInfluence on Black women STL-Area LawmakersNadia E. Brown, Georgetown University
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY33.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY VIRTUAL
MINI-CONFERENCE: DEVELOPMENTALIMAGINARIES AND DECOLONIALPOSSIBILITIES
Room: VirtualChair: Roxanne L. Euben, University of PennsylvaniaDisc: Inder Singh Marwah, McMaster University
Papers: Anti-Imperial Uses of History in Early Modern ChinaLeigh K. Jenco, London School of Economics
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Undoing Colonized Subjectivity in Contemporary ArabThoughtYasmeen Daifallah, University of California, SantaCruzEmpire and Democracy: Britain, India, and the Time ofMetropolitan DemocracyNazmul S. Sultan, University of ChicagoDevelopment as Alibi, Underdevelopment as ClaimDavid Temin, University of Michigan
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY33.2 HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE
MEANINGS AND CHALLENGES OF PLURALISM(1355-1752)
Room: VirtualChair: Glory M. Liu, Harvard UniversityDisc: Kinch Hoekstra, University of California, Berkeley
Glory M. Liu, Harvard University
Papers: An Early Theory of Institutional Bi-Partyism: BartolusĀDe Guelphis et GebellinisDavid Ragazzoni, Columbia UniversityBaconian Political ExperimentsSamuel Garrett Zeitlin, Corpus Christi College,University of CambridgeHobbes's Strategy of ConvergenceAlison McQueen, Stanford UniversityDavid HumeĀs Court of CompetitorsDanielle Charette, University of Chicago
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY33.3 SIMON GILHOOLEY'S "THE ANTEBELLUM
ORIGINS OF THE MODERN CONSTITUTION"Room: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 56: American Political ThoughtChair: Emily Nacol, University of TorontoPart: Simon Gilhooley, Bard College
Neil Roberts, Williams CollegeNolan Bennett, University of Wisconsin - Green BayElizabeth Beaumont, University of California, SantaCruzCalvin TerBeek, University of Chicago
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY33.4 HOW DO WE SOLVE A PROBLEM LIKE
CLIMATE CHANGE?Room: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Environmental Politics and TheoryDisc: Elisabeth H. Ellis, University of Otago
Papers: āA Fruit of Every ClimeĀ? RousseauĀs EnvironmentalPoliticsRebecca Aili Ploof, Leiden UniversityEffective DisoccupationAlejandra Mancilla, University of OsloFrom the Common State: John Locke on ClimateChangeChristopher R. Hallenbrook, California StateUniversity Dominguez HillsRyan Reed, Bradley UniversityLose the Whole Earth: A Planetary Politics Toward theFutureChar Roone Miller, George Mason University
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DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY33.5 IN SEARCH OF THE CONCRETE UNIVERSAL:
EVALUATING BENHABIB'S THEORETICALVISION
Room: VirtualChair: Anna Jurkevics, University of British ColumbiaDisc: Seyla Benhabib, Yale University
Papers: At the Borders of the Self: Democratic Iterations asPost-National SovereigntyPaul Linden-Retek, Yale UniversityModels of Communicative Cosmopolitanism: Arendt,Habermas and BenhabibPeter J. Verovšek, University of SheffieldSituating the Self and the Problem of Moral MotivationCarmen Lea Dege, Polonsky AcademyJurisgenerativity in the Age of Big DataMatthew Longo, Leiden University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY33.6 DEBATING PLURALISM IN A WORLD OF MANY
WORLDSRoom: VirtualChair: Stefan P. Dolgert, Brock UniversityDisc: Yann Allard-Tremblay, McGill University
Papers: Ontological Pluralism and the Possibility of ConversingAcross WorldsDidier Zúñiga, McGill UniversityIntellectual Disability and Political Community:A Politics of UnknowRachael Desborough, University of TorontoPluralism at the MarginsAvigail Eisenberg, University of VictoriaThe Politics of Air: Towards a Political Theory ofElemental MaterialismRachel Forgash, UCLA
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY33.7 POLICY ATTITUDESRoom: VirtualChair: Jared McDonald, Stanford UniversityDisc: Elif Naz Kayran, Leiden University
Jared McDonald, Stanford University
Papers: A Cross National Examination of Attitudes TowardVaccinations and GMOsCengiz Erisen, Yeditepe UniversityScott Clifford, University of HoustonDane G. Wendell, Illinois CollegeInequality, Polarization, and Climate ChangeWilliam (Zev) Berger, University of ArizonaWhat's the Problem? Perceiving Social Problems andChanging Policy AttitudesPhilip Moniz, University of Texas at AustinWhy Do Some Americans Support the Protection ofHate Speech?Mark Daniel Ramirez, Arizona State University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY33.8 GENDER, REPRESENTATION, AND
LEADERSHIPRoom: VirtualChair: Katelyn E. Stauffer, University of South Carolina
Tuesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Conflict and Gender Leadership: Female Mayors inColombiaFrancisco Eslava, University of British ColumbiaLabor Unrest, Ideology Formation and FemaleParticipation in the 1930sFrancesc Amat, University of Barcelona, Gran Via deles Corts Catalanes 585, Q0818001J, 08007 BarcelonaWealth and Gender in CongressRachel Bernhard, University of California DavisAndrew C. Eggers, Oxford UniversityMarko Klasnja, Georgetown University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS33.9 PRO-DEMOCRACY PROTESTSRoom: VirtualChair: Hamid Rezai, Pitzer CollegeDisc: Hamid Rezai, Pitzer College
Papers: An Agent-Based Model of Protest Diffusion andThresholdsStephanie Dornschneider, University College DublinBruce Edmonds, Manchester Metropolitan UniversityĄNot-In-My Backyardď(NIMBY) Activism in China:Why Some Succeed or Fail?Steven Yet, University of TorontoRetrospective Revolutionary Narratives: Variation inSocial Grievances in TunisiaMichelle Jurkovich, University of MassachusettsBostonDina Bishara, Cornell UniversityChantal Berman, Georgetown UniversityRevisiting the Politics of Discontent in the Arab WorldMichael Robbins, Princeton UniversityTarik M. Yousef, Georgetown University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES33.10 POLICING AND PLURALISM IN SOUTH ASIARoom: VirtualChair: Devesh Kapur, Johns Hopkins SAISDisc: Susan L Ostermann, University of Notre Dame
Papers: Engendering Policing: Evaluating Reforms to IncreaseWomenĀs Access to SecurityAkshay Mangla, University of OxfordGabrielle Kruks-Wisner, University of VirginiaSandip Sukhtankar, University of VirginiaIncorporating Organized Women: Theorizing PoliceResponses to Domestic ViolencePoulami Roychowdhury, McGill UniversityPolicing and Violence Against Women: GenderedPatterns of Case Disbursal in IndiaNirvikar Jassal, Stanford UniversityPolicing Peaceful Protests in a DemocracyAmit Ahuja, University of California, Santa BarbaraRahul HemrajaniRajkamal Singh, University of California, SantaBarbara
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES33.11 STATE CAPACITY AND STATE BUILDINGRoom: VirtualChair: Nate Grubman, Stanford UniversityDisc: Hillel David Soifer, Temple University
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Papers: Democratization and Local Bureaucratic Capacity:Evidence from ArgentinaFederico Tiberti, Princeton UniversityDo Elections Build States? Evidence from LiberianElectoral AdministrationJeremy Bowles, Harvard UniversityThe Dynamics of Bribery: Evidence from TunisianCustoms Transactions (Pre-Recorded)Nate Grubman, Stanford UniversitySamuel Leone, University of California - BerkeleyJawaher Mbarek, IndependantNetworks of Effectiveness and Bureaucratic Performancein PakistanSameen A. Mohsin Ali, Lahore University ofManagement Sciences
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES33.12 GOVERNMENT AND CITIZEN RESPONSES TO
THE COVID-19 PANDEMICRoom: VirtualChair: Ziyi Wu, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDisc: Olesya Tkacheva, Free University of Brussels (VUB)
Papers: The Coercive Capacity of COVID-19 Policies: Rule ofLaw and Rule of Fear?Paula Daniela Ganga, Columbia UniversityCaress Rene Schenk, Nazarbaev UniversitySaving Lives or the Economy? The Incumbent SupportDuring the Pandemic in RussiaKirill Chmel, National Research University "HigherSchool of Economics"Aigul KlimovaNikita Savin, National Research University "HigherSchool of Economics"Where is the Real Conspiracy? Covid and Post-Communist Democratic DecayNikolay V. Marinov, University of HoustonMaria Popova, McGill UniversityThe Epidemiologization of Politics and the PreventiveRepression in XinjiangSeyfullah Ozkurt
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES33.13 LINKING DESCRIPTIVE AND SUBSTANTIVE
REPRESENTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Zsuzsanna Blanka Magyar, University of LucerneDisc: Michael Becher, IE School of Global and Public Affairs
Papers: Linking Constitutive and Substantive Representation:An Intersectional ApproachOrly Siow, Newcastle UniversityWhy Do Political Elites Promote the Political Inclusionof Marginalized Peoples?Carol A. Mershon, University of VirginiaNatural Disasters and Green Party Electoral SupportAntónio Valentim
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY33.14 ANALYZING THE GLOBALIZATION
BACKLASH: NEW EXPLANATIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Leonardo Baccini, McGill UniversityDisc: Leonardo Baccini, McGill University
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Stephen Weymouth, Georgetown University
Papers: Trade as Villain: Falling Support for Globalization andthe Fading American DreamCameron Ballard-Rosa, University of North Carolina,Chapel HillJudith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford UniversityNita Rudra, Georgetown UniversityHow Other Countries React to Challenges toInternational InstitutionsStefanie Walter, University of ZurichHow an IndustryĀs History Affects Status Loss UnderForeign CompetitionSung Eun Kim, Korea UniversityKrzysztof J. Pelc, McGill UniversityJob Insecurity, Local Sociotropism and Anti-Globalization SentimentJames Hodgdon Bisbee, NYUB. Peter Rosendorff, New York University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION33.15 CITIZEN OPINION ON INTERNATIONAL
COOPERATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Michael R. Tomz, Stanford UniversityDisc: Lora Anne Viola, Free University of Berlin
Papers: International Economic Relations and Antitrust PolicyRyan Brutger, University of California, BerkeleyAmy PondExplaining Citizen Legitimacy Beliefs TowardInternational OrganizationsLisa Maria Dellmuth, Stockholm UniversityJan Aart Scholte, University of GothenburgJonas Tallberg, Stockholm UniversitySoetkin Verhaegen, UCLouvainU.S. Public Opinion Toward Withdrawal fromInternational OrganizationsFelicity Vabulas, Pepperdine UniversityInken von Borzyskowski, University College London(UCL)International Law, Foreign Policy, and Public Demandsfor Punishing TortureA. Burcu Bayram, University of ArkansasEric Keels, Air War CollegeEfe Tokdemir, Bilkent UniversityRecalibrating the Costs of Non-cooperation: How Brexitaffects Preferences Towards European Integration inNon-member StatesGiorgio Malet, University of ZurichStefanie Walter, University of Zurich
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY33.16 CYBER CONFLICTRoom: VirtualChair: Aysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, BoulderDisc: Jeremy Matthew Berkowitz, Prairie View A&M
University
Papers: Coercion in Cyberspace: A Model of Extortion viaEncryptionJenny Jun, Columbia UniversityCyber DIME Trends and Influences in Cyber Warfareand International SecurityLev Topor, Haifa University
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Cyber Power: Measuring Capabilities and Intent inCyberspaceAnina SchwarzenbachPublic Secrets: Dynamics of Secrecy in State CyberOperationsGil Baram
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES33.17 LEADER-BASED APPROACHES TO
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICTRoom: VirtualChair: Christopher Chiego, California State University
Maritime AcademyDisc: Christopher Chiego, California State University
Maritime AcademyCarmela Lutmar, University of Haifa
Papers: Appeal to the Public: Domestic Evaluation and PublicStatements in Vietnam WarYohan Park, Texas A&M UniversityBirds of a Feather: Leader Similarity and InternationalConflictMatthew DiLorenzo, Old Dominion UniversityBryan Rooney, Universidad Carlos III de MadridHard to Say IĀm Sorry: Domestic Reactions to MakingInternational ApologiesMichaela Mattes, UC-BerkeleyJessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-MadisonLeader Hawkishness, Political Survival, and InterstateConflictJeff Carter, Appalachian State University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES33.18 COMMITTEE DYNAMICS IN THE U.S.Room: VirtualChair: Timothy P. Nokken, Texas Tech UniversityPapers: Assessing Policy Learning and Attention in
Congressional CommitteesNathaniel A Birkhead, Kansas State UniversityKevin M. Esterling, University of California,RiversideJustin Kirkland, University of VirginiaJoseph Gerard Amoroso, University of VirginiaHarrison James Weeks, University of VirginiaAssessing the Effects of Multiple Referrals in the U.S.House: 1975- 2020Timothy P. Nokken, Texas Tech UniversityNeil Chaturvedi, California State PolytechnicUniversity, PomonaCommittee Staff Capacity and Legislative Performance:A Team Production ApproachGeorge A. Krause, University of GeorgiaJosh McCrain, University of UtahElectoral Rewards for Political Grandstanding inCommittee HearingsJu Yeon Park, University of Essex
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS33.19 PRESIDENTIAL INFLUENCE IN U.S. FOREIGN
POLICYRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 20: Foreign PolicyChair: Zak Taylor, Georgia Institute of TechnologyDisc: Zak Taylor, Georgia Institute of Technology
Tuesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Tested: The Difficulty of Foreign Policy for NewPresidentsJames M. Quirk, American UniversityThe Story vs. the Storyteller: Rhetoric, Representation,and the JCPOAJane Darby MentonHow Presidents Shape US Foreign Policy: Evidencefrom the Iran Nuclear DealPhilipp SoekerPreemptive Challenges: Measuring Executive Power inLegislating Foreign PolicyJakob Wiedekind, Leibniz Universität Hannover
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY33.20 PLURAL APPROACHES TO EDUCATION AND
EQUALITYRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 59: Education Politics and PolicyChair: Zachary F. Peskowitz, Emory UniversityPapers: Immigrant Inclusion in the Safety Net and Latino
Postsecondary AttainmentMeghan Condon, Loyola University ChicagoElisabet Barrios MateoLanguage-in-Education Policy Reform in Urban SchoolsServing Refugee StudentsCelia Reddick, Harvard UniversityOpting-Out? Evaluating Participation in the AlabamaAccountability ActAnnah Rogers, University of Alabama, TuscaloosaThe Politics of Indigenous Identity for College Studentsin Oaxaca, MexicoMneesha Gellman, Emerson College
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTALRELATIONS33.21 A PATCHWORK OF GOVERNANCE FOR A
COMPLEX WORLDRoom: VirtualChair: Jennifer Bachner, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Dorothea Israel Wolfson, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: State Constitutions: Successes and PitfallsJennifer Bachner, Johns Hopkins UniversityBenjamin Ginsberg, Johns Hopkins UniversityFilling the Void: How Interstate Compacts AddressNational InterestsKathy Wagner Hill, Johns Hopkins UniversitySpeaking Truth to BureaucraciesCollin Paschall, Johns Hopkins UniversityBenjamin Ginsberg, Johns Hopkins UniversityApplying International Anti-Corruption Criteria to theU.S.Sarah O'Byrne, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS33.22 REPRESENTATIONAL AND DISTRIBUTIONAL
CONSEQUENCES OF ELECTORAL SYSTEMS(VIRTUAL)
Room: VirtualChair: Robert G. Moser, University of Texas at AustinDisc: Ignacio Lago, University Pompeu Fabra
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Papers: Does Proportional Representation IncreaseRedistribution?Tine N Paulsen, New York UniversityGender, Political Careers, and Electoral SystemsTobias Nowacki, Stanford UniversityWhen Does a Vote-Winner's Ideological PositionDetermine Government Congruence?G. Bingham Powell, University of Rochester
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES33.23 NATIONALISM, AUTHORITARIANISM, AND
PARTIESRoom: VirtualChair: Rina Verma Williams, University of CincinnatiDisc: Navid Mehrdad, Columbia University
Hubert Tworzecki, Emory University
Papers: Choosing Who to Hate? Foreign Policy of the Far RightTowards Middle EastJakub Wondreys, University of GeorgiaThe Consequence of Timing & Messaging in theDevelopment of Nationalist PartiesSean D Harris, Temple UniversityThe Emergence of Competitive Authoritarian Regimes:Turkey and Hungary ComparedSebnem Yardimci Geyikci, Hacettepe UniversityThe Rise of PolandĀs PiS: Organizational ExpansionThrough Civil Society ActivismMelis G. Laebens, Nuffield CollegeMarcin Slarzynski, Polish Academy of Sciences
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR33.24 SINCERE AND STRATEGIC VOTERSRoom: VirtualChair: Ruth Dassonneville, Universite de MontrealDisc: Mert Moral, SabancĝUniversity
Papers: Policy Balancing Voting in a One-Party DominantSystemKo Maeda, University of North TexasVoter Decision-making in Primary ElectionsSeth J. Hill, University of California, San DiegoEasy Come, Easy Go: Strategic Switching in PluralityElectionsDaniel Max Kselman, IE UniversityEmerson M. S. Niou, Duke UniversityAustin Horng-En Wang, University of Nevada, LasVegasWhat Role Does Affective Proximity Play in CanadianElections?Sarah Lachance, University of British ColumbiaEdana Beauvais, Simon Fraser University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION33.25 MISINFORMATION: HOW AND WHY
MISINFORMATION IS SPREADRoom: VirtualChair: Stefan McCabe, Northeastern UniversityDisc: Jon Green, Northeastern University
Papers: The Campaign Disinformation Divide: Belief andSharing in the 2019 UK ElectionCristian Vaccari, Loughborough UniversityAndrew Chadwick, Loughborough UniversityJohannes Kaiser, Loughborough University
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Fake News and Media Skepticism in Non-DemocraciesAnton Shirikov, University of Wisconsin-MadisonWeaponizing Fake News: Uncovering Australia's āDeathTaxĀCampaignAndrea Carson, La Trobe UnivesityAndrew Gibbons, The University of Texas at AustinJustin Bonest Phillips, University of Waikato
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS33.26 EXTREMISM AND POLARIZATION ONLINERoom: VirtualChair: Heather L. Katz, Southwestern Oklahoma State
UniversityDisc: Heather L. Katz, Southwestern Oklahoma State
University
Papers: Hostile Perception and Unsociable Social Media: MassPolarization in South KoreaSUKYOUNG MYUNG, University of Hawaii atManoaReducing Intergroup Prejudice Through Conversationson WhatsAppRajeshwari Majumdar, New York UniversityRichard Bonneau, NYUJonathan Nagler, New York UniversityJoshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityOpinion Manipulation in the Farsi TwittersphereAmirhossein Farzam, Northwestern Universityparham moradi, shahid Beheshti universityZahra PadarSaeedeh Mohammadi, Shahid Beheshti UniversityAlexandra Arons Siegel, University of ColoardoBoulderDigital PopulismAngela Maione, Harvard University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS33.27 HUMAN RIGHTS AND SEX TRAFFICKINGRoom: VirtualChair: Laura A. Hebert, Occidental CollegePapers: Human Rights, Anti-Trafficking Funding, and the
Discourse of PreventionLaura A. Hebert, Occidental CollegeNavigating Stigma: Institution Building in the SexWorkers Rights MovementErica E MacDonald, University of ConnecticutSexual Violence in the Shadows: Private MilitaryContractors and Sexual ViolenceBaylee Harrell, University of KentuckyGender Violence and Public Attitudes TowardPunishmentSuparna Chaudhry, Lewis & Clark CollegeKelebogile Zvobgo, College of William & Mary
Part: Erica E MacDonald, University of ConnecticutBaylee Harrell, University of KentuckySuparna Chaudhry, Lewis & Clark CollegeKelebogile Zvobgo, College of William & Mary
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS33.28 RETHINKING COMPARISON IN THE SOCIAL
SCIENCES: PROMISES AND POSSIBILITIESRoom: VirtualChair: Erica S. Simmons, University of Wisconsin, MadisonPart: Nicholas Rush Smith
Jonathan Obert, Amherst CollegeBenjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa Cruz
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DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS33.29 THE STATE AND TRADITIONAL GOVERNANCE
NEXUS: EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM AFRICARoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative PoliticsChair: Lauren M. MacLean, Indiana University, BloomingtonDisc: Peter Van der Windt
Kristen Kao, University of Gothenburg
Papers: Do Endorsements by Traditional Leaders Affect VoterAttitudes?Sarah Brierley, London School of EconomicsGeorge Kwaku Ofosu, London School of Economicsand Political ScienceWho Votes with the Chief? Evaluating TraditionalAuthority in Ghana and TogoMartha Wilfahrt, University of California, BerkeleyNatalie Wenzell Letsa, University of OklahomaHow Leaders Gain Compliance: Survey Experiments onVariation by ActivityKatharine A. Baldwin, Yale UniversityEllen M. Lust, University of GothenburgComparing Governance by Traditional and StateInstitutions in the DRCSoeren Jannik Henn, IPA & University of Chicago
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS33.30 NEW APPROACHES TO MENA RESEARCH FOR
COVID-19 AND BEYONDRoom: VirtualChair: Rana B. Khoury, Princeton UniversityDisc: Marwa Shalaby, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Papers: Migration Management Aid and Governance inRecipient CountriesKelsey P. Norman, Rice UniversityNicholas R. Micinski, Boston UniversityUsing Social Media to Combat Gender Based Violencein Egypt amid COVID-19Elizabeth Parker-Magyar, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyFotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyHoracio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard UniversityNorhan MuhabHow To Say ĄKhalas:ďAbandoning Projects in theMiddle East and BeyondSarah E. Parkinson, Johns Hopkins UniversityFaten Ghosn, University of ArizonaTransregional Authoritarianism: Sino-Arab Collaborationin the COVID-19 ContextJulia Gurol, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität FreiburgCOVID-19 and Municipal Policymaking in LebanonMelani Cammett, Harvard UniversityLama Mourad, Carleton University
Related Groups34.1 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:
PERSONALITY, GENERATION, AND POLITICALBEHAVIOR IN TAIWAN
Room: VirtualChair: Grace C. Huang, St. Lawrence UniversityDisc: Yao-Yuan Yeh, University of St. Thomas
Wei-hao Huang, National sun-yat sen university
Tuesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: How China Factor Mediate Personality Effect on PartyPreference in Taiwan?Dennis Lu-Chung Weng, Sam Houston StateUniversityLu-huei Chen, National Chengchi UniversityChing-Hsing Wang, National Cheng Kung UniversityThe Effect of Personality on Attitude Toward InternetSensationalized PoliticsChing-Hsing Wang, National Cheng Kung UniversityUnderstanding ĄLittle but Certain Happinessď: The LostGeneration in TaiwanHugo Tai, University of Oxford
34.2 DEMOCRATIC INNOVATIONS:EXPERIMENTING WITH DELIBERATIVE MINI-PUBLICS
Room: VirtualChair: Helene E. Landemore, Yale UniversityDisc: John Gastil, Pennsylvania State University
Jonathan Collins, Brown University
Papers: Can Deliberation Have Lasting Effects?James S. Fishkin, Stanford UniversityAlice Siu, Stanford UniversityLarry Diamond, Stanford UniversityNorman Bradburn, University of ChicagoValentin Bolotnyy, Hoover InstitutionInvolving Politicians in Deliberative Mini-PublicsKimmo Gronlund, Abo Akademi UniversityKaisa Herne, University of TurkuDeliberative Polling with Automated Moderation:A First Application in JapanAlice Siu, Stanford UniversityShinya WakaoDeliberative Polling During a PandemicSveinung Arnesen, NORCE - Norwegian ResearchCentre
34.3 ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS AND THEORY:BEYOND NATURE: CONTINGENCY,EXTRACTIVE LOGICS, AND THINKING LIKE ALANDSCAPE
Room: VirtualChair: Chelsea Welker, University of Northern ColoradoDisc: Andy Scerri, Virginia Tech
Papers: Ecopopulism, Post-Foundational Theory, and RadicalDemocratic PluralismChayne Thomas Wild, Colorado State UniversityStrike Without End: Mass Strikes and the AnthropoceneConor Bean, Johns Hopkins UniversityMaking Climate Resilient Coasts: From Technopoliticsto Multispecies PoliticsKatinka WijsmanCaelum Nullius: Outer Space and the Colonial Logic ofProperty RightsEmily Ray, Sonoma State UniversitySean Parson, Northern Arizona University
35.1 MADE IN FRANCE: SOCIETAL STRUCTURESAND POLITICAL WORK BY ANDY SMITH
Room: VirtualChair: Amy G. Mazur, Washington State UniversityPart: Céline Belot, Univ. Grenoble Alpes, CNRS Pacte,
Sciences-Po Grenoble,
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Frederic Merand, Université de MontréalCraig A. Parsons, University of OregonAndy SmithChristine Musselin, FNSP
Tuesday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PMTheme Panels36.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND SOCIAL
MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE: LATINXAND LATIN AMERICAN INTERSECTIONALPRAXIS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Juliet Hooker, Brown UniversityDisc: Cristina Beltran, New York University
Martha Balaguera, University of Toronto
Papers: Developing a Mestiza Consciousness: InterrogatingLatina Intersectional Identities and PraxisCeleste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder¿El pueblo unido?: Immigrant Organizing, IntersectionalSolidarity, and DemobilizationRamon Garibaldo Valdez, Yale UniversityExploring the Campaigns for Equal Marriage in Uruguayand ArgentinaErica Townsend-Bell, Oklahoma State UniversityIntergroup Dialogue in Faith Communities and Tensionsover ImmigrationFelipe A Filomeno, University of Maryland,Baltimore County
Tuesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PMTheme Panels37.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND SOCIAL
MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL AGENCY AND STRUCTURE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Alexandra Moffett-Bateau, CUNY-John Jay CollegeDisc: Christopher T. Stout, Oregon State University
Hajer Al-Faham, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: How Policy Structure Shapes the Politics ofIntersectionality and MobilizationJennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard UniversityKirsten Walters, Harvard UniversityAn Intersectional Analysis of BLM Movement and ItsImplications for American DemocracyNatasha Behl, Arizona State UniversityIntersectional Advocacy and Activism in Time, and inCrisisChaya Crowder, Columbia UniversityMaraam Dwidar, Syracuse UniversityAshley English, University of North TexasMary Kroeger, University of North Carolina, ChapelHillDara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton UniversityKathleen Marchetti, Dickinson College
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Understanding Democracy Through an IntersectionalLens: Class, Race and Gender and the Extension of theFranchiseLee Ann Banaszak, Pennsylvania State University
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY38.1 ACTION AND AESTHETICS IN THE TRADITION
OF AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 41: Politics, Literature, and FilmChair: Daniel Henry, University of VirginiaDisc: Lucy Britt, Gettysburg College
Daniel Henry, University of Virginia
Papers: What a Riot! Activism, Moral Holidays, and theCarnival of Modern U.S. DemocracyMary K Ryan, Washington & Jefferson CollegeWhitman's Undemocratic VistasJack Turner, University of WashingtonThe Rhetorical Roots of Du Bois's Double-ConsciousnessRob Goodman, Ryerson UniversityFrederick Douglass and the Abolitionist State ofExceptionIan R. Zuckerman, Stanford University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY38.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY VIRTUAL
MINI-CONFERENCE: CARTOGRAPHIES OFTHOUGHT IN COMPARATIVE VIEW
Room: VirtualChair: Karuna Mantena, Columbia UniversityDisc: Karuna Mantena, Columbia University
Papers: The Delinked Regionalisms of Walter Rodney and SamirAminAnuja Bose, University of MinnesotaThe Location of Anticolonialism: Archive, Temporality,CartographyMurad Idris, University of MichiganThe End of the World: Maps of the Future and theRacial State in 1941-1953 IranNaveed MansooriThe Brown Family and Social Reproduction in U.S.CapitalismInes Valdez, Ohio State University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY38.3 FOUNDATIONS OF AMERICAN POLITICAL
THOUGHTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 56: American Political ThoughtChair: Nolan Bennett, University of Wisconsin - Green BayDisc: Gordon R Arlen, Goethe University Frankfurt
Papers: Not Eligible But Still Fitted?: Naturalization and theAsian Question, 1882-1906Juman Kim, Towson UniversityThe Inegalitarian Equality of the Declaration ofIndependenceEmma Rodman, Princeton UniversityTocqueville and Bad Civil SocietyJennet Kirkpatrick, Arizona State University
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'To Hope and To Wait': Roger Williams and theApocalyptic Roots of TolerationMatthew H Young
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY38.4 CHALLENGING PLURALISM: POLITICAL
VIOLENCE AND SABOTAGERoom: VirtualChair: Aspen Elizabeth Brinton, Virginia Commonwealth
UniversityDisc: James M. Glass, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers: Deviant and Respectable Violence Within PerformativeCitizenshipOwen Gunehame Fite, University of ColoradoBoulderIrrationality and the Public Sphere: Constructing a Post-Discursive PoliticsJamie Aroosi, St. Olaf College
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY38.5 GRASSROOTS POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Keith E. Schnakenberg, Washington UniversityDisc: Thomas Choate, George Washington University
Papers: Robust Theories of Political PolarizationAsya Magazinnik, MITDan Alexander, University of RochesterA Formal Model of Co-Ethnic VotingFan Lu, University of California, DavisGento Kato, Nazarbayev UniversityStrategic Uncertainty and Social IdentityDominik Duell, University of InnsbruckCatherine Hafer, New York UniversityDimitri Landa, NYUPartisan Misperception Drives Self-Segregation inCooperative DilemmasJung Chen, University of California, MercedMatthew V. Hibbing, University of California,MercedBrad L. LeVeck, University of California, Merced
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY38.6 CANDIDATE ASSESSMENTRoom: VirtualChair: April A. Johnson, Kennesaw State UniversityDisc: Aleksander Ksiazkiewicz, University of Illinois at
Urbana-ChampaignAndrew M. Engelhardt, University of North Carolina,Greensboro
Papers: Are Partisan Cues More Effective in English or Spanish?Alejandro Flores, University of ChicagoInspired Citizenship: How Role Models ImpactCandidate Emergence in the U.S.Jennie Sweet-Cushman, Chatham UniversityRacism and Sexism Benefit Conservative (Not White orMale) PoliticiansHui Bai
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY38.7 GOVERNANCE AND STATE CAPACITYRoom: VirtualChair: Ruixue Jia, ucsdDisc: Laura Gamboa, University of Utah
Tuesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Papers: Building the Biometric State: Citizen Response to aState-Building InterventionJeremy Bowles, Harvard UniversityLocal Governance Quality and Law Compliance - TheCase of Mozambican FirmsHanna Berkel, University of CopenhagenChristian Estmann, University of CopenhagenJohn Rand, University of CopenhagenTransparency and Renegotiation of Public-PrivatePartnership ContractsCamila Angulo Amaya, University of Wisconsin,MadisonWhen Lineages Meet Power: Elite Competition andRural Governance in ChinaMeina Cai, University of ConnecticutQi Zhang, Fudan University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY38.8 DEMOCRATIZING MARKETS AFTER
NEOLIBERALISM: RECLAIMING ANTITRUSTFOR DEMOCRACY
Room: VirtualChair: Gerald Berk, University of OregonPart: Samuel Ely Bagg, Nuffield College
Katharine Jackson, University of DaytonWilliam J. Novak, University of MichiganSanjukta Paul, Wayne State UniversityZephyr TeachoutSteven K. Vogel, University of California, BerkeleyLina Khan, Columbia University Law School
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY38.9 ADVANCES IN MACHINE LEARNING (II)Room: VirtualChair: Nora Webb Williams, University of Illinois at Urbana-
ChampaignDisc: Tom Paskhalis, New York University
Papers: A Benchmark Dataset for Detecting and ExplainingImplicit Hate SpeechDavid Muchlinski, Georgia Institute of TechnologyA Computer Assisted Search Strategy for Digital TextArchivesGidon Cohen, Durham UniversityPatrick Michael Kuhn, Durham UniversityA Hybrid Text Analysis Method for ContextualSpecificity in Political DocumentsDavid Sylvan, Graduate Institute of Internationaland Development StudiesJean-Louis Arcand, Graduate Institute ofInternational and Development StudiesAshley Thornton, Graduate Institute of Internationaland Development Studies
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY38.10 OBSERVATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL
CAUSAL INFERENCERoom: VirtualChair: Stephanie A. Nail, Stanford UniversityDisc: Chad Hazlett
Papers: Experimentation for Homogenous Policy ChangeMolly Rachael Offer-Westort, University of ChicagoDrew Dimmery, New York University
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How Much Shall We Trust IV Estimates? PracticalAdvice Based on 63 ReplicationsApoorva Lal, Stanford UniversityMackenzie Lockhart, UC San DiegoYiqing Xu, Stanford UniversityZiwen ZuA New Matching Frontier to Help Balance PrioritiesWhen Designing Observational StudiesAlexis J. Diamond, Minerva Schools at KGIIdriss BennisMikulas Plesak, Minerva Schools at KGIIdentification of Peer Effects with Negative Controls forUnobserved ConfoundingNaoki Egami, Columbia University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS38.11 COVID-19 IN COMPARATIVE CONTEXTRoom: VirtualChair: Nancy E. Wright, Pace UniversityDisc: Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve University
Papers: COVID-19 Lockdown Policies Weaken Civic Attitudesin the US and EuropeMoritz Marbach, Texas A&M UniversityDalston G Ward, ETH ZurichDominik Hangartner, London School of EconomicsPopulists and the Pandemic: How Populists Around theWorld Respond to COVID-19Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, MadisonLucio R. RennoRegime Types and the Real World of Oligarchy in theShadow of COVID-19Noaman G Ali, Lahore University of ManagementSciencesLuke Melchiorre, Universidad de los AndesNational and International Influences on PandemicResponse and LockdownsRachel M. Gisselquist, United Nations UniversityDurgesh Solanki, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES38.12 COMPROMISING DEMOCRACY: AGENTS OF
DEMOCRATIC REGRESSION IN SOUTHEASTASIA
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Southeast Asian Politics
Chair: Kikue Hamayotsu, Northern Illinois UniversityDisc: Rachel Beatty Riedl, Cornell University
Maya Jessica Tudor, Oxford University
Papers: Political Violence & Democratic Deconsolidation in thePhilippines Under DuterteSol Iglesias, University of the PhilippinesStalled Democratization: The Case of MyanmarĀsMilitary-Led Regime TransitionMegan Ryan, University of MichiganCrowdsourcing Dictatorship in ThailandAim Sinpeng, University of SydneyProtection Rackets, Preman and Politics: Gangs andElections in IndonesiaJessica Soedirgo, University of Amsterdam
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES38.13 POLITICS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION AND
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTRoom: VirtualChair: Beth Rabinowitz, Rutgers UniversityDisc: Aldo Madariaga, Diego Portales University
Papers: Pivot Agency in ChinaĀs Developmental State andOperationalization of the BRIHong Zhang, Johns Hopkins UniversityTerritory and Trust: Why Some States Develop TheirEconomies and Others Do NotBeth Rabinowitz, Rutgers UniversityThe New Politics of Private Investment in DevelopingCountriesPaula Daniela Ganga, Columbia UniversityErum Aly Haider, Georgetown University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY38.14 CENTRAL BANKS AND THEIR OBJECTIVESRoom: VirtualChair: Mark S. Manger, University of TorontoDisc: Ana Carolina Garriga, University of Essex
Papers: Climate Change and the Contested Greening of CentralBankingNils Kupzok, Johns Hopkins UniversityInside a Black Box - The Political Economy of CentralBanking in AutocraciesAndreas Kern, Georgetown UniversityJack SeddonMichael Aklin, University of PittsburghNing Leng, Georgetown UniversityTaking Away the Punch Bowl: Institutional Settings andMacroprudential ActivityEtienne LepersVoter Responses to Monetary Policy: ExperimentalEvidence in Times of CrisisCristina Bodea, Michigan State UniversityFederico Maria Ferrara, London School ofEconomics and Political ScienceThomas Sattler, University of Geneva
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION38.15 INTERNATIONAL LAW AND SECOND-ORDER
COMPLIANCERoom: VirtualChair: Anibal Perez-Linan, University of Notre DameDisc: Wayne Sandholtz, University of Southern California
Øyvind Stiansen, University of Oslo
Papers: Compliance with the Permanent Court of ArbitrationEmilia Justyna Powell, University of Notre DameRepeated Interactions: Compliance at the IACHRFrancesca Parente, Christopher Newport UniversityNoncompliance with the African Court on Human andPeoplesĀRightsNicole De Silva, Concordia UniversityCompliance in Time: Lessons from the Inter-AmericanCourt of Human RightsAnibal Perez-Linan, University of Notre DameLuis Schenoni, University of Notre DameKelly Elizabeth Morrison, University of Gothenburg
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DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY38.16 CRISIS DYNAMICSRoom: VirtualChair: Chris C. Demchak, Naval War CollegeDisc: Lami Kim, US Army War College
Papers: Regional OrganizationsĀInterventions in IntrastatePolitical CrisesSahil Mathur, American UniversityImplied Non-Commitment: Why and How BlusterMatters in International CrisesJoon Hyuk Chung, University of Wisconsin-MadisonFRIENDLY SPIES: Potential Espionage Crises withStrategic PartnersEmily Rachel Kulenkamp, Boston CollegeHow Territorial Disputes Become Frozen ConflictsAndi Cam Zhou, Harvard University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY38.17 BUREAUCRATIC ACTORS IN FOREIGN
POLICYMAKINGRoom: VirtualChair: Anna ADisc: Pamela R. Aall, US Institute of Peace
Papers: Ideational Differences in the Foreign Policy BureaucracyBerkay Gülen, University of WashingtonTaiwan Lobby in U.S. Foreign Policy (Pre-Recorded)satoru fuse, Keio UniversityThe U.S. National Security Advisor, BureaucraticPolitics, and Ad Hoc DiplomacyMichael Goldfien, Yale University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES38.18 MOBILIZATION AND RELIGION IN ARMED
CONFLICTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and PoliticsChair: Günes Murat Tezcur, University of Central FloridaDisc: Günes Murat Tezcur, University of Central Florida
Anna O. Pechenkina, Utah State University
Papers: Diversity by Fiat: How Historical Displacement ShapesContemporary PoliticsDavid B. Carter, Washington University in St. LouisLuwei Ying, Washington University in St. LouisAustin L. Wright, University of ChicagoHow Diverse Is ReligionĀs Influence on IntractableConflicts?Chirasree Mukherjee, Arizona State UniversityReligion, Resettlement, and Armed Insurgency: Evidencefrom Tibet and XinjiangAnna Zhang, Stanford UniversityThe Challenger's Coalition: Mobilization of Religion inCivil War.Johanna Kristin Birnir, University of Maryland,College ParkNil S. Satana, Bilkent University (on leave)
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES38.19 IDEOLOGY IN TIMES OF POLARIZATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Scott J Basinger, University of Houston
Tuesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Papers: Inducing Polarization: Procedural Bias in Ideal PointEstimationAustin Bussing, Sam Houston State UniversityJoshua Yoshio Lerner, NORC at the University ofChicagoPolitical Parties as Drivers of U.S. Polarization: 1927-2018Nathan J. Canen, University of HoustonChad KendallFrancesco Trebbi, University of British ColumbiaThe Paradox of Moderation in a Polarized EraMichael A. Bailey, Georgetown UniversityTo Moderate, or Not to Moderate: Strategic MediaSharing by Cong. CampaignsMaggie Macdonald, New York UniversityJoshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityRichard Bonneau, NYUJonathan Nagler, New York University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY38.20 PUBLIC POLICY AND THE POLITICS OF
DISASTER: NEW DIRECTIONS, NEWRESEARCH
Room: VirtualChair: Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State UniversityDisc: Richard S. Olson, Florida International University
Part: Jose Miguel Cruz, Florida International UniversityRob A. DeLeo, Bentley UniversityNazife Emel GanapatiVincent T. Gawronski, Birmingham-Southern CollegeBarry S. Levitt, Florida International UniversityKristin Taylor, Wayne State UniversityElizabeth J. Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS38.21 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: "JUDGING
INEQUALITY"Room: VirtualChair: James L. Gibson, Washington University in St. Louis
Michael J. Nelson, The Pennsylvania State UniversityPart: Peter Enns, Cornell University
Brandice Canes-Wrone, Princeton UniversityHerbert M. Kritzer, University of MinnesotaRan Hirschl, University of Toronto
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY38.22 GENDER DYNAMICS ON THE CAMPAIGN
TRAIL AND IN THE STATEHOUSERoom: VirtualChair: Jason H. Windett, University of North Carolina,
CharlotteDisc: Mirya R. Holman, Tulane University
Elizabeth Ila Dorssom, University of Missouri
Papers: Ending the Child Bride: State Legislative Action onLow-Salience Gender IssuesAmber N Lusvardi, Purdue UniversityGender, Germs, and Governors: Masculinity andLeadership in the COVID PandemicValerie Sperling, Clark UniversityRobert G. Boatright, Clark UniversityThe Impact of Candidate Gender and Quality inGubernatorial ElectionsMegan Kennedy, Penn State University
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When Women Run: Explaining the rise in women statelegislative candidatesJennifer Hayes Clark, University of HoustonGathoni Anne Kimondo, University of Houston
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS38.23 URBAN INSTITUTIONAL GEOGRAPHIES:
SPATIAL STRUCTURE & POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Alison E. Post, University of California, BerkeleyPapers: Political Origins of Urban Growth in Latin America
Melissa Ziegler Rogers, Claremont GraduateUniversitySoha Hammam, Claremont Graduate UniversitySpatial Orders in Municipal Institutional DevelopmentSally F Lawton, Johns Hopkins UniversityWhy We Should Study Smaller CitiesTanu Kumar, College of William and MaryMatthew Stenberg, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS38.24 RELIGIOUS FREEDOM AND RIGHTSRoom: VirtualChair: David E. Campbell, University of Notre DameDisc: Hans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan University
Rina Verma Williams, University of Cincinnati
Papers: The Shifting Moral Authority of the KoreanEvangelicals' Anti-LGBT MovementWondong Lee, University of California IrvineSelf-Censorship in China: Analysis of Sermons fromState-Registered ChurchesSarah Lee, UC BerkeleyCross-Cuttingness and Religious DiscriminationNikola Mirilovic, University of Central FloridaWhither Korean Christianity: Competing EvangelicalApproaches to OutgroupsJoseph Yi, Hanyang University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR38.25 ELECTION VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State UniversityDisc: Arvind Magesan
Papers: Myopia or Accountability? The Electoral Effects ofMass Trauma by Event TypeWayde ZC Marsh, University of Notre DameThe Gendered Nature of Violence in State House RacesRebekah Herrick, Oklahoma State UniversitySue ThomasSeeking Solace from History? Elections & Threats toDemocracyVirginia Sapiro, Boston UniversityVoting for Violence? The Group-Bases of PoliticalViolence in Election 2020Ali A. Valenzuela, Princeton UniversityLoren Collingwood, UC RiversideKassra AR Oskooii, University of Delaware
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION38.26 PLURALISM IN ATTITUDES TOWARD
AMERICAN GOVERNMENTRoom: VirtualChair: John H. Aldrich, Duke UniversityDisc: Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
DailySchedule
Tuesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Marc J. Hetherington, University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill
Papers: Shifting Terrain of AmericansĀRelationship toGovernment and Rural-Urban DivideTrevor Brown, Cornell UniversitySuzanne Mettler, Cornell UniversityUsing Indicators to Understand Attitudes and InformCriminal Justice ReformAmy E. Lerman, UC BerkeleyNaomi Levy, Santa Clara UniversityEmotions, Personality, and AmericansĀAttitudes TowardGovernmentSteven W. Webster, Indiana UniversityWhat Determines American Citizens' Views of theAdministrative State?Edgar V. Cook, Duke UniversityJan P. Vogler, University of Virginia
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS38.27 TRANSBOUNDARY GOVERNANCE AND
POLICYMAKINGRoom: VirtualChair: Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of EconomicsDisc: Mark Purdon, Université du Québec à Montréal
(UQAM)
Papers: Transnational Partnerships, Domestic Institutions, andSustainable DevelopmentLiliana Botcheva-Andonova, Graduate Institute(IHEID)Multidimensional Bargaining and the Regulation ofNuclear EnergyJohn M. Chambers, Princeton UniversityHow the International Trade Regime Constrains PracticalClimate Policy SolutionsGeorge Hoberg, University of British Columbia
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS38.28 THE RICH DIVERSITY OF CONTEMPORARY
WORK IN HUMAN RIGHTSRoom: VirtualChair: Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California,
IrvinePapers: Climate Change, Migration, and Human Rights
Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco StateUniversityDoes Naming and Shaming Influence State HumanRights Practices?Yuan Zhou, Kobe UniversityGhashia Kiyani, Naval Postgraduate SchoolCharles David Crabtree, Dartmouth CollegeHuman Rights in the 21st CenturyKristen Renwick Monroe, University of California,IrvineModern Challenges in International Law and IndigenousRightsFrancesca Gottardi, University of CincinnatiDeep Learning the Hidden Victims of CoercedSterilization with Data AugmentationBaekkwan Park
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DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS38.29 LONGITUDINAL ASSESSMENTS OF CANADIAN
POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Carolyn Geiser, Colorado Technical UniversityDisc: Quinn Albaugh, University of Toronto
Papers: CanadaĀs Feminist Foreign Policy and Historic ForeignPolicy Reviews ComparedTaylor R McDonald, University of FloridaShow Me the Money: Local Campaign Expenses inCanada, 2004-2019Holly Ann Garnett, Royal Military College ofCanada
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH38.30 EXPERIMENTS IN EMPATHYRoom: VirtualChair: Scott Clifford, University of HoustonDisc: Scott Clifford, University of Houston
Papers: Empathy as Game TheoryClaire Leslie Adida, UCSDAndrew Little, University of California-BerkeleyPraise from Peers Promotes Empathetic BehaviorJonathan Renshon, University of Wisconsin, MadisonAdeline Lo, University of Wisconsin, MadisonLotem Bassan-Nygate, University of Wisconsin -MadisonThe Effects of Photo-Journalism on the OutgroupEmpathy GapJohanna Dunaway, Texas A&M UniversityKevin Arceneaux, Sciences PoBert Bakker, University of AmsterdamWhen Empathy and Negative Group StereotypesCollide: The Case of ImmigrationLeonie Huddy, SUNY, Stony BrookStanley Feldman, Stony Brook UniversityRomeo Gray
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP38.31 ELITES, IMMIGRATION POLICY, AND THE
POLITICS OF DIVISIONRoom: VirtualChair: Desmond King, University of OxfordDisc: James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist University
Papers: Adapting Points Test to Contemporary Notions of Skill:Elite Policy DesignAnna Katherine Boucher, University of SydneyXenophobia & Racial Resentment Toward EarlyCOVID-19 Policy ResponsesSara Wallace Goodman, University of California,IrvineThomas Pepinsky, Cornell UniversityShana Kushner Gadarian, Syracuse UniversityHow Political Elites Frame the Politics of Migration:The U.S. CaseGerda Hooijer, University College LondonDesmond King, University of OxfordPolarization Traps in the Struggle for Muslim InclusionPaul M. Sniderman, Stanford UniversityElisabeth Ivarsflaten, University of Bergen
Tuesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS38.32 STATE FORMATION THROUGH THE LENS OF
COLONIALISM AND MISSIONARYMOVEMENTS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and History
Chair: Anthony James DeMattee, Emory UniversityDisc: Shelley Liu, UC Berkeley
Anthony James DeMattee, Emory University
Papers: Endogenous Borders: Geography, Precolonial States, andthe Partition of AfricaJack Paine, University of RochesterXiaoyan Qiu, IE UniversityJoan Ricart-Huguet, Loyola University MarylandMissionary Roots of Islamic Fundamentalism in AfricaAala Abdelgadir, Stanford UniversityĄPolice Fire on Rioters, Africans Attack PatrolďKaden Paulson-Smith, University of Wisconsin-GreenBayThe Colonial Origins of Political Underdevelopment inSomalia and LibyaSalih O. Noor, Northwestern University
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY38.33 WEALTH, BUSINESS, AND POLITICAL POWERRoom: VirtualChair: John Seungmin Kuk, University of OklahomaDisc: Christian Breunig, University of Konstanz
Mallory E. SoRelle, Duke University
Papers: Economic Targeting of Climate Protection: Evidencefrom Local Elected OfficialsMegan Mullin, Duke UniversityElecting CEOsPatricia Kirkland, Princeton UniversityPredatory Influence: Understanding the PoliticalAdvantage of Payday LendersRhea Myerscough, University of California, BerkeleyHow Legislators Perceive InequalityChristian Breunig, University of Konstanz
DIVISION 58: CIVIC ENGAGEMENT38.34 THE ROLE OF EDUCATION IN CIVIC
ENGAGEMENTRoom: VirtualChair: Shannon McQueen, West Chester UniversityDisc: Lisa A. Bryant, California State University, Fresno
Ngoc Phan, Hawaii Pacific University
Papers: Encouraging Student Voter Participation During COVID:Lessons for the FutureKathleen Regina Barrett, University of West GeorgiaChapman Rackaway, Radford UniversityParty at the Mailbox: Mobilizing Black Voters withCelebrations of CommunityMelissa R. Michelson, Menlo CollegeStephanie L. DeMora, University of California,RiversideSarah Virginia Hayes, California State University,FresnoAshley CJ Daniels, American Council for LearnedSocieties
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Roadmap to Citizenship: How UndocumentedImmigrants Make Claims on the StateEmily Cury, Pine Manor CollegeYouth Participatory Action Research for a New PoliticalKnowledgeAbigail Dym, University of Pennsylvania
Tuesday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PMTheme Panels39.1 INTERSECTIONALITY AND SOCIAL
MOVEMENTS MINI-CONFERENCE:INTERSECTIONAL PRAXIS AND SOLIDARITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: S. Laurel Weldon, Simon Fraser UniversityDisc: Tabitha Bonilla, Northwestern University
Papers: Intersectional Advocacy: How She Reconfigures theStateMargaret Brower, University of ChicagoMoving Beyond Trickle-Down Intersectionality (or WhyProtest Can Only Get "The" WomenĀs Movement SoFar)Zakiya Luna, Washington University in St LouisIntersectionality, Social Justice, and ActivismEthel Tungohan, York UniversityFernando Arturo Tormos Aponte, University ofMaryland Baltimore CountyAponte Intersectional Movement Building: A Case Studyon the National Domestic Workers AllianceMegan Unden, Rutgers University
Tuesday, 5:00 PM to 7:00 PMAPSA Events40.1 APSA EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE MEETINGRoom: WSCC, 307 and 308
Wednesday, September 29, 2021VirtualWednesday, 5:00 AM to 12:30 PMAPSA Events41.1 EMERGING SCHOLARS RESEARCH
DEVELOPMENT WORKSHOP (INVITE ONLY)Room: Virtual Off-Platform EventChair: Sanjay Ruparelia, Ryerson University
Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve UniversityRachel Sweet, University of Notre Dame
Wednesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AMTheme Panels42.1 ADVANCES IN PROBABILISTIC NETWORK
DATA ANALYSISRoom: VirtualChair: Skyler J. Cranmer, The Ohio State UniversityDisc: Olga Chyzh, University of Toronto
Papers: Networks All the Way Down: Assessing ModelingChoices for Political ConversationSarah Shugars, New York University
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Mixed-Membership Stochastic Blockmodels for BipartiteNetworksAdeline Lo, University of Wisconsin, MadisonSantiago Olivella, University of North CarolinaKosuke Imai, Harvard UniversityEstimating Directionality from Event DataCassy Dorff, Vanderbilt UniversityShahryar Minhas, Michigan State UniversityIdentification of Social Influence in Bipartite BehaviorCascadesSebastián Martínez BustosLaurence BrandenbergerPhilip Leifeld, University of Konstanz
42.2 POLITICAL BEHAVIOR ACROSS DISCIPLINARYBOUNDARIES
Room: VirtualChair: Tali Mendelberg, Princeton UniversityPart: Christopher H. Achen, Princeton University
Joshua D. Kertzer, Harvard UniversityGwyneth McClendon, New York UniversityDiana C. Mutz, University of PennsylvaniaElizabeth R. Nugent, Yale UniversityIsmail K. White, Princeton UniversityMaya Sen, Harvard University
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY43.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY VIRTUAL
MINI-CONFERENCE: COMPARATIVEPOLITICAL THEORY AND THE COMPARATIVESTUDY OF RELIGION AND POLITICS
Room: VirtualChair: Roxanne L. Euben, University of PennsylvaniaDisc: Murad Idris, University of Michigan
Papers: What's 'Personal' about Personal Law? Categories,Travelling, ComparisonIza Hussin, University of CambridgeReligion and Justice: The Problem of RightsHumeira Iqtidar, King's College LondonIslam, Christianity, and LiberalismĀs MissionaryVenturesJeremy Menchik, Boston UniversityLiminal Reformism in Portuguese GoaAditi Rajeev Shirodkar, University of Chicago
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY43.2 HETERODOX MARXISMSRoom: VirtualChair: Scott Benjamin Ritner, SUNY PotsdamPart: Robyn Marasco, CUNY, Hunter College
William Clare Roberts, McGill UniversityChris O'Kane, University of Texas Rio Grande ValleyScott Benjamin Ritner, SUNY Potsdam
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY43.3 HISTORICAL POLITICAL ECONOMYRoom: VirtualChair: Alexandra Cirone, Cornell UniversityDisc: Dean Dulay, Singapore Management University
Papers: Colonial Origins of the State: BureaucraticEmbeddedness and Public GoodsAda Johnson-Kanu, University of California, Merced
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Personal Connections in Bureaucracies: Evidence fromthe Spanish EmpireMarcos Salgado, Stanford UniversityThe Electoral Authoritarian Advantage in Access toCreditAustin Michael Mitchell, Tohoku UniversityThe Persistence of Rural Underdevelopment: Evidencefrom Land Reform in ItalyMichael Albertus, University of Chicago
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY43.4 WHO GETS TO VOTE?Room: VirtualChair: Joan Ricart-Huguet, Loyola University MarylandPapers: Intersectionality and the Franchise: Class, Race and
Gender and Political RightsLee Ann Banaszak, Pennsylvania State UniversityContemporary Enfranchisement: Lowering the VotingAge in the United StatesKlaudia WegschaiderGendered Inclusion: Estimating the Gender Gap inTurnout in Latin AmericaIsabel Castillo, Pontificia Universidad Católica deChileWho Gets to Play? A Typology of EnfranchisementRegimes Across EuropeLotem Halevy, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS43.5 DEMOCRACY AND DISCONTENTRoom: VirtualChair: Ali Tanveer Ahmed, New York UniversityDisc: Ellen Carnaghan, Saint Louis University
Papers: Nationalism, Inequality Perceptions, and DemocraticDiscontentYeon Ju Lee, Waseda UniversityProtest Violence and Solidarity: Comparing the UnitedStates and Hong KongDennis Young, University of WashingtonBrian Leung, University of WashingtonThe 2019 Chilean Social Upheaval: Who Are theLeaderless Protesters?Loreto CoxRicardo Ignacio González, Universidad Adolfo IbañezCarmen Le Foulon, Centro de Estudios PúblicosThe Goldilocks Paradox: The Lifecycle of a ChileanProtestorAmanda Milena Alvarez, Temple UniversityEverett Albert Vieira, California State University,Fresno
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS43.6 ELECTIONS AND PROTESTSRoom: VirtualChair: Allison D. Evans, University of Nevada, RenoDisc: Silvana-Maria Tarlea
Papers: Giving in to Blackmail: Post-Election Disputes andCoalition CabinetsVictor Antonio Hernandez-Huerta, Centro deInvestigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE)Judging Elections: Dispute Resolution Through theCourtsJoe Klaver, University of Michigan
Wednesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
The Electoral and Protest Participation Nexus in Old andNew Democraciesyasemin tosunThe Long-Term Effects of Protest on Opposition Politicsin AutocraciesJan Matti Dollbaum, University of Bremen
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES43.7 POLITICS OF PRE-DISTRIBUTION AND
REDISTRIBUTIONRoom: VirtualChair: Sarah Andrea Berens, University of InnsbruckDisc: Gustavo A. Flores-Macias, Cornell University
Papers: Funding Public Goods in a Globalized World: Who WillCarry the Tax Burden?ďIda Bastiaens, Fordham UniversitySarah Andrea Berens, University of InnsbruckMigration, Remittances and the Fiscal ContractBarry Maydom, Birkbeck College, University ofLondonAna Isabel Lopez Garcia, University of KonstanzThe Politics of Adjustments to Cash Transfer Programsin Latin AmericaMelina Altamirano, El Colegio de MéxicoMaria Cecilia Rossel, Catholic University of UruguayThe 'Left-Turn' and the Support for Pro-Poor IncomeGrowth in Latin AmericaMartín Opertti, Universidad Católica del UruguayRosario Queirolo, Universidad Católica del UruguaySantiago López-Cariboni, Universidad de laRepública
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES43.8 MANAGED PLURALISM IN COMMUNIST AND
POST-COMMUNIST STATESRoom: VirtualChair: Congyi Zhou, New York UniversityDisc: Grace C. Huang, St. Lawrence University
Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Papers: Issue Positioning of Chinese Communist Party inEmerging Pluralist SocietyYong Jae Kim, Hawaii Pacific UniversityLoyalty or Expertise - What Does an AuthoritarianRegime Value in Consultations?Felix Wiebrecht, Chinese University of Hong KongPopulation Classification and Two Types of SocialControl in China and the DPRKJung Eun Kim, Heidelberg UniversityJuan Wang, McGill UniversityWomen's Perceptions of Empowerment in MongoliaCynthia M. Horne, Western Washington UniversityPartnering for Overseas Development: INGOsĀChangingEngagement with ChinaElizabeth Plantan, Stetson UniversityWendy Leutert, Indiana UniversityAustin Strange, University of Hong Kong
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES43.9 PANDEMIC POLICY & ELECTORAL SUPPORT
IN EASTERN EUROPE & LATIN AMERICARoom: Virtual
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Chair: Guy Grossman, University of PennsylvaniaDisc: Francesc Amat, University of Barcelona, Gran Via de
les Corts Catalanes 585, Q0818001J, 08007 BarcelonaGraeme Robertson
Papers: Electoral Effects of COVID-19 on Incumbents at Localand National levelsOlga Onuch, University of ManchesterHenry E. Hale, George Washington UniversityGwendolyn Sasse, University of OxfordSubnational Response to the COVID Pandemic inArgentinaJacqueline Behrend, Universidad Nacional de SanMartinXimena Simpson, Universidad Nacional de SanMartinCOVID-19 and Political Support in Russia: Evidencefrom an Online Panel SurveyMargarita Zavadskaya, University of HelsinkiNeoliberalization from the Monarchy to the COVID-19Crisis in HungaryAttila Antal, Eötvös Loránd University
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES43.10 COALITION AND CABINET POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Alba Huidobro, Universitat Pompeu FabraDisc: Timothy Hellwig, Indiana University, Bloomington
Papers: Cabinet Members Representing Party Ideology: TheImpact of Portfolio AllocationIda Baek Hjermitslev, University of ViennaHow Voters Predict Coalition Bargaining OutcomesDavid Fortunato, University of California, San DiegoRandolph T. Stevenson, Rice UniversitySeonghui Lee, University of EssexThe Power of Pivotalness: Coalition Survival and theOpposition StructureZsuzsanna Blanka Magyar, University of LucerneCabinet Reshuffles: How Bad Are They for Expertiseand Policy?Despina Alexiadou, University of Strathclyde
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY43.11 EUROPE'S CRISIS OF LEGITIMACY:
GOVERNING BY RULES AND RULING BYNUMBERS
Room: VirtualChair: Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy SchoolPart: John Erik Fossum, University of Oslo
Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy SchoolSheri Berman, Barnard College, Columbia UniversitySergio Fabbrini, Luiss Guido CarliVivien A. Schmidt, Boston University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY43.12 POLITICAL CONNECTIONS AND POLICY
INFLUENCERoom: VirtualChair: Carolina Moehlecke, Fundação Getulio VargasDisc: Jonas Bunte, Vienna University of Economics and
Business
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: MNE Political Connectedness and Political Competition:Vodacom MozambiqueRobbert Maseland, University of GroningenMagdalene Silberberger, Witten/Herdecke UniversityJoachim Zweynert, Witten/Herdecke UniversityThe Value of Political Business ConnectionsSarah Bauerle Danzman, Indiana UniversityWilliam Kindred Winecoff, Indiana UniversityComparing Mobilization and Access: USMCA Lobbyingin the U.S. and CanadaJieun Lee, University at Buffalo, SUNYJan Stuckatz, Institute for Advanced Study inToulouseThe Conditional Arm of the Law. The Effect of Anti-Bribery Policies on FDILorenzo Crippa, University of Essex
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY43.13 CHINA'S RISERoom: VirtualChair: Karen Ruth Adams, University of MontanaPapers: Success at Sea: HistoryĀs Great Powers, Navy-Building,
and Prospects for ChinaBrian C. Chao, Naval War CollegeThe Rise of China and the US-Europe Alliance: A Crackin the Liberal Building?Antonio José Pagán Sánchez, City University of HongKongChinese Perception of Democratic PeaceSeok Joon Kim, Korea UniversityJulia Macdonald, University of DenverSino-American Bipolarity: Capabilities and ConsensusKaren Ruth Adams, University of Montana
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY43.14 GENDER AND INTERNATIONAL SECURITYRoom: VirtualChair: Rose McDermott, Brown UniversityPapers: Polygyny, Inequality, and Social Unrest
Tim Krieger, University of FreiburgLaura Renner, University of FreiburgDesigned for Men? The Logistics of Disaster ReliefShira Eini Pindyck, University of PennsylvaniaThe Effectiveness of Women CombatantsOlgahan Çat, University of Texas at AustinAnxiety, Self-Presentation & Gender in Foreign Policy:A Survey ExperimentFahd Humayun, Yale University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY43.15 SOCIAL ORGANIZATION IN REGULAR AND
IRREGULAR ARMED FORCESRoom: VirtualChair: Jason Lyall, Dartmouth CollegeDisc: Jonathan Obert, Amherst College
Ches Thurber, Northern Illinois University
Papers: Can China Fight? Assessing the Battlefield Effectivenessof the PLAEric Hundman, NYU ShanghaiJennifer M. Lind, Dartmouth College
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From Mao to the Islamic State: The Insurgent Civil-Military BalanceAlec Worsnop, University of MarylandMichael Cowan, University of Maryland, CollegeParkEthnicity and Defection During Uprisings from BelowPaul Lorenzo Johnson, US ArmyChes Thurber, Northern Illinois University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES43.16 NATIONALISM, ORIGIN MYTHS, AND
VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Aysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, BoulderDisc: Benedict Edward DeDominicis, Catholic University of
KoreaAysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, Boulder
Papers: Colonial Origins of Rebel Group Emergence in AfricaJacob S. Lewis, Washington State UniversityMichael W Widmeier, Webster UniversityExplaining Ethnic Assimilation, Displacement, andGenocide in Europe, 1850-2020Guy Schvitz, ETHCarl Müller-Crepon, Oxford UniversityLars-Erik Cederman, ETH ZurichNationalism and Conflict in Post-Napoleonic EuropeLars-Erik Cederman, ETH ZurichYannick Immanuel Pengl, ETH ZurichDennis Atzenhofer, ETH ZürichLuc Girardin, ETH ZurichCarl Müller-Crepon, Oxford UniversityThe Content of National Mythology: How Past Victoryand Defeat Shape PreferencesJoslyn N. Barnhart, University of California SantaBarbaraJiyoung Ko, Bates College
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES43.17 THE FUTURE OF CIVIL WAR STUDIESRoom: VirtualChair: Anastasia Shesterinina, The University of SheffieldPart: Ana M. Arjona, Northwestern University
Amelia Hoover Green, Drexel UniversityPatricia Justino, UNU-WIDERStathis N. Kalyvas, Yale UniversityDipali Mukhopadhyay, Columbia UniversityPaul Staniland, University of Chicago
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES43.18 LEGISLATIVE PRODUCTIVITY IN THE U.S.Room: VirtualChair: Brian Daniel Libgober, Yale UniversityDisc: Brian Daniel Libgober, Yale University
Papers: A Fuller Account of Lawmaking: The LawmakingProductivity Metric in the SenateMandi Eatough, University of Michigan, Ann ArborJessica Robinson Preece, Brigham Young UniversityRunning for Political Office: Views of Legislators withDisabilitiesSally Friedman, SUNY, AlbanyRichard Scotch, University of Texas at Dallas
Wednesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
The Historical Determinants of Legislative Effectivenessfrom 1873 to 2011Fang-Yi Chiou, Academia SinicaMax Goplerud, University of PittsburghVoting the District or Talking the DistrictKris Miler, University of Maryland, College ParkSoRelle Wyckoff Gaynor, University of MarylandPhilip Resnik, University of MarylandPranav Goel, University of Maryland, College Park,USAAlexander Hoyle
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS43.19 PRESIDENTIAL LEADERSHIP AND THE
MAKINGS OF PUBLIC POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Meena Bose, Hofstra UniversityDisc: Jonathan D. Klingler, University of Mississippi
Meena Bose, Hofstra University
Papers: Crisis Competence: How Women Leaders TackledCovid-19 and the Economic RecessionKatie Tyner, The Cohen GroupFarida Jalalzai, Virginia TechSarah Elise Wiliarty, Wesleyan UniversityWilliam McKinley, Presidential Leadership, and theDevelopmental StateZak Taylor, Georgia Institute of TechnologyThe Tone of Presidential Immigration RhetoricMatthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North TexasThe Power of a Tweet? Presidential Communication andthe Affordable Care ActSimon F. Haeder, The Pennsylvania State UniversityJacqueline M. Chattopadhyay, University of NorthCarolina at Charlotte
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS43.20 CITIZENS ACROSS BORDERS: THE ROLE OF
COURTS IN MIGRATION AND ASYLUMRoom: VirtualChair: Todd A. Curry, University of Texas at El PasoDisc: Todd A. Curry, University of Texas at El Paso
Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Papers: Crafting the Language of Borders:ECJ Opinions on theFreedom to Move and ResideMaureen Stobb, Georgia Southern UniversityJamie Elizabeth Scalera, Georgia SouthernUniversityThe Limits of EU Standardization: Legal Approaches toGender-Based Asylum ClaimsPatricia Charlotte Rodda, Carroll UniversityThe Role of Domestic Courts in Climate-RelatedAsylum AppealsIvanka Bergova, Georgia State UniversityTipping the Scales: The Effect of Burden of Proof inImmigration Bond DecisionsJeffrey Staton, Emory UniversityAnthony James DeMattee, Emory UniversityDevon ThurmanGrace Shrestha
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS43.21 MOBILITY AND IMMIGRATION: CITIES AS
ACTORS IN THE IMMIGRANT EXPERIENCERoom: Virtual
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Chair: Els de Graauw, Baruch College, CUNYDisc: Joseph Levine, International Growth Centre and Yale
Research Initiative on Innovation and Scale
Papers: Mayoral Leadership and Immigrant Sanctuary in SanFranciscoEls de Graauw, Baruch College, CUNYPlanned and Charter Cities as Emigration-ReductionPoliciesJoseph Levine, International Growth Centre and YaleResearch Initiative on Innovation and ScaleUrban Housing Integration of EU Migrant Roma andInclusion in the Body PoliticEmily Schraudenbach, George Washington UniversityWhat Drives the Development of City Sanctuary Policiesand Practices?Raffaele Bazurli, Ca' Foscari University of VeniceEls de Graauw, Baruch College, CUNY
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH43.22 VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMENRoom: VirtualChair: Shannon Drysdale Walsh, University of Minnesota
DuluthDisc: Regina A. Bateson, University of Ottawa
Stacey Leigh Hunt, Auburn University
Papers: Femicides in Latin America: When Numbers ArePoliticalMariela Szwarcberg Daby, Reed CollegeGendered Nostalgia and Post-War Sri Lanka:Perspectives on Loss and JusticeHannah Partis-Jennings, Loughborough UniversityRebekka C. Friedman, King's College LondonIs Femicide Still a State Crime When It Happens in theU.S.?Sumru Atuk, Ithaca CollegeViolence, Democracy, and WomenĀs Political Rights inLatin AmericaJuliana Restrepo Sanin, University of Florida
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS43.23 RACE, REPRESENTATION, AND INSTITUTIONSRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 34: Representation and ElectoralSystems
Chair: Kerry L. Haynie, Duke UniversityDisc: Matthew J. Hayes, Rice University
Papers: Minority Committee Chairs and Agenda Setting in theU.S. CongressJennifer Garcia, Oberlin CollegeRacial Gap: Evidence from Congressional StaffFred Gui, University of RochesterRacial Representation and Cyber-Home Style in theNascent Trump EraTyson D. King-Meadows, University of Maryland,Baltimore CountyJamil Shatema Scott, Georgetown UniversityThe Effect of Race on Message Interpretation in PublicMeetingsBai Linh Hoang, University of Texas at Arlington
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR43.24 FOSTERING VOTER TURNOUTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 58: Civic EngagementChair: Seo-young Silvia Kim, American UniversityDisc: Arndt Leininger, Chemnitz University of Technology
Papers: How Are Elections Run? New Comparative TrendsToby S. James, University of East AngliaHolly Ann Garnett, Royal Military College ofCanadaNative American Voter TurnoutJames W. Endersby, University of Missouri,ColumbiaNicholas BrothersJoseph Patrick Harrison, University of MissouriTurnout in Older Age and Measures to FacilitateParticipation in CanadaFlorence Vallée-Dubois, Université de Montréal
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR43.25 VOTING FOR POPULISTSRoom: VirtualChair: Orçun Selçuk, Luther CollegeDisc: Lorena G. Barberia, University of São Paulo
Irina Soboleva, Duke Kunshan University
Papers: Does Compensating the Losers of Globalization Pay offElectorally?Costin Marius Viorel Ciobanu, McGill UniversityHousing, Assets and the Populist Radical RightAlexander Held, Trinity College DublinPauliina Patana, Harvard UniversityPopulists on the Rise: Is Immigration to Blame?Didem Seyis, Binghamton University (SUNY)William B. Heller, SUNY, BinghamtonTrade Shocks, Government Spending, and Populism inAdvanced Industrial CountriesSu-Hyun Lee, Nanyang Technological University,Singapore
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION43.26 CITIZENS' PERSPECTIVES ON DEMOCRACYRoom: VirtualChair: Jonathan M. Ladd, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Rodolfo Sarsfield, Autonomous University of Queretaro
Papers: LosersĀLament: Democratic Disenchantment inDominant-Party EnclavesJonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt UniversityMason Wallace Moseley, West Virginia UniversityUnbinding the Executive: Support for UncheckedPresidents in Latin AmericaBrett Bessen, University of Colorado BoulderWhat Kind of Democracy Do Chinese People Want?Duancheng Yang, Renmin University of ChinaYuan Zhou, Kobe UniversityYun-han ChuVarieties of Democratic Understanding and PoliticalParticipationKursat Cinar, Middle East Technical UniversityAsya Bülbül
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DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION43.27 (DE)POLARIZATION?Room: VirtualChair: Marisa A. Smith, Michigan State UniversityDisc: Bernhard Clemm von Hohenberg
Papers: Affective Polarization, Social Media News and PoliticalPersuasionHomero Gil de Zúñiga, University of Salamanca /Pennsylvania State UniversityHugo Marcos-MarneEmily B Carty, University of SalamancaElectoral Threat and the Impact of Interparty Contact onAffective PolarizationErin RossiterTaylor Nicole Carlson, Washington University in St.LouisPartisan Motivations in Cross-Cutting Media ExposureLie Philip Santoso, Duke Kunshan UniversityThe (De)Polarizing Effects of Extreme Political Rhetoric(Pre-Recorded)Eran Amsalem, The Hebrew University of JerusalemAlon Zoizner, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY43.28 AUTHORITARIAN ELITES AND SURVIVALRoom: VirtualChair: Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State UniversityDisc: Semuhi Sinanoglu, University of Toronto
Papers: The Merits of Exclusion for the Stability of AutocraticRegimesClaudia Lastro, University of GrazTrajectories of Authoritarian ConsolidationGloria Cheung, Duke UniversityWhy Do Some Coups Lead to Democratization?Huseyin Zengin, University of Pittsburgh
DIVISION 59: EDUCATION POLITICS AND POLICY43.29 ENDURING LESSONS IN EDUCATION POLITICS
AND POLICY FROM THE COVID-19 PANDEMICRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyChair: Jeffrey R. Henig, Columbia UniversityDisc: Leslie K. Finger, University of North Texas
Papers: The Intergovernmental Politics of School Re-OpeningDuring the COVID-19 PandemicMeghan E. Wilson, Michigan State UniversityJonathan Collins, Brown UniversityAll States Close but Red Districts ReopenSarah E. Reckhow, Michigan State UniversityMatt Grossmann, Michigan State UniversityCollectively Confronting COVID-19: Teachers UnionsĀRespond to a Global PandemicLesley Lavery, Macalester CollegeSara E. Dahill-Brown, Wake Forest UniversitySustaining a Sense of Success: Teacher WorkingConditions During COVID-19Melissa Lyon, Brown UniversitySchool Boards and School Reopening PlansKarin Kitchens, Virginia TechSabrina Kylie Harris, Virginia TechKathryn Elizabeth Miller, Virginia Tech
Wednesday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Related Groups44.1 ASSOCIATION OF KOREAN POLITICAL
STUDIES: PUBLIC OPINION AND DEMOCRATICPOLITICS IN SOUTH KOREA AND BEYOND
Room: VirtualChair: Celeste Arrington, George Washington UniversityDisc: Yoonkyung Lee, University of Toronto
Papers: Public Opinion on Universal Basic Income in SouthKoreaJong-sung You, Gachon UniversityGender Equality and COVID-19 in South Korea andTaiwanHannah June Kim, University of Nebraska, OmahaPhoebe Woorim Moon, University of California,IrvineThe Enemy of My Enemy: Threat Perception and PublicSupport for the U.S. MilitaryMyunghee LeeCharmaine N. Willis, University at Albany, SUNYThe Dynamics of the Candlelight Protests in SouthKoreaJai Kwan Jung, Korea University
44.2 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:CHINA AND TAIWAN: CHALLENGES ANDOPPORTUNITIES
Room: VirtualChair: Karl Ho, University of Texas, DallasDisc: Wen-Chin Wu, Academia Sinica
Papers: An Empirical Analysis of ChinaĀs Health Aid to AfricanCountriesCharles Chong-Han Wu, National ChengchiUniversityYu-Hsiu Lin, National Chung Cheng UniversityChinaĀs Economic Statecraft in the Taiwan StraitYuan-kang Wang, Western Michigan UniversityCan We Join? Integrating Taiwan Into Global EconomyWithout AgreementsChien-pin Li, Kennesaw State UniversityDennis Lu-Chung Weng, Sam Houston StateUniversity
44.3 DEMOCRATIC INNOVATIONS: WHAT GOODARE DEMOCRATIC INNOVATIONS? EVIDENCEFROM AROUND THE WORLD
Room: VirtualChair: Edana Beauvais, Simon Fraser UniversityDisc: Thamy Pogrebinschi, WZB Berlin Social Science Center
Megan Mattes, Simon Fraser University
Papers: How Can Participatory Processes Improve Democracy?A CitizensĀPerspectiveLisa van Dijk, KU LeuvenHannah Werner, University of LeuvenSofie Marien, University of LeuvenLinking a Mini-Public to the Larger Public: Evidencefrom a Swiss Popular VoteAlexander Matthias Geisler, Université de GenèveNenad Stojanovic, University of GenevaThe Emergence of Democratic Innovations in LatinAmericaErnesto Cruz Ruiz, Technical University of Munich
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Social Capital for Shaping Norms to AddressDemocratic Legitimacy and Inclusion?Dale Mineshima-Lowe, Birkbeck, University ofLondon
44.4 POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP: POLITICALFORECASTING: TEACHING AND PRACTICE
Room: VirtualChair: Ross E. BurkhartDisc: Ross E. Burkhart
Papers: Presidential Forecasting: A Preliminary Political,Economic, and Cultural ModelLara Michelle Brown, The George WashingtonUniversityLilly J. Goren, Carroll UniversityEdward Levitas, University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeTeaching Forecasting Without Teaching MethodsDebra Lynn Leiter, University of Missouri-KansasCityThe Effect of Contact Networks on Citizens' ForecastingSkillsPhilippe Mongrain
44.5 SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS: GROUPIDENTITY AND BEHAVIOR IN SOUTHEASTASIAN CONTEXT
Room: VirtualChair: Jiayun Elvin Ong, National University of SingaporeDisc: Stephen Siu Kay On, National Sun Yat-Sen University
Jiayun Elvin Ong, National University of Singapore
Papers: The Colonial Origins of Separatist Rebellion in thePhilippines & BurmaMary Anne Mendoza, California State PolytechnicUniversity, PomonaCold War Compatriots: Ethnic Nationhood After BorderCrossingsPhi Hong Su, Williams CollegeAuthoritarian Repertoire and Bystander DisruptionToward ProtestersVan Tran, Cornell UniversityDomestic Politics and ChinaĀs Engagement Strategies inSE AsiaZheng Wang, University at Albany, NY
45.1 TURNING RESTRAINT INTO REALITY:CONNECTING GRAND STRATEGY TO POLICYCHANGE
Room: VirtualChair: Miranda Priebe, RAND CorporationPart: Barry Posen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Justin Logan, Cato InstituteDaniel H. Nexon, Georgetown UniversityBrandon Valeriano, Cato InstituteRachel Esplin Odell, Quincy Institute for ResponsibleStatecraft
45.2 RADICALIZATION AND DE-RADICALIZATIONAS PROCESSES AND THE ROLE OF THE STATE
Room: VirtualChair: Umut Korkut, Glasgow Caledonian UniversityDisc: Tarik Basbugoglu, Glasgow Caledonian University
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Can We Still Trust the State?Doga Atalay, Glasgow Caledonian UniversityUmut Korkut, Glasgow Caledonian UniversityOntological Discomfort Online: Anti-Lockdown ProtestsDuring COVID-19Bogdan Ianosev, Glasgow Caledonian UniversityOzge Ozduzen, Brunel University LondonHegemony and Limits of Consensus Democracy:Swedish CriticsEmilia Palonen, University of HelsinkiAnnika Björnsdotter Teppo, Uppsala UniversityHow To Be an Anti-Migrant: Ontological SecurityThreatened by the OthersStevan Tatalovic
Wednesday, 8:00 AM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events46.1 AFRICA RDG PART 1Room: WSCC, 606Chair: Azeez O. Olaniyan, Federal University, Oye Ekiti
George Meyiri Bob-Milliar, Kwame Nkrumah Universityof Science and Technology
Wednesday, 8:00 AM to 5:00 PMAPSA Events47.1 APSA COUNCIL MEETINGRoom: WSCC, Ballroom 6E
Wednesday, 9:00 AM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events48.1 ADVANCING THE SCHOLARSHIP OF
TEACHING AND LEARNING IN POLITICALSCIENCE
Room: WSCC, 603Chair: Shane Nordyke, University of South DakotaPart: Mitchell Brown, Auburn University48.2 DATA SOURCES FOR INTEREST GROUP
RESEARCHRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: Beth L. Leech, Rutgers University, New BrunswickPart: Jesse M. Crosson, Trinity University
Alexander Charles Furnas, University of MichiganGeoffrey M. Lorenz, University of Nebraska, LincolnTimothy M. LaPira, James Madison UniversityHerschel F. Thomas, University of Texas, ArlingtonTravis N. Ridout, Washington State UniversityErika Franklin Fowler, Wesleyan UniversityJan Beyers, University of AntwerpHelene Helboe Pedersen, Department of PoliticalScience, Aarhus UniversityHye Young You, New York University
48.3 PROCESS TRACING: THE LOGIC AND BESTPRACTICES OF PROCESS TRACING (QMMR 3)
Room: WSCC, 607Chair: Andrew Bennett, Georgetown UniversityPart: Tasha A. Fairfield, London School of Economics
Jeffrey T. Checkel, European University Institute
Wednesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AMTheme Panels49.1 CAN DEMOCRATIC INNOVATIONS DEEPEN
DEMOCRACY IN DIVERSE SOCIETIES?Room: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 3: Normative Theory
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Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsCo-sponsored by Democratic Innovations
Chair: Jonathan Collins, Brown UniversityDisc: Edana Beauvais, Simon Fraser University
Part: Jane Mansbridge, Harvard Kennedy SchoolCathy J. Cohen, University of ChicagoArchon Fung, Harvard UniversityLisa Garcia Bedolla, University of California, BerkeleyOmar Wasow, Princeton UniversityAzucena Moran Tobar, Institute for AdvancedSustainability Studies
49.2 FUNDING OPPORTUNITIES AT THE NATIONALSCIENCE FOUNDATION
Room: VirtualChair: Jan E. Leighley, National Science FoundationPart: Reggie S. Sheehan, National Science Foundation
Paul K. Huth, University of Maryland, College ParkMark S. Hurwitz, National Science FoundationLee D. Walker, University of North Texas
49.3 INDIGENOUS POLITICS VIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE: SETTLER COLONIALISM,INDIGENOUS POLITICS, AND POLITICALSCIENCE: CRITICAL HISTORIES AND NEWDIRECTIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Indigenous Studies Network
Chair: Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeePart: Kouslaa Kessler-Mata, University of San Francisco
Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson CollegeTulia G. Falleti, University of PennsylvaniaSheryl R. Lightfoot, University of British ColumbiaNathaniel Shils, University of PennsylvaniaMarcela Torres
APSA Events50.1 BLACK POLITICS: OLD PROBLEMS, NEW
DIRECTIONS, AND CHARTING A PATHFORWARD
Room: VirtualChair: Ismail K. White, Princeton UniversityPart: Candis Watts Smith, Duke University50.2 BYSTANDER INTERVENTION TRAINING IRoom: VirtualChair: Kimberly Mealy, American Political Science AssociationPart: Paige Sechrest, University of WashingtonDivision PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY51.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY VIRTUAL
MINI-CONFERENCE: TAKING STOCK AT 24:COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY IN 2021AND BEYOND
Room: VirtualChair: Leigh K. Jenco, London School of Economics
Murad Idris, University of MichiganPart: Jane A. Gordon, University of Connecticut, Storrs
Roxanne L. Euben, University of PennsylvaniaGeorge Ciccariello-Maher, Vassar CollegePaulina Ochoa Espejo, Haverford College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY51.2 EXAMINING CAPITALISMRoom: VirtualChair: Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State UniversityDisc: William Clare Roberts, McGill University
Wednesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Imagining Altruism: A Discourse Analysis of the GivingPledgeGordon R Arlen, Goethe University FrankfurtRacial Economic Injustice and the Rule of CapitalEmily Katzenstein, University of OxfordWaiting for Capitalism: Abstinence and Expectation inthe Nineteenth CenturyRoni Hirsch, Harvard UniversityDemocratic Destruction & Reconstruction: The GeneralStrike in Benjamin & Du BoisJeffrey Feldman, Brown University"Total Excemption from Trouble and from Risk": AdamSmith on Subprime MortgagesJennifer Corby, Kingsborough Community College,CUNY
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY51.3 EMOTIONS AND POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGYRoom: VirtualChair: Antoine J. Banks, University of MarylandDisc: Antoine J. Banks, University of Maryland
Scott Clifford, University of Houston
Papers: Emotional Framing and the Effectiveness of CorrectiveInformationPirmin Stöckle, University of MannheimGroup Empathy in Response to the COVID-19PandemicCigdem V. Sirin, University of Texas, El PasoNicholas A. Valentino, University of Michigan, AnnArborJose D. Villalobos, University of Texas at El PasoPolitical Independents: Are They Capable of BeingEmotionally Provoked?Ev Marie Dowling, University of California, DavisThe Mitigating Effects of Humility on Political Hostilityand StressKristin N. Garrett, Wheaton College
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY51.4 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Sebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, San
DiegoDisc: Fernando Bizzarro Neto, Harvard University
Papers: Coordination and Incumbency Advantage in Multi-PartyRaces: Evidence from FranceKevin DanoFrancesco Ferlenga, Brown UniversityVincenzo Galasso, Bocconi UniversityCaroline Le Pennec, HEC MontrealVincent Pons, Harvard Business SchoolTaxation and Representation in 19th Century AmericaGiuliana Pardelli, New York University Abu DhabiJeffrey Louis Jensen, New York University-AbuDhabiJeffrey F. Timmons, NYU Abu DhabiThe Impact of Presidential Appointment: Montesquieu orThe Federalists?Sultan Mehmood, University of Paris-Dauphine
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The Political Economy of Suffrage Reform: The GreatReform Act of 1832Adriane Fresh, Duke UniversityGary W. Cox, Stanford UniversitySebastian M. Saiegh, University of California, SanDiego
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY51.5 EMBEDDINGSRoom: VirtualChair: Aaron Russell Kaufman, New York University Abu
DhabiDisc: Justin Grimmer, Stanford University
Papers: Embedding Regression: Models for Context-SpecificDescription and InferencePedro L. Rodriguez, Vanderbilt UniversityBrandon Michael Stewart, Princeton UniversityArthur Spirling, New York UniversityEmotion and Reason in Political LanguageGloria Gennaro, ETHElliott Ash, ETH ZurichUsing BERT to Study Word Meaning ChangesPatrick Y. Wu, University of Michigan, Ann ArborWhat Is Word Embedding and How Can It Be Usefulfor Social Science ResearchYaoyao Dai, University of North Carolina, CharlotteBenjamin J Radford, University of North Carolina atCharlotte
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION51.6 GLOBAL CIVIC ENGAGEMENT EDUCATION:
IDEAS, DIRECTIONS, AND CALLS FOR ACTIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 58: Civic EngagementChair: Alasdair Blair, De Montfort UniversityDisc: Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South Bend
Dmitry Lanko, St. Petersburg State University
Papers: Stop Training Political Hobbyists! Citizens via Trans-National WomenĀs ActivismJ. Cherie Strachan, Virginia CommonwealthUniversityLori Poloni-Staudinger, Northern Arizona UniversityCandice D. Ortbals, Abilene Christian UniversityImporting Civic Education into Authoritarian ChinaTaiyi Sun, Christopher Newport UniversityAppraising Civic Education in the Secondary SchoolCurriculum of MauritiusSheetal Sheena Sookrajowa, University of MauritiusMy Participation is Often Dismissed: Youth Experts inSocietal Change ProcessesNiina Meriläinen, Tampere Univeristy
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS51.7 COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ETHNICITY,
RELIGION, AND NATIONALISMRoom: VirtualChair: Keith A. Darden, American UniversityDisc: Belgin San-Akca, Koç University
Papers: Timing vs. Religious Doctrine: Secular Institutions inComparative PerspectiveH. Zeynep Bulutgil, University College London
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Disenfranchisement of Religious Minorities and theOrigins of DemocracySener Akturk, Koç UniversityNationalist Education and Emigrant IntegrationVasiliki Fouka, Stanford UniversityHarris Mylonas, George Washington UniversityInclusive Nationalism and the Diversity Deficit:Institutions and DevelopmentDaniel Joseph SchultePrerna Singh, Brown University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS51.8 CULTURAL FOUNDATIONS OF STATE
BUILDINGRoom: VirtualChair: David D. Laitin, Stanford UniversityDisc: David Stasavage, New York University
Ericka Albaugh, Bowdoin College
Papers: Explaining Resentment of Bilingual Ballots: Evidencefrom Republic of GeorgiaAmy H. Liu, University of Texas at AustinThe Link Between Colonial āNative Legal CodesĀandPostcolonial GovernanceKunle Owolabi, Villanova UniversityA Lingua Franca for Kurdish Populations?Shlomo Weber, New Economic SchoolLanguage Choice in the Post Colonial WorldDavid D. Laitin, Stanford UniversityRajesh Ramachandran, Heidelberg University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS51.9 EXPLAINING VARIATIONS IN THE SUCCESS OF
PANDEMIC RESPONSESRoom: VirtualChair: John G. Francis, University of UtahDisc: Tobias Hofmann, Free University of Berlin
Papers: Social Infrastructure's Role in Pandemic ManagementDaniel P. Aldrich, Northeastern UniversityYitzhak Henry, Northeastern UniversityPolitical Leadership and Pandemic Response in the UKGillian R. Peele, University of OxfordHealth Federalism in Italy and Access to CareLorenzo Pratici, University of ParmaThe Role of Prior Experience in Responses to PandemicThreatsLeslie Pickering Francis, University of UtahJohn G. Francis, University of Utah
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES51.10 GENDER AND POLITICS IN THE GLOBAL
SOUTH 1Room: VirtualChair: Rabia Malik, University of EssexDisc: Regina A. Bateson, University of Ottawa
Papers: A Booth of OneĀs Own: Female-Only Polling StationsĀEffectiveness in PakistanJ. Andrew Harris, New York University Abu DhabiRabia Malik, University of EssexLeft-Behind or Left-Ahead? Gendered PoliticalImplications of Migration in IndiaRithika Kumar, University of Pennsylvania
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Bureaucratic Discretion and Downstream Effects:Evidence from IndiaBhumi Purohit, University of California, BerkeleyRepresentation, discrimination and progressive socialpolicy: Evidence from IndiaTanushree Goyal, Harvard UniversitySam Van NoortMats Ahrenshop, University of OxfordCan Biometric Verification Get More Cash to PoorWomen? Evidence from PakistanBilal Murtaza Siddiqi, University of California,BerkeleyKate Vyborny, Duke University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES51.11 POLITICAL PREFERENCES AND PUBLIC
OPINION IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVERoom: VirtualChair: Giancarlo Visconti, Purdue UniversityDisc: Virginia Oliveros, Tulane University
Papers: Demographic Changes, Far Right Parties, and PoliticalAttitudesGiancarlo Visconti, Purdue UniversityPolicy Mood in the Developing World: Evidence fromUruguay.Eliana Álvarez, Universidad Católica del UruguayMartín Opertti, Universidad Católica del UruguayRosario Queirolo, Universidad Católica del UruguaySources of Public Trust in Latin AmericaĀs CourtsDavid De Micheli, University of UtahWhitney K Taylor, Cornell UniversityReappraising Volatility and Nationalization: A Voter-centric, Multi-level TheoryThomas Mustillo, University of Notre DameJohn Polga-Hecimovich, U.S. Naval Academy
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES51.12 DEBATING THE NATURE AND IMPACT OF
POST-COMMUNIST CIVIL SOCIETYRoom: VirtualChair: Paula M. Pickering, College of William & MaryPart: Lisa McIntosh Sundstrom, University of British
ColumbiaDorota Pietrzyk-Reeves, Jagiellonian University inKrakowJanet E. Johnson, CUNY-Brooklyn CollegePaulina Pospieszna, Adam Mickiewicz University ofPoznanPatrice McMahon, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY51.13 SOCIAL INVESTMENT IN EDUCATION:
IMPLICATIONS FOR EQUALITY AND SOCIALSOLIDARITY
Room: VirtualChair: David Weisstanner, University of AarhusDisc: David Weisstanner, University of Aarhus
Papers: The Causes of Rising InequalityJohn D. Stephens, University of North Carolina,Chapel HillEvelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, ChapelHill
Wednesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Education for Some versus Education for AllCathie Jo Martin, Boston UniversityOrchestrators of CoordinationPatrick Emmenegger, University of St. GallenMarius R. Busemeyer, University of KonstanzMartin B. Carstensen, Copenhagen Business SchoolThe Politics of Educational DifferentiationAnja S Giudici, University of OxfordJane R. Gingrich, University of Oxford
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY51.14 NEW RESEARCH ON IMF PROGRAMS: DESIGN,
IMPLEMENTATION, AND IMPACTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International CollaborationChair: Randall W. Stone, University of RochesterDisc: Mark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Randall W. Stone, University of Rochester
Papers: The Money is in the Mission: Explaining Variation inIMF MissionsLauren Elizabeth Ferry, University of MississippiAlexandra Olivia Zeitz, Concordia UniversityA Model of IFI Conditionality, Program Ownership, andDe Facto ImplementationNikitas Konstantinidis, IE UniversityBernhard Reinsberg, University of CambridgeThe Impact of IMF Programs on PopulismMerih Angin, Koç UniversitySaliha Metinsoy, University of GroningenIMF Lending Programs and Repression in AutocraticRegimesChristopher Dinkel, Northwestern UniversityStephen Craig Nelson, Northwestern University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION51.15 STATES, MARKETS, AND FOREIGN AIDRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
Chair: Simone Dietrich, University of GenevaPart: J. Lawrence Broz, University of California, San Diego
Susanna Campbell, American UniversitySusan D. Hyde, University of California, BerkeleyChristina J. Schneider, University of California, SanDiegoAlexander Thompson, Ohio State University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY51.16 ARMS AND PROFITRoom: VirtualChair: Carmela Lutmar, University of HaifaPapers: Beyond Conquest: Four Pathways from Military Power
to ProfitsJonathan Markowitz, University of SouthernCaliforniaBenjamin A.T. Graham, University of SouthernCaliforniaFarewell to Arms: Arms Embargo Busting and ArmsControl in the European UnionKeith A Preble, SUNY, University at AlbanyDefense Offsets and the Coming Redistribution of ArmsProduction CapabilitiesJonata Anicetti, European University Institute
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Democratizing Disarmament: Weapons Governance bySmall StatesNaomi Egel, Cornell University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY51.17 RACE AND LIBERAL FOREIGN POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Richard W. Maass, Old Dominion UniversityPart: Randolph B. Persaud
Stacie E. Goddard, Wellesley CollegePaul K. MacDonald, Wellesley CollegeBianca Freeman, University of California, San DiegoStephen Pampinella, SUNY New PaltzTobias Lemke, University of DelawarePaul Higate, University of BristolNivi Manchanda
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY51.18 REGIONAL SECURITY EAST ASIA/SOUTH ASIARoom: VirtualChair: Robert Reardon, North Carolina State UniversityDisc: Debak Das, Stanford University
Papers: Reshaping the Identity of Former Combatants:Reeducation During the Korean WarSam Adam Erkiletian, University College LondonAchieving Strategic Stability on the Korean PeninsulaThrough Arms ControlMANSEOK LEE, UC BERKELEYDoes Nationalism Increase Belief in Misinformation?Evidence from PakistanAsfandyar Ali Mir, Stanford UniversityNiloufer Siddiqui, SUNY, University at AlbanyEnterprising Extremists-Crime, Religion & the Businessof Violence in PakistanRabia Zafar, U.S. Naval War College
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES51.19 HOMELANDS AND TERRITORIAL CONFLICTRoom: VirtualChair: Ron E. Hassner, University of California, BerkeleyPart: Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Henk Erich Goemans, University of RochesterDevorah S. Manekin, Hebrew UniversityBoaz Atzili, American UniversityJordan Branch, Claremont McKenna College
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES51.20 THE STRUCTURE OF ARMED GROUPSRoom: VirtualChair: Kristen Kao, University of GothenburgDisc: Kristen Kao, University of Gothenburg
Jessie Bullock, Harvard University
Papers: Recruits and Bystanders: How Potential SupportersEvaluate Armed GroupsKolby Hanson, Naval War CollegeTerror in Transition: Leadership and Succession inTerrorist OrganizationsTricia Bacon, American UniversityElizabeth Grimm Arsenault, Georgetown UniversityWhen Purges Fail: Organisational Structure and MassPurgesRadu Andrei Parvulescu, Cornell UniversityPublic Preferences and Foreign Support for Gender-Inclusive Armed MovementsCaglayan Baser, New York University Abu Dhabi
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES51.21 POLICY PREFERENCES, CONFLICT, AND
LEGISLATIVE SPEECHRoom: VirtualChair: Catherine E. De Vries, Bocconi UniversityDisc: Hanna Back, Lund University
Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston
Papers: How Are Politicians Informed? Witness Testimony andInformation ProvisionPamela Ban, University of California, San DiegoJu Yeon Park, University of EssexHye Young You, New York UniversityCoalitions and the Allocation of Speaking Time inLegislaturesMax Goplerud, University of PittsburghDaniel M. Smith, Columbia UniversityInterrogating the Opponent? The Use of Blue-CardQuestions in the EPVerena Kunz, University of MannheimThinking, Speaking, Doing? Preference, Speech andFloor Voting CongruenceDavid Munck Willumsen, University of InnsbruckPatrik Ohberg, The Department of Political Scienceat the University of Gothenburg
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS51.22 PROMOTING PLURALISM THROUGH
CIVICALLY ENGAGED RESEARCHRoom: VirtualChair: Kirstie Lynn Dobbs, Merrimack CollegeDisc: Ana Bracic, Michigan State University
Papers: Can Civically Engaged Research Improve Governancefor Immigrant Integration?Margaret M. Commins, Queens University ofCharlottePluralism in Actionable Science: Communities andInterdisciplinary PartnershipsKirstie Lynn Dobbs, Merrimack CollegeCivic Engagement and Social Science Research:Vietnamese American FishersBrian Shoup, Mississippi State University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH51.23 TWITTER, MOBILIZATION, AND NORMSRoom: VirtualChair: Sierra Powell, Mount San Antonio CollegeDisc: Malliga Och, Idaho State University
Papers: How 2020 Presidential Candidates Framed ClimateChange on TwitterLindsey Meeks, University of OklahomaMobilization for Equality: Norm Change and BacklashSpencer DorseyEmily Myers, Duke UniversityLivia Isabella Schubiger, Duke UniversityYou DonĀt Look like the Leader TypeAngelica Garcia-Macias, University of California,Irvine
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DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS51.24 RACE, VOTER SUPPRESSION, AND
INSTITUTIONS' IMPACT ON VOTERS ANDOUTCOMES
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and VotingBehavior
Chair: Bernard L. Fraga, Emory UniversityPapers: Cured from Rejection? Vote-by-Mail Ballots in FloridaĀs
2020 General ElectionEnrijeta Shino, University of FloridaDaniel A. Smith, University of FloridaBrandi Martinez, University of FloridaLaRaven Temoney, University of FloridaEvaluating Partisan Gerrymandering Under VRAConstraintsDavid Cottrell, University of GeorgiaJowei Chen, University of MichiganExamining Tension Between Electoral Changes andBallot Access for Black VotersMindy Romero, USCShakari Byerly, University of California, Los AngelesRacial Disparities in Gerrymandering's Stranded VotersDavid Niven, University of Cincinnati
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS51.25 INEQUALITY, HEALTH DISPARITIES, AND
ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICERoom: VirtualChair: Rebecca Bromley-Trujillo, Christopher Newport
UniversityDisc: Maiah Jaskoski, Northern Arizona University
Papers: Environmental Injustice in Clean Water ActEnforcementDavid Konisky, Indiana University, BloomingtonChristopher M. Reenock, Florida State UniversityShannon D. Conley, Indiana University BloomingtonA National Assessment of Brownfield Redevelopmentand Gentrification in the U.S.Marisol Becerra, University of Illinois at ChicagoNeighborhood Level Disparities in Pandemic PoliciesTabitha Marie Benney, University of UtahHow Natural Resource Decentralization ReshapesInequalityNathan Cook, Indiana University-Purdue UniversityIndianapolis
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS51.26 CRISTIAN VACCARI AND AUGUSTO
VALERIANI'S "OUTSIDE THE BUBBLE" (OUP,2021)
Room: VirtualChair: Johanna Dunaway, Texas A&M UniversityPart: Bruce Bimber, UC, Santa Barbara
Shelley Boulianne, MacEwan UniversityGeorgia Kernell, UCLAYannis Theocharis, Technical University of MunichCristian Vaccari, Loughborough UniversityAugusto Valeriani, Università di Bologna
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE51.27 MAKING AND UNMAKING CARCERAL POWER:
IMAGINING NEW MODES OF JUSTICERoom: Virtual
Wednesday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Chair: Deva Woodly, New School for Social ResearchDisc: Farah Godrej, University of California, Riverside
Naomi Murakawa, Princeton University
Papers: Mobilizations from Within: Black Political Organizing inPrisonsDavid Jonathan Knight, University of ChicagoCumulative Punishment: The Carceral State ExpandedKaneesha Johnson, Harvard UniversitySouthern Carceral Power From the Chain Gang to theModern Carceral StateKirstine Taylor, Ohio UniversitySpeaking Truth to Power: How Racial Threat ShapesPolitical BeliefsJenn M. Jackson, Syracuse University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP51.28 NATURALIZATION AND THE DRIVERS OF
NATURALIZATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Jessica Taghvaiee, University of California, IrvineDisc: Hannah Marie Alarian, University of Florida
Papers: Migrant Rights and Access to Citizenship: GenderedNaturalization DecisionsJeannette Money, University of California, DavisSara Kazemian, University of California, DavisThe Temporal Borders of Latinx CitizenshipJessica Taghvaiee, University of California, IrvineDo Historically Ethnic Nations Support ImmigrantIntegration?Steven Denney, University of TorontoNicholas Alexander Rymal Fraser, Munk School ofGlobal Affairs and Public Policy, University ofTorontoCharles David Crabtree, Dartmouth College
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS51.29 FRAMING AND NEGOTIATING STATE-SOCIETY
RELATIONS IN THE MENARoom: VirtualChair: Asli Cansunar, University of WashingtonDisc: Yusuf Magiya, Columbia University
Allison Spencer Hartnett, University of SouthernCalifornia
Papers: Humanitarian Boundaries? Institutions, Disruption, andSyrian MigrantsEmily K.M. Scott, McGill UniversityTax Morale in Rentier States: Evidence from a SurveyExperimentYuree Noh, Rhode Island CollegeTarek E. Masoud, Harvard UniversityMolly Hickey, Harvard UniversityYouth Empowerment, Social Entrepreneurship, andAuthoritarian Renewal in JordanAdam Almqvist, University of ChicagoMore Than Money: Rentier Politics in Qatar (Pre-Recorded)Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, Northwestern University inQatar
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Related Groups52.1 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:
POLICY PREFERENCE AND GOVERNANCE INTAIWAN
Room: VirtualChair: Ching-Hsing Wang, National Cheng Kung UniversityDisc: Li-Yin Liu, University of Dayton
Wei-Ting Yen, Franklin & Marshall College
Papers: Political Regimes and Minority Language Policies:Evidence from TaiwanChun-Ying WuOn the Legitimacy of TaiwanĀs Constitutional CourtYu-Hsien Sung, University of South CarolinaPolitical Dynasties, Electoral Systems and TheirElectoral AdvantagesYu-Ceng Liao, University of HoustonJou Fei Huang, University at Buffalo
52.2 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: SYMBOLS OFHISTORICAL ORDER IN ERIC VOEGELIN'S“ISRAEL AND REVELATION”
Room: VirtualChair: Nicoletta Scotti Muth, Catholic University of Sacro
Cuore, MilanDisc: Ignacio Carbajosa, San Dámaso University
Giorgio Buccellati, UCLAPeter Machinist, Harvard UniversityWilliam M. Thompson-Uberuaga, Duquesne UniversityJohn Milbank, University of Nottingham
Part: David J. Walsh, Catholic University of America52.3 GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICAL
SCIENTISTS: DOMESTIC CHALLENGES IN XIJINPING'S CHINA
Room: VirtualChair: Melanie Frances Manion, Duke UniversityDisc: Yang Zhong, The University of Tennessee
Yuen Yuen Ang, University of Michigan
Papers: Citizen Support for Economic Governance in anAuthoritarian StateReza Hasmath, University of AlbertaPostmaterialist Values, and Political Attitudes andBehavior in ChinaJie Chen, James Madison UniversityNarisong Huhe, University of StrathclydePlatform Governance: Chinese Social Credit andSocialist Digital MarketsLarry Catá Backer, Pennsylvannia State UniversityThe Evolution of the Stalinist Bureaucratic ReligionParadigm in ChinaLawrence C. Reardon, University of New Hampshire
53.1 RESEARCH IN BIOLOGY AND POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University,
HarrisburgDisc: Steven A. Peterson, Pennsylvania State University,
Harrisburg
Papers: Testosterone and ĄHonor Culturesďof Young MenAllan Mazur, Syracuse University
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
The Domesticated AnimalKenneth Caldwell BlanchardWar and Human Mind: New Hypotheses of EvolutionaryPolitical ScienceRyuta Ito, Hiroshima University
Wednesday, 1:30 PM to 5:30 PMAPSA Events54.1 CAUSAL INFERENCE AND TREATMENT
EFFECT ESTIMATION USING STATARoom: WSCC, 607Chair: Enrique Pinzon, StataCorpPart: Enrique Pinzon, StataCorp54.2 DEMOCRATIC DELIBERATION AND GENE
EDITINGRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: Michael K. Gusmano, Rutgers UniversityPart: Karen Maschke, The Hastings Center54.3 LEARNING FOR DEMOCRACY: LESSONS IN
POWER AND PERSUASIONRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Titus Alexander, Democracy MattersPart: Titus Alexander, Democracy Matters54.4 POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION JUNIOR
RESEARCH WORKSHOP (INVITE ONLY)Room: WSCC, 603Chair: Bonnie M. Meguid, University of Rochester
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PMTheme Panels55.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS MINI-CONFERENCE:
SELF-DEFINITION IS SELF-DETERMINATIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Indigenous Studies NetworkChair: Thomas Klemm, University of MichiganDisc: Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson College
Papers: Voting Reservations: The Identity Politics of LandLoren Collingwood, UC RiversideSean David Long, University of California, RiversideTowards a Decolonial Quantitative Social Science:Indigenous Self-Identification in the 2019 NativeHawaiian SurveyNgoc Phan, Hawaii Pacific UniversityLike Water Slipping Through Cracks in a Basket:Teaching and Learning Yurok at Hoopa Valley HighSchool, CaliforniaMneesha Gellman, Emerson CollegeWhat are 'Indigenous Problems' Represented to be in theLong-term Care Policies in Taiwan?Wasiq Silan, University of Helsinki
55.2 METHODOLOGICAL CONSIDERATIONS FORSTUDYING DIVERSE IDENTITIES
Room: VirtualChair: Heather L Ondercin, Appalachian State UniversityPart: Daniel Q. Gillion, University of Pennsylvania
Amber Mackey, University of PennsylvaniaMelina Much, UC IrvineHeather L Ondercin, Appalachian State UniversityLorrie Frasure, UCLAJanelle Wong
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APSA Events56.1 A DISCUSSION AMONG THE EDITORS: WHAT
IT MEANS TO BE A POLITICAL SCIENCEJOURNAL EDITOR IN 2021
Room: VirtualChair: Paul Gronke, Reed CollegePart: Michael Bernhard, University of Florida
Kathleen Dolan, University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeeJennifer L. Lawless, University of VirginiaVera Eva Troeger, University of WarwickDenise Marie Walsh, University of Virginia
56.2 EXPLORING CAREER OPPORTUNITIESOUTSIDE OF ACADEMIA
Room: VirtualChair: Thad Kousser, University of California, San DiegoPart: Michelle Diggles, Political Consultant
Daniel George LehmanStan Nguyen Oklobdzija, Claremont McKenna College
56.3 RBSI ORIENTATIONRoom: VirtualDivision PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY57.1 A WOMAN'S SPHERE(S): GENDER AND
CITIZENSHIP IN THE HISTORY OF POLITICALTHOUGHT
Room: VirtualChair: Lisa Pace Vetter, University of Maryland, Baltimore
CountyDisc: Mary Jo MacDonald, University of Toronto
Papers: Tyrant Kings & Female Patriots: Catharine Macaulay'sEgalitarian RepublicWendy Gunther-Canada, University of Alabama,BirminghamEncounters with Philosophy: Layers of Identity in theWork of Christine de PizanAnna Marisa Schoen, University of HoustonDueling Feminist MachiavellisLorraine Krall McCrary, Wabash CollegeThe Greeks and the Goths: Radical Critiques ofVictorian CivilizationTheophile Deslauriers, Princeton University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY57.2 GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY TO
CITIZENSRoom: VirtualChair: Benjamin Ogden, Texas A&M UniversityDisc: Ian R. Turner, Yale University
Papers: Civil-Police Relations: The Effects of Police Power onElectoral AccountabilityAlexander Stephenson, University of CaliforniaBerkeleyPolitical Accountability and Stereotyping in ProsecutionsRyan Hubert, University of California, DavisPrivate Security and Public PolicingAnna Maria Wilke, Columbia UniversityOversight, Capacity, and InequalityTara L Slough, New York University
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY57.3 DISCRIMINATION AND PREJUDICERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Katherine McCabe, Rutgers UniversityDisc: Andrew M. Engelhardt, University of North Carolina,
GreensboroKatherine McCabe, Rutgers University
Papers: Beyond Anti-Urban Sentiment: Immigrants as a RuralSocial Identity Out-GroupKristin Kay Lunz Trujillo, Northeastern Universityand Harvard UniversityGroup Status and Emotionally Coping withDiscriminationAntoine J. Banks, University of MarylandJennifer L. Merolla, University of California,RiversideHeather Hicks, Colorado State UniversityWilliam Bishop"Kung Flu" Fighting: Understanding Anti-AsianSentiment in the Wake of COVID-19Hannah Nam, Stony Brook UniversityKatherine M. Sawyer, Stony Brook UniversityHillary Style, Stony Brook University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY57.4 THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF STATE
POWER IN THE PERIPHERYRoom: VirtualChair: Michael Albertus, University of ChicagoDisc: Aditya Dasgupta, University of California, Merced
Mai Omer Hassan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Papers: Fiscal Legibility and State Development: Evidence fromColonial MexicoFrancisco Garfias, University of California, SanDiegoEmily A. Sellars, Yale UniversityAllies or Adversaries? Extraction, Native Groups, andthe State in Latin AmericaChristopher Lee Carter, Harvard UniversityColonial Indirect Rule, Land Inequality and MaoistInsurgency in IndiaShivaji Mukherjee, University of TorontoCapturing Constituents: The Electoral Consequences ofLand Reform in PortugalNoah Schouela, University of ChicagoMichael Albertus, University of Chicago
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY57.5 LEGACIES OF WORK – SOCIAL POLICY,
EMPLOYMENT, AND REGIMES OFINEQUALITY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Labor Politics
Chair: Kimberley S. Johnson, New York UniversityDisc: Herschel Nachlis, Dartmouth College
Papers: Organized Black Women & Political Development: DayNurseries v MothersĀPensionsCarol Nackenoff, Swarthmore CollegeThe United StatesĀLack of Paid Family Leave inHistorical PerspectiveAlexis Walker, Saint Martin's University
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The Politics of Contingent WorkEva Bertram, University of California, Santa CruzSaving Lives, Reopening the Economy: State Responsesto the COVID-19 PandemicGwendoline M. Alphonso, Fairfield UniversityDaniel Sledge, University of Texas, ArlingtonHerschel F. Thomas, University of Texas, Arlington
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY57.6 CROWDSOURCINGRoom: VirtualChair: Naijia Liu, Princeton UniversityDisc: Alessandro Vecchiato, Stanford University
Papers: Anomalous Responses on Amazon Mechanical Turk:An Indian PerspectiveWilliam O'Brochta, Washington University in St.LouisSunita A. Parikh, Washington University in St. LouisExpectations and Vote: Evidence from PredictionMarkets in Ten ElectionsAlberto Lopez Ortega, University of ZurichOliver Strijbis, University of ZurichLearning Media Credibility from Facebook DataTom Paskhalis, New York UniversityKevin Aslett, New York UniversityZhanna Terechshenko, New York UniversityJoshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityJonathan Nagler, New York UniversityRichard Bonneau, NYUShedding the Shirkers: Methods for De-RandomizingSurvey ResponsesMatthew Tyler, Stanford UniversityJustin Grimmer, Stanford University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS57.7 THE POLITICS OF COMBATTING POVERTYRoom: VirtualChair: Nayma Qayum, Manhattanville CollegeDisc: Joan Ricart-Huguet, Loyola University Maryland
Papers: Clientelistic Politics and ProPoor Targeting: Rulesversus Discretionary BudgetsDilip MookherjeeAnusha Nath, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolisand University of MinnesotaConversion and Drift in Unlikely Cases: Welfare Reformin Hybrid RegimesAsya El-Meehy, New York UniversityH. Tolga Bolukbasi, Bilkent UniversityTargeted Poverty Alleviation: How State Engages withSociety in Chinese Villages?Xin Han, University of PittsburghA Virtuous Circle of Political Competition, Governanceand Public Good ProvisionRyan G. Baird, Joint Warfare Analysis Center
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES57.8 POLITICAL ATTITUDES AND COALITIONS IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVERoom: VirtualChair: Juan Cruz Olmeda, El Colegio de MéxicoDisc: Sara Niedzwiecki, University of California, Santa Cruz
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Papers: Bilingualism and Political Attitudes in South IndiaDeepika Padmanabhan, Yale UniversityCan Diverse Subnational Coalitions Overcome theMiddle-Income Trap in Mexico?Seth Pipkin, University of California, IrvineAlberto Jose Fuentes, Georgia Institute of TechnologyThe Effects of Multilevel Electoral Coalitions on NullVoting in MexicoJuan Cruz Olmeda, El Colegio de MéxicoLisandro Martín Devoto, Universidad NacionalAutónoma de MéxicoIsaac Cisneros, El Colegio de MéxicoThe Effect of International Travel on Political Attitudesin AsiaBrittany Wood, Murray State University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION57.9 CHINA AND COERCION IN INTERNATIONAL
POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Abraham Newman, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Margaret M. Pearson, University of Maryland
Victor C. Shih, UCSD
Papers: Driven to Self-Reliance: Coercion and the US-ChinaInnovation EcosystemMark Peter Dallas, Union CollegeYeling Tan, University of OregonAbraham Newman, Georgetown UniversityHenry Farrell, Johns Hopkins UniversityConsumer Casualties: Political Boycotts andInternational DisputesJessica Chen Weiss, Cornell UniversityJeremy L. Wallace, Cornell UniversityThe Impact of International Tensions on ScientificOutputMargaret E Roberts, University of California, SanDiegoYe Wang, New York UniversityEddie Yang, University of California, San DiegoChina and the Global Discursive Response to COVID-19Stefan Müller, University College DublinSamuel Brazys, University College DublinAlexander Dukalskis, University College Dublin
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY57.10 AUTHORITARIANISM, POPULISM, AND
FOREIGN POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Christopher Chiego, California State University
Maritime AcademyDisc: Brandon Merrell, Yale University
Papers: Public Threats, Private Assurances: Dimensions ofDiplomacy in Crisis TrajectoryYana Otlan, University of California, Los AngelesWhat Populists Do? Populism and Security Spending inEuropeEmily Holland, United States Naval War CollegeHadas Aron, New York UniversityAuthoritarian Leaders, Defense Ministers and Inter-StateConflictSimonas Cepenas, University of VirginiaAnne Meng, University of Virginia
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DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY57.11 THEORY AND PRACTICE OF FOREIGN-POLICY
RELEVANT RESEARCHRoom: VirtualChair: Naazneen Barma, University of DenverDisc: Fabiana Sofia Perera, William J Perry Center for
Hemispheric Defense StudiesKimberly Turner, Harvard University
Papers: A Meta-Analysis of Policy Implications in ExtendedNuclear Deterrence ResearchAlexander Bollfrass, ETH ZurichCausal Inference and Policy Relevance in the Study ofForeign-Policy EffectsMarc Toby Grinberg, Stanford UniversityAmerican Security Assistance and the Empowerment ofSecurity Services in JordanRosalie Rubio, George Washington UniversityMedia Reporting on International AffairsAndrew C Shaver, University of California, MercedLeonardo Feitosa Dantas, University of California,Los AngelesAmarpreet Kaur
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES57.12 ELECTIONS, CONFLICT, AND VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Arvind MagesanDisc: Arvind Magesan
Sayres S. Rudy
Papers: Once Bitten Twice Shy: How War Can Shape SoldiersĀSupport for IncumbentsAnna Getmansky, London School of EconomicsChagai Weiss, University of Wisconsin - MadisonPolicing Politics: Crime and Law Enforcement DuringElectionsShruti LakhtakiaPolitical Selection After ConflictMateo Vasquez Cortes, Instituto TecnologicoAutonomo de MexicoMaria I Curiel, New York UniversityReelection Backfire: Political Accountability andSecurity Provision in MexicoRafael Ch, New York University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES57.13 TRADE COMPLEXITY, RESOURCE
DEPENDENCE, MARKETS AND POLITICALCONFLICT
Room: VirtualChair: Krista E. Wiegand, University of TennesseeDisc: Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University
Stephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina, ChapelHill
Papers: The Timing of Terrorist Attacks as a Function ofFunding ConsistencyOlga Chyzh, University of TorontoArctic Shock: Utilizing Climate Change to Test aTheory of Resource CompetitionJonathan Markowitz, University of SouthernCaliforniaBorder Institutions and Product-Level Margins of TradeBailee Donahue, University of Pennsylvania
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Market Power, Institutions, and Conflict in theDemocratic Republic of CongoMaya Isabel SchroderMark J.C. Crescenzi, University of North Carolina,Chapel HillStephen E. Gent, University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES57.14 TRANSITIONING FROM CONFLICT TO PEACE:
THE CASE OF COLOMBIARoom: VirtualChair: Livia Isabella Schubiger, Duke UniversityDisc: Ana M. Arjona, Northwestern University
Michael Lee Weintraub, Universidad de los Andes
Papers: Perpetrator Identity and Public Responses to CivilianVictimizationGabriella Levy, Duke UniversityRestoring the Rule of Law in the Aftermath of CivilWarAna Maria Montoya Garcia, Duke UniversitySpoiling Support for Peace Processes?Aila M. Matanock, University of California-BerkeleyNatalia Garbiras Diaz, University of CaliforniaBerkeleyMiguel Garcia-SanchezFrom Combatants to Civilians: The Effects of DDRPrograms on Combatant Well-BeingJuan Fernando Tellez, University of California, DavisMateo Villamizar Chaparro, Duke Univeristy
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY57.15 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: MALLORY
SORELLE'S "DEMOCRACY DECLINED"Room: VirtualChair: Chloe Thurston, Northwestern UniversityPart: Emily Zackin, Johns Hopkins University
Kimberly J. Morgan, George Washington UniversityDesmond King, University of OxfordJacob S. Hacker, Yale UniversityMallory E. SoRelle, Duke University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS57.16 PUBLIC OPINION, COURT LEGITIMACY, AND
SUPPORT FOR THE RULE OF LAWRoom: VirtualChair: Michael K. Romano, Shenandoah UniversityDisc: Michael K. Romano, Shenandoah University
Lisa M. Holmes, University of Vermont
Papers: Norm Erosion in Judicial Confirmations and AttitudesToward the Supreme CourtMichael Salamone, Washington State UniversityPeople Beneath Robes: How Identity Impacts JudicialLegitimacyJoshua Boston, Bowling Green State UniversityBenjamin Kassow, University of North DakotaAli Shiraz Masood, Rhodes CollegeDavid Ryan Miller, Vanderbilt UniversityThe Stability of Public Support for the Rule of LawAmanda DriscollJay Krehbiel, West Virginia UniversityMichael J. Nelson, The Pennsylvania State University
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Understanding the Link Between Representation andLegitimacy in the JudiciaryScott J Hofer, St. Francis CollegeSusan Vivian Achury, Lycoming CollegeJason P. Casellas, University of HoustonMatthew Ward, University of Louisiana at Lafayette
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH57.17 EMOTIONS, FASHION, AND REDEFINING
POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Nichole Bauer, Louisiana State UniversityDisc: Nichole Bauer, Louisiana State University
Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
Papers: Gender, Emotion, and Political Engagement in U.S.PoliticsKathleen M. Rogers, Rutgers UniversityHow Women Win Over Political PeersMaryClare Roche, Princeton UniversityRedesigning Women? A Quantitative and QualitativeApproach to Candidate StrategyCammie Jo Bolin, Georgetown UniversityThe Garbs of Our Past: Understanding the Role ofMemory Through FashionMaylin Hernandez, University of Massachusetts-Amherst
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH57.18 INTERSECTIONAL CANDIDATES,
COMMUNICATION, AND REPRESENTATIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Nadia E. Brown, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Pearl K. Dowe, Emory University
Papers: The Electoral Consequences of Skin Color and GenderAmong Black AmericansCamille Danielle Burge, Villanova UniversityJulian Wamble, George Washington UniversityHow Do Voters/Elites Respond to Women of Color asState Legislative CandidatesEric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State UniversityParu ShahLatina and Latino Candidate Appeals in White MajorityDistrictsChristian Dyogi Phillips, University of SouthernCaliforniaCommunicating Identity Politics: Women of Color andPolitical MessagingSarah Allen Gershon, Georgia State UniversityNadia E. Brown, Georgetown University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS57.19 PARTISANSHIP AND VOTING AMONG BLACK
AMERICANSRoom: VirtualChair: Natasha Altema McNeely, University of Texas, Rio
Grande ValleyDisc: Sharon Denise Austin, University of Florida
Papers: Moving Beyond Symbolic Representation: BlackVoters & The 2020 Dem PrimaryShakari Byerly, University of California, Los Angeles
DailySchedule
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Policing for Profit and the Undermining of Democracy:Fines, Fees, and TurnoutJonathan Ben-Menachem, Columbia UniversityKevin Thomas Morris, Brennan Center for JusticeProtests, Pandemics, and Participation: Turnout in the2020 Georgia ElectionsBernard L. Fraga, Emory UniversityKiela Crabtree, University of Michigan, Ann ArborShades of Blue: The Nuances of Partisan AffiliationAmong Black DemocratsShakari Byerly, University of California, Los AngelesRaphael J. Sonenshein, California State University,Los AngelesAyobami Laniyonu, University of TorontoBoris E. Ricks, California State University,NorthridgeThe Downstream Effects of Funding Elections: BlackVoter Turnout in GeorgiaChristian R. Grose, University of Southern CaliforniaAyojide Emmanuel Hospidales
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES57.20 SOCIAL MOVEMENTS AND PARTIES, CRISIS
AND CHANGERoom: VirtualChair: Maraam Dwidar, Syracuse UniversityDisc: António Valentim
Ruth Dassonneville, Universite de Montreal
Papers: Black Lives Matter Protests Amidst a Global PandemicLaGina Gause, University of California, San DiegoManeesh Arora, Wellesley CollegeOrganizing Social Movements on the Right and the Leftin the United StatesMichael T. Heaney, University of GlasgowPurposive Benefits, Moral Foundations, and PoliticalParty ActivismDouglas D. RoscoeThe Re-Politicization of Religion: ChileĀs ConstitutionalPlebisciteDanissa Paz Contreras Guzmán, University of Texas,Austin
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR57.21 DONALD TRUMP AND VOTERSRoom: VirtualChair: David Niven, University of CincinnatiDisc: Jennifer Wolak, Michigan State University
David Niven, University of Cincinnati
Papers: Donald Trump and the 2020 U.S. ElectionsAlan I. Abramowitz, Emory UniversityFatalists for Trump: A Cultural Theory ofAuthoritarianism and Presidential VoteJoseph T. RipbergerBrendon Swedlow, Northern Illinois UniversityVoter Registration and Trump's Victory in 2016Florin Nicolae Fesnic, Babes-Bolyai University ClujVoting in Groups, Thinking like Ideologues: TheParadox of Partisan ConflictEric R. Schmidt, Concordia College
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DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION57.22 NEW FRAMEWORKS FOR THE STUDY OF
GROUPS AND POLITICAL OPINIONRoom: VirtualChair: Nicole Yadon, Ohio State UniversityDisc: Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas
Papers: Institutional versus Group Theories of PoliticsHenry E. Brady, University of California, BerkeleyThomas Bradley Kent, UC BerkeleySocial Groups & Political Belief Systems: FreshEvidence on an Old TheoryNeil O' Brian, University of OregonElizabeth Mitchell Elder, Princeton UniversityVolatility in Party SupportDouglas Rivers, Stanford UniversityStephanie A. Nail, Stanford UniversityTwo Faces of Class: Patterns of Self-Identification &Core Attitude StructuresChristopher Muste, University of Montana
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION57.23 COVID COMMUNICATION STRATEGIESRoom: VirtualChair: James Benjamin Taylor, Kennesaw State UniversityDisc: Dominik Andrzej Stecula, Colorado State University
Papers: Multiple Successful Messages to Reduce COVID-19Vaccine Hesitancy and ResistanceJennifer Lin, Northwestern UniversityJon Green, Northeastern UniversityJames N. Druckman, Northwestern UniversityMatthew A. Baum, Harvard UniversityDavid Lazer, Northeastern UniversityKatherine Ognyanova, Rutgers UniversityMatthew Simonson, Northeastern UniversityMauricio SantillanaRoy Perlis, Harvard Medical SchoolFrom Cheerleaders to Dissidents: Rethinking CulturalGovernance in ChinaKarl Yan, Zhejiang UniversityYin Yang, Pennsylvania State UniversityDiscordance in Strategic Narrative in UK GovernmentTelevised Covid BriefingsBen O'Loughlin, University of London, RoyalHollowayHashtag Activism in Politicized Pandemics: TheāTaiwanCanHelp CampaignAnita Kueichun Liu, University at BuffaloYotam Ophir, University at BuffaloDror Walter, Georgia State UniversityItai Himelboim, University of Georgia
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE57.24 ADORNO, BENJAMIN, AND QUERYING THE
UNREASON IN CONTEMPORARY POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Michael Forman, University of Washington, TacomaDisc: Judith Grant, Ohio University
Papers: The Authoritarian Horizon: Critical Theory and theScars of DemocracyBradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State UniversityKatherine Young, University of Hawaii at Hilo
Wednesday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
The Anthropocenes Project: Critique of theClimatological Conception of HistoryTimothy W. Luke, Virginia TechCritical Theory and Environmental Pessimism: On theIntractability of JusticeMichael Lipscomb, Winthrop UniversityPessimism and the Frankfurt School, Toward a Theoryof Radical EcopessimismMary Witlacil
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS57.25 RECONSIDERING THE FIELD: RESEARCHERS,
SUBJECTS, AND POSITIONALITYRoom: VirtualChair: Sean Yom, Temple UniversityDisc: Erica S. Simmons, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Becoming Othered, Thrice: Race, Positionality, andFieldworkSean Yom, Temple UniversityInsiders, Outsiders, and Credible Visitors in EliteInterviewingAarie Glas, Northern Illinois UniversityAlesha Porisky, Northern Illinois UniversityStrategic Sites as a Tool of Ethnography for PoliticalScienceAndres Besserer Rayas, The Graduate Center, CityUniversity of New YorkRobert Courtney Smith, Marxe School of Public andInternational Affairs, Baruch College, and Sociology,Grad Center, CUNYUnbounding the ĄFieldďof Field Research: A FeministReconceptualizationCarissa Ann Cunningham, Rutgers UniversitySummer Lindsey, Rutgers University, New BrunswickMichael FitzGerald, Rutgers University, NewBrunswick
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY57.26 POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS, POLICIES, AND
PUBLIC HEALTHRoom: VirtualChair: Daniel J Mallinson, Penn State, HarrisburgDisc: Kelly B Smith, Stetson University
Papers: COVID-19 and the Census: How the 2010 CensusAffected the Pandemic ResponseAshley Moraguez, University of North Carolina,AshevilleInfertility Mandates and the Politics of InequalityErin Heidt-Forsythe, Pennsylvania State UniversityHeather Silber Mohamed, Clark UniversityInstitutional Pluralism and Public Opinion in HealthcareResource AllocationPhilip Petrov, Stanford UniversityRegimes and COVID-19Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve UniversityDaniel Tisch, School of Medicine, Case WesternReserve University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP57.27 CONFLICT AND DIVISION IN THE PUBLIC
OPINION AND GOVERNANCE OF MIGRATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Elizabeth Davis, Syracuse UniversityDisc: Judith Spirig, University College London
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Papers: Political Conflict Over Immigration in Electoral-Authoritarian MalaysiaJakob HenningerDivided Communities: Polarization, Immigration, andPolitical ToleranceSemuhi Sinanoglu, University of TorontoSelin Kepenek, University of TorontoPublic Opinion on Climate Migration: Evidence of aPolicy/Preferences MismatchGabriel De Roche, University of California, SanDiegoDemocratization and Migrant Rights: Theory andEvidence from TunisiaElizabeth Davis, Syracuse University
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY57.28 OVERCOMING BARRIERS TO
INTERSECTIONAL RESEARCH ON ECONOMICINEQUALITY & POLITICS
Room: VirtualChair: Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, UC BerkeleyPart: Elizabeth Suhay, Government, American University
Hakeem Jerome Jefferson, Stanford UniversityMelissa Sands, London School of EconomicsNicholas Carnes, Duke UniversityJamila D. Michener, Cornell UniversityMargaret Brower, University of ChicagoKarthick Ramakrishnan, University of CaliforniaRiverside
Related Groups58.1 CAMPAIGN FINANCE RESEARCH GROUP:
CAMPAIGN FINANCE AND DEMOCRACY:DILEMMAS AND SOLUTIONS
Room: VirtualChair: Diana Dwyre, California State University, ChicoDisc: Raymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts,
AmherstSusan Scarrow, University of Houston
Papers: Funding We The People: Parties, Partisanship andPolitical FinanceMatteo Bonotti, Monash UniversityZim Nwokora, Deakin UniversityDialing for Dollars and for Domination: ElectoralGatekeeping by the WealthyPrithviraj Datta, Franklin and Marshall CollegeDoes Political Advertising Have Diminishing Returns?Keena LipsitzJavier PadillaWhy ThereĀs No Free Speech Right to UnlimitedCampaign SpendingErin Miller, Princeton University
58.2 INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES &METHODS: "YES, AND": GRADUATESTUDENTS CONDUCTING QUALITATIVEMETHODS DURING/AFTER COVID
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 46: Qualitative Methods
Chair: Marnie - Howlett, London School of EconomicsPart: Lauren C. Konken, Princeton University
Charmaine N. Willis, University at Albany, SUNYColleen Wood, Columbia UniversityGözde Böcü, University of TorontoRamon Garibaldo Valdez, Yale UniversityLuisa Fernanda Turbino Torres
DailySchedule
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Shauna N Gillooly, University of California, Irvine58.3 JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP: A REGION
OF REGIMES PROSPERITY & PLUNDER INASIA: CONTRIBUTION OF T.J. PEMPEL
Room: VirtualChair: Mary Alice Haddad, Wesleyan UniversityPart: T.J. Pempel, University of California, Berkeley
Kristi Govella, German Marshall Fund of the UnitedStatesSaori N. Katada, University of Southern CaliforniaDavid Leheny, Waseda UniversityThomas Pepinsky, Cornell UniversityJohn Ravenhill, University of WaterlooKeiichi Tsunekawa, The University of Tokyo
58.4 LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDYGROUP: REDISTRICTING IN THE 2020S: MOREOF THE SAME OR A NEW STORY?
Room: VirtualChair: Bruce E. Cain, Stanford UniversityPart: Matt A. Barreto, University of California, Los Angeles
Guy-Uriel Charles, Duke University School of LawRobert Yablon, University of Wisconsin Law SchoolEmily Zhang, Stanford UniversityBenjamin L Ginsberg, Retired
58.5 LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL AND TRANSGENDERCAUCUS: AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: ERINMAYO ADAM'S "QUEER ALLIANCES"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & Politics
Chair: Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton UniversityPart: Courtenay W. Daum, Colorado State University
Celeste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, BoulderJulie L. Novkov, University at Albany, SUNYRenee A. Cramer, Drake UniversitySusan R. Burgess, DePaul UniversityNaomi Murakawa, Princeton University
58.6 PROJECT ON THE AMERICAN CONSTITUTION:WHOSE REGIME? WHICH CONSTITUTION?
Room: VirtualChair: Ashleen Menchaca-Bagnulo, Texas State UniversityPart: Ashleen Menchaca-Bagnulo, Texas State University
Christopher Caldwell, Claremont InstituteMatthew J. Peterson, Claremont Institute for the Studyof Statesmanship and Political PhilosophySamuel Goldman, George Washington UniversityJames M. Patterson, Ave Maria University
Wednesday, 4:30 PM to 5:30 PMAPSA Events59.1 POLITICAL COMMUNICATION SECTION
BUSINESS MEETING (IN-PERSON & VIRTUAL)Room: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Wednesday, 6:00 PM to 8:00 PMAPSA Events60.1 APSA AWARDS RECEPTION IN SEATTLE
(INVITE ONLY)Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6C60.2 VIRTUAL AWARDS CEREMONYRoom: VirtualChair: Ashley Vande Bunte (APSA), American Political
Science Association
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Thursday, September 30, 2021VirtualThursday, 6:00 AM to 6:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS61.1 ETHICS AND EPISTEMOLOGY IN POLITICAL
SCIENCE VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualPapers: Seeing Like a Political Scientist
Dustin Ellis, University of OregonWhat Is Naturalism in Political Science?Nicholas Geiser, Brown University
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY & POLITICS61.2 LGBTQ POLITICS IN REVIEW VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Alison Gash, University of OregonDisc: Alison Gash, University of Oregon
Papers: A History of Institutional Racism Threatens BIPOCTransgender AmericansTed Combs, Arizona State University
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY61.3 HEALTH POLICY AND POLITICS VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Herschel Nachlis, Dartmouth CollegeDisc: Gregory Schober, University of Texas at El Paso
Papers: Big Data Reveals Preferences and Power Asymmetriesin Global Health GovernanceGian Franco Bermudez, University of PennsylvaniaJennifer Prah Ruger, Perelman School of Medicine atthe University of PennsylvaniaInformal Social Capital and Infection PreventionBehaviorYasushi Hazama, Institute of Developing EconomiesWhen Universal Health Coverage Is Not Enough: WhatCan We Learn from Chile?Claudio A. Méndez, Universidad Austral de ChileUnintended Pharmaceutical Regulatory StateImplications of Operation Warp SpeedAnthony D. Dell'Aera, Worcester State University
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AMTheme Panels62.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS VIRTUAL MINI-
CONFERENCE: INDIGENOUS AUTONOMY ANDSOVEREIGNTY: PRACTICES OF GOVERNANCE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Indigenous Studies Network
Disc: Kouslaa Kessler-Mata, University of San FranciscoNina McMurry, WZB Berlin Social Science Center
Papers: The Historical Failure of the IHS and the Restoration ofHealthcare SovereigntyJoseph John DietrichKara MazareasJean Reith Schroedel, Claremont GraduateUniversity
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
The Search for Native American Political DevelopmentThomas Klemm, University of MichiganāIndigenousĀLand Rights and Contentious Politics inAfrica: The Case of UgandaMatthew I. Mitchell, University of SaskatchewanThe Land is Everywhere or It's Nowhere": Unsettlingthe City Through Indigenous Urban Autonomy andCosmopolitan IndigeneityElizabeth Camacho, University of ChicagoPer-Capita Payments and Tribal GovernancePaasha Mahdavi, University of California, SantaBarbara
62.2 PITIED BUT IGNORED? DISCRIMINATIONTOWARD DISABLED PEOPLE IN POLITICS ANDPOLICY
Room: VirtualChair: Anna Daily, Mount Holyoke CollegeDisc: Lisa Schur, Rutgers University-New Brunswick
Elizabeth A. Sharrow, University of MassachusettsAmherst
Papers: Who Speaks for Disabled Workers? Legislative Activityat WestminsterAmy L. Atchison, Valparaiso UniversityBodies in Resistance: ADAPT, the AHCA protests, andthe Rhetoric of RightsAnn Kathleen Heffernan, University of MichiganVoter Evaluations of Disabled Candidate Self-Presentations in CampaignsStefanie Reher, University of StrathclydeThe Last Ventilator: Disability, Discrimination andResource DistributionElizabeth BellAri NeemanMonica C. Schneider, Miami UniversityDara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton University
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY63.1 REVISITING MODERATION IN POLARIZED
TIMESRoom: VirtualChair: Constantine Vassiliou, University of HoustonDisc: Alin Fumurescu, University of Houston
Constantine Vassiliou, University of Houston
Papers: Mary Astell on Moderation: The Case of OccasionalConformityGeertje Jeanne Bol, University of OxfordAmerican Tragic Democracy: Reconciling Extremismand Moderation Through TragedyNoah R. Eber-Schmid, Indiana UniversityModeration, Toleration, and Revolution: William PennĀsPerswasive in ContextAndrew R. Murphy, Virginia CommonwealthUniversityModeration in Plato's RepublicLaura Rabinowitz, St. Thomas University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY63.2 FANON TODAYRoom: VirtualChair: George Ciccariello-Maher, Vassar CollegeDisc: George Ciccariello-Maher, Vassar College
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Papers: The Disorders of Violence: Fanon's Sociodiagnosis ofthe FamilyRobyn Marasco, CUNY, Hunter CollegeInfrastructures of Decolonization: Scales ofWorldmaking in Frantz FanonBegüm Adalet, Cornell UniversityThe Last Shall Be FirstGlen Sean CoulthardFanon, Wilderson, and the Work of ExhaustionNica Siegel, Yale
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY63.3 REALISTIC PLURALISM: WHAT CAN WE
EXPECT FROM ELECTIONS?Room: VirtualChair: Lisa J. Disch, University of Michigan, Ann ArborDisc: Russell Muirhead, Dartmouth College
Papers: A āSchumpeterianĀUtopia: SchumpeterĀs RealisticAssessment of CompetitionNatasha Piano, University of ChicagoThe Fall of Democratic Optimism in Central EasternEuropean Studies (2000-2015)Lise Esther Herman, University of ExeterJames Dawson, University College LondonAurelia Ananda, King's College LondonPolitical Competition Is Under Attack: Does It MeritDefense?Alexander Kirshner, Duke UniversityActing Democratically Under ClientelismSamuel Ely Bagg, Nuffield CollegeUdit Bhatia
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY63.4 SINJA GRAF'S HUMANITY OF UNIVERSAL
CRIMERoom: VirtualChair: Turkuler Isiksel, Columbia UniversityPart: Ines Valdez, Ohio State University
Sonali Chakravarti, Wesleyan UniversityBarbara Arneil, University of British ColumbiaSinja Graf, London School of Economics and PoliticalScienceCatherine Lu, McGill University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY63.5 THE GENESIS OF REPRESENTATIVE
INSTITUTIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Agnes Cornell, University of GothenburgPapers: Parliament Strikes Back: Agenda-setting and Power
Voids in Stuart EnglandToni Rodon, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceTom Paskhalis, New York UniversityParty Systems and ParliamentarianismSimon Davidsson, Lund UniversityPolitical Elites: Representation in the Executive andLegislature as SubstitutesVictoria Paniagua, London School of EconomicsJoan Ricart-Huguet, Loyola University MarylandThe Origins of Pluralism, History, and RepresentativeInstitutionsDeborah A. Boucoyannis, George WashingtonUniversity
DailySchedule
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS63.6 POPULISM, PLURALISM, PATRIOTISM:
MIGRATION MANAGEMENT & POLITICALCHANGE
Room: VirtualChair: Myra A. Waterbury, Ohio UniversityDisc: Noelle K. Brigden, Marquette University
Papers: A Matter of Life & Death: Necropatriotism & DiasporaEngagement During COVID-19Ruxandra Paul, Amherst CollegeOsman Balkan, Swarthmore CollegeCross-Party Transnational Voting in the TurkishDiasporaGulcan Saglam, University of GeorgiaMichael Ahn Paarlberg, Virginia CommonwealthUniversitySecuritization, Emergency and Externalization ofMigrant Receptions in SicilyMarie BassiNationals versus Foreigners: Political Attitudes andElectoral MobilizationSebastián A. Umpierrez de Reguero, LeidenUniversity
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES63.7 CLIENTELISM AND DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS 1Room: VirtualChair: Miquel Pellicer, University of Duisburg-EssenDisc: Daniel Max Kselman, IE University
Papers: Citizen Demand for Different Types of ClientelismMiquel Pellicer, University of Duisburg-EssenEva Wegner, University of MarburgRedistribution and Clientelism: A Conjoint SurveyExperiment in BrazilSina Smid, Copenhagen Business SchoolSigrid Alexandra Koob, Copenhagen Business SchoolMogens K. Justesen, Copenhagen Business SchoolHow Economic Inequality Structures Vote BuyingAcross AfricaJoseph Amick, Credence Management SolutionsHenry Pascoe, IE UniversityPaying the Dues? Access, Congestion, and BriberyDiego José Romero, Duke UniversityFatih Serkant Adiguzel, Duke UniversityMarco Morucci, New York University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES63.8 ELECTORAL POLITICS IN PUTIN'S RUSSIARoom: VirtualChair: Allison C. White, Colorado State UniversityDisc: Tomila Lankina, London School of Economics and
Political ScienceOra John Reuter, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Papers: Asymmetrical Effects: Subnational Authoritarian RegimeStabilityAllison C. White, Colorado State UniversityInga A-L Saikkonen, Åbo Akademi UniversityRepresentation of Women and Ethnic Minorities in theRussian State DumaRobert G. Moser, University of Texas at Austin
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CitizensĀBureaucratic Interactions and Voting Behaviorin RussiaWilliam M. Reisinger, University of IowaMarina Zaloznaya, The University of IowaHaofeng Ma, The University of IowaWhy Allow Local Elections? Fraud and the Abolition ofRussian Mayoral ElectionsCole J Harvey, Oklahoma State University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES63.9 MASS MOBILIZATION AND PROTESTS IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVERoom: VirtualChair: Ye Wang, New York UniversityDisc: Dilshod Achilov, University of Massachusetts -
DartmouthWendy Leutert, Indiana University
Papers: BeijingĀs Different Reactions Towards the Protests inHong Kong: 2014 vs 2019Zhenyu Zhang, Cornell University"I am Doing This out of Love": Mobilization for FairElections in BelarusAlesia Sedziaka, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignMapping Student Protests in Russia: The Navalny factorArarat L. Osipian, DonbasEyeing the Credible Top: Elite Origins of PopularResistance in ChinaYanjun Liu, Peking UniversityJie(•••) MA(•••), Peking University, Beijing, ChinaHow Propaganda Encourages Citizenry Protest inAutocraciesLi Shao, Zhejiang University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY63.10 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF GLOBALIZATION IN
SOUTH ASIARoom: VirtualChair: Rikhil R Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, MadisonDisc: Rikhil R Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Political Consequences of South-South Migration:Evidence from a Field ExperimentNikhar Gaikwad, Columbia UniversityKolby Hanson, Naval War CollegeAliz TothInternational Trade Liberalization and Nativist Politics inIndiaBenjamin Clay Helms, University of VirginiaForeign Aid and Compliance with Public Health Orders:Evidence from PakistanSyeda ShahBano Ijaz, UC San DiegoWho Supports Globalization and Why the Formal-Informal Worker DivideNita Rudra, Georgetown UniversityHelen V. Milner, Princeton UniversityHarish S.P., College of William & Mary
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY63.11 NORMS AND WARRoom: VirtualChair: Lori Helene Gronich, George Washington University
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Just Cause, Reasons, and RevolutionEzekiel Vergara, Yale UniversityIntervenerĀs Trade-off: Plausible Deniability and IndirectControl in Proxy WarsSanjida Amin, University of TorontoCombatant Socialization & Norms of Restraint: U.S. &Philippine Army SurveysAndrew Bell, Indiana University- BloomingtonHow Wartime Experiences Affect Postwar SecurityDecisionsChristopher Chiego, California State UniversityMaritime Academy
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY63.12 PUBLIC OPINION AND INTERNATIONAL
SECURITYRoom: VirtualChair: William Reno, Northwestern UniversityDisc: Christopher Michael Faulkner, United States Naval War
College
Papers: Media's Effect on the PublicĀs Foreign PolicyPreferences in Diplomatic CrisesFrances Yaping Wang, Singapore ManagementUniversityCall of Duty? Perceived Volunteerism and PublicSupport for the Use of ForceMax Zeldes Margulies, United States MilitaryAcademyKeith Carter, United States ArmyInstrumentalizing the Military in CompetitiveAuthoritarian RegimesHuseyin Zengin, University of Pittsburgh
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY63.13 CONGRESSIONAL INFLUENCE ON AMERICAN
FOREIGN POLICYMAKINGRoom: VirtualChair: Benedict Edward DeDominicis, Catholic University of
KoreaDisc: Jennifer Abbassi, Randolph College
Papers: Legislative Diplomacy: Reforming Congress's Role inForeign Policy, 1970-2015Ryan Dukeman, Princeton UniversitySecrecy and Oversight: U.S. Law and the DomesticPolitics of Covert ActionMelinda Haas, University of PittsburghThe Cause of Congressional Oversight Effort of the U.S.Arms Sale PlansHoshik Nam, University of IowaForeign Policy Entrepreneurship in Congress During theTrump AdministrationGeorge E. Shambaugh, Georgetown University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES63.14 ADVANCES IN UNDERSTANDING BARGAINING
AND CONFLICTRoom: VirtualChair: Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton UniversityDisc: Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton University
Kevin A. Clarke, University of Rochester
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Papers: Do States Signal by Sinking Costs or DownpayingCosts?Kai Quek, University of Hong KongDan Altman, Georgia State UniversityThe Bargaining Model and Additional Explanations forWarSteven Beard, University of Colorado - BoulderThe Strategic Consequences of Emotion in BargainingBrandon Yoder, Australian National UniversityThe Two-War Standard: Crisis Bargaining andOpportunistic Third PartiesAhmer Tarar, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES63.15 SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN WAR AND PEACERoom: VirtualChair: Summer Lindsey, Rutgers University, New BrunswickDisc: Summer Lindsey, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Clara Neupert-Wentz, Aarhus University
Papers: Gendered Violence, Moral Order, and Social Control inColombiaĀs Civil WarSamuel Ritholtz, University of OxfordMobilizing Public Protests Against Sexual Violence inIndiaAditi Malik, College of the Holy CrossPunish or Tolerate? State Capacity, Military Oversight,Wartime Sexual ViolenceSumin Lee, Rutgers UniversityAndrey Tomashevskiy, Rutgers UniversityThe Correlates of Sexual and Gender-Based Violence inPost-Conflict LiberiaPriscilla Torres, Duke UniversitySabrina Karim, Cornell University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES63.16 POLITICAL ELITES, ECONOMIC INEQUALITY
AND UNEQUAL REPRESENTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Elisa Volpi, University of GenevaDisc: Nathalie Giger, University of Geneva
Papers: Not Visible Enough? ElitesĀExplanations of Inequalityand Their ConsequencesNathalie Giger, University of GenevaElisa Volpi, University of GenevaThe Risks of Knowing It All: Unequal RepresentationCaused by Political ExpertiseYvette Peters, University of BergenTroy Saghaug BroderstadTrajche Z. Panov, University of BergenHow Legislators Perceive Redistributive Preferences ofVotersChristian Breunig, University of KonstanzLuzia Helfer, Geneva University, Political Science andInternational RelationsJulie Sevenans, University of Antwerp
DailySchedule
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Unequal Responsiveness in MP-Citizen Communication:A Comparative ExperimentWouter Schakel, University of AmsterdamDiane Bolet, King's College LondonMarkus Baumann, Department of Social SciencesRosie Campbell, University of London, BirkbeckCollegeTom Louwerse, Leiden UniversityThomas Zittel, Goethe-University Frankfurt
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS63.17 SEPARATION OF POWERS AND INTERBRANCH
RELATIONSHIPSRoom: VirtualChair: Brian Daniel Libgober, Yale UniversityDisc: Brian Daniel Libgober, Yale University
Maureen Stobb, Georgia Southern University
Papers: āAs You Were SayingĀ: Framing Decisions at the Courtof Justice of the EUJohan Lindholm, University of UmeaDaniel Naurin, Oslo UniversityPhilipp Schroeder, Ludwig-Maximilians-UniversityMunichMeasuring Court Curbing in the U.S. StatesMichael Anthony Catalano, Binghamton University,SUNYPredicting Supreme Court Behavior Towards ExecutiveAgency PowerMadison SchroderPublic Congress v. Private Courts: UnderstandingInterbranch RelationsLauren Hanson-Figueroa, Georgia State UniversityAlexandra Piccirillo, Georgia State UniversityAmy L. Steigerwalt, Georgia State University
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW ANDJURISPRUDENCE63.18 POLITICS AND CONSTITUTIONALISMRoom: VirtualChair: Todd A. Curry, University of Texas at El PasoDisc: Joshua Boston, Bowling Green State University
Papers: Hardball Republic: Constitutional Hardball DuringPeriods of Ordinary PoliticsRobinson Woodward-Burns, Howard UniversityLaw and Politics of ImpeachmentJoshua Braver, University of WisconsinMadison, Jefferson, and Constitutional Interpretation:Founder vs. ExecutorKelly Errera, Duquesne UniversityThe Constitution as a ConstraintMark A. Graber, University of Maryland CareySchool of Law
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH63.19 COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF GENDER AND
POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Indira Sinha, Patliputra UniversityDisc: Indira Sinha, Patliputra University
Papers: From Seeing to Believing: How Female RepresentationShapes Support for DemocracyAdam Jordan Nafa, University of North Texas
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The Gap Within: Impact of Separate Gender PollingStations on Voter TurnoutMuhammad Khudadad ChatthaShruti LakhtakiaWomenĀs Representation: Supply, Mass and EliteDemand, and Regime TypeKostanca Dhima, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS63.20 IS RELIGION THE BLIND SPOT OF POPULISM?Room: VirtualChair: Jocelyne Cesari, University of BirminghamDisc: Jocelyne Cesari, University of Birmingham
Kirk A. Hawkins, Brigham Young University
Papers: Religion and Populism: Theory and Evidence from thePhilippines and BeyondDavid T. Buckley, University of LouisvilleThe Paradox of Populist Party Resiliency and the Appealof Religious DiscourseSultan Tepe, University of Illinois at ChicagoReligious Leaders and Rule of Law in Pakistan: HowDoes it Influence Populism?Sultan Mehmood, University of Paris-DauphineAvner SerorPopulism and Religious Nationalism in India, Turkey,and FranceďIrmak Yazici, University of Hawaii at Manoa
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES63.21 EXPERIMENTS IN PARTIES AND POLITICAL
ORGANIZATIONS RESEARCHRoom: VirtualChair: Robert G. Boatright, Clark UniversityDisc: Stephanie A. Nail, Stanford University
Anne Rasmussen, University of Copenhagen
Papers: Building Parties Top-Down and Bottom-Up: Evidencefrom a Natural ExperimentMathias Poertner, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceElite Ideology, Partisanship & Information: TwoExperiments on Political ElitesAlexander Charles Furnas, University of MichiganTimothy M. LaPira, James Madison UniversityThe Effects of Intraparty Conflict on Partisans in theElectorateOliver McClellan, Columbia UniversityPartisan Double Standards in ElectionsWilliam Smith, Princeton University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR63.22 FIELD AND NATURAL EXPERIMENTS ON
ELECTORAL BEHAVIORRoom: VirtualDisc: Gloria Gennaro, ETH
Papers: Do Radio Ads Increase Minority Voter Registration?:A Field ExperimentHayley Cohen, Columbia UniversityJose S Gomez, Columbia UniversityDonald P. Green, Columbia UniversityJoseph Sutherland, Columbia University
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Negative Political Identities and Party ActivismKatharina Lawall, London School of EconomicsStuart J Turnbull-Dugarte, King's college LondonFlorian Foos, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceThe Effect of VAAs on Voting Behavior: A FieldExperiment in TurkeyAli Carkoglu, Koc UniversitySimge Andi, University of OxfordSusan A. Banducci, University of ExeterThe Electoral Effect of Social Influencers: Evidencefrom a Natural ExperimentHeike Klüver, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION63.23 DEMOCRACY UNDER PRESSURE: DIVERSE
PERSPECTIVES AND APPROACHESRoom: VirtualChair: Aida Ramusovic, University of CincinnatiDisc: Carolyn Geiser, Colorado Technical University
Papers: Democracies Under Pressure: Online Incivility andPolarization in ItalyRita MarchettiRossella Rega, University of SienaAnna Stanziano, University of PerugiaThe Role of Pluralism and Polarization in DiscussionsAbout UnemploymentSusana Salgado, Universidade de LisboaDarren Lilleker, Bournemouth UniversityIs Emotional Communication More Effective? A StudyExamining Multi-Platform DataPaula Szewach, University of EssexNot So Implicitly Political: Selective Exposure toFictional Entertainment MediaStewart Matthew Coles, University of Illinois atUrbana-Champaign
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION63.24 PROPAGANDA AND INFLUENCE CAMPAIGN
OPERATIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Edmund W. Cheng, City University of Hong KongDisc: Yuner Zhu, City University of Hong Kong
Papers: What Sentiment Analysis Tells Us About RussianStrategic Narratives on UkraineJuris Pupcenoks, Marist CollegeScott Fisher, New Jersey City UniversityGraig R. Klein, Leiden UniversityUnited Work, Divided Audiences: How China's Info OpsPolarize Taiwanese VotersZenobia Chan, Princeton UniversityNoel Foster, Princeton UniversityIs Depoliticized Propaganda Effective?Shiyao Liu, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyKaiping Zhang, Tsinghua UniversityHow the Pro-Beijing Media Influences Voters: A FieldExperimentJay Chieh Kao, University of Texas at Austin
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DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS63.25 POLITICAL AND SOCIAL BARRIERS TO
CONSERVATION AND ENVIRONMENTALPOLICY
Room: VirtualChair: Megan Mullin, Duke UniversityDisc: Elizabeth Ann Albright, Duke University
Papers: Compensation and Diversion in Wildlife Conservation:Field Evidence from ChinaMengqiao Wang, University of Hong KongCo-Operation Above and Conflict Below: Interactions inPolycentric SystemsPraneeta Mudaliar, Ithaca collegeHumanizing the Impacts of Climate Change ThroughEpisodic Visual and Text FramesRebecca Bromley-Trujillo, Christopher NewportUniversityDavid Ciuk, Franklin & Marshall CollegeUncovering Spatial Variability of Climate Change,Water, and ConflictSojeong Lee, University of TennesseeBomi Lee, University of Iowa
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS63.26 INTERNET POLICY AND GOVERNANCERoom: VirtualChair: Heather L. Katz, Southwestern Oklahoma State
UniversityDisc: Heather L. Katz, Southwestern Oklahoma State
University
Papers: How Internet Outages Shape Public Opinion in AfricaRebecca Strauch, University of KonstanzSaving the Internet: When is Outside Lobbying byDigital Platforms Successful?Michael Kemmerling, University of Cologne/MaxPlanck Institute for the Studiy of SocietiesWhy Do Governments Attempts to Control the Internet?Fahmida Zaman, University of DelawareToward Innovative & Inclusive Approaches?Cybersecurity & Capacity-BuildingNanette S. Levinson, American University-SIS
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY63.27 AUTHORITARIAN GOVERNMENT &
DEMOCRATIC BACKSLIDINGRoom: VirtualChair: Aspen Elizabeth Brinton, Virginia Commonwealth
UniversityDisc: Silvana-Maria Tarlea
Papers: Democratic Check? Incumbent Parties and DemocraticBackslidingFelix Dwinger, University of GothenburgThe Rise of Multiparty AutocracyLaure Sarah Bokobza, Nuffield College, University ofOxfordJacob Nyrup, University of OsloTimocracy: The Logic of Popular DictatorshipAlexander Baturo, Dublin City UniversityPaul D. Kenny, Australian Catholic University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
When Does Civil Society Sustain Democracy? CaseStudies from Central EuropeMerrill Sovner, the Graduate Center, City Universityof New York
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY63.28 LEGISLATURES & PARLIAMENTARY POLITICS
UNDER AUTOCRACYRoom: VirtualChair: Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young UniversityDisc: Michael Wahman, Michigan State University
Papers: Canary in the Coal Mine? The Predictive Qualities ofViolence in ParliamentsMoritz Schmoll, Mohammed VI PolytechnicUniversityWang Leung Ting, London School of EconomicsCan Non-Policy Issue Become a Cleavage BetweenOpposition Elites in EA Regime?Nok Hin Au, University of TokyoKa Ming Chan, Geschwister Scholl Institute ofPolitical Science, Ludwig-Maximilians-UniversitätMünchenKa Lun Ng, Hong Kong University of Science andTechnologyGoverning at the Margins? Opposition LegislativeBehavior Under AuthoritarianismSebastian Dettman, Singapore ManagementUniversity
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY63.29 POLITICAL PARTIES UNDER AUTOCRACYRoom: VirtualChair: Hubert Tworzecki, Emory UniversityDisc: Jiayun Elvin Ong, National University of Singapore
Papers: Coalesced or Monopolized? Reassessing OppositionParties in DemocratizationJeremy Martin Ladd, The Pennylvania StateUniversityRunning Against, with, or from?: A Typology of Partiesin NondemocraciesAllison D. Evans, University of Nevada, RenoIan M. Hartshorn, University of Nevada, RenoSolving the Party Membership Dilemma, Ensuring PartySurvivalFabio Angiolillo, Hong Kong UniversityStraightjacket: Party System Institutionalization,Polarization, and BackslidingLaura Gamboa, University of UtahSteffen Blings, Utah State University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP63.30 IMMIGRANT POLITICAL PARTICIPATION AND
VOTER BEHAVIOR IN HOST SOCIETIESRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and VotingBehavior
Chair: Armando Xavier Mejia, University of Wisconsin,Madison
Disc: Jeremy Ferwerda, Dartmouth College
Papers: Inclusive Electoral Institutions and Efficacy of EthnicVoters in DemocraciesElif Naz Kayran, Leiden UniversityAnna-Lena Nadler
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Heterogenous Electorates? Attitudes and Vote ChoiceAmong Immigrants and NativesAnna-Lena NadlerThe Negative Externalities of Regressive CitizenshipRegimes on VotingJulius Lagodny
Related Groups64.1 CIVIL SOCIETY, POLICY, AND POWER: DOES
CIVIL SOCIETY REALLY SERVE DEMOCRACY?Room: VirtualChair: Robert Mickey, University of MichiganDisc: Nandini Deo, Lehigh University
Anthony James DeMattee, Emory University
Papers: The Impact of Crowdsourced Monitoring on ElectoralIntegrity: The Case of TurkeyBasak Bozkurt, Bogazici UniversityHow Civil Society Facilitates Subnational AuthoritarianEnclave DemocratizationTrix van Mierlo, Institute of Political ScienceThe Professionals: Latinx Advocacy in the Age ofGrantmakingBenjamin Marquez, University of Wisconsin,MadisonAdvancing Nonprofit Influence: The Mediating Role of501(c)(4) OrganizationsMargaret A. Post, Clark UniversityElizabeth T. Boris, Urban Institute
64.2 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:CHINA-TAIWAN RELATIONS AND WORLDPOLITICS
Room: VirtualChair: Yao-Yuan Yeh, University of St. ThomasDisc: Ronan Tse-min Fu, Academia Sinica
Wei-hao Huang, National sun-yat sen university
Papers: BidenĀs Taiwan Strait Policy: Neoclassical Realism andTrumanĀs 1948 ElectionDean Chen, Ramapo College of New JerseyParadiplomacy as a Response to International Isolation:The Case of TaiwanSara A. Newland, Smith CollegeWill the US Come to Taiwan's Defense? Public Opinionfrom both Taiwan and the USChung-li Wu, Academia SinicaAlex Min-Wei Lin, National Chengchi UniversityChingching Chang, Academia Sinica
64.3 INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES &METHODS: INTERPRETIVE APPROACHES TOPOLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: VirtualChair: Rina Verma Williams, University of CincinnatiDisc: Abhishek Chatterjee, University of Montana
Papers: A Tale of Three Visas: Structural Violence andEthnography in Political ScienceBilgesu Sumer, University of Massachusetts, AmherstThe Meaning of ViolenceMaja Touzari Greenwood, The University ofEdinburghBecoming an EU diplomat in the European ExternalAction ServiceJonas Gejl Kaas, Aarhus University
Thursday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Fame & Feminism: Celebrities & International Anti-Trafficking ActivismSamantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay CollegeThe Politics of Sight: Revisiting Timothy PachiratĀsEvery Twelve SecondsBernardo Zacka, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyJasmine Hope English, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology
64.4 LABOR POLITICS: ROUNDTABLE ON "THECAMBRIDGE HANDBOOK OF LABOR ANDDEMOCRACY"
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and HistoryCo-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping CountriesCo-sponsored by Division 44: Democracy and Autocracy
Chair: Kenneth M. Roberts, Cornell UniversityPart: Paul Frymer, Princeton University
Cynthia Estlund, New York UniversityAngela Cornell, Cornell Law SchoolDavid Ost, Hobart and William Smith CollegesKenneth M. Roberts, Cornell University
64.5 WALTER BAGEHOT RESEARCH COUNCIL ONNATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY: IN THEAFTERMATH OF THE 2020 ELECTIONS:LOOKING FORWARD
Room: VirtualChair: Joseph DiSarro, Washington & Jefferson CollegeDisc: Buba Misawa, Washington & Jefferson College
Frank P. Le Veness, Saint John's UniversityMatthew A. Pauley, Manhattanville CollegeRobert F. Pecorella, St. John's UniversityJude Souazoube
Part: Joseph Prud'homme
65.1 LEGISLATIVE-EXECUTIVE RELATIONSDURING THE PANDEMIC: COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVES
Room: VirtualChair: Thomas Saalfeld, University of BambergDisc: Csaba Nikolenyi, Concordia University
Papers: Legislatures During the Pandemic: A Trias PoliticalPerspectivePatricia Popelier, University of AntwerpLegislative-Executive-Judicial Relations in the U.S.Covid 19 PandemicThomas Saalfeld, University of BambergFighting COVID-19 on Democratic Terms:Parliamentary Functioning in Italy and Denmark duringthe PandemicHelene Helboe Pedersen, Department of PoliticalScience, Aarhus UniversityVariable Resilience: Law-Making During the Covid-19Pandemic in Four Western DemocraciesIttai Bar-Siman-Tov, Bar-Ilan University
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Thursday, 6:30 AM to 7:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS66.1 RELIGION AND POLITICS VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: John C. Green, University of AkronDisc: Amy Gould, Evergreen State College
Papers: Civic Values and Political Activity of the "Spiritual butNot Religious"Nathan Barron, University of OklahomaAbigail Lee Bitterman, University of OklahomaCommunity Authoritarianism and Elite Decision-makingAnthony Stowers, Florida State UniversityMegachurch Influence in Politics: Variations BetweenStatesTristan Hightower, University of Maryland, CollegeParkReligion and Politics: How Latter-Day Saints JustifyIncongruent PositionsKyle McWagner, University of California IrvineTransnational Shocks and Sectarian Attitudes in theMENAAlireza Raisi, Northeastern UniversityTrump, Christian Nationalism, and Polarization:A Survey of Iowa Clergy in 2020Kedron Bardwell, Simpson CollegeCompeting or Completing? Explaining Priests' AtittudesTowards Ortho-BloggersDragos, S, ams,udean
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE66.2 EMERGENT WORK IN NEW POLITICAL
SCIENCE VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualDisc: Lucrecia Garcia Iommi, Fairfield University
Jennifer Lawrence, Virginia Tech
Papers: Re-Assembling Memory: Monument Removal andRefusal in Democratic Memory PoliticsMatthew D Frierdich, University of VirginiaConceptualizing the Temporality of InterestsHiroki Osada, Graduate Institute Geneva
Thursday, 7:00 AM to 7:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS67.1 AFRICAN POLITICS VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Alice Kang, University of Nebraska-LincolnDisc: Laura Seay, Colby College
Aala Abdelgadir, Stanford University
Papers: Foreign Aid and Distributive PoliticsKeyi TangLanguages of National Politics in Kenya and TanzaniaAndrew Marshall, Georgetown UniversityXenophobic Attack and its Challenges on AfricanDevelopmentJames Jacob, University of Abuja
DailySchedule
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Divide & Conquer: Rising Defections & Emergence ofTwo-Party Systems in AfricaKimberly L. Shella, Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondaleThe (Pre)Colonial Origins of Communal Conflict inNamibiaVladimir Chlouba, The Ohio State University
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION67.2 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION: TOPICS IN PUBLIC
ADMINISTRATION AND BUREAUCRACYVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Jill Nicholson-Crotty, Indiana UniversityDisc: Jill Nicholson-Crotty, Indiana University
Papers: Federal Grant Spending and Agency ApprovalLaine Shay, Texas A&M University-Corpus ChristiJason S. Byers, Davidson CollegeRepresentative Bureaucracy? Promotions in SwedenĀsLocal Government BureaucracyNora AnterBeyond Ideology How to Administer Privatization forVulnerable PopulationsEunju Kang, SUNY GeneseoMyunghoon Kang, Bilkent UniversityCommunity Performance in South KoreaĀs FisheriesCo-Management PolicySojeong Kim, University of Colorado DenverHiring by Region and Latino Representation in theDefense Contract Audit AgencyLawrence Allen Brown, University of Illinois atChicago
Thursday, 7:00 AM to 8:00 AMAPSA Events68.1 NEW MEMBER AND FIRST TIME ATTENDEE
BREAKFASTRoom: Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom
Thursday, 7:30 AM to 8:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH69.1 WOMEN AND POLITICS RESEARCH VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Wendy Wright, William Paterson UniversityDisc: Wendy Wright, William Paterson University
Papers: Measuring Gender Bias in U.S. House Elections:An Outcome Test ApproachElisha Cohen, Emory UniversityCredibility Questions: Content Analysis of MediaCoverage of Dr. Deborah BirxAngela High-Pippert, University of St. ThomasDemocratic Ideals Undermined: Creating Policy Basedon Identity Group MembershipRachel Yon, United States Military AcademyExploring the Political Status of Hazara Women inAfghanistanTamana Attai, Smith College
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The Media Counterforce of the Gender IdeologyCampaign for Colombian PeaceAngela Bohorquez Oviedo, University of DelawareAddressing WomenĀs Safety to Vote: State AddressConfidentiality ProgramsEmily Farris, Texas Christian UniversityCivic Skills and Ambition Among Elected School BoardTrusteesRebecca E. Deen, University of Texas, ArlingtonBeth Anne Shelton, University of Texas at Arlington
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTALRELATIONS69.2 FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL
RELATIONS VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Clayton M. Nall, University of California, Santa BarbaraDisc: Clayton M. Nall, University of California, Santa Barbara
Papers: Challenging Accepted Thinking in EmergencyManagementMatthew LeRiche, Ohio University
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AMTheme Panels70.1 PANDEMIC POLITICS, VACCINE POLITIES:
COMPARING OUTBREAKS, ERAS, ANDGEOGRAPHIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Co-sponsored by Division 48: Health Politics & HealthPolicy
Chair: Kim Yi Dionne, University of California, RiversideDisc: Sahar Abi-Hassan, Mills College
Papers: Cultural Embeddedness & Vaccine Hesitancy: Lessonsfrom the First-Ever VaccinePrerna Singh, Brown UniversityPolitical Capacity for Pandemic ResponseMatthew Kavanagh, Georgetown UniversityRenu Singh, Hong Kong University of Science andTechnologyDemocratic & Republican Disasters: SARS, H1N1,Ebola, and Zika & U.S. PoliticsCharley Ellen Willison, Cornell UniversityPhillip M. Singer, University of UtahVaccines and Vaccinations: The Comparative PoliticalEconomy of InoculationElize Massard da Fonseca, Fundação Getulio VargasHolly Jarman, University of MichiganScott L. Greer, University of MichiganElisabeth King, New York University
70.2 PLURALISTIC APPROACHES TO COMPLEXINFERENTIAL CHALLENGES
Room: WSCC, 609Chair: Matthew P. Hitt, Colorado State UniversityPart: Nora Webb Williams, University of Illinois at Urbana-
ChampaignSarah Shugars, New York UniversityJohn R. Freeman, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesYiqing Xu, Stanford University
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY71.1 DEMOCRACY AND LEGITIMACY IN ANCIENT
GREECERoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Sean Ingham, University of California, San DiegoDisc: Jordan Jochim, The University of Chicago
Papers: Plato on PluralismAmanda Greene, University College LondonJonathan Yudelman, Harvard UniversityOn the Legitimacy of the Mixed RegimeMatthew Landauer, University of ChicagoVoting for the Guardians: Election, Lottery, andDemocracy in Plato's "Laws"Jeremy Reid, San Francisco State UniversityPromoting Like-Mindedness: Ancient Greek Approachesto DemagogueryMatthew Simonton
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY71.2 MATERNAL POLITICS AGAINST THE GRAINRoom: WSCC, 3BChair: Annie Menzel, University of WisconsinPart: Annie Menzel, University of Wisconsin
Lori Marso, Union CollegeElva Fabiola Orozco Mendoza, University ofConnecticutJasmine Syedullah, Vassar College
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY71.3 CAUSES OF WAR (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Brenton Kenkel, Vanderbilt UniversityDisc: Noam Reich, Princeton University
Papers: From Information Uncertainty To Peaceful Power Rise(Pre-Recorded)Haonan Dong, Vanderbilt UniversityKicking the Can Down the Road: Strategic Delay inInterstate Crisis Bargaining (Pre-Recorded)Brett V. Benson, Vanderbilt UniversityEmerson M. S. Niou, Duke UniversityMutual Optimism, Relative Power, and Conflict (Pre-Recorded)James D. Fearon, Stanford UniversityWar and Peace in an Anarchic World (Pre-Recorded)Germán Sergio Gieczewski, Princeton University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY71.4 ATTITUDES TOWARDS IMMIGRANTSRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom DDisc: Adam Ramey, New York University Abu Dhabi
Papers: The Centrality of Ethnicity and Religion in StereotypesAbout ImmigrantsKirill Zhirkov, University of VirginiaEffects of Country-of-Origin Stereotypes on Anti-Immigrant AttitudesBoyoon Lee, Pennsylvania State University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY71.5 BUREAUCRACIESRoom: WSCC, 612Chair: Saad Gulzar, Stanford UniversityDisc: Jeremy Bowles, Harvard University
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Papers: Doing Business while Holding Public Office: Evidencefrom MozambiqueFelix Sören Schilling, Copenhagen Business SchoolSam Jones, University of CopenhagenFinn Tarp, University of CopenhagenEconomic and Ideological Motivations of BureaucratsTurnover DecisionTainá Souza Pacheco, FGVFacilitation Improves Low-Capacity BureaucraticGovernance: Evidence from MyanmarDean Dulay, Singapore Management UniversityEdmund J. Malesky, Duke UniversityHow the Communication of Deferred EnforcementAffects ComplianceSantiago López-Cariboni, Universidad de laRepúblicaSarah Andrea Berens, University of InnsbruckIrene Menendez, IE UniversityArmin von Schiller, Deutsches Institut fürEntwicklungspolitik (DIE) - Hertie School ofGovernance
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY71.6 ADVANCES IN MACHINE LEARNING (I)Room: WSCC, 603Chair: Luwei Ying, Washington University in St. LouisDisc: Diogo Ferrari, University of California, Riverside
Papers: A Method to Assess Semantic Validity and Bias WhenCoding Open-ended ResponsesRebecca A. Glazier, University of Arkansas, LittleRockAmber Ellen Boydstun, University of California,DavisJessica T. Feezell, University of New MexicoHarnessing Accurate Bias in Large Language Models toExplore Public Opinion (Pre-Recorded)David Wingate, Brigham Young UniversityChristopher Rytting, Brigham Young UniversityLisa P. Argyle, Brigham Young UniversityEthan C Busby, Brigham Young UniversityNancy Fulda, Brigham Young UniversityJoshua Ronald Gubler, Brigham Young University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS71.7 AUTOCRACY AND PUBLIC POLICYRoom: WSCC, 607Chair: Katherine Geneya Crofts-Gibbons, King's College
LondonDisc: Brett Logan Carter, University of Southern California
Papers: Blue Bloods: The Impact of Nepotism on AuthoritarianResilienceJiangnan Zhu, The University of Hong KongNikolai Mukhin, The University of Hong KongDomestic Consequences of the Belt and Road InitiativesYujeong Yang, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaignPolitical Decentralization, Political Regimes, and InfantMortalityNisha Mukherjee Bellinger, Boise State UniversityAppease Workers Without Losses: Autocracy andProgressive Labor RegulationsHsu Yumin Wang, Emory University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS71.8 COMMUNITY NETWORKS, CLIENTELISM, AND
PARTICIPATION (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Ellen M. Lust, University of GothenburgDisc: Nick Eubank, Vanderbilt University
Janet I. Lewis, George Washington University
Papers: Poverty, Social Networks, and ClientelismAllen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann ArborNico Ravanilla, University of California San DiegoSelf-Enforcing Norms and Sustained Autocrats:The Social Norm of VotingLeah R Rosenzweig, Stanford UniversityNeighborhood Social Ties and Compliance Among thePoorPrisca Jöst, University of GothenburgEllen M. Lust, University of GothenburgThe Labor Market of Party BrokersPablo Balan, Harvard UniversityTesalia Rizzo, University of California, Merced
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS71.9 POLITICS BEYOND THE LEFT-RIGHT
SPECTRUMRoom: WSCC, 401Papers: Populism in Plain Sight
Dan Ziebarth, George Washington UniversityRadical Left Parties and Policy OutcomeEva Hoxha, University of Gothenburg, PoliticalScience DepartmentThe Ascendance of Anti-Pluralist Ethno-NationalPopulism in IsraelYoav Peled, Tel Aviv UniversityCovid-19 Infections and Sympathetic Social Media inPolarized EnvironmentsJuan Salvador Gomez-Cruces, Georgia StateUniversity
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES71.10 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON STATEBUILDINGRoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Erica Chenoweth, Harvard UniversityDisc: Mai Omer Hassan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Papers: Mano Dura: An Experimental Evaluation of MilitaryPolicing in Cali, ColombiaRobert A. Blair, Brown UniversityIslands of Stability: Explaining Subnational Security inFragile StatesMichael F. Harsch, Harvard UniversityKevin Troy, Harvard UniversityRailroads and the Spatial Expansion of the State:Evidence from ArgentinaFederico Tiberti, Princeton University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES71.11 THE SUBNATIONAL TURN (II): REFORMS,
POLICY INNOVATION, AND ELECTIONSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Chengzuo Tang, Duke UniversityDisc: Allison D. Evans, University of Nevada, Reno
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Papers: The Politics of Administrative Division Adjustment inUrban China (Pre-Recorded)Jianzi He, Institute for Global Public Policy, FudanUniversityKyle Alan Jaros, University of Notre DameFrom Institution to Governance: How Do LocalGovernments Innovate and Why? (Pre-Recorded)Yuhao Wang, Harvard UniversityThe Politics of Local Pre-Election Party Coalitions:Post-Communist ExperiencePetia A. Kostadinova, University of Illinois atChicagoTatiana Kostadinova, Florida International UniversityStolichnaya Praktika: Governing RussiaĀs RegionalCapitals through UrbanismAmanda Leigh Zadorian, Oberlin CollegeVera Smirnova, Kansas State UniversityDaniela Zupan, Institute for European Urban StudiesProvincial Competition in ChinaĀs Belt and RoadInitiativeSarah Sklar, Boston University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY71.12 CHALLENGES TO THE RULE OF LAW IN
EUROPE (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Tommaso Pavone, University of ArizonaDisc: Lisa Conant, University of Denver
Papers: The Euro-Model of Judicial Governance and Its Impacton Democratic Quality (Pre-Recorded)Pablo Castillo Ortiz, University of SheffieldJudicial Independence and Cooperation with the CJEU(Pre-Recorded)Marlene Wind, University of CopenhagenJuan Antonio Mayoral, University of CopenhagenDeterring Democratic Decay? Regional Organizationsand Democracy Enforcement (Pre-Recorded)Cassandra V. Emmons, Harvard UniversityWhere Have the Guardians Gone? The EUĀs ShiftingPolitics of Legal Enforcement (Pre-Recorded)Tommaso Pavone, University of ArizonaR. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, NewBrunswick
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY71.13 ECONOMIC COERCION IN GLOBAL POLITICSRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan AChair: Robert Kubinec, Princeton UniversityDisc: Seung-Youn Oh, Bryn Mawr College
Papers: How Much Yuan Is a Seat on the Security CouncilWorth?Su-Hyun Lee, Nanyang Technological University,SingaporeByungwon Woo, Yonsei UniversitySwinging Back: How Targeted Trade Retaliation isViewed as Election InterferenceMax Kagan, University of California, BerkeleyRyan Brutger, University of California, BerkeleyStephen Chaudoin, Harvard UniversityHow ChinaĀs Tech MNCs Circumvent PoliticalPushback on FDI via PrivateeringAlberto Beltran, Purdue University
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Cryptocurrencies, Blockchain Technologies andInternational SanctionsFrancesco Giumelli, University of GroningenMalcolm Campbell-Verduyn, University of Toronto
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION71.14 INDIVIDUALS AND INSTITUTIONS UNDER
INTERNATIONAL LAWRoom: WSCC, 205
Co-sponsored by Division 21: Conflict ProcessesDisc: Geoffrey P.R. Wallace, University of Washington
Julia C. Morse, University of California, Santa Barbara
Papers: Threats and Commitments: International CriminalTribunals and Peace NegotiationsGenevieve Bates, University of British ColumbiaThe Hidden Impacts of the ICC: An Assessment UsingGoogle DataGeoff Dancy, Tulane UniversityShadowland Strategy: How Non-State Armed ActorsFight for their RightsHyeran Jo, Texas A&M UniversityThe Politics of Punishment: Why Non-Democracies Jointhe ICCLeslie Johns, University of California, Los AngelesFrancesca Parente, Christopher Newport University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY71.15 ALLIANCES, PARTNERSHIPS, AND
TECHNOLOGYRoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Cecilia Idika-Kalu, University of Massachusetts LowellPapers: Structured Relations: Communications & Infrastructure
in International PoliticsStuart Pike, UCLAHow Friends Fight: Alliance Institutions, Technology,and US-UK Strategy in WWIICasey Mahoney, University of PennsylvaniaDelivering the Bomb: Enabling, Ambiguity, and theNon-proliferation OrderDebak Das, Stanford University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY71.16 INTERNATIONAL GOVERNANCE CHALLENGES
OF EMERGING TECHNOLOGIESRoom: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford UniversityDisc: Erik Gartzke, UCSD
Jacquelyn Schneider, Stanford University
Papers: Trust, Confidence, and the Adoption of General PurposeTechnologiesMichael Horowitz, University of PennsylvaniaDiffusion of Military Cybercapacity: The Theory ofAlliance ComplementarityNadiya Kostyuk, Georgia Institute of TechnologyStrategic Dynamics of Technology Races With Safety-Performance TradeoffsEoghan Stafford, University of OxfordRobert F. Trager, UCLAAllan Dafoe, University of OxfordIdentifying Wolves Among Sheep: How Dual UseTechnology Shapes CooperationTristan A. Volpe, Naval Postgraduate SchoolJane Eugenia Vaynman, Temple University
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DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY71.17 ASSESSING THE CHINESE-AMERICAN
RIVALRYRoom: WSCC, 615Chair: Zoltan Feher, The Fletcher School of Law and
Diplomacy, Tufts UniversityIonut Popescu, Texas State University, San Marcos
Papers: The Sources of American Conduct: US Strategy, ChinaĀsRise & International OrderZoltan Feher, The Fletcher School of Law andDiplomacy, Tufts UniversityUS, China, and Offensive Realism: Grand Strategy forGreat Power CompetitionIonut Popescu, Texas State University, San Marcos
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES71.18 REGIME DURABILITY IN THE FACE OF COUPSRoom: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Michael Kenwick, Rutgers UniversityDisc: Jun Koga Sudduth, University of Strathclyde
Papers: Domestic Security Capacity and Regime Resilience inAutocracies and DemocraciesOre Koren, Indiana University BloomingtonMissteps and Mutinies: A New Coup-Proofing ParadoxChristopher Michael Faulkner, United States NavalWar CollegeJaclyn m Johnson, University of KentuckyJonathan M. Powell, University of Central FloridaRebecca Eileen SchielDefection, Campaign Strategy and DemocratizationMarianne Dahl, PRIO / NTNUMauricio Alejandro Rivera CelestinoHåvard Mokleiv Nygård, The Norwegian Agency forDevelopment Cooperation (Norad)Buying Repressive CapacityRoya Izadi, Binghamton UniversityBrendan Skip Mark, University of Rhode Island
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES71.19 SOCIETY AND INSTITUTIONS AFTER
CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C2
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International CollaborationChair: Shelley Liu, UC BerkeleyDisc: Shelley Liu, UC Berkeley
Connor Huff, Rice University
Papers: Conditions for Durable Power-Sharing AgreementsJaeseok Cho, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignReintegration of Former Combatants: One Man's Rebel,Another Man's PoliticianMarcela Ibanez, University of MannheimThe Military After Conflict: The Colombian ArmedForces After PeaceAndrew Ivey, University of California Riverside
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES71.20 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT ECONOMIES,
ORGANIZED CRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE ROUNDTABLE
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Laura Blume, University of Nevada Reno
Nicholas Barnes, University of st AndrewsPart: Deborah Yashar, Princeton University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Enrique Desmond Arias, Baruch College, CUNYChristine Cheng, King's College LondonSarah Zukerman Daly, Columbia UniversityAdrienne LeBas, American UniversityEduardo Moncada, Barnard College, ColumbiaUniversity
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES71.21 SPEECHES AND POSITION TAKING IN A
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVERoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Juan Pablo Micozzi, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de
MexicoDisc: Royce A. Carroll, University of Essex
Nils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Content Analysis of Non-Lawmaking Speeches:Targeting Constituencies in ChileEduardo Aleman, University of HoustonJuan Pablo Micozzi, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomode MexicoSebastian Vallejo Vera, University of HoustonDo Actions Speak Louder than Words? LegislativeBehavior in Speeches and VotesDanilo Buscatto Medeiros, Brazilian Center forAnalysis and PlanningMauricio Yoshida Izumi, Federal University ofEspírito SantoRightwing Populism and Affective Polarization inEuropean ParliamentsHanna Back, Lund UniversityRoyce A. Carroll, University of EssexEsther Mary L. Calvo, Lund UniversitySpeaking in Tongues: Linguistic StandardizationThrough Foreign Language UseNils Ringe, University of Wisconsin, MadisonYoshikuni Ono, Waseda UniversityAkitaka Matsuo, University of Essex
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS71.22 QUESTIONS OF EXECUTIVE POWER:
FOUNDATIONS, ASSUMPTIONS, ANDRHETORIC
Room: Sheraton, IssaquahChair: John A. Dearborn, Vanderbilt UniversityDisc: John A. Dearborn, Vanderbilt University
Bethany Bowra, Florida International University
Papers: Prisoners of Their PremisesGeorge C. Edwards, Texas A&M UniversityIn the Name of the PresidentBenjamin YoelHannah LowenkampAmnon Cavari, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)HerzliyaWhat Presidents Mean by Power: Nineteenth CenturyViewsRichard W. Waterman, University of KentuckySherelle Roberts Pierre, University of KentuckyThe Social Media Presidency: Donald Trump, Twitter,and Party DisciplineSamuel FontaineDaniel M Gomez, University of California SantaBarbara
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DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY71.23 ADVANCES IN LAW ENFORCEMENT POLICY
RESEARCHRoom: WSCC, 2AChair: Brian Daniel Libgober, Yale UniversityDisc: Zachary F. Peskowitz, Emory University
Papers: Breaking the Code: Can a New Penal Procedure AffectPublic Safety?Matis Cattaneo, University of MichiganCarlos Daniel Diaz GuimaraensRocio Titiunik, Princeton UniversityDo Elections Improve Police Performance? Evidencefrom Sheriff Term LimitsCameron DeHart, Stanford UniversityDaniel M Thompson, Stanford UniversityDo Residency Requirements Improve Police-CivilianRelations?Srinivas Parinandi, University of Colorado atBoulderJulia Payson, New York University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS71.24 POLITICS OF FEDERAL JUDICIAL SELECTIONRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: Christopher ShortellDisc: Christopher Shortell
Justin Wedeking, University of Kentucky
Papers: Continuity and Change in the Appointment of LowerFederal Court JudgesJoshua Boston, Bowling Green State UniversityPatrick Donald Rickert, Washington University in St.LouisJames F. Spriggs, Washington University, St. LouisNicholas Waterbury, Washington University in St.LouisDivision in Lower Court ConfirmationsAlicia Uribe-McGuire, University of Illinois atUrbana-ChampaignGone Nuclear: The Filibuster Rules Change and theJudicial Confirmation ProcessLogan Dancey, Wesleyan UniversityKjersten Nelson, North Dakota State UniversityEve M. Ringsmuth, Oklahoma State UniversityEmma Bari Solomon, Wesleyan UniversityParty Messaging and the Supreme Court NominationProcessAndrew R Stone, Harvard University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH71.25 GENDER, CRISIS AND POLITICAL POWER
(PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Aili Mari Tripp, University of Wisconsin, MadisonDisc: Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College
Rachel E. Brule, Boston University
Papers: Protests as Gendered Crises: Impacts on WomenĀsRepresentation and LeadershipJulieta Suarez-Cao, Pontificia Universidad Catolicade ChileCarmen Le Foulon, Centro de Estudios PúblicosCatherine Reyes-Housholder, Pontificia UniversidadCatólica de Chile
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Who Can Do What: Gender, Leadership and CrisisLouise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of MiamiMalliga Och, Idaho State UniversityFarida Jalalzai, Virginia TechBacklash and Crisis: When Pushback is Not AboutPolicyAnna Calasanti, University of New Mexico
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS71.26 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND AMERICAN
POLITICAL DEVELOPMENTRoom: Sheraton, Willow AChair: Christopher T. Stout, Oregon State UniversityDisc: Steven White, Syracuse University
Papers: National ElitesĀOpinions on Chinese Immigrants Duringthe 19th Century (Pre-Recorded)Dukhong Kim, Florida Atlantic UniversityPatronage Protection: Violence and Migration inDepression-Era TexasLeonardo R. Arriola, University of California,BerkeleyJuan Campos, University of California, BerkeleyJuve J. Cortes, Independent ScholarLand in the Age of Emancipation ĉ Imagining BlackFreedom During ReconstructionRutger Ceballos, University of Washington, SeattleConfronting Racial Terror: Past Injustice andContemporary Political AttitudesElsa Voytas, Princeton UniversityChaya Crowder, Princeton UniversityThe Contentious Formation of Personal Liberty Lawsand the Underground RailroadAllan Colbern, Arizona State University
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES71.27 INTEREST GROUPS, PARTIES, AND THE
POLICIES FOR WHICH THEY ADVOCATERoom: WSCC, 617Chair: Jesse M. Crosson, Trinity UniversityDisc: Adam Chamberlain, Coastal Carolina University
Kevin Reuning, Miami University
Papers: Partisan Convergence around Criminal Justice PolicyNina M. Moore, Colgate UniversityParty Factions in the House: Reauthorization of theExport-Import BankChris Den Hartog, California Polytechnic StateUniversity, San Luis ObispoTimothy P. Nokken, Texas Tech UniversityThe Overlooked but Incredibly Important Party PlatformScott Cooley, University of Chicago
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR71.28 HOW CAMPAIGNS SHAPE VOTERSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Matthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, IdahoDisc: Matthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, Idaho
Papers: Did ĄNever TrumpďAdvertising Generate ElectoralSupport for Biden?Amanda Wintersieck, Virginia CommonwealthUniversityAlex Keena, Virginia Commonwealth University
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Learning During the 2020 US Election CampaignEric Guntermann, University of California, BerkeleyGabriel Lenz, UC BerkeleyReferendum Campaigns and Values (Pre-Recorded)Garret Binding, University of ZürichLucas Leemann, University of ZurichThomas Christian WilliAttitude Activation and the Study of Political CampaignsWilliam Marble, Stanford UniversityJustin Grimmer, Stanford UniversityCole Tanigawa-Lau
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR71.29 PARTY POLARIZATION IN CANADA AND THE
UNITED STATESRoom: Sheraton, Willow BChair: Michael J. Ensley, Kent State UniversityPapers: Affective Polarization in the Canadian Party System
1965-2019 (Pre-Recorded)Richard Johnston, University of British ColumbiaCampaign Comparative Advantage and PartisanPolarizationLucy M. Goodhart, Brandeis UniversityPolarized Priorities? Issue Salience in the ContemporaryAmerican ElectorateChristopher Hare, University of California, DavisRobert N. Lupton, University of ConnecticutQuantifying Polarization at Sub-State Levels Using NewGeospatial MethodsUdi Sommer, Tel Aviv UniversityOr Rappel-Kroyzer, Tel Aviv University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION71.30 POLITICAL OPINION DURING A PANDEMICRoom: WSCC, 611Chair: Alessandro Del Ponte, Yale UniversityPapers: Benchmarks or Bull?: How Voters Evaluate the Severity
of COVID-19.David Karol, University of MarylandAlexander George Theodoridis, University ofMassachusetts AmherstExperimental Evidence that Info on COVID19-InducedInequalities Inspires ConcernJonathan Jan Benjamin Mijs, Erasmus UniversityRotterdamWillem de Koster, Erasmus University RotterdamJeroen van der Waal, Erasmus University RotterdamPolarized Pandemic Politics: How Endorsements &Attributes Affect VaccinationCarlos Algara, Claremont Graduate UniversityDaniel J. Simmons, Saint Michael's CollegeOne-sided Social Contract? Privacy Concerns inPandemic ControlKaiping Zhang, Tsinghua UniversityTianguang Meng, Tsinghua UniversitySupport for Liberal Democracy in Times of Crisis:Evidence from COVID-19Kevin Arceneaux, Sciences PoBert Bakker, University of AmsterdamSara B Hobolt, London School of EconomicsCatherine E. De Vries, Bocconi University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION71.31 ELITE COMMUNICATION: CONGRESS,
CANDIDATES, AND EXPERTSRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A
DailySchedule
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Chair: Kyong L. Mazzaro, The Graduate Center, CUNYDisc: Sarah A. Oates, University of Maryland
Papers: Online Candidate Incivility in the 2020 CongressionalElectionsMichael Heseltine, American UniversityTelevision News Media and Public Opinion TowardBlack Female Political Elites (Pre-Recorded)Sydney Carr, University of Michigan, Ann ArborCoverage of Congress in an Era of Declining LocalNewsC. Daniel Myers, University of MinnesotaBiased Perceptions of Women Experts in Political MediaAdam L Ozer, Electoral Psychology Observatory,London School of Economics
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION71.32 NEWS BIAS, REPRESENTATION AND
ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: Sheraton, AspenDisc: Matthew Jenkins, Gyeongsang National University
Papers: Exploring the Relationship Between Trust in News andImpartial JournalismCamila Mont'Alverne, University of OxfordSumitra Badrinathan, University of OxfordAmy Ross Arguedas, Reuters Institute for the Studyof JournalismBenjamin Toff, University of OxfordRichard Fletcher, University of OxfordRasmus Kleis Nielsen, University of OxfordWhat the US Newspaper Crisis Means for PublicAccountabilityNikki Usher, University of Illinois Urbana-ChampaignSanghoon Kim-Leffingwell, University of Illinois atUrbana-ChampaignTrump vs. Fox News: The Effects of Attacking andDefending Partisan MediaAllison M.N. Archer, University of HoustonLinguistic Media and Latino Democratic Attitudes:An Online Survey ExperimentWalter Wilson, University of Texas, San AntonioBryan Gervais, University of Texas at San AntonioRobert R. Preuhs, Metropolitan State University ofDenverRoberto Carlos, University of Georgia
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS71.33 NATURAL DISASTERS AND THE POLITICS OF
INFRASTRUCTURERoom: WSCC, 618Chair: Alicia Dailey Cooperman, Texas A&M UniversityDisc: Parrish Bergquist, Georgetown University
Papers: Funding Hazard Protection: How Time Frames AffectVoter SupportTim Marple, University of California, BerkeleyAlison E. Post, University of California, BerkeleyLocal News and the Electoral Incentive to Invest inInfrastructureKaty Hansen, Duke UniversityMegan Mullin, Duke University
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Risk salience and intertemporal welfare trade-offs inclimate policymakingAlexander Laurence Sahn, Princeton UniversityMatto Mildenberger, University of California SantaBarbaraChris Miljanich, University of California, SantaBarbaraMark N. Lubell, University of California, DavisThe Causal Effect of Planned Power Outages onPolitical Attitudes (Pre-Recorded)Matto Mildenberger, University of California SantaBarbaraLeah Stokes, UCSBSam Trachtman, University of California, BerkeleyMark N. Lubell, University of California, Davis
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY71.34 DEMOCRATIZATION AND REGIME CHANGERoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Chair: Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los AngelesDisc: Adriane Fresh, Duke University
Papers: Causal Sequences in Long-Term DemocraticDevelopment and DeclineMichael J. Coppedge, University of Notre DameAmanda B. Edgell, University of Alabama,TuscaloosaCarl Henrik Knutsen, Department of PoliticalScience, University of OsloStaffan I. Lindberg, V-Dem Institute, University ofGothenburgDemocracy DoesnĀt Happen Over Night: RegimeChange in Stages and Economic GrowthVanessa Alexandra BoeseMarkus Eberhardt, University of NottinghamThe Future of the Past: Protestant Missions PersistentImpact on DemocracyRobert D. Woodberry, Baylor UniversityTrust Traditional Authority Amid Fear &Democratization: Evidence from SomaliaAnup Phayal, University of North CarolinaWilmingtonPrabin Khadka, University of Essex
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY71.35 TRANSITIONAL JUSTICE IN COMPARATIVE
AND HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Michael Bernhard, University of FloridaDisc: Milena Ang Collan Granillo, UT - San Antonio
David Backer, University of Maryland, College Park
Papers: Denazification Trials and Democratic Attitudes in Post-War GermanyGiovanni Capoccia, University of OxfordGrigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton UniversityThe Fate of Former Authoritarian Elites in TransitionalJustice ProgramsMonika Nalepa, University of ChicagoMoksha Sharma, University of ChicagoCulpability and Prosecution in ArgentinaĀs HumanRights TrialsPearce Edwards, Emory UniversityJennifer Gandhi, Emory UniversityDon S Grasse
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Do TJ Policies Backlash? Evidence from Street NameChanges in SpainLaia Balcells, Georgetown UniversityFrancisco Villamil, Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS71.36 LEGAL PLURALISMRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: Kristen Renwick Monroe, University of California,
IrvinePapers: Get the Word Out: Monitoring Human Rights Reduces
AbuseJose Kaire, Arizona State UniversityLegal Rhetoric, Human Rights, and the UniversalPeriodic ReviewKyle Rapp, University of Southern CaliforniaLocal Human Rights Monitoring in a Changing HumanRights ContextRoya Talibova, University of MichiganChristopher J. Fariss, University of Michigan
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY & POLITICS71.37 MOVEMENT AND MOBILIZINGRoom: WSCC, 608
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
Chair: Charles W. Gossett, California State University,Sacramento
Papers: Character Development in State Same-Sex MarriageCasesEdward F. Kammerer, Idaho State UniversityQueering the Movement: How LGBTQIA+ Folk ShapePolitical Movements in the USMelanie Marie Bowers, Rutgers University, CamdenComing Out of the Closet; Coming Out asEnvironmentalists (Pre-Recorded)Jeff L Feng, UC Santa Barbara
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY71.38 PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF AND GOVERNMENT
RESPONSES TO HEALTH CRISESRoom: WSCC, 620Chair: Mark Schlesinger, Yale UniversityDisc: Andrea Louise Campbell, Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
Papers: Awareness of COVID-19 at the Local Level: PoliticalCauses and ConsequencesJake Haselswerdt, University of MissouriSarah E. Gollust, University of MinnesotaHealth Policy, Transfers, and Political Participation inDeveloping DemocraciesGregory Schober, University of Texas at El PasoTaeko Hiroi, The University of Texas at El PasoTesting Negative: The Non-Consequences of COVID-19on Mass Political AttitudesJack Blumenau, UCLTimothy Hicks, University College LondonScott Matthews, Memorial UniversityTom O'Grady, University College LondonAlan M. Jacobs, University of British Columbia
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP71.39 CONTEMPLATING THE OPENNESS AND
CLOSURE OF CITIZENSHIP AND BORDERS IRoom: Sheraton, BallardChair: Guillaume Bogiaris, University of West Alabama
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Disc: Ayelet Shachar, University of Toronto
Papers: Immigrant Integration After Diversity: The Elements ofPolitical DemographyAdrian Favell, University of LeedsThe Unchartered Territories and Untested Assumptionsof MulticulturalismSerdar Kaya, Simon Fraser UniversityCitizenship, Equality, and Ethnocultural Bias:An Analysis of the German CaseClaus HofhanselBorder Myths, Security Myths: Contemporary Powerand Stateless Outlaws (Pre-Recorded)Kathleen R. Arnold, DePaul University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP71.40 PRIVILEGING MIGRANTS' VOICESRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: Fanny Lauby, William Paterson UniversityDisc: Fanny Lauby, William Paterson University
Papers: "It's About the Economy, Stupid. Hearing from Migrantsin Transit Countries."Natalie Chwalisz, American UniversityHow Hard-Work Narratives Shape Immigrants' AttitudesTowards Racial Inequality (Pre-Recorded)Masha T Krupenkin, Boston CollegeWhat Refugees Want: A New Cross-National Dataset onRefugee Rights (Pre-Recorded)Yu Jin Woo, Waseda UniversityMasaaki Higashijima, Tohoku University
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS71.41 PROBING IDENTITY AND POLITICAL
COMMUNITY ACROSS AFRICARoom: WSCC, 303
Co-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
Chair: Kristin McKie, Saint Lawrence UniversityDisc: Kristin McKie, Saint Lawrence University
Kristen A. Harkness, University of St. Andrews
Papers: Electoral Turnover and Local Factional Rivalry inSenegalMarie Gagne, Concordia UniversityUndermining National Identity in BotswanaDominika Koter, Colgate UniversityTerritoriality and Its Implications for the EthiopianPolitical CommunitySolomon M Gofie, Addis Ababa UniversityTrust and the "Invention of Tradition:" Evidence fromGuinea and SenegalLindsey Pruett, Cornell University
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS71.42 MENA DIASPORAS, AUTHORITARIANISM AND
ACTIVISM IN EXILE (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded Presentations
Co-sponsored by Division 52: Migration & CitizenshipChair: Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of GlasgowDisc: Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of Glasgow
DailySchedule
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Online Mobilization and Repression in EgyptElizabeth R. Nugent, Yale UniversityAlexandra Arons Siegel, University of ColoardoBoulderIslamist Activism in ExileIoana Emy Matesan, Wesleyan UniversityDiaspora Mobilization for Transitional Justice in theAbsence of TransitionEric Wiebelhaus-Brahm, University of Arkansas,Little RockEspen Stokke, University of BergenCompetitive Authoritarian Regimes and TransnationalPolitics of Nation-BrandingBahar Baser, Durham UniversityGözde Böcü, University of Toronto
Related Groups72.1 AMERICAN PUBLIC PHILOSOPHY INSTITUTE:
CONSTITUTIONAL INTERPRETATION ANDORIGINALISM TODAY
Room: WSCC, 2BChair: Christopher Wolfe, University of Dallas
Daniel BurnsPart: Justin B. Dyer, University of Missouri, Columbia
James R. Stoner, Louisiana State UniversityCarson L. Holloway, University of Nebraska, OmahaChristopher Wolfe, University of Dallas
72.3 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: CIVIL RELIGION,INTERNATIONAL PLURALISM, ANDSTATESMANSHIP
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: Greg Russell, University of OklahomaDisc: David Clinton, Baylor University
Papers: Montesquieu's Right of Nations (Pre-Recorded)Christopher Daniel Ruiz, Baylor UniversityWar and Civil Religion in St. Augustine's De CivitateDei (Pre-Recorded)Michael Roland Gonzalez, Baylor UniversityThe Lessons of Irony: Reinhold Niebuhr and thePhilosophy of HistoryDaniel G. Lang, Lynchburg CollegeReinhold Niebuhr and the Reconciliation of Justice andPowerReed M. Davis, Seattle Pacific University
Thursday, 8:00 AM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events73.1 AFRICA RDG PART 2Room: VirtualChair: Azeez O. Olaniyan, Federal University, Oye Ekiti
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George Meyiri Bob-Milliar, Kwame Nkrumah Universityof Science and TechnologyRawia Amer, University of Oxford
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 10:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES74.1 CONFLICT PROCESSES 1 VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Benjamin Thomas Jones, The University of MississippiDisc: Benjamin Thomas Jones, The University of Mississippi
Matthew Millard, Nazarbayev University
Papers: Abortion-Related Terrorism: A Cross National StudyJoseph Brown, University of Massachusetts BostonBureaucracy and Conflict RecurrenceAda Johnson-Kanu, University of California, MercedPeter Carey, University of California, MercedControlling the Military in the Shadow of ExternalThreatsHwalmin Jin, Texas A&M UniversityDoes Repression Undermine Opposition Demands?The Case of the Hong KongTetsuro Kobayashi, City University of Hong KongJaehyun Song, Kansai UniversityPolly ChanExpressing the Relationship Between DefenseCooperation Agreements and TerrorismPatrick Larue, Collin CollegeMore of a Threat Than Guns: Introducing the Genderand Rebel Governance DatasetTessa Devereaux Evans, CornellMultiparty Mediation Effectiveness in Civil WarsIsil Akbulut-Gok, Sacred Heart UniversityPolitical Ecology and Conflict in Greater Upper Nile,South SudanMatthew LeRiche, Ohio UniversityDo Ethics Matter? Documenting Discussions of Ethics inPublished ResearchStephanie Schwartz, University of SouthernCaliforniaJOHANNA RODEHAU-NOACK, LONDONSCHOOL OF ECONOMICSSarah Ashley Cueva, Columbia UniversityM.P. Broache, University of North Carolina atGreensboroMilitary Alliances and the Internationalisation of CivilWarChristopher Rickard, Mr
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AMTheme Panels75.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS MINI-CONFERENCE:
INDIGENOUS POLITICAL PARTICIPATIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Indigenous Studies NetworkDisc: Mneesha Gellman, Emerson College
Tessa Provins, University of Pittsburgh
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Native American Voting in the 2020 ElectionGabriel Sanchez, University of New MexicoRaymond Foxworth, First Nations DevelopmentInstituteVoting by Mail: A Comparison Between the Access ofRural White and Reservation Populations in ArizonaJean Reith Schroedel, Claremont GraduateUniversityJoseph John DietrichKara MazareasMelissa Ziegler Rogers, Claremont GraduateUniversityPolitics of Coalition Building: An Examination of theIndigenous and Black Movements in the U.S.Danielle Hiraldo, University of Arizona/NativeNations InstituteMiriam R. Jorgensen, University of ArizonaDiplomacy as Representation: Congress, Indian Nations,and Legislative SuccessKirsten M. Carlson, Wayne State UniversityNavigating Native Hawaiian Voices on the Thirty MeterTelescope (TMT)Leilani DeLudeNgoc Phan, Hawaii Pacific University
75.2 RESHAPING CAPITALIST DEMOCRACIESRoom: VirtualChair: Maria Federica Carugati, King's College LondonPart: Margaret Levi, Stanford University
Jenna Bednar, University of Michigan, Ann ArborRebecca M Henderson, Harvard Business SchoolNils Gilman, Berggruen InstituteNick Joseph Hanauer, Civic VenturesDarrick Hamilton, The New School
75.3 SEXUAL HARASSMENT AND ASSAULT DURINGFIELD RESEARCH
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
Chair: Stacey Leigh Hunt, Auburn UniversityPart: Rebecca D. Gill, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Virginia Sapiro, Boston UniversityLorraine Bayard de Volo, University of Colorado,BoulderRosalee A. Clawson, Purdue UniversityJanet E. Johnson, CUNY-Brooklyn CollegeCarol A. Mershon, University of VirginiaPaula D. McClain, Duke University
APSA Events76.1 APPLYING FOR A JOB AT A TEACHING-
ORIENTED INSTITUTIONRoom: VirtualChair: Terry Gilmour, Midland CollegePart: Amy Cabrera Rasmussen, California State University,
Long BeachMatthew B. Platt, Morehouse CollegeMaria Isabel Puerta, Valencia CollegeH. Howell Williams, Western Connecticut StateUniversity
76.2 ASSOCIATION LEADERS MEETINGRoom: WSCC, 20876.3 CAREER OPEN HOUSE ASK-ME-ANYTHING
SESSION: EXPECTATIONS AND EXPERIENCESNEWLY ON THE TENURE TRACK
Room: Virtual
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Chair: Mary Anne Mendoza, California State PolytechnicUniversity, PomonaBiko Koenig, Franklin & Marshall College
76.4 CAREER OPEN HOUSE ASK-ME-ANYTHINGSESSION: LANDING A POSTDOC
Room: VirtualChair: Kimberly Turner, Harvard University
Laura Garcia Montoya, Princeton University76.5 CAREER OPEN HOUSE ASK-ME-ANYTHING
SESSION: NAVIGATING THE JOB MARKET FORPOLITICAL SCIENCE PRACTITIONERS
Room: VirtualChair: Yazmin Argentina Garcia Trejo, U.S. Census Bureau
Benjamin Campbell, Aware76.6 CAREER OPEN HOUSE ASK-ME-ANYTHING
SESSION: RECENT EXPERIENCES ON THEACADEMIC JOB MARKET
Room: VirtualChair: Rachel Torres, James Madison University
Maneesh Arora, Wellesley College76.7 CAREER OPEN HOUSE ASK-ME-ANYTHING
SESSION: WORKING AT A COMMUNITYCOLLEGE
Room: VirtualChair: Rebecca J Lubbers, St. Clair County Community
CollegeJosue Alejandro Franco, Cuyamaca College
76.8 FACULTY RECRUITMENT AND RETENTION:BEST PRACTICES FOR SUCCESS
Room: VirtualChair: Kimberly Mealy, American Political Science AssociationPart: Antoine J. Banks, University of Maryland
Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College76.9 NAVIGATING CAREERS DURING AND AFTER
THE PANDEMICRoom: VirtualChair: Erica Townsend-Bell, Oklahoma State UniversityPart: Maricruz Ariana Osorio, University of California,
RiversideJeanette Morehouse Mendez, Oklahoma State UniversityDavia C. Downey, University of MemphisFarhana Loonat, Skagit Community College
76.10 PLENARY ADDRESS WITH REPRESENTATIVEROBIN KELLY: CONGRESSWOMAN ANDPOLITICAL SCIENTIST
Room: VirtualPart: Congresswoman Robin Kelly76.11 POLITICAL SCIENCE INSTRUCTION IN FOCUS:
LESSONS FROM VOLUME 16 OF THE JOURNALOF POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION
Room: VirtualChair: Joseph W. Roberts, Roger Williams UniversityDisc: Joseph W. Roberts, Roger Williams University
Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Papers: What Can I Do with This Class? Building Employment-Related Skills in InternationBidisha Biswas, Western Washington UniversityVirginia Haufler, University of MarylandImporting the Laboratory Model to the Social Sciences:Prospects for Improving MMegan Becker, University of Southern California
DailySchedule
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Issue Advocacy: A Semester-Long Experiential LearningProjectBrandon W. Lenoir, High Point UniversityEthics Through Earthquakes: Using UniversityAdministration as a Resource for SiJohn Michael Parrish, Loyola Marymount UniversityDevra Schwartz, LA Homeland Security andAdvisory Council
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY77.1 RACHEL Z. FRIEDMAN'S "PROBABLE JUSTICE:
RISK, INSURANCE, AND THE WELFARE STATE"Room: VirtualChair: Roni Hirsch, Harvard UniversityPart: Karen Orren, University of California, Los Angeles
Michael J. Sandel, Harvard UniversityEmily Nacol, University of TorontoTorben Iversen, Harvard UniversityBernardo Zacka, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyRachel Friedman, Tel Aviv University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY77.2 THEORIES OF SOVEREIGNTY: BODIN, HOBBES,
MAZZINI, AND TOCQUEVILLERoom: VirtualChair: Nura Alia Hossainzadeh, Stanford UniversityDisc: Christopher Meckstroth, University of Cambridge
Papers: The Many Moses's of Hobbes's Leviathan: Covenant,Sovereignty, and AuthoritySarah Greenberg, Cornell UniversityJean BodinĀs Pluralist Sovereignty?Catherine R. Power, Glendon College, YorkUniversityCreating Sovereignty: The Social Contract, Religion andPolitical FriendshipKaren Taliaferro, Arizona State UniversityMazzini on the Globalization of Democratic NationalismTheodore Christov, George Washington University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY77.3 AUTHOR-MEETS-CRITICS: BENJAMIN L.
MCKEAN, "DISORIENTING NEOLIBERALISM"Room: VirtualChair: Elisabeth H. Ellis, University of OtagoPart: Benjamin McKean, Ohio State University
Paul C. Apostolidis, London School of EconomicsErin Pineda, Smith CollegeEmma Stone Mackinnon, Cambridge UniversityJoseph Winters
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY77.4 POLITICAL TRUST AND TOLERANCERoom: VirtualChair: David Alexander Romney, Brigham Young UniversityDisc: Mackenzie Israel-Trummel, College of William & Mary
Papers: Perceived Autonomy and Political Trust Across Europe:Multi-level EvidenceVladislav KrivoshchekovOlga Gulevich, Higher School of EconomicsPolitical Monopoly and Support for AuthoritarianRegimesJacob Tucker, Princeton University
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Views of Government or Danger? Re-ExaminingIdeologies in the U.S. PublicJeremy Levy, Northwestern University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY77.5 PERSPECTIVES ON "THE POLITICS OF BAD
OPTIONS" BY WALTER, RAY & REDEKERRoom: VirtualChair: Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard UniversityPart: Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich
Nils Redeker, The Hertie SchoolBjörn Kristen Bremer, Max Planck Institute for theStudy of SocietiesMatthias Matthijs, Johns Hopkins UniversityPalma Polyak, Scuola Normale SuperioreChristina J. Schneider, University of California, SanDiego
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION77.6 PLURALISM MEETS PLURALISM:
ETHNOGRAPHY, DECOLONIZATION, ANDCIVIC ENGAGEMENT
Room: VirtualChair: James M. Quirk, American UniversityDisc: Rebecca McCumbers Flavin, Baylor University
Papers: Contextualizing Inequality with Ethnographic Interviews(Pre-Recorded)Jocelyn Sage Mitchell, Northwestern University inQatarDecolonizing the Comparative Politics Syllabus AfterU.S. ExceptionalismBilgesu Sumer, University of Massachusetts, AmherstPluralism in the Online ClassroomTavishi Bhasin, Kennesaw State UniversityCharity Butcher, Kennesaw State UniversityUnderstanding Centers & Institutes of CivicEngagement: A Qualitative ApproachMary A. McHugh, Merrimack CollegeElizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University, NewBrunswick
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES77.7 CIVIL SOCIETY AND SUBNATIONAL
RESPONSES TO THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC INTHE AMERICAS
Room: VirtualChair: Carew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, BoulderDisc: Jennifer Cyr, Universidad Torcuato di Tella
Papers: Explaining Subnational Responses to COVID-19 inBrazil, Mexico, and the U.S.Cyril BennounaAgustina Giraudy, American UniversityEduardo Moncada, Barnard College, ColumbiaUniversityRichard O. Snyder, Brown UniversityPaul Franz Testa, Brown UniversityEva Rios, Brown UniversityProtest, Political Crisis, and the Cost of Low LegitimacyDuring a PandemicV. Ximena Velasco Guachalla, University of ColoradoBoulderCalla Hummel, University of MiamiJami Nelson-Nunez, The University of New MexicoCarew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, Boulder
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
A Crisis Within a Crisis: Social Movements, Extremismand the Pandemic in BrazilRebecca Neaera Abers, University of BrasiliaMarisa Von Bulow, University of BrasiliaExplaining Social Protection in Times of Crisis: LatinAmerica Since COVIDMerike Blofield, German Institute of Global andArea StudiesJennifer Pribble, University of Richmond
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES77.8 THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF SOCIAL
PROTECTION IN AFRICARoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 53: African PoliticsChair: Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State UniversityDisc: Katharine A. Baldwin, Yale University
Martha Wilfahrt, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Changes of Government and Cash Transfer Expansion inEast and Southern AfricaHangala Siachiwena, University of Cape TownPathways to Pension Reform in Africa: Trade Unionsand Historical LegaciesYonatan L. Morse, University of ConnecticutShaping Citizen-State Relations Through Cash TransferProgram DesignAlesha Porisky, Northern Illinois UniversityPartisanship and Public Opinion on Cash Transfers:Survey Evidence from KenyaKen Ochieng' Opalo, Georgetown University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES77.9 NATIONAL IDENTITY, NATION-BUILDING, AND
NATIONALISM IN POST-COMMUNISTSETTINGS
Room: VirtualChair: Scott G. Feinstein, Iowa State UniversityDisc: Sener Akturk, Koç University
Matthew J Reichert, Harvard University
Papers: The Role of National Intelligentsias in Nation-Building:A Nested AnalysisMatthew J Reichert, Harvard UniversityāBut THIS Is Our Ukrainian Church!': Identity andReligious Belonging in UkraineOxana Shevel, Tufts UniversityEU Influence and Nationalist Voting: Evidence fromCentral and Eastern EuropeRoman Hlatky, University of Texas at AustinWhat Authorities Say, What People Hear: Memory inRussiaGeorge Soroka, Harvard UniversityFélix Krawatzek, Centre for East European andInternational Studies (ZOiS)Public Support for International Criminal Tribunals:The Case of ICTYPëllumb Kelmendi, Auburn University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY77.10 THE POLITICS OF POLITICALLY CONNECTED
FIRMSRoom: VirtualChair: Raphael Cunha, Florida State University
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Disc: Seungjun Kim, University of California, Merced
Papers: Politically Connected OwnershipTimm Betz, Technical University of MunichAmy Pond, Technical University of MunichWhy Trade and FDI Should Be Studied TogetherIn Song Kim, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologySteven Liao, University of California, RiversideSayumi Miyano, Princeton UniversityLobbying in the European Union: A New Dataset at theFirm Level (Pre-Recorded)Leonardo Baccini, McGill UniversityAndreas Duer, University of SalzburgEXIM Bank, Firms, and CongressJonas Bunte, Vienna University of Economics andBusiness
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION77.11 GLOBAL GOVERNANCE AND DEVELOPMENTRoom: VirtualChair: Daniel L. Nielson, University of Texas at AustinDisc: Daniel L. Nielson, University of Texas at Austin
Ranjit Lall, London School of Economics
Papers: Rewarding WomenĀs Rights in DictatorshipsSarah S. Bush, Yale UniversityDaniela Donno, University of CyprusPar Zetterberg, Uppsala UniversityUN Statebuilding in Authoritarian States: Governanceand Bureaucratic InnovationYolande Bouka, George Washington UniversityTravis B. Curtice, Dartmouth CollegeSusanna Campbell, American UniversityBureaucracy and Treaty Compliance: Evidence from anOECD AgreementShannon Carcelli, University of Maryland, CollegeParkFrom Discourse to Practice? Evidence from the OECDDACSimone Dietrich, University of GenevaAlice Iannantuoni, University of GenevaBernhard Reinsberg, University of Cambridge
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY77.12 INTERNATIONAL ORDERS IN EAST ASIARoom: VirtualDisc: Aaron L. Friedberg
Oriana Skylar Mastro, Stanford University
Papers: Hierarchy, Cultural Dissemination, and Conflict:Modeling the Tributary OrderHaoming Xiong, Ohio State UniversityEmotional Contagion and Hostility: National Humiliationon Chinese Social MediaMichael Masterson, Missouri State University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES77.13 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT ECONOMIES,
ORGANIZED CRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE: CRIMINAL ANDEXTRA-LEGAL GOVERNANCE
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Danielle F. Jung, Emory UniversityPart: Juan Albarracin Dierolf, Universidad Icesi
Jose Miguel Cruz, Florida International UniversityLynette H. Ong, University of Toronto
DailySchedule
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Niloufer Siddiqui, SUNY, University at AlbanyDavid Skarbek, Brown University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES77.14 INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO EUROPEAN
LEGISLATIVE PROCESSESRoom: VirtualChair: Christian Breunig, University of KonstanzDisc: Resul Umit, University of Oslo
Jens Wäckerle, University of Cologne
Papers: Legislator Dissent and Electoral OutcomesResul Umit, University of OsloPhilip Cowley, University of NottinghamMeasuring LegislatorĀs Ideological Position UsingPairwise-ComparisonsChristian Breunig, University of KonstanzBenjamin GuinaudeauSimon RothWho Sits Where? The Parliamentary Power Index andCommittee MembershipJens Wäckerle, University of CologneDanielle Pullan, University of Cologne / Max PlankInstitute for the Study of SocietiesBruno de Paula Castanho Silva, University ofCologneOligarchs and Legislative Politics in Post-Soviet UkraineFrank C. Thames, Texas Tech UniversityStephen Bloom, Southern Illinois University,CarbondaleDiana Butsko
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH77.15 GENDER AND DECISION-MAKINGRoom: VirtualChair: Jennifer Wolak, Michigan State UniversityDisc: Jennifer Wolak, Michigan State University
Karin Liebhart, University of Vienna
Papers: Cases but no Controversies: Public Response to JudgesUnrobedElizabeth Lane, Louisiana State UniversityJessica Schoenherr, University of South CarolinaJamil Shatema Scott, Georgetown UniversityCOVID-19 & Protective Behaviors: The Role of Fear,Partisanship, and GenderKristyn L. Karl, Stevens Institute of TechnologyCovid-19: The Place for Women in Pandemic Responseand Decision-Making in the EUAntonella Zarra, Hamburg UniversityMatilde Ceron, University of MilanGender Pay Gap in the Bureaucracy: Evidence fromMassachusetts State EmployeesKyuwon Lee, New York UniversityElisa Maria Wirsching, New York UniversityHye Young You, New York University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS77.16 TOWARD PLURALISM IN REP/ELECTIONS
RESEARCH: BLACK WOMEN IN ELECTORALPOLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
Chair: Natasha Altema McNeely, University of Texas, RioGrande Valley
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Disc: Jennifer E. Cryer, University of Southern California
Papers: The Effect of Social Networks on Black WomenĀsPartisanship & Candidate SupportChryl Laird, University of MarylandJulian Wamble, George Washington UniversityDiscourse Analysis on Black Women Mayors and TheirUse of Experiential RhetoricAndrene Wright, Northwestern UniversityHow the Punishment of Black Women Affects TheirPolitical ParticipationSally Nuamah, Northwestern UniversityIrene Kwon, NorthwesternRallying Women: Social MovementĀs Role inMobilizing Black Women CandidatesMeghan E. Wilson, Michigan State UniversityChristopher T. Stout, Oregon State UniversityA Case Study in Political Ambition: Stacey Abrams andthe Heavy Lifter TheoryJatia Wrighten, Virginia Commonwealth University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION77.17 THE CENTRALITY OF RACE IN PUBLIC
OPINIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Christine Marie Slaughter, University of California Los
AngelesDisc: Tabitha Bonilla, Northwestern University
Lucas de Abreu maia, University of California, SanDiego
Papers: Partisan Identity Salience and Racial ResentmentEmily Anne West, University of PittsburghĄThe Caucasian Persuasionď: The Effect of CandidateSkin Tone on White AttitudesNicole Yadon, Ohio State UniversityCollege Education and Changing Party AffiliationDuring the Obama YearsAlexander Tolkin, University of PennsylvaniaDefund the Police: Race, Political Trust, IdeologyNurgul R. Aitalieva, Purdue University Fort WayneLauren Howard Harding, Tennessee TechnologicalUniversity
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION77.18 POPULIST POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Dominik Andrzej Stecula, Colorado State UniversityDisc: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Papers: Inviting the Populists to the Party: Populist Appeals inPresidential PrimariesZachary Scott, Wake Forest UniversityExploring Populist Communication & PerformancesOnline: A Multi-Method ApproachMichael Habegger, University of DelawareTobias Lemke, University of DelawareRadical Right-Wing Populist Digital Politics in Portugal,Spain, and BrazilAfonso Biscaia, Instituto de Ciências Sociais -Universidade de Lisboa
Thursday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Visual Populism: A Comparative Analysis of 28CountriesĀParty Facebook PagesXénia Farkas, Centre for Social Sciences, HungarianAcedemy of SciencesMarton Bene, Centre for Social Sciences, HungarianAcademy of ScienceUta Russmann, FHWien University of AppliedSciences of WKWAnastasia Veneti, Bournemouth University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS77.19 INFLUENCE OF DISASTER ON PUBLIC POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Thomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State UniversityDisc: Louise K. Comfort
Papers: The Effects of FEMA Buyouts on Political BehaviorIngmar Sturm, University of California, SantaBarbaraAssessing Factors That Impact Community DisasterPreparedness and CommunicationElise Pizzi, University of IowaKylah Hedding, University of IowaKajsa E. Dalrymple, University of Wisconsin,MadisonPerceived Threat of Extreme Weather and InternalMigration in the U.S.Ted Hsuan Yun Chen, University of HelsinkiBoyoon Lee, Pennsylvania State UniversityClimate Events and the Role of Adaptive Capacity in(Im)MobilityVally Koubi, ETH Zurich
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY77.20 POLITICAL ATTITUDES OF BUREAUCRATS
AND REGIME TRANSITIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Joshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityDisc: Kohei Suzuki, Leiden University
Papers: The Fate of Post-Authoritarian Security Forces andDemocratic ConsolidationMonika Nalepa, University of ChicagoDeterminants of Bureaucratic Support for Democracy inDeveloping CountriesJan-Hinrik Meyer-Sahling, University of NottinghamChristian Schuster, University College LondonKim Sass Mikkelsen, Department of Political Scienceand Government, Aarhus UniversitySubverting Public Sector Independence as a Threat toDemocracyBryn Rosenfeld, Cornell UniversityEvolution of Bureaucratic Political AttitudesBarbara Maria Piotrowska, King's College London
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY & POLITICS77.21 LGBTQ POLITICAL UNITY AND DIVISIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
Chair: Quinn Albaugh, University of TorontoDisc: Phillip M Ayoub, Occidental College
Michael J. Donnelly, University of Toronto
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Papers: What Causes LGBTQ Linked Fate?Julie Moreau, University of TorontoMichael J. Donnelly, University of TorontoQuinn Albaugh, University of TorontoLiberation, Rights, and Freedom: LGBT CollectiveIdentities and PartisanshipAndrew Thomas Proctor, Wake Forest UniversityĄThe Not-So Silent BďZein Murib, Fordham University-Lincoln Center
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH77.22 EXPERIMENTS IN SOUTH ASIAN POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Sarah Khan, Yale UniversityDisc: Sarah Khan, Yale University
Mashail Aman Malik, Harvard University
Papers: An Experiment Testing How Pakistani Women AreDeprived of Their InheritanceShaheen Naseer, Lahore School of EconomicsKlaus HeineChristoph Engel, Max Planck Institute on CollectiveGoodsEvidence of Police Discrimination from a ConjointAnalysis of Police OfficersMargaret Boittin, Stanford UniversityRachel Fisher, UC BerkeleyCecilia Hyunjung Mo, UC BerkeleyTraining Effective AltruismShaheen Naseer, Lahore School of EconomicsSultan Mehmood, University of Paris-Dauphine
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP77.23 IMMIGRANT DETENTION AND DEPORTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Laura Cleton, University of AntwerpDisc: Monica W Varsanyi, CUNY Graduate Center
Claudia Donoso, St. Mary's University
Papers: Arresting Movement: The Political Economy ofImmigration DetentionSabrina Diana Axster, Johns Hopkins UniversityEnvironmental Justice and Intersectionality in the Sitingof Detention CentersLeda Barnett, Our Lady of the Lake UniversityRenelinda Arana, Our Lady of the Lake UniversityThe Politics of Family Norms and Development inConstructing Deportable MinorsLaura Cleton, University of AntwerpWho Should Be Sent Home? Experimental Analysis ofAttitudes Toward DeportationBeth Elise Whitaker, University of North Carolina,CharlotteJohn Doces, Bucknell University
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY77.24 INEQUALITY AND THE POLITICS OF
CONSUMER DEBT AND DEBT RELIEFRoom: VirtualChair: Jamila D. Michener, Cornell UniversityDisc: Patricia Posey, University of Chicago
Jamila D. Michener, Cornell University
Papers: Predatory Resources: Race, Class, and the UnequalPolitical Effects of DebtMallory E. SoRelle, Duke University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 10:30 AM to 11:00 AM
Reducing Criminal Justice Debt Through Ability to PayLegislationDelphia Shanks, Hendrix CollegeDebtors, Debt Relief, and American PoliticalDevelopmentChloe Thurston, Northwestern UniversityEmily Zackin, Johns Hopkins UniversityCOVID-19 & the New Safety Net: Shifting PoliticalTerrain for Debt ReliefSerena Laws, Trinity College, Hartford CT
Related Groups78.1 ASSOCIATION FOR POLITICS AND THE LIFE
SCIENCES: EVOLUTIONARY APPROACHES TOPOLITICS
Room: VirtualChair: Aleksander Ksiazkiewicz, University of Illinois at
Urbana-ChampaignDisc: Claire Gothreau, Rutgers University
Papers: The Evolution of Politics: Our First Five Million YearsPeter Corning, Institute for the Study of ComplexSystemsVoluntary Costly Signaling in Religious Communities:a Political InterpretationMaciej Potz, University of LodzThe PRC's Rise and the Life SciencesBradley A. ThayerWhat Exactly is Risky About Germ-Line GeneticEngineering?Nicholas Geiser, Brown University
78.2 CIVIL SOCIETY, POLICY, AND POWER:PHILANTHROPY IN PERILOUS TIMES: HELPOR HINDRANCE?
Room: VirtualChair: Trix van Mierlo, Institute of Political ScienceDisc: Catherine E. Herrold, Syracuse University
Benjamin Marquez, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Gifts and Governance: Philanthropic Policy AdvocacyDuring COVID-19Summer Marion, University of MarylandAssessing the International Influence of PrivatePhilanthropy: The Case of OSFGuadalupe Correa-Cabrera, George MasonUniversityLucas Nunez, George Mason UniversityAgents of Pluralism: Nonprofit Organizations in an Ageof TurmoilLewis Faulk, American UniversityMirae KimElizabeth T. Boris, Urban InstituteDonors for Democracy? Philanthropy in AuthoritarianTimesKristin Goss, Duke University
78.3 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:POLICYMAKING AND RESPONSIVENESS INTAIWAN DURING COVID-19 PANDEMIC
Room: VirtualChair: Hans J. Stockton, University of Saint ThomasDisc: Ching-Hsing Wang, National Cheng Kung University
Sara A. Newland, Smith College
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Papers: Deciphering Resilience in Fighting COVID-19:An Analysis of TaiwanĀs GovernanceChia-Chien Chang, National Sun Yat-sen UniversityWei-Ting Yen, Franklin & Marshall CollegeLi-Yin Liu, University of DaytonState Capacity and Policy Tools in Crisis Response:AsiaĀs COVID-19 ExperienceWei-Ting Yen, Franklin & Marshall CollegeLi-Yin Liu, University of DaytonEunji Won, Northern Illinois UniversityFnu Testriono, Northern Illinois UniversityThe Politics of Borders Control During the COVID-19:EWen-Chin Wu, Academia SinicaHans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan UniversityGreg Chih-Hsin Sheen, New York University AbuDhabi
78.4 POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP: LESSONSLEARNED FROM THE 2020 US PRESIDENTIALELECTION FORECASTS
Room: VirtualChair: Mary Stegmaier, University of MissouriPart: Ruth Dassonneville, Universite de Montreal
Charles P. Tien, CUNY, Hunter College & TheGraduate CenterAndreas Erwin Murr, University of WarwickVeronique Jerome, University of Paris XI-Sud OrsayThomas Rietz
Thursday, 10:30 AM to 11:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES79.1 CONFLICT PROCESSES 2 VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Jared Abbott, Tulane UniversityDisc: Jared Abbott, Tulane University
Kristen Abatsis, University of Massachussetts, Amherst
Papers: Committed Sponsors: The Impact of Overt ExternalSupport to InsurgentsArthur Stein, Université de MontréalCurbing International Influence: Deglobalization in theContext of Civil WarBurak Demir, University of Tennessee, KnoxvilleDesigning Power-Sharing Settlements to Secure CitizensSupportEdward Morgan-Jones, University of KentLaura Sudulich, University Of EssexNeophytos Loizides, University of KentRaluca-Florica Popp, University of KentFeargal Cochrane, University of LancasterFake It till You Make It: Secessionist Diplomacy andExposition of SovereigntyR. Joseph Huddleston, Seton Hall UniversityPolitical Conflict and Diaspora InvestmentsLulu Onakpoya, APSAReverse Exodus: A Study of the Return Intentions ofConflict Displaced PersonsPeter Onah Thompson, University of North Carolinaat CharlotteSeeking Safety: Civilian Decision-Making DuringViolence in IndiaAidan Milliff, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Thursday, 10:30 AM to 11:00 AM
The Economy, the State and War: A Systemic Theory ofConflictJoseph J. St. Marie, University of SouthernMississippiPaul Burton, Mastech InfotrellisThe Social Dilemma? Counterinsurgent EthnicityEngineering & Wartime OutcomesDipin Kaur, Yale UniversityWhat Causes Power Transition Conflicts?Jingjing An, Claremont Graduate University
Thursday, 11:00 AM to 11:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES80.1 CONFLICT PROCESSES 3 VIRTUAL POSTER
ROOMRoom: VirtualChair: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State UniversityDisc: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Papers: Elaborating on Courses of Conflicts ĉ A New ConflictModelKatharina Storch, Fernuniversität HagenNegotiating WomenĀs RepresentationKristen Aanstoos, University of California, IrvinePreemptive Justice in the Fog of War: During-ConflictJustice and RecurrenceRachel Dawn Van Nostrand, University of ArizonaJessica Maves Braithwaite, University of ArizonaProxies, Plausible Deniability, and Escalation Risks inInternational ConflictScott Williamson, Bocconi UniversityMagnified Coercion: The Effect of Sanctions on NuclearStatesĀCrisis OutcomesYueyi Li, Duke University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY80.2 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Matthew P. Motta, Oklahoma State UniversityDisc: Matthew P. Motta, Oklahoma State University
Papers: The Information Environment: A Recipe or Remedy forAffective Polarisation?Haylee Kelsall, University of AmsterdamThe Role of Perceptions of Negative Externalities inElectoral AccountabilityViviana Baraybar HidalgoEmotion and Responses to Norm ViolatorsThomas M. Dolan, University of Central FloridaMediated Interparty Contact: Entertainment MediaĀsImpact on PartisanshipAlexandra C. Pauley, Georgia State UniversitySober Second Thought and Negativity BiasSeyoung Jung, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Thursday, 11:30 AM to 12:00 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY81.1 FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: Virtual
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Chair: Roger Stuart Berkowitz, Bard CollegeDisc: Stan Molchanov, Catholic University of America
John R. Pottenger, University of Alabama in Huntsville
Papers: A Rousseauian Critique of ĄRealist LiberalismďXinzhi Zhao, University of Wisconsin-MadisonAverroes and the Abandonment of EsotericismMichael C. Hawley, Duke UniversityRace, Capital, and the False Promise ofCosmopolitanismKailash Srinivasan, The Ohio State UniversityRights-Claiming and the Limits of Emancipatory Politicsfor Marginalised GroupsAndreja Zevnik, University of ManchesterAndrew Russell, University of LiverpoolRule of the People: A Republican Account ofDemocratic LegitimacyWenyang GaoThe Combatant/Non-Combatant Distinction and ItsImplications for RevolutionsEzekiel Vergara, Yale UniversityThe Concept of 'Tribalism' in the Work of Popper.An application to Populism?Marc Hooghe, University LeuvenWhat Democratic Citizens Do for LawJihyun Jeong, Duke UniversityRhetoric of Reconciliation: Historical Sources of aContemporary DiscoursePaul Londrigan
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 12:30 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS82.1 DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Veronica Michel-Luviano, John Jay College-CUNYDisc: Jessica Schoenherr, University of South Carolina
Amy L. Steigerwalt, Georgia State University
Papers: Constitutional Equality- Socioeconomic Rights in Post-Apartheid South AfricaYusuf Bulbulia, University of TorontoHear Ye! Hear Me! The Freshman Effect on OralArgument in the U.S. Supreme CourtTaraleigh Davis, University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeLegitimacy of the Court of Justice as aCountermajoritarian InstitutionHyeonho Hahm, Hanyang UniversityDavid Dominik Hilpert, University of MannheimPublic Reactions to Video Teleconferencing Technologyin U.S. Immigration CourtsDevon ThurmanCase Sensitive: Lawyers and the Making of LegalArguments in TanzaniaJessica HickleThe Appearance and the Success of Attorneys in FederalCourtNicholas Waterbury, Washington University in St.Louis
DailySchedule
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Incentivizing Injustice: 2008 Financial CrisisProsecutorial IndiscretionsSari Krieger Rivera, CUNY College of State IslandThe Political Supply and Demand of Federal LitigationAlbert Rivero, University of Virginia
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PMTheme Panels83.1 DEMOCRATIC AND REVOLUTIONARY
PEDAGOGYRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom AChair: Matthew Landauer, University of ChicagoDisc: Evelyn M. Behling, University of Notre Dame
Papers: Karl Marx on the Pedagogic Power of Trade UnionFailureDimitrios Ioannis Halikias, Harvard UniversitySocratic Remnant or Creative Democracy: IrvingBabbittĀs Critique of John DeweyLuke Foster, University of ChicagoThe Education of Charisma in Max WeberSoren Dudley, Harvard University
83.2 LOCAL POLITICS AT THE FOREFRONT OFAMERICA'S FIGHT FOR RACIAL EQUALITY
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban Politics
Chair: Amber Wichowsky, Marquette UniversityDisc: Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University
Papers: Criminal Justice, Inequality, and Voter BehaviorJustin de Benedictis-Kessner, Harvard UniversityJohn M. Sides, Vanderbilt UniversityChristopher Warshaw, George Washington UniversityGrassroots Political Organizations in American PoliticalDevelopmentGwen Prowse, Yale UniversityLocal Government: Social Accountability and āBlackLives MatterRosa Castillo Krewson, Virginia CommonwealthUniversityLorita DanielsShared Space, Social Capital and Voter Turnout: BlockParties in PhiladelphiaMichael Jones-Correa, University of PennsylvaniaTanika Raychaudhuri, University of Houston
APSA Events84.1 APSA ANNUAL ALL-MEMBER MEETINGRoom: Virtual84.2 BYSTANDER INTERVENTION TRAINING IIRoom: VirtualChair: Kimberly Mealy, American Political Science AssociationPart: Paige Sechrest, University of WashingtonDivision PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY85.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY:
PLURALIZING A GLOBAL FIELD OF INQUIRYVIRTUAL MINI-CONFERENCE
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan ACo-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of PoliticalTheory
Chair: Gauri Wagle, Royal Holloway University of London
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DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY85.2 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JENNIE IKUTA'S
"CONTESTING CONFORMITY"Room: WSCC, 608Chair: Kevin Duong, University of VirginiaPart: Jennie Choi Ikuta, University of Missouri-Columbia
Shalini Satkunanandan, University of California, DavisInder Singh Marwah, McMaster UniversityAndrew Dilts, Loyola Marymount UniversityJames L. Wilson, University of Chicago
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY85.3 RHETORIC, POLITICS, AND HOBBESRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: Alison McQueen, Stanford UniversityDisc: Nancy J. Hirschmann, The University of Pennsylvania
Kinch Hoekstra, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Reunion, Collision, and Reflection: Hobbes, Rhetoricand Politics in ContextsTed H. Miller, University of Alabama, TuscaloosaHobbes and the Rhetoric of Theatricalization:Sovereignty and SpectacleTracy B. Strong, University of SouthhamptonFrancis Bacon, Thomas Hobbes and the Causes of theEnglish Civil WarMarkku Peltonen, University of HelsinkiThe Rhetoric Question in HobbesKeith Topper, University of California, Irvine
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY85.4 PERSONALITY AND PREDISPOSITIONSRoom: Sheraton, AspenChair: Matthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, IdahoDisc: Julie Wronski, University of Mississippi
Papers: Personality and Voter Attitudes Where Politics IsStructured Around ConflictNaama Rivlin-AngertAlon Yakter, Tel Aviv UniversityLior Sheffer, Tel Aviv UniversityPartisan Differences in Personality Trait Evaluation byMembers of CongressAdam Ramey, New York University Abu DhabiJonathan D. Klingler, University of MississippiGary E. Hollibaugh, University of PittsburghPredicting Support for Trump: An Integrative ModelIra Roseman, Rutgers University, CCASBen Rudolph, Rutgers UniversityDavid P. Redlawsk, University of DelawareKyle Mattes, Florida International UniversityMeasuring AuthoritarianismDaniel Stevens, University of ExeterJohn E. Transue, University of Illinois - Springfield
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY85.5 LEGACIES OF CONFLICT AND REPRESSIONRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Chair: Emily A. Sellars, Yale UniversityDisc: Florian Hollenbach, Copenhagen Business School
Papers: Developmental Legacy of Mass Repression: Evidencefrom the Khmer RougeDon S Grasse
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Group Survival Strategies: The Case of Sephardic Jewsin Interwar SalonicaElias Dinas, European University InstituteVasiliki Fouka, Stanford UniversityThe Effect of Government Repression on Civil Society:Evidence from CambodiaJeremy Springman, Duke UniversityEdmund J. Malesky, Duke UniversityErik M. Wibbels, Duke UniversityLucille E Right, Duke UniversityThe Imperial Army and the Russian Civil War: FromOppression to InsurrectionRoya Talibova, University of Michigan
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY85.6 ORGANIZING WITH AND AGAINST THE STATERoom: WSCC, 606Chair: David Alexander Bateman, Cornell UniversityDisc: Alexis Walker, Saint Martin's University
Papers: The Political Influence of the PoliceSteven White, Syracuse UniversityConsumer Rights When Wronged: Private Arbitration inthe U.S.Sarah Staszak, Princeton UniversityGreen Distractions? Personal Responsibility andEnvironmental Protection (Pre-Recorded)Matthew Lacombe, Barnard College, ColumbiaUniversityThe Resiliency of At-Will Employment: The PoliticalLimits of Worker RightsAlina Dunlap, Princeton UniversityPaul Frymer, Princeton University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY85.7 MEASURING POLITICAL PREFERENCESRoom: WSCC, 401Chair: Justin E. Esarey, Wake Forest UniversityDisc: Umberto Mignozzetti, Emory University
Papers: Modelling Acquiescence Bias in the Case of FullyUnbalanced Scales (Pre-Recorded)Philip James Swatton, Essex UniversityProgressives, Never-Trumpers, and Brexiteers: ApplyingcPCA to US-UK Survey DataSamuel Fuller, University of California, DavisTzu-Ping LiuThe Changing Population of DonorsJay Goodliffe, Brigham Young UniversityThe Core of the Party System (Pre-Recorded)Tasos Kalandrakis, University of RochesterZuheir Desai, IE University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY85.8 OBSERVATIONAL CAUSAL INFERENCERoom: WSCC, 603Disc: Dominik Duell, University of Innsbruck
Papers: Bayesian Rule Set: An Alternative to QualitativeComparative AnalysisAlbert Chiu, Stanford UniversityYiqing Xu, Stanford UniversityUtilizing Machine Learning for Valid Causal InferenceMarc Thomas Ratkovic, Princeton University
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DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION85.9 REFLECTIONS ON EMERGENCY ELEARNING
AND PANDEMIC PEDAGOGYRoom: WSCC, 611Chair: Michael P. A. Murphy, University of OttawaPart: Rebecca A. Glazier, University of Arkansas, Little Rock
Eric Loepp, University of Wisconsin, WhitewaterBrent Steele, University of UtahAyesha Ray, Kings CollegeJoseph W. Roberts, Roger Williams UniversityDelton T. Daigle, George Mason University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES85.10 MANAGING POWER AND CRISES IN XI
JINPING'S CHINA (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Maria Repnikova, Georgia State UniversityDisc: Maria Repnikova, Georgia State University
William Hurst, University of Cambridge
Papers: Faction, Anti-Corruption, and the Consolidation of XiJinpingĀs Power in ChinaRongbin Han, University of GeorgiaRobert Grafstein, University of GeorgiaJohn Wagner Givens, Kennesaw State UniversityWinning the ĄPeopleĀs WarďAgainst Covid: Propagandaand Political LeadershipAshley Esarey, University of AlbertaXiao Qiang, University of California-BerkeleyThe Communist PartyĀs Nervous System: AffectiveGovernance from Mao to XiChristian Phillip Sorace, Colorado CollegeBad Cop, Good Lawyer? Using Legal Advice Websitesto Challenge Police in ChinaSuzanne E. Scoggins, Clark UniversityJohn Wagner Givens, Kennesaw State University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES85.11 TWO APPROACHES TO AUTOCRACY: THE
CASE OF RUSSIA (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Timothy FryePart: Elise Giuliano, Columbia University
Jennifer Gandhi, Emory UniversityHenry E. Hale, George Washington UniversityGraeme RobertsonGulnaz Sharafutdinova, King's College London
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY85.12 EU POLITICS IN CONTEMPORARY EUROPERoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Jae-Jae Spoon, University of PittsburghDisc: Nicolò Fraccaroli, Brown University
Papers: Changing Voting Dimensions in the EuropeanParliament, 2004-2019Nicolò Fraccaroli, Brown UniversitySending a Signal: EP Vote Defection and NationalCoalitionsJeffrey Nonnemacher, University of PittsburghJae-Jae Spoon, University of PittsburghThe European (Dis)Union: Revisiting TheoryMila Temnyalova, George Washington University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Implementation Leeway: How Efficiency ConsiderationsInfluence Dublin Procedures (Pre-Recorded)Théoda Woeffray, University of Bern
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY85.13 EXCHANGE RATES AND GOVERNMENT
CREDIBILITY RECONSIDEREDRoom: WSCC, 607Chair: Mark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, MadisonDisc: Ryan M. Weldzius, Villanova University
Papers: A Third-Generation Framework: Reconsidering CBI andFixed Exchange RatesDavid H. Bearce, University of Colorado, BoulderAna Carolina Garriga, University of EssexThe Partisan Reversal: Exchange Rate Policy in Closedand Open EconomiesAndrew Rys, Johns Hopkins UniversityDavid A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins UniversityTrade and Exchange Rate CompetitionMark S. Manger, University of TorontoDo Financial Markets Listen when Politicians TalkAbout Monetary Policy?Jana Grittersova, University of California, Riverside
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY85.14 THE WORLD UNDER FINANCIALIZATIONRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: Sylvia Maxfield, Providence CollegeDisc: Sylvia Maxfield, Providence College
Papers: Central Banks and Public Confidence after the GlobalFinancial CrisisJuliet Johnson, McGill UniversityPandemic Preferences: Voter Attitudes TowardsCOVID19 Central Bank Interventions (Pre-Recorded)Andrew Walter, School of Social and PoliticalSciences, University of MelbourneNicole Rae Baerg, Bank of EnglandJeffrey M. Chwieroth, London School of EconomicsStates for Markets? Political Responsiveness to StockMarket Returns (Pre-Recorded)Gabrielle Cheung, University of Southern CaliforniaGene Park, Loyola Marymount UniversitySaori N. Katada, University of Southern CaliforniaThe Subterranean Politics of Pension FinancializationNatascha van der Zwan, Leiden University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION85.15 MANAGING INTERDEPENDENCE IN THE
DIGITAL AGERoom: WSCC, Ballroom 6A
Co-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
Chair: Beth A. Simmons, University of PennsylvaniaDisc: Daniel W. Drezner, Tufts University
Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown University
Papers: A Liberal Theory of Cyber BordersBeth A. Simmons, University of PennsylvaniaRachel A Hulvey, University of PennsylvaniaThe Internet Freedom Agenda and ComplexInterdependence in CyberspaceJaclyn Kerr, Harvard University
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Developing Digital Capacity: How and Why ForeignAssistance Shapes InstitutionsHarry Oppenheimer, Harvard UniversityInformation Flow Restrictions as Unintended IndustrialPolicy: Evidence from ChinaMeicen Sun, MIT
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY85.16 EVALUATING GRAND STRATEGYRoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: William C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth CollegeDisc: Charles L. Glaser, George Washington University
Papers: The Benefit of Forward-Deployed Conventional Forcesand U.S. Grand StrategyTyler Bowen, Johns Hopkins SAISThe Links Between Security Provision and ReserveCurrency StatusCarla Norrlof, University of TorontoBlind Spots: Grand Strategy, Grand Theory, and Middle-Range AlternativesHillary Victoria Briffa, King's College LondonA. Bradley Potter, Johns Hopkins University, SAIS
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY85.17 MILITARY TRAINING, NORMS, AND
PROFESSIONALIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Austin Carson, University of ChicagoDisc: Risa A. Brooks, Marquette University
Papers: Advising War: Limited Intervention in ConflictAlexandra Chinchilla, Dartmouth CollegeMilitary Aid as Soft Power: Human Capital and NormTransmission Between AlliesAndrew Boutton, University of Central FloridaSandor Fabian, University of Central FloridaSecurity Assistance and Military BehaviorRenanah Miles Joyce, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyTrust During Military Reform? A Lab-in-the-FieldExperiment in UkraineKonstantin Ash, University of Central FloridaMiroslav Shapovalov, University of Central Florida
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES85.18 BOTTOM-UP AND TOP-DOWN APPROACHES
TO POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INTERSTATECONFLICT (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Kaija E. Schilde, Boston UniversityDisc: Jonathan D. Caverley, Naval War College
Papers: The Political Economy of Trading with the EnemyAlexander Kirss, George Washington UniversityCommittees Without Influence: Rethinking the Politicsof Defense AcquisitionLeah MatchettFor Security or Money?: The EU's Relation toInternational SecurityEmma Campbell-Mohn, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyThe Politics of Military Intervention in the EconomyRoya Izadi, Binghamton University
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES85.19 REBEL GOVERNANCE: INSTITUTIONS AND
BEHAVIORSRoom: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Jeffrey T. Checkel, European University InstituteDisc: Jeffrey T. Checkel, European University Institute
Lauren Marie Balasco, Stockton University
Papers: Armed Non State Actors' Taxation: Coercion andConsent in the PhilippinesTanya Bandula-Irwin, University of TorontoGovernance and Competition in Civil Wars: Rebels'Institutional ChoicesNiels H Appeldorn, Texas A&M UniversityLaws and Order: The Impact of Rebel Governance onPost-Conflict Rule of LawCyanne E. Loyle, Pennsylvania State UniversityRebel Governance and National Court CurbingMehwish Sarwari, SUNY Buffalo StateKeith Blackley
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES85.20 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT ECONOMIES,
ORGANIZED CRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE: THE METHODSAND ETHICS OF RESEARCH ON CRIMINALAND EXTRA-LEGAL ACTORS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Laura Blume, University of Nevada RenoPart: Nicholas Rush Smith
Regina A. Bateson, University of OttawaMax Gallien, Institute of Development StudiesRebecca V. Bell-Martin, Tecnologico de MonterreyGema Santamaria, Loyola University ChicagoRomain Malejacq, Radboud University NijmegenMaría Méndez Gutiérrez, University of Minnesota
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES85.21 CANDIDACIES, CAMPAIGNS, AND BEHAVIOR
IN THE AMERICAN CONTEXTRoom: WSCC, 617Disc: Huchen Liu, Princeton University
Papers: Campaign Contributions in Installments and Post-Election Access-SeekingHuchen Liu, Princeton UniversityWho Parties? Participation in Party Message CampaignsGregory Koger, University of MiamiTyler Hughes, California State University, NorthridgeSpatial Predictions of State Legislative CandidateEmergenceCorwin D. Smidt, Michigan State University
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION85.22 BUREAUCRATIC AGENCIES AND POLITICAL
PRESSURESRoom: WSCC, 303Papers: Bad Politicians, Good Bureaucrats: Corruption and
Bureaucratic Reliability (Pre-Recorded)Amy Basu, Yale UniversityCentripetal Force: Public Administration & PluralismManny P. Teodoro, University of WisconsinMaxwell Allamong, Texas A&M UniversitySeung-Ho An, University of Arizona
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The Impact of Political Change on WorkplaceSatisfaction in Federal AgenciesTianshu (Tina) Zhao, California State UniversityLong BeachKelly LeRouxThe Roles of Ideology and Policy Expertise in FederalAgency LobbyingPeter BilsRichard W. DiSalvo, Princeton University
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS85.23 HOUSING, EQUITY, AND THE BUILT
ENVIRONMENTRoom: WSCC, 620Chair: Jacob Nyrup, University of OsloDisc: Michael C. Craw, The Evergreen State College
Papers: Governing the Neighborhood: Sub-Local Organizations,Disorder, and ReinvestmentMichael C. Craw, The Evergreen State CollegeSimon A. Andrew, University of North TexasIn It for the Money? On the Origins of Opposition toNew Housing DevelopmentJacob Nyrup, University of OsloMartin Vinæs Larsen, Aarhus University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH85.24 AMERICAN POLITICS AND GENDERRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Magdalena Larreboure, Busara Center for Behavioral
EconomicsDisc: Wendy Wright, William Paterson University
Papers: Made for Men: Gender Equality in Political ScienceDepartmentsAnnika M. Hinze, Fordham UniversityThe Military Effect on Men's Attitudes TowardWomen's IssuesYeon Soo Park, Texas A&M UniversityWomenĀs Policy Agencies and Anti-Gender-BasedViolence LegislationAlexis N Work, University of Arizona
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS85.25 RACISM AND POLITICAL ATTITUDES IN LATIN
AMERICARoom: WSCC, 205
Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative PoliticsChair: Marcus Johnson, UMD College ParkDisc: Andrew Janusz, University of Florida
Papers: Rage Within the Machine: Activation of Racist Contentin Social MediaSebastian Vallejo Vera, University of HoustonIntersectional Perceptions of Racism and Discrimination:A Vignette Experiment (Pre-Recorded)Analía Gómez Vidal, Inter-American DevelopmentBankMarcus JohnsonTransnational Race and Political Attitudes Among BlackCuban MigrantsDanielle P. Clealand, University of Texas at AustinThe Politics of Black Inclusion in Peru and EcuadorJohn Thomas, University of Chicago
DailySchedule
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS85.26 REPRESENTATION OR PANDERING? ELECTED
OFFICIALS, CANDIDATES, AND PARTIESRoom: Sheraton, Willow A
Co-sponsored by Division 34: Representation and ElectoralSystems
Disc: Paru ShahRicardo Ramirez, University of Notre Dame
Papers: And Justice for All: Expanding the Significance ofPolitical RepresentationPei-te Lien, University of California Santa BarbaraNicole Filler, Highline CollegeHow Black Lives Matter Shapes the Rhetoric of BlackElected OfficialsChristopher T. Stout, Oregon State UniversityDavin Lanier Phoenix, University of California,IrvineGregory John Leslie, University of California, LosAngelesSpanish-Language Appeals and Candidate Evaluations inthe United StatesMarques Zarate, Rice UniversityEnrique Quezada, Rice UniversityVying for Votes: How Group-based Appeals ChangeVoter OpinionsTabitha Bonilla, Northwestern University
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS85.27 RELIGIOUS MINORITIESRoom: Sheraton, BallardChair: Nikola Mirilovic, University of Central FloridaDisc: Simone R. Bohn, York University
John F. McCauley, University of Maryland, CollegePark
Papers: COVID-19, Religion & Politics in South AsiaZainab Alam, Howard UniversityDemystifying Sufi Politics in Egypt, Tunisia, and TurkeyEtga Ugur, University of Washington TacomaIntersectional Representation of Arab Legislators in theIsraeli ParliamentOsnat Akirav, Western Galilee CollegeLiving Unthreatening Lives: Muslims at the PolishCatholic FrontierBojan Savic, University of Kent, Brussels School ofInternational Studies
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS85.28 SECULAR SURGE: A NEW FAULT LINE IN
AMERICAN POLITICSRoom: Virtual Platform, Zoom RoomChair: Andrew R. Lewis, University of CincinnatiPart: David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame
Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre DameEdward G. Carmines, Indiana University, BloomingtonJennifer L. Merolla, University of California, RiversideAnand Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado, BoulderJohn C. Green, University of Akron
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES85.29 PARTIES, POLARIZATION, AND CLIENTISMRoom: WSCC, 618Chair: Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois at ChicagoDisc: Keith Douglas Brownsey, Mount Royal University
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Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois at Chicago
Papers: The Rise of the 'Democrat Party': Partisan Slurs, &Linguistic Polarization.David Karol, University of MarylandZachary Scott, Wake Forest UniversityĄWhatĀs in it for me?ďClientelism and Partisanship atLocal LevelClara Volintiru, Bucharest University of EconomicStudies (ASE)George Stefan, Babes, Bolyai UniversityRaluca Andreea Popa, Bucharest University ofEconomic StudiesAnca Maria Paraschiv, Bucharest University ofEconomic StudiesZlei Ecaterina Teodora, The Bucharest University ofEconomic StudiesThe Evolving Marketplace for Ideas: Policy Researchand Partisan PolarizationZachary Albert, Brandeis University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR85.30 FORECASTING ELECTIONSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Navid Mehrdad, Columbia UniversityDisc: Eric Guntermann, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: 2020 U.S. Election Digital Trace ProjectRaymond Duch, CESS NuffieldHow Policy Stakes & Probabilistic Forecasts CanInfluence Voting BehaviorMark McKibbinPrediction of the winner in 2020 American PresidentialElection (Pre-Recorded)Chandrasekhar Putcha, California State University,FullertonBrian Sloboda, UoPSubstitution Patterns in the 2020 Democratic PrimariesBrendan Pablo Montagnes, Emory UniversitySergio Montero, University of RochesterZachary F. Peskowitz, Emory University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION85.31 GENDER & PUBLIC OPINIONRoom: WSCC, 615
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
Chair: Amanda Wintersieck, Virginia CommonwealthUniversity
Disc: Blair Read
Papers: How Gender Gaps in Political Engagement Vary AcrossGenerationsJennifer Wolak, Michigan State UniversityItĀs on the House: Working-Class MCsĀImpact onCongressional EvaluationsAshley Sorensen, University of MinnesotaThe Effects of Pregnancy, Childbirth and EarlyParenthood on Political Knowledge (Pre-Recorded)Elias Markstedt, University of GothenburgElin Naurin, University of Gothenburg
Thursday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
WomenĀs Representation and Legitimacy Beliefs: SurveyEvidence from LiberiaLuis A. Camacho, NORC at the University ofChicagoAmanda Clayton, Vanderbilt UniversityZoe Grotophorst, NORC at the University of Chicago
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION85.32 RALLIES, PROTESTS, AND MOBILIZATIONRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom DChair: Annelise Russell, University of KentuckyDisc: Andreu Casas, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Papers: Mobilization, Inequality, and News Communities in the2020 Iowa CaucusesBenjamin Toff, University of OxfordRuth Palmer, IE UniversitySocial Movement Organizations as Curating Actors ofPolitical Information (Pre-Recorded)Thomas J Billard, Northwestern UniversityThe Material and Mobile Dimensions of Political Rallies(Pre-Recorded)Juan Sebastian Larrosa-Fuentes, ITESO UniversityNew Media and the Propensity to Participate in Protestsin the United StatesYul Min Park, University of Texas at AustinTse-min Lin, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS85.33 CRISES IN DIGITAL JOURNALISMRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah
Co-sponsored by Division 38: Political CommunicationChair: Shannon C McGregor, University of North CarolinaDisc: Shannon C McGregor, University of North Carolina
Papers: Does Local News Mitigate the Polarized NationalRhetoric on COVID-19?Catie Snow Bailard, George Washington UniversityGroup Salience, Inflammatory Rhetoric, and HateCrimes (Pre-Recorded)William Hobbs, Cornell UniversityNazita Lajevardi, Michigan State UniversityXinyi Li, Cornell UniversityCaleb Lucas, Michigan State UniversityReinflating the Filter Bubble: Domain versus URL LevelAnalyses of News SharingJon Green, Northeastern UniversityDavid Lazer, Northeastern UniversitySarah Shugars, New York UniversityStefan McCabe, Northeastern University
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE85.34 NEOLIBERALISM AND GOVERNANCE IN THE
GLOBAL SOUTHRoom: WSCC, 612Chair: Melisa Ross, WZB Berlin Social Science CenterDisc: Ian M. Hartshorn, University of Nevada, Reno
Papers: Critiquing Our Unsettling Present: Neoliberalism,Capital, Governmentality (Pre-Recorded)Guillermina Seri, Union CollegeDave Siegel, St. Joseph's CollegeSaving COVID Patients or Neoliberalism? Uruguay andthe Rhetoric of CrisisSebastian Sclofsky, CSU, Stanislaus
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The Left Turn's Social Reform in the Southern Cone:A Qualitative Approach (Pre-Recorded)Melisa Ross, WZB Berlin Social Science Center
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY85.35 BRYN ROSENFELD'S "THE AUTOCRATIC
MIDDLE CLASS"Room: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Bryn Rosenfeld, Cornell UniversityPart: Ben William Ansell, University of Oxford
David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesDaniel S. Treisman, University of California, LosAngeles
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP85.36 MONEY MATTERS IN MIGRATIONRoom: WSCC, 2BChair: Tesseltje de Lange, Radboud UniversityPart: Annette Schrauwen, Amsterdam Centre for European
Law and GovernanceAyelet Shachar, University of TorontoJudith de JongKimberly J. Morgan, George Washington UniversityElspeth Guild, Queen Mary University of London
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS85.37 DEMOCRACYS RESILIENCE AND
STAGNATION: THE ROLE OF OPPOSITIONPARTIES
Room: Sheraton, Willow BCo-sponsored by Division 44: Democracy and Autocracy
Chair: Sebastian Elischer, University of FloridaDisc: Noah Nathan, University of Michigan
Papers: The Paradox of Institutionalized Ethno-RegionalOpposition PartiesNicolas van de Walle, Cornell UniversityLise Rakner, University of BergenOpposition Party institutionalization in UgandaEloïse Bertrand, University of PortsmouthMichael Mutyaba, SOAS University of LondonDemocratic Success and Challenges: Political Parties inBenin and South AfricaRachel Beatty Riedl, Cornell University
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY85.38 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CIVIL
SERVICE REFORMRoom: WSCC, 2AChair: Alexander Laurence Sahn, Princeton UniversityDisc: Thad Kousser, University of California, San Diego
Papers: The Representational Consequences of Municipal CivilService ReformNicholas Kuipers, UC BerkeleyAlexander Laurence Sahn, Princeton UniversityProgressive Era Reforms and the Upward Mobility ofImmigrants in the U.S.Maria Carreri, University of California, San DiegoJulia Payson, New York UniversityThe Political Influence of City Employees: Civil ServiceAdoption in AmericaSarah F. Anzia, University of California-BerkeleyJessica Luce Trounstine, University of California,Merced
DailySchedule
Thursday, 1:30 PM to 2:00 PM
Progress or Backlash? The Political Effects ofAffirmative Action EnforcementJake M Grumbach, Princeton UniversityAbhay Aneja, UC Berkeley
DIVISION 56: AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT85.39 POWER SHIFTS: CONGRESS AND
PRESIDENTIAL REPRESENTATION BY JOHNDEARBORN
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6BCo-sponsored by Division 7: Politics and History
Chair: Rogers M. Smith, University of PennsylvaniaPart: Jeremy D. Bailey, University of Oklahoma
Terri Bimes, University of California at BerkeleyVerlan Lewis, Harvard UniversityElizabeth Sanders, Cornell UniversityJohn A. Dearborn, Vanderbilt University
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS85.40 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE MENA
REGION: A PLURALIST APPROACHRoom: WSCC, 310Chair: Amr Ismail Adly, American University in CairoDisc: Alexandra Domike Blackman, Cornell University
Papers: Intra-Elite Conflict and Demands for Power-Sharing:Evidence from Khedival Egypt (Pre-Recorded)Allison Spencer Hartnett, University of SouthernCaliforniaMohamed Saleh, University of Toulouse CapitoleReproducing Embeddedness: Colonial and Post-ColonialFrench Networks in TunisiaMohamed-Dhia Hammami, Maxwell School, SyracuseUniversityResource Extraction and Protest in Tunisia (Pre-Recorded)Dina Bishara, Cornell UniversityChantal Berman, Georgetown UniversityReligious Cycles of Government ResponsivenessAhmed Mohamed, Columbia University
DIVISION 58: CIVIC ENGAGEMENT85.41 THE IMPACT OF (HIGHER) EDUCATION ON
POLITICAL OUTCOMES (PRE-RECORDED)Room: WSCC, 614Chair: Sunshine Hillygus, Duke UniversityDisc: Mikael Persson, University of Gothenburg
Dominik Hangartner, London School of Economics
Papers: The Social and Political Effects of Higher EducationJohn Gerring, University of Texas, AustinBrendan Apfeld, University of Texas, AustinStephen Jessee, University of Texas, AustinEmanuel Coman, Trinity College DublinThe Impact of Colleges on the Voting and PartisanPatterns of Young PeopleJohn Holbein, University of VirginiaJonathan C. Smith, Coastal Carolina UniversityIs Education the Great Political Equalizer?Karl-Oskar Lindgren, Uppsala UniversitySven Oskarsson, Uppsala University
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Which Political Activities Are Caused by Education?Evidence from Entry ExamsDalston G Ward, ETH ZurichDominik Hangartner, London School of EconomicsLukas Schmid
Related Groups86.1 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: INTERSECTING
THEMES IN CLASSICAL POLITICAL THOUGHTRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: John F. von Heyking, University of LethbridgeDisc: Thomas W. Heilke, The University of British Columbia
Papers: AugustineĀs Confessions XII as a Response to PlatoĀsRepublicJohn F. von Heyking, University of LethbridgeHousehold Management in PlutarchĀs Lives of Aristidesand Marcus Cato.Rodolfo K Hernandez, University of MissouriThe Modern Frontier: An Inevitable Crisis?Joshua Harrison Ayer, University of BritishColumbia
Thursday, 1:30 PM to 2:00 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY87.1 FOREIGN POLICY: COMPETITION AND
RIVALRY IN INTERNATIONAL POLITICSVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Vinicius G. Rodrigues Vieira, Armando Alvares
Penteado Foundation (FAAP)Disc: Carmela Lutmar, University of Haifa
Papers: ChinaĀs Belt and Road Initiative: Implications for GlobalClimate GovernanceFuzuo Wu, University of SalfordDivert When It Does Not Hurt: U.S. EconomicSanctions from 1989 to 2015Hana Attia, GIGA Institute of Global and AreaStudiesDivision and Decision: The Politics of UnilateralMilitary ActionKatherine Irajpanah, Harvard UniversityDovish Reputation Theory: When Fighting toDemonstrate Resolve BackfiresJoshua Schwartz, University of PennsylvaniaOpening New Doors: Coerciveness, Interdependence,and Third-Party StatesPei-Yu Wei, Duke University
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES87.2 COMPARATIVE POLITICS: ADVANCED
INDUSTRIAL SOCIETIES VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Maarja Luhiste, Newcastle UniversityDisc: Maarja Luhiste, Newcastle University
Papers: Fiscal Austerity and Political LeadersĀOccupationalBackgroundNicola Nones, University of Virginia
Thursday, 1:30 PM to 2:00 PM
Gender Quotas and the Gender Gap in PoliticalKnowledgeGiulia Venturini, Florida State UniversityGroup Belongingness and Redistribution Preference:A Survey Experiment in JapanKatsunori Seki, University of Tsukuba
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE, AND POLITICS87.3 IDEAS AND KNOWLEDGE AS CAUSAL
VARIABLES VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualDisc: Jeffrey Friedman, Harvard University
Papers: Effects of Ideology and Participation on ElectoralConspiracy EndorsementYanru Jiang, University of Southern CaliforniaXin Jin, City University of Hong Kong
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 2:30 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES88.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION 1Room: VirtualChair: Nandini Deo, Lehigh UniversityDisc: Nandini Deo, Lehigh University
Papers: Citizens or Partisans? How Participatory InstitutionsUndermine ResponsivenessJared Abbott, Tulane UniversityKatherine Marie McKiernan, Tulane UniversityCrime Reporting and Diffuse Support for Democracy inLatin AmericaScott Liebertz, University of South AlabamaFighting Ethno-Territorial Civil Wars: Conventional andGuerrilla StrategiesShale Horowitz, University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeeNationalism, Exclusion and the Origins of Uneven StatePresence in Latin AmericaPaola Galano Toro, ETH ZurichStruggles for Social Control: The Andean State and theOrganizational ChallengersZarai Toledo Orozco, University of British Columbia
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION88.2 VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION: POLITICAL
SCIENCE EDUCATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Rachel Bzostek Walker, Collin CollegeDisc: Maria Tolika, ESCE International Business School,
Paris, France
Papers: Acting Presidential: Teaching the U.S. PresidencyThrough TheaterClaudia Franziska Bruehwiler Haeusermann,University of St. GallenSystematically Incorporating Human Rights in PoliticalScience EducationSarita Cargas, University of New MexicoThe Use of Statistical Software in UndergraduateMethods InstructionClinton Jenkins, Birmingham-Southern CollegeSusan L. Wiley, George Washington University
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Using Drawings to Understand Perceptions of CivicEngagement Across CountriesJohn W. Hogan, Technological University DublinSharon Mary Feeney, Technological University (TU)Dublin
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PMTheme Panels89.1 INDIGENOUS POLITICS VIRTUAL MINI-
CONFERENCE: NATIVE LANDS, NATIVEWATERS: THE POLITICS OF CLIMATECHANGE AND NATIVE NATIONS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Indigenous Studies Network
Chair: Arturo Chang, University of TorontoDisc: Richard C. Witmer, Creighton University
Ngoc Phan, Hawaii Pacific University
Papers: Indigenous Influence in Global Climate GovernanceFernando Arturo Tormos Aponte, University ofMaryland Baltimore CountyPolitical Recognition, Resource Access, and IndigenousEnvironmental Governance in AmericaClifton Cottrell, University of OklahomaThe Determinants of Governmental Responses toClimate Change? An Examination of Indigenous NationsTessa Provins, University of PittsburghClimate Policies of Native American Casino IndustryLaura E. Evans, University of WashingtonNives Dolsak, University of WashingtonIndigenous Peoples and Climate Change Activism inSoutheast AsiaKim D. Reimann, Georgia State University
89.2 METHODOLOGICAL PLURALISMRoom: VirtualChair: Aya Kachi, University of BaselDisc: Alison Craig, University of Texas, Austin
Matthew C. Ingram, University at Albany, SUNY
Papers: EndogeneityVera Eva Troeger, University of WarwickA Unified Framework for Dynamic Causal InferenceSuzanna Linn, Pennsylvania State UniversityClayton McLaughlin Webb, University of KansasThe Network Science of Public Policy DiffusionIshita Gopal, The Pennsylvania State UniversityBruce Desmarais, Pennsylvania State UniversityHarnessing the Power of Event History, Spatial, andNetwork AnalysisDavid Darmofal, University of South Carolina
APSA Events90.1 CREATING MINIMUM STANDARDS FOR
EMPLOYING CONTINGENT FACULTY IN THEPROFESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Jennapher Lunde Seefeldt, Augustana UniversityPart: Isaac Kamola, Trinity College
Maria Isabel Puerta, Valencia CollegeShawn Gilmore, University of Illinois, Urbana-ChampaignMark Criley, American Association of UniversityProfessors
DailySchedule
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
90.2 EXPLORING LGBTQ CONTRIBUTIONS TO ANDINCLUSION IN THE BLM MOVEMENT:OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES
Room: VirtualChair: Claire Leslie Adida, UCSD90.3 HOW TO PROMOTE YOUR BOOK INSIDE AND
OUTSIDE THE DISCIPLINERoom: VirtualChair: Jon Gurstelle, APSAPart: Lorraine Klimowich, Springer Nature
Naomi Brodie Schalit, The Conversation USChristina Wolbrecht, University of Notre DameParis West, Cambridge University Press
90.4 JOURNAL OF POLITICAL SCIENCEEDUCATION: SPECIAL ISSUE ON ASIANPACIFIC AMERICANS
Room: VirtualChair: John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
James S. Lai, Santa Clara UniversityPart: Carrie Liu Currier, Texas Christian University
Linda Hasunuma, Temple University, Center for theAdvancement of TeachingLoan K. Le, Institute for Good Government & InclusionSarah Van Perez, University of Texas Rio GrandeValley
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY91.1 ENMITY, WAR, AND PEACE IN THE HISTORY
OF POLITICAL THOUGHTRoom: VirtualChair: Yvonne Chiu, Naval War CollegeDisc: Theodore Christov, George Washington University
Papers: Sexual Violence Against Women in Ancient PoliticalThoughtColleen MitchellGrotius, Just War, and Just PoliticsAlex Tuckness, Iowa State UniversityJohn Michael Parrish, Loyola Marymount UniversityKant, Gentz, and Arendt on Federation and PerpetualPeaceChristopher Meckstroth, University of CambridgeArendtian Plurality in the World of EnmityShinkyu Lee, DePaul University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY91.2 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: MAURO J.
CARACCIOLI'S "WRITING THE NEW WORLD"Room: VirtualChair: Daniel J. Kapust, University of Wisconsin, MadisonPart: Emma Planinc, University of Notre Dame
Rebecca Aili Ploof, Leiden UniversityPĝnar Kemerli, Bard CollegeNeveser Koker, Quintet Consulting CorporationMauro J. Caraccioli, Virginia Tech
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY91.3 POLITICAL THEORY, DISCIPLINE, AND
METHODRoom: VirtualChair: Peter C. Stone, Trinity College, DublinDisc: Joshua Simon, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Sheldon Wolin's Philosophy of Social ScienceHari Ramesh, Wesleyan University
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Prying Open the Canon: Tradition Meets DiversityPenny A. Weiss, Saint Louis UniversityThe Making of Eclectic Pluralism in Political ScienceJoshua R. Berkenpas, Minnesota State University,MankatoExcluded Within? Political Theory vis-à-vis PoliticalScience in the AmericasPaulo Daniel Ravecca, Universidad de la RepúblicaDiego Hernan Rossello, Universidad Adolfo IbáñezGuillermina Seri, Union College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY91.4 RIOT AND RESISTANCE: FOR GOOD OR FOR
ILLRoom: VirtualDisc: Callum Ingram, University of Nevada Reno
Papers: Resistance Culture as a Remedy for Epistemic InjusticeLucia M. Rafanelli, George Washington UniversityPerforming Disrespect: Semiotic Violence and the U.S.Capitol InsurrectionMona Lena Krook, Rutgers University, NewBrunswickRuptures of Rioting and Democracy from Tocqueville tothe Baltimore UprisingQuinn Lester, Johns Hopkins University"WinterPalace 2021": Hobbes, Phantasy, and the Assaulton PluralismJames M. Glass, University of Maryland, CollegePark
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY91.5 FORMAL MODELS OF ALLIANCE AND
RIVALRY IN CONFLICTRoom: VirtualChair: Alexandre Debs, Yale UniversityDisc: Scott Wolford, University of Texas
Jack Paine, University of Rochester
Papers: Tug of War: Dynamic Outbidding Between TerroristGroupsCasey Crisman-Cox, Texas A&M UniversityMichael Gibilisco, California Institute of TechnologyIt's Not Our Fault: Blame and the Politics of MilitaryCooperationBradley C Smith, Vanderbilt UniversityMarket Segmentation and the Endurance of AlliancesRobert J. Carroll, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignChoosing Sides and Sapping Rivals Through ProxyWarfareKatherine Ingram, Princeton University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY91.6 POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY AND RACERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Jennifer E. Cryer, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Hui Bai
Joseph Vitriol, Stony Brook University, HarvardUniversity
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Papers: Clarifying Social Context: The Political Effects of RacialEmbeddedness MeasuresAllison Penelope Anoll, Vanderbilt UniversityLauren D. Davenport, Stanford UniversityRachel Lienesch, Stanford UniversityHow BLM Activism Changed Parental Choices andChildrenĀs Racial SocializationAllison Penelope Anoll, Vanderbilt UniversityAndrew M. Engelhardt, University of NorthCarolina, GreensboroMackenzie Israel-Trummel, College of William &MaryRace, Inequality and Perceptions of Economic ĄWinnersand LosersďAlina Oxendine, Hamline UniversityWhat Are You Doing Here? Voter Demographics,Identities and Group SentimentRonja Sczepanski, ETH Zurich
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY91.7 VOTING AND ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: VirtualChair: Cesar Zucco, Getulio Vargas FoundationDisc: Horacio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard University
Papers: Social Media Access and Political Behavior: Evidencefrom an Electoral AutocracyJeremy Bowles, Harvard UniversityJohn Marshall, Columbia UniversityPia Raffler, Harvard UniversityThe Effect of Sustained Transparency on ElectoralAccountabilityGuy Grossman, University of PennsylvaniaKristin Grace Michelitch, Vanderbilt UniversityCarlo Prato, Columbia UniversityThis Land is My Land: Property Rights and Voting inDeveloping DemocraciesCameron Wimpy, Arkansas State UniversityVoting with One's Neighbors: Evidence from Migrationwithin MexicoAlberto Simpser, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo deMexicoFrederico Finan, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY91.8 THE LEGACIES OF HISTORICAL VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Robert Braun, UC Berkeley
Papers: Historical Traumas, Revolution Participation, and State-buildingPeiyuan Li, University of Colorado BoulderMobilizing Racist Collective Memory: "The Birth of aNation" and Racial ViolenceMichael Weaver, The University of British ColumbiaThe Legacies of Revolutionary War on ContemporaryCriminal Violence in MexicoLuz Marina Arias, CIDELuis De la Calle, Centro de Investigación y DocenciaEconómicas (CIDE)Type of Violence and Ingroup IdentitySergi Martinez
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DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS91.9 PERSONALISMRoom: VirtualChair: Rachel Beatty Riedl, Cornell UniversityDisc: Jessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Papers: Personalist DemocraciesFernando Bizzarro Neto, Harvard UniversityThe Perils of PersonalismRaul L. Madrid, University of Texas, AustinMatthew Rhodes-Purdy, Clemson UniversityPersonalist Parties in DemocraciesJoseph Wright, Pennsylvania State UniversityErica Frantz, Michigan State UniversityAndrea Herschman Kendall-TaylorJia Li, Penn State UniversityMeasuring Personalism: Voting for a Populist Leader inRussia and TurkeyTatiana Kostadinova, Florida International UniversityDilara Hekimci, Florida International University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY91.10 POLITICS OF THE U.S.-CHINA TRADE WARRoom: VirtualChair: Shiping Hua, University of LouisvilleDisc: Yeling Tan, University of Oregon
Jieun Lee, University at Buffalo, SUNY
Papers: Bilateral Tensions, Global Supply Chains, and U.S.-China Trade RelationsKa Zeng, University of Arkansas, FayettevilleRob Wells, University of ArkansasAustin Wilkins, University of ArkansasDomestic Politics of Trade Wars: Evidence from a FieldExperiment on U.S. FirmsLindsay R. Dolan, Wesleyan UniversityRobert Kubinec, Princeton UniversityDaniel L. Nielson, University of Texas at AustinJiakun Zhang, University of KansasThe Politics of Tariff ExclusionAubrey Waddick, Pennsylvania State UniversityBoliang Zhu, Pennsylvania State UniversityAngel Manuel Villegas Cruz, Pennsylvania StateUniversityIn the Middle: American Multinationals in China andTrade War PoliticsJiakun Zhang, University of KansasSamantha Vortherms, University of California, IrvineRigao Liu, University of Kansas
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION91.11 INTERNATIONAL LAW: PRECISION,
DELEGATION AND COMPLIANCERoom: VirtualChair: Jana von Stein, The Australian National UniversityDisc: Emilie Marie Hafner-Burton, University of California,
San DiegoJana von Stein, The Australian National University
Papers: Explaining Textual Ambiguity in InternationalOrganizationHenning Schmidtke, GIGA German Institute ofGlobal and Area StudiesMarkus Gastinger, University of Salzburg
DailySchedule
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Legal Precision and Agenda-Setting in the UNGA andUNSCRobert Shaffer, Syracuse UniversitySabrina Beth Arias, University of PennsylvaniaNon-compliance in the European Union as a MonetaryPolicy SubstituteTobias Hofmann, Free University of BerlinWhat Explains Human Rights Treaty Derogation DuringCovid-19?Audrey Lynn Comstock, Arizona State University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY91.12 THE SECOND IMAGE REVERSEDRoom: VirtualChair: Annette Iris Idler, Harvard UniversityPapers: The Transferability of Power Resources and
International CooperationJi Min Lee, University of ChicagoVersailles and the Mutual Constitution of Domestic andInternational PoliticsPatrick J. McDonald, University of Texas, AustinA Hierarchy of Violence: The Scope of the DemocraticPeaceLuke N. Condra, University of PittsburghRyan D. Grauer, University of PittsburghDominic Tierney, Swarthmore CollegeEffective Statebuilding by Non-Western PowersJesse Driscoll, University of California, San DiegoDesha Girod, Georgetown University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES91.13 THE EVOLUTION OF WARRoom: VirtualChair: Lowell Gustafson, Villanova UniversityPart: Anthony C. Lopez, Washington State University,
VancouverBradley A. ThayerDaniel de Pinho Barreiros, Federal University of Rio deJaneiro
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES91.14 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT ECONOMIES,
ORGANIZED CRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE: STATERESPONSES TO ILLICIT ECONOMIES,ORGANIZED CRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Cecilia Farfan Mendez, University of California, San
DiegoPart: Louis-Alexandre Berg, Georgia State University
Kieran Mitton, King's College LondonBrian J. Phillips, University of EssexDavid A. Shirk, University of San DiegoChelsea L Estancona, University of South CarolinaLauren Pinson, University of Texas at Dallas
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS91.15 ASSESSING THE PRESIDENT'S IMPACT ON THE
POLITICAL SYSTEMRoom: VirtualChair: Terri Bimes, University of California at BerkeleyDisc: Diane J. Heith, St. John's University
Terri Bimes, University of California at Berkeley
Papers: President Trump's Pardons: A New Low for ClemencyJeffrey Crouch, American University
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Donald Trump and His Eugencial LegacyShannon Bow O' Brien, University of Texas, AustinThe Effect of Donald TrumpĀs Effort to SubvertDemocracy on the Republican PartyGary C. Jacobson, University of California, SanDiegoPrimary Constituency Focused PresidentialCommunicationJonathan D. Klingler, University of Mississippi
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION91.16 EQUITY AND ACCESSRoom: VirtualChair: Derek Epp, University of Texas at AustinDisc: Daniel P. Hawes, Kent State University
Papers: Classifying Local Government Commitments to Equity:A Machine Learning ApproachAaron Deslatte, Indiana University BloomingtonCali CurleyEric Stokan, University of Maryland, BaltimoreCountyKathryn Elizabeth WasselParticipatory Inequality and Rulemaking: Evidence fromFinancial RegulationBrian Daniel Libgober, Yale UniversitySusan Webb Yackee, University of Wisconsin,MadisonDaniel P. Carpenter, Harvard UniversitySteven Rashin, McCombs School of Business,University of Texas, AustinDevin Judge-Lord, Harvard UniversityJacob Waggoner, Harvard UniversityChristopher Kenny, Harvard University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS91.17 COURTS, CAMPAIGNS, AND ELECTORAL
POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Terri Peretti, Santa Clara UniversityDisc: Terri Peretti, Santa Clara University
Brent D. Boyea, University of Texas at Arlington
Papers: Democrats, Republicans, and Judges: How U.S. PartiesUse the Courts in CampaignsLisa M. Holmes, University of VermontElectoral Expectations and Support for ConstitutionalChangeEileen BramanMovement Lawyering in the 2020 ElectionCourtney Chenette, Hollins UniversityThe Politics of Judicial Review of Elections in AfricaChristopher Appiah- Thompson, The University ofNewcastle, Australia
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS91.18 MENTORING IN LAW & COURTS: GOALS,
CHALLENGES, AND OPPORTUNITIESRoom: VirtualChair: Gbemende Johnson, Hamilton CollegeDisc: Shane A. Gleason, Texas A&M University- Corpus
Christi
Part: Jennifer Bowie, University of RichmondAngelique Davis, Seattle UniversityWendy L. Martinek, SUNY, Binghamton University
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Robert M. Howard, Georgia State UniversityLee D. Walker, University of North Texas
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS91.19 LINKING RACIAL CAPITALISM AND URBAN
POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Mara Sidney, Rutgers University, NewarkDisc: Richardson Dilworth, Drexel University
Papers: Racial Capitalism and City Politics: Towards aTheoretical SynthesisMichael Javen Fortner, Claremont McKenna CollegeRace, Class, and the Visibility of High-Cost FinancialMarketsPatricia Posey, University of ChicagoRacial Orders, Market Logics, and American PoliticalDevelopmentChloe Thurston, Northwestern UniversityPathways to (In)EqualityTimothy Weaver, SUNY, University at Albany
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH91.20 CONFLICT AND GENDERRoom: VirtualPapers: Testing the (Actual) Gender Gap in Support for War
Thomas Worth, University of Wisconsin-MadisonViolence as Peace: Everyday Masculine Discourses inPost-Conflict SpacesKara Hooser, The Ohio State UniversityViolence Against Women in Politics in AustraliaMedha Majumdar, Australian National University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS91.21 POLICING, POLITICS, AND PARTICIPATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Christina Greer, Fordham UniversityDisc: Hannah Walker, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Backing the Blue as a Person of Color: ProbingMinority Attitudes Toward PoliceGabriel E MartinezRudy Alamillo, Western Washington UniversityFrom Breonna Taylor to George Floyd: Media Framesand the Threat of PolicingJenn M. Jackson, Syracuse UniversityHow Police Killings Shape Political ParticipationRegina BrantonTony E. Carey, University of North TexasValerie J. Martinez-Ebers, University of North TexasProtesting Vulnerability: Race and Pandemic PoliticsKhalilah L. Brown-Dean, QUINNIPIACUNIVERSITYRay Block, Penn State UniversityPursuing Justice Online Using āBlackLivesMatter onTwitterRosa Castillo Krewson, Virginia CommonwealthUniversityLorita Daniels
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS91.22 COMPARING AMERICAN NOMINATING
SYSTEMS (VIRTUAL)Room: Virtual
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Chair: Cynthia McClintock, George Washington UniversityDisc: Eric McGhee, Public Policy Institute of California
Papers: Into the Jungle: Louisiana Statewide Candidate Entry,1975-2019Jordan Landry, Thirty North ConsultingRunoff Elections and the Quality of PoliticalRepresentationCarl Gustafson, Stanford UniversityUnconventional Nominations: Party Conventions andRepresentation in the U.S.Jordan Kujala, University of California, DavisThe Decline of Local News and Primary Elections in theUnited StatesMackenzie Lockhart, UC San Diego
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR91.23 PROTESTS AND VOTINGRoom: VirtualChair: Tony Affigne, Providence CollegeDisc: Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College
Papers: Dynamics of Protestors: The Effects of Voting Patternsand the Electoral CycleHyunjin Cha, Korea UniversityProtest and Polarization: How Anti-Movements AffectVoters' Preference?Yuko Sato, V-Dem InstituteThe Effect of Political Protests on Elections in AmericaJohn Holbein, University of VirginiaTova Wang, nvfUnderstanding Voter Turnout During AuthoritarianTransition in Hong KongNathan Kar Ming Chan, University of California,IrvineLev Nachman
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION91.24 FREE SPEECH, CENSORSHIP, & SELF-
CENSORSHIPRoom: VirtualChair: Jennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard UniversityDisc: Jonathan M. Ladd, Georgetown University
Papers: Cancel Culture? A Spiral of Silence in Political SciencePippa Norris, Harvard University and University ofSydneyHow the Public Form Judgements of Online HateSpeechJesper RasmussenTolerance of Controversial Political and SocialExpression in the United StatesDennis Chong, University of Southern CaliforniaJack Citrin, University of California, BerkeleyMorris E Levy, University of Southern CaliforniaWho Is ĄMass Online Surveillanceďfor?Isadora Borges Monroy, McGill University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY91.25 VIOLENT AND NONVIOLENT RESISTANCE:
TACTICAL CHOICES AND PRACTICALCONSEQUENCES
Room: VirtualChair: Peter Krause, Boston CollegeDisc: Adria Lawrence, Johns Hopkins University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Paul Staniland, University of Chicago
Papers: Democracy After WarNancy Bermeo, Princeton UniversityRevolutionary Violence and CounterrevolutionKillian Clarke, Georgetown UniversityManaging the Move to Non-Violence: How SocialMovements Tactically De-EscalateDevashree Gupta, Carleton CollegeRethinking Nonviolent Resistance in an Age of StateViolence & AuthoritarianismKai Massey Thaler, University of California, SantaBarbara
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS91.26 THE HUMAN RIGHTS RESPONSIBILITIES OF
PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATIONSRoom: VirtualChair: George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY- John Jay College and
the Graduate CenterPart: George J. Andreopoulos, CUNY- John Jay College and
the Graduate CenterAlison Dundes Renteln, University of SouthernCaliforniaSteven Rathgeb Smith, American Political ScienceAssociationEdward Liebow, American Anthropological AssociationJames R. Grossman, American Historical AssociationMargaret Weigers Vitullo, American SociologicalAssociation
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY91.27 RACE, HEALTH POLICY, AND DISPARITIES IN
POLITICAL VOICERoom: VirtualChair: Julianna Pacheco, University of IowaDisc: Christine Marie Slaughter, University of California Los
AngelesKarl Kronebusch, CUNY-Baruch College
Papers: Community Public Health Conditions and PoliticalParticipationCydney Marie McGuire, University of MinnesotaSchool of Public HealthSarah E. Gollust, University of MinnesotaRacial Disparities in Health Care Experiences andHealth Policy AttitudesKatherine McCabe, Rutgers UniversityMichael Strawbridge, Rutgers UniversityHealth Reform, Endowment Effects, and Racism:An Experiment with the ACASimon F. Haeder, The Pennsylvania State UniversitySteven M. Sylvester, Utah Valley UniversityCOVID Does Not Discriminate, Governments Do: Race,Resilience and ResistanceVanessa Cruz Nichols, Indiana University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP91.28 CITIZENSHIP REIMAGINED: A NEW
FRAMEWORK FOR STATE RIGHTS IN THEUNITED STATES
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 28: Federalism andIntergovernmental Relations
Chair: Monica W Varsanyi, CUNY Graduate CenterPart: Jamila D. Michener, Cornell University
Daniel Tichenor, University of Oregon
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Abigail Fisher Williamson, Trinity CollegeDIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS91.29 TERRITORY, POLITICS, AND POWER IN
AFRICARoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
Chair: John Taden, Pepperdine UniversityDisc: John F. McCauley, University of Maryland, College
ParkMai Omer Hassan, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Papers: An Electoral Geography of Africa: Sectoral Profile ofPersistent Electoral BlocsEun Kyung Kim, Hankuk University of ForeignStudiesCatherine Boone, London School of Economics andPolitical Science (LSE)Juliette Crespin-Boucaud, Paris School of EconmoicsFarmer and Herder Conflict Dynamics in Ghana: TheRole of Environmental ScarcityDaniel K Banini, University of Central FloridaLand and Legibility: When Do Citizens Expect PropertyRights to Be Secure?Melanie Lauren Phillips, University of California,BerkeleyKaren E. Ferree, University of California, San DiegoLauren Honig, Boston CollegeEllen M. Lust, University of Gothenburg
Related Groups92.1 AGING POLICY AND POLITICS GROUP:
POPULATION AGING AND COVID-19Room: VirtualChair: Michael K. Gusmano, Rutgers UniversityDisc: Michael K. Gusmano, Rutgers University
Papers: How States Support Older Adults and Persons withDisabilities During COVID-19Lisa Beauregard, University of Massachusetts BostonEdward Alan Miller, University of Massachusetts,BostonMichael K. Gusmano, Rutgers UniversityPamela Nadash, University of Massachusetts, BostonLiz SimpsonNursing Home Care in an Era of Increasing Scarcity:The Case of PennsylvaniaEdward Alan Miller, University of Massachusetts,BostonElizabeth SimpsonThe Phenomenology of Institutional (Re)Design in thePandemicOlga V. Shvetsova, SUNY, Binghamton UniversityWhy the State Should Ban Prenatal Screening forDisabilitiesAthmeya Jayaram, University of California, SanDiego
92.2 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: CONSTITUTIONALSTRESS TESTS IN AN AGE OF POPULISM:ROUNDTABLE
Room: VirtualChair: Michael FranzPart: Steven McGuire, Villanova University
James R. Stoner, Louisiana State UniversityJohn F. von Heyking, University of Lethbridge
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Tony P. Spanakos, Montclair State University92.3 LABOR POLITICS: ORGANIZED LABOR IN
CONTEMPORARY AMERICAN POLITICSRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 55: Class and InequalityChair: Jacob S. Hacker, Yale UniversityPart: Laura C. Bucci, Saint Joseph's University
Daniel Galvin, Northwestern UniversityJake M Grumbach, Princeton UniversityMelissa Lyon, Brown UniversityAlexis Walker, Saint Martin's University
92.4 LATINO CAUCUS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:LATINO POLITICS IN 2021
Room: VirtualChair: Marcela García-Castañon, San Francisco State
UniversityDisc: Marcela García-Castañon, San Francisco State
University
Papers: The Latinx QuestionMarcela García-Castañon, San Francisco StateUniversityAnti-Blackness and Ally Ship in Latino PoliticsMarcela García-Castañon, San Francisco StateUniversityJulia Marin Hellwege, University of South Dakota
92.5 SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT:WHAT ARE THE ELEMENTS OF CLASSICALPOLITICS?
Room: VirtualChair: Mark J. Lutz, University of Nevada, Las VegasDisc: Mark J. Lutz, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Papers: Aristotle on Pleasure, Pain, and Moral VirtueAbigail Marie Staysa, University of Notre DameOrder and Justice in Aeschylus' OresteiaJohn Boersma, University of Wisconsin - MadisonSovereignty in Classical Athens? The View From theHousehold to the City-StateNaomi T. Campa, The University of Texas at Austin
Thursday, 2:00 PM to 4:00 PMAPSA Events93.1 CAREER FAIR AND COFFEERoom: WSCC, Exhibit Hall 4BChair: Michelle Allendoerfer, APSA
Thursday, 2:30 PM to 3:00 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES94.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPING
COUNTRIES VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION 2Room: VirtualChair: Lorena G. Barberia, University of São PauloDisc: Lorena G. Barberia, University of São Paulo
Papers: Pluralism and Mass Movement in Nigeria: The CaseStudy of ENDSARS MovementJoseph Olayinka Fashagba, Federal UniversityLokojaChiedo Nwankwor, Johns Hopkins School ofAdvanced Innterntional Studies
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Property Institutions, Politics, and Chinese Investmentsin African FarmlandYuezhou Yang, London School of EconomicsWhen Do Central Banks Accommodate FinancialGlobalization?Fathimath Musthaq, Reed CollegeNationalism, Exclusion and the Origins of Uneven StatePresence in Latin AmericaPaola Galano Toro, ETH ZurichWomen, Inclusive Government and SustainableDevelopment Goals in NigeriaAdekunle Saheed Ajisebiyawo, Igbinedion University,OkadaNeopatrimonialismĀs Effect on Post-Communist RentierStatesĀDomestic PoliciesSeungok Ryu, KIMEP UniversityRede Globo and the Coverage of 2018 BrazilianPresidential ElectionsMarta Correa Machado, UFSCSocial Capital and Democratic GovernanceAndres CasasNathalie Mendez, Texas A&M UniversityRicardo Ignacio González, Universidad Adolfo IbañezThe Challenges of Pluralism in Nigeria: The Case Studyof the National AssemblyJoseph Olayinka Fashagba, Federal UniversityLokojaChiedo Nwankwor, Johns Hopkins School ofAdvanced Innterntional StudiesThe impact of criminal justice reforms on perceptions ofprocedural justiceVeronica Michel-Luviano, John Jay College-CUNY
Thursday, 3:00 PM to 3:30 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR95.1 ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR: VOTER
TURNOUT AND CHOICES VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Indira Sinha, Patliputra UniversityDisc: Elizabeth N. Simas
Papers: Issue Ownership and Vote Choice: Accounting for of theCausal RelationshipJohannes Bergh, Institute for social researchAtle Haugsgjerd, University of Oslo, Department ofPolitical ScienceRune Karlsen, Institute for Social ResearchMore Candidates and Fewer Voters: How an Abundanceof Choice Demobilizes VotersSpencer Hamilton Goidel, Texas A&MThe Challenge of Measuring the Gender Turnout GapFranziska Roscher, New York UniversityThe Effect of Vocational Education on Voter ChoiceSarah WagnerPhilip James Swatton, Essex UniversityPolitical Leaders, Economic Hardship and Support forthe LeftSung Min Han, Hankuk University of ForeignStudies
DailySchedule
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Trading Agreement for Electability? Evidence from the2020 Democratic PrimaryAlessio Albarello, University of RochesterMayya Komisarchik, University of Rochester
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR95.2 ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR:
ELECTORAL CAMPAIGNS, SYSTEMS, ANDSTRATEGY VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Charles W. Gossett, California State University,
SacramentoDisc: Seo-young Silvia Kim, American University
Papers: Electoral Campaigns and Co-Partisan DiscriminationPatrick Cunha Silva, Washington University in St.LouisMeasuring Strategic Voting in Denmark: A DirectMethodAndra Pascu-Lindner, Rice UniversityLie Philip Santoso, Duke Kunshan UniversityPredicting the 2020 Presidential Election: Voter Choice,Campaigns, and MediaDanielle Dougall, California State University LongBeachRanked Choice Voting and the Minority Voting RightsBaodong Paul Liu, University of UtahRichard Lee Engstrom, University of HoustonAre They Populist, After All? Populism and PartyPreferences in East AsiaMarta GallinaLewis Alexander Luartz, University of California,RiversideStefano Camatarri, Université catholique de LouvainThe Impact of Early Voting: The Case of 2020Brian J. Brox, Tulane University
Thursday, 3:30 PM to 4:30 PMAPSA Events96.1 WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICS RESEARCH
SECTION RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PMAPSA Short Course97.1 `METOOPOLISCI ADVANCE WORKSHOPRoom: WSCC, 208Chair: Rebecca D. Gill, University of Nevada, Las VegasTheme Panels98.1 PLURALIZING POLITICAL THEORY:
CONTEMPORARY QUEER CONTRIBUTIONSRoom: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Lida E. Maxwell, Boston UniversityDisc: Elena Gambino, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Papers: ĄWhy IsnĀt It Better Yet?ď: How the LGBT MovementFailed Queer ExistenceAnne I. Caldwell, University of LouisvilleQueer Velocities: Critical Mass, Recurrent Institutions,and Political Trust (Pre-Recorded)Samuel R. Galloway, Purchase CollegeMasonic Contracts, Fraternal Contact, and the IntimatePublic SphereAylon Cohen, University of Chicago
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98.2 THEORETICAL IMPLICATIONS OF EMPIRICALMODELS
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom ACo-sponsored by Division 51: Experimental Research
Chair: Federica Izzo, UCSDDisc: Konstantinos Matakos, King's College London
Papers: Theoretical Implications of Empirical Models:An Application to Conflict StudiesScott Tyson, University of RochesterJessica Sun, Emory UniversityIdeology, Electability, and ValenceScott Abramson, University of RochesterKorhan Kocak, Princeton UniversityAsya Magazinnik, MITPriming Self-Reported Partisanship: Implications forSurvey Design and AnalysisBrendan Pablo Montagnes, Emory UniversityZachary F. Peskowitz, Emory UniversityKaylyn Jackson Schiff, Emory UniversityDoors and Perceptions: Motivations, Beliefs, andReturns to Canvassing (Pre-Recorded)Clement Minaudier, University of Vienna
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY99.1 SEEING, HEARING, AND SPEAKING:
POLITICAL THEORIES OF JUDGMENT ANDCOMMUNITY
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan AChair: Jennie Choi Ikuta, University of Missouri-ColumbiaDisc: Avshalom M Schwartz, Stanford University
Gianna Englert, Southern Methodist University
Papers: Rousseau's Pluralism of the Ear: Music and Politics inAudial SocietyGary Matthew Kelly, Hetta Institute for InternationalDevelopmentPersuasion Attends on Truth: Plato and the PoliticalSignificance of MathematicsSam Stevens, UC BerkeleyMachiavellian Democracy and the Appearance ofFirsthand ExperienceBoris Litvin, Stetson UniversitySpeech as the Art of Weaving in Plato's StatesmanCatherine Craig
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY99.2 ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION ON CHANDRAN
KUKATHAS'S "IMMIGRATION AND FREEDOM"Room: WSCC, 2BChair: Stephen Macedo, Princeton UniversityDisc: Chandran Kukathas, Singapore Management University
Part: Demetra Fannie Kasimis, University of ChicagoPeter N. Skerry, Boston CollegeDaniel Weinstock, McGill University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY99.3 PSYCHOLOGY OF COVID-19Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom DChair: Janel Jett, Purdue UniversityDisc: Rune Slothuus, Aarhus University
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Papers: Leveraging Religiosity Against COVID-19Misinformation: An Experiment in IndiaSumitra Badrinathan, University of OxfordSimon Chauchard, Leiden UniversityDeadly Divisions in Mass Pandemic ResponsesJulie Wronski, University of MississippiNathan P. Kalmoe, Louisiana State UniversityLilliana Hall Mason, University of Maryland, CollegeParkPatriotic Identity and Affect as a Cause of Accuracy-Based ProcessingGregory A. Petrow, University of Nebraska, OmahaJohn E. Transue, University of Illinois - SpringfieldManuel Gutierrez, University of Illinois SpringfieldHow COVID-19 Primes Change Cognition and PoliticalActionElaine K. Denny, University of California, Merced
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY99.4 NEW PERSPECTIVES ON POLITICAL
ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Macartan Humphreys, Columbia UniversityDisc: Pablo Querubin, New York University
Gregory John Martin, Stanford University
Papers: Political Entrenchment and Bureaucratic QualityTara L Slough, New York UniversityTinghua Yu, London School of EconomicsCan Attribution Improve Accountability? ExperimentalEvidence from India & GhanaTanushree Goyal, Harvard UniversityRobin Harding, University of OxfordHow Do Gender Quotas Impact ElectoralAccountability?Zuheir Desai, IE UniversityVarun Karekurve-Ramachandra, University ofRochesterSergio Montero, University of RochesterDo Career Concerns shape Monetary Policy: Evidencefrom Deliberations in the FOMCGabriel Lopez-Moctezuma, California Institute ofTechnologyMatias Iaryczower, Princeton University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY99.5 DEMOCRATIC RESILIENCE: CAN THE US
WITHSTAND RISING POLARIZATION?Room: WSCC, 612Chair: Jamila D. Michener, Cornell UniversityDisc: Lawrence R. Jacobs, University of Minnesota, Twin
CitiesSteven Levitsky, Harvard UniversityChristopher S. Parker, University of Washington
Papers: How Democracies Endure: The Challenges ofPolarization and Sources of ResilienceRobert C. Lieberman, Johns Hopkins UniversitySuzanne Mettler, Cornell UniversityKenneth M. Roberts, Cornell UniversityPolarization and the Durability of Madisonian Checksand BalancesPaul Pierson, University of California, BerkeleyEric Schickler, University of California, Berkeley
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Cross-Cutting Cleavages, Political Institutions, andDemocratic ResilienceFrances E. Lee, Princeton University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY99.6 METHODS TO STUDY DIVERSITYRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: Bang Quan Zheng, UCLADisc: Rachel Bernhard, University of California Davis
Papers: A Semi-Supervised Method to Extract Political Identitiesfrom Texts (Pre-Recorded)Dror Kris Markus, Hebrew University of JerusalemGuy Mor, Hebrew University of JerusalemVered Porzycki, The Hebrew University of JerusalemAlon Zoizner, Hebrew University of JerusalemEffi LeviAvishai Green, Hebrew University of JerusalemTamir Sheafer, Hebrew University of JerusalemShaul Rafael Shenhav, Hebrew University ofJerusalemDiscrimination in Academic Publishing: Choices,Pipelines, and Networks in PSKevin A. Clarke, University of RochesterLawrence S. Rothenberg, University of RochesterPeeking into the Black Box: An IntersectionalPerspectiveMelina Much, UC IrvineKyle McWagner, University of California IrvineRace as a Causal VariableDavid Robert Foster, University of California,BerkeleyJoseph Warren, University of California, BerkeleyAlan Nigel Yan, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION99.7 OPEN-SOURCE EDUCATIONAL RESOURCES
FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CChair: Rachel Bzostek Walker, Collin CollegePart: Mark Carl Rom, Georgetown University
Joseph Prud'homme, Washington CollegeTimothy C. Lim, California State University, LosAngeles
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS99.8 CONTROVERSIAL CONCEPTS: HOW TO
DEFINE AND DELIMIT "COUP" AND"FASCISM"
Room: WSCC, 607Chair: Wendy Hunter, University of Texas, AustinPart: Fabrice Lehoucq, University of North Carolina,
GreensboroAmy Erica Smith, Iowa State UniversityAnibal Perez-Linan, University of Notre DameNadia Urbinati, Columbia UniversityKurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS99.9 PROTEST, DEMOCRACY, AND AUTONOMY:
THE CASE OF HONG KONGRoom: WSCC, 611Chair: Erin Baggott Carter, University of Southern CaliforniaPapers: Anti-Extradition Protests and Decaying Institutional
Trust in Hong Kong (Pre-Recorded)Hans Hanpu Tung, National Taiwan University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Intergroup Relations and Support for Democratization:Evidence from Hong KongTak Huen Chau, UC BerkeleyJunyan Jiang, Columbia UniversityThe Myth of Hong KongĀs Collapsing Autonomy (Pre-Recorded)David A. RezvaniPost-materialism, New Media, and Protest in Hong Kongand Taiwan (Pre-Recorded)Theodore Charm, University of Texas at AustinTse-min Lin, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES99.10 CAMPAIGN FINANCE IN DEVELOPING
DEMOCRACIESRoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Leonardo R. Arriola, University of California, BerkeleyDisc: David Szakonyi, Higher School of Economics
Papers: The Business of Distributive Politics in DevelopingDemocraciesGautam Nair, Harvard UniversityDisplacing the Political Fiscal Cycle: Blessing or Curse?Nelson Alejandro Ruiz, University of OxfordPolitical Finance in Africa: What We Know and WhatWe DonĀt.Rachel Sigman, Naval Postgraduate SchoolCampaign Donations, Family Loyalty, and KickbacksMiguel R. Rueda, Emory UniversityNelson Alejandro Ruiz, University of Oxford
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES99.11 POLITICAL ACTIVISM IN THE TWENTY FIRST
CENTURY (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Hahrie C. Han, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University
Papers: The Challenges of Organizing Informal Sectors andExcluded PopulationsVerónica Pérez Bentancur, Universidad de laRepúblicaRafael Piñeiro, Universidad Catolica del UruguayFernando Rosenblatt, Universidad Diego PortalesFar-Right Revolution: Movement-CountermovementDynamics in BrazilElizabeth McKenna, Johns Hopkins UniversitySustaining Movement Gains: Activists and PolicyTrajectories in Latin AmericaSantiago Anria, Dickinson CollegeCandelaria Garay, Harvard UniversityJessica Rich, Marquette UniversityThe Organization of Exclusionary Civic Engagement:Racist Extremism in the U.S.Kathleen Blee, University of Pittsburgh
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES99.12 POLITICAL ELITES AND POLITICAL CAREERSRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: Ellen M. Immergut, European University InstituteDisc: Vicente Valentim
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Papers: How Do Legislated Gender Quotas ImpactRepresentation?Silje Synnøve Lyder Hermansen, University of OsloCandidate Selection Criteria and Preference Diversity inParliamentary DebateChristine A Sylvester, University of StrathclydeZachary David Greene, University of StrathclydeGendered Communication and Women's PoliticalCareers in 19 DemocraciesJens Wäckerle, University of CologneDanielle Pullan, University of Cologne / Max PlankInstitute for the Study of SocietiesBruno de Paula Castanho Silva, University ofCologneReward or Punishment? The Distribution of Returns toPolitical OfficeJens Olav Dahlgaard, Copenhagen Business SchoolFrederik Kjøller Larsen, University of CopenhagenNicolai Kristensen, VIVE
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY99.13 POLITICAL PARTIES IN EUROPERoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Maria Snegovaya, Virginia TechDisc: Christoffer Green-Pedersen, University of Aarhus
Papers: Party Cues & Support for Joint European Debt:Evidence from a Survey ExperimentBjörn Kristen Bremer, Max Planck Institute for theStudy of SocietiesTheresa Kuhn, University of AmsterdamMaurits Meijers, Radboud UniversityFrancesco NicoliSimilar or Different? Issue Overlap Between MainstreamPartiesChristoffer Green-Pedersen, University of AarhusHenrik Bech Seeberg, University of AarhusHow Bad Can It Get? In-Group Biased Decision-MakingUnder Partisan Polarization (Pre-Recorded)Mark A. Kayser, Hertie School of Governance, BerlinKasia Nalewajko, European University InstituteThe Unintended Consequences: Populist EconomicPolicies After the 2008 CrisisMaria Snegovaya, Virginia TechMitchell A Orenstein, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY99.14 GLOBAL RULES AND ILLICIT ECONOMIC
FLOWSRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: Julia C. Morse, University of California, Santa BarbaraDisc: Erik Peinert, Brown University
Papers: Tax Havens: Canadian Dynamics of a Global IssueBruce McKenna, Université du Québec à MontréalTesting the Economic Costs of Money LaunderingKaren Nershi, Stanford UniversityResilient Public Institutions: Governance in InternationalFinancial CentersCharlotte Ku, Texas A&M UniversityAndrew Morriss, Texas A&M UniversityJakub Aleksander Bartoszewski, Texas A&MUniversityJesse Horton Sowell, Texas A&M University
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY99.15 SOVEREIGN DEBT, PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS,
AND GLOBAL NORMSRoom: WSCC, 401Chair: Alexander Slaski, Leiden UniversityDisc: Patrick E. Shea, University of Houston
Matthew R. DiGiuseppe, Leiden University
Papers: Austere Populism: Opposition to Debt Accumulation inMexico During the PandemicDavid A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins UniversityDaniel McDowell, Syracuse UniversityStrategic Debt Management: How GovernmentsManipulate Bond Market PerceptionsLayna Mosley, Princeton UniversityJared Falkenberg Edgerton, Ohio State UniversitySarah M. Brooks, Ohio State UniversityPartisan Ideology and Debt Policy ManagementMatthew R. DiGiuseppe, Leiden UniversityAlexander Slaski, Leiden UniversityFrom Neoliberalism to Orbàn: Political Disaffection andPopulism in EuropeMert Kartal, St. Lawrence University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION99.16 AVOIDING RUPTURE IN THE GLOBAL ORDER:
IS PLURALISM POSSIBLE? (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Alan S. Alexandroff, University of TorontoDisc: Yves E. Tiberghien, University of British Columbia
Part: Miles Kahler, American UniversityArthur A. Stein, University of California, Los AngelesBruce D. Jones, New York UniversitySusan L. Shirk, University of California, San DiegoG. John Ikenberry, Princeton University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY99.17 IDENTITY FRAMES, STANDING, AND
CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Eleonora Mattiacci, Amherst CollegeDisc: Scott Gates, PRIO and University of Oslo
Papers: The Threat of Subversion in Foreign-ImposedDemocraciesJonathan Monten, University College LondonUnder the Shadow of Precedent: Justifying Recognitionof StatehoodElsy Gonzalez, University of ChicagoWar by Any Other Name? Humanitarian Frames &Expected Military OutcomesSarah Maxey, Loyola University Chicago
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY99.18 NUCLEAR WEAPONS, NEW TECHNOLOGIES,
AND THE RISKS OF CRISIS ESCALATIONRoom: WSCC, 4C2Chair: Charles L. Glaser, George Washington UniversityDisc: Christopher P. Twomey, Naval Postgraduate School,
Monterey, Calif.
Papers: Crisis Escalation and Emerging TechnologyErik Lin-Greenberg, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology
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Nuclear Operations and Crisis Instability in North KoreaGiles David Arceneaux, University of Colorado,Colorado SpringsThe Escalatory Effects of Misinterpreting RussianStrategyKristin Ven Bruusgaard, University of OsloNorth KoreaĀs Nuclear Posture and Crisis EscalationHyun-Binn Cho, College of New JerseyAriel F.W. Petrovics, Harvard University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY99.19 EXPANDING THE UNIVERSE OF FOREIGN
POLICYMAKING CASESRoom: WSCC, 615Disc: Rafis Abazov, Columbia University- School of
International and Public Relations
Papers: Greenland's Foreign and Security Policy Reporting (Pre-Recorded)Maria Helena Ackrén, IlisimatusarfikIranian Foreign Policy-Making in Relations to the GCCMehran Kamrava, Georgetown University-QatarReconciling Collective Good & National Purpose:SwedenĀs 2017-18 UNSC Membership (Pre-Recorded)Kjell Engelbrekt, Swedish National Defense CollegeThe Role of China's Civil-Military Relations in India-China CrisesJaganath Sankaran, LBJ School of Public Affairs
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES99.20 AUTHORS MEET CRITICS: MILITARY COUPS
AND REGIME SURVIVALRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Chair: Kristen A. Harkness, University of St. Andrews
Erica Susanne De Bruin, Hamilton CollegePart: Risa A. Brooks, Marquette University
Sheena Chestnut Greitens, University of Texas at AustinPhilip Roessler, College of William & MaryTheodore D. McLauchlin, Université de Montréal
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES99.21 RELATIONAL APPROACHES TO THE STUDY
OF CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Ches Thurber, Northern Illinois UniversityDisc: Cassy Dorff, Vanderbilt University
Papers: Social Adaptation and Organizational Emergence inWar: A Relational ApproachSarah E. Parkinson, Johns Hopkins UniversityThe Structure of Ethnic Group & InsurgentMobilization: A Global AnalysisAnoop K. Sarbahi, University of MinnesotaLiberating the Enemy in South AfricaĀs Anti-ApartheidStruggleBenjamin R Naimark-Rowse, Tufts University, TheFletcher SchoolEthnic Coalitions and the Trajectories of CivilResistance CampaignsRobert Tanner Bivens, Northern Illinois UniversityChes Thurber, Northern Illinois University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES99.22 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT ECONOMIES,
ORGANIZED CRIME, AND EXTRA-LEGALACTORS MINI-CONFERENCE: NEW RESEARCHIN CRIMINAL POLITICS: CRIMINALCOMPETITION AND VIOLENCE
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Laura Blume, University of Nevada RenoDisc: Javier Osorio, University of Arizona
Laura Blume, University of Nevada Reno
Papers: Human Rights Backlash from Below: Criminal Violence,Justice & the Rule of LawHannah Baron, Brown UniversityThe Dark Side of Competition: Organized Crime andViolence in BrazilStephanie Gimenez Stahlberg, Johns HopkinsUniversityState Cohesion, Capacity, or Stability? Ending ViolentCriminal CompetitionPatrick Joseph Signoret, Princeton UniversityGrammar of Threat: The Social Order of CriminalMessages in Colombia and MexicoPhilip Luke Johnson, The Graduate Center, CityUniversity of New YorkShauna N Gillooly, University of California, Irvine
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES99.23 CUES AND SIGNALS TO CONSTITUENTS AND
FELLOW LEGISLATORSRoom: WSCC, 205Chair: Osnat Akirav, Western Galilee CollegeDisc: Todd Makse, Florida International University
Steve B. Lem, Kutztown University
Papers: Electoral Rules and LegislatorsĀActivity in the UK,Japan, and IsraelMikitaka Masuyama, National Graduate Institute forPolicy StudiesOsnat Akirav, Western Galilee CollegeLeadership Continuity and Cue Taking in StateLegislaturesTodd Makse, Florida International UniversityDistrict Heterogeneity, Affluence, and House Members'Spending PrioritiesJennifer Marie HaasSteve B. Lem, Kutztown UniversityThe Informal Network Among U.S. SenatorsSean M. Theriault, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS99.24 COURTS IN CONTEXT: EXAMINING JUDICIAL
AND LEGAL HIERARCHIESRoom: WSCC, 603Chair: Wendy Wright, William Paterson UniversityDisc: Wendy Wright, William Paterson University
Michelle D. Deardorff, University of Tennessee atChattanooga
Papers: Judicial Hierarchy in State Courts: Race, Gender,Politics & Judicial ProcessTao L. Dumas, The College of New JerseyNonuniformity and Compliance in the Judicial HierarchyNicolas Madan, Duke University
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Pluralism, Diversity, and Individuation in a Global Ruleof LawJoseph P. GarskeSocial Innovation Approach for Traditional JusticeSystem in PakistanRizwan Shaikh, Yonsei UniversityYousueng Han, Yonsei University
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTALRELATIONS99.25 POLITICAL BEHAVIOR AND PUBLIC OPINION
UNDER FEDERALISMRoom: WSCC, 310Chair: Clayton M. Nall, University of California, Santa BarbaraDisc: Daniel J Mallinson, Penn State, Harrisburg
Papers: Blame Attribution During COVID-19 in RussiaKirill Chmel, National Research University "HigherSchool of Economics"Aigul KlimovaNikita Savin, National Research University "HigherSchool of Economics"Counting Like a State: Intergovernmental Partnerships inthe 2020 CensusPhilip B. Rocco, Marquette UniversityDC On My Mind: National Considerations in StatePolitical DecisionsDerek Holliday, University of California, Los AngelesAaron Rudkin, UCLAThe Federal Dynamics: The Attitudes of CitizensTowards Federalism in BelgiumLaura Pascolo, Université catholique de Louvain
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY99.26 ELECTION ADMINISTRATION: IMPACT OF
VOTING RULES IN THE STATESRoom: WSCC, 609Chair: Joseph Anthony, Oklahoma State UniversityDisc: Jake M Grumbach, Princeton University
Joseph Coll, University of Iowa
Papers: Casting and Curing Vote-by-Mail Ballots in the 2020General ElectionDaniel A. Smith, University of FloridaMichael C. Herron, Dartmouth CollegeMichael P. McDonald, University of FloridaDifficulty of Voter Registration in the U.S. and ItsImpact on Young VotersJoshua Jansa, Oklahoma State UniversityMatthew P. Motta, Oklahoma State UniversityRebekah Herrick, Oklahoma State UniversityHow State Variations in Postal and ElectionAdministration Shape Mail VotingMichael James Ritter, Washington State UniversityThe Impact of the Pandemic on the Administration ofthe 2020 ElectionPaul S. Herrnson, University of ConnecticutMichael J. Hanmer, University of Maryland, CollegePark
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS99.27 THE POWER OF INTERESTS IN LOCAL
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTRoom: WSCC, 303
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Papers: Change in Urban Governance: The Case of PublicĉPrivate Interactions in AnaheimPeter F. Burns, Soka University of AmericaMatthew O. Thomas, California State University,ChicoMax Bieganski, Soka University of AmericaDo Local Governments Listen to the Experts? Evidencefrom AmazonĀs HQ2 ContestSeth Pipkin, University of California, IrvineRepresentational Inequality and the Problems ofCommunity Benefits Agreements (Pre-Recorded)Nicholas Adam Robinson, Temple UniversityThe Politics of Survival: A Case Study of Chicago'sChinatown DevelopmentKaiyu Li, University of Illinois at Chicago
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH99.28 GENDERED POLITICAL ECONOMYRoom: Sheraton, Willow AChair: Nandini Deo, Lehigh UniversityDisc: Clara Neupert-Wentz, Aarhus University
Papers: A Field of Her Own: Property Rights and WomenĀsAgency in MyanmarAlexandra Hartman, UCLEdmund J. Malesky, Duke UniversityLakshmi Iyer, University of Notre DamePlaying the Victim: NGOs and Narratives ofVictimizationMarcy Quiason, University of KansasThe Gendered Impact of RemittancesBozena Christina Welborne, Smith CollegeClara BroekaertWhy Do Women Reduce Corruption? Voter StereotypesAcross European RegionsMonika Bauhr, University of GothenburgNicholas Charron, Goteburg UniversityLena Wangnerud, University of Gothenburg
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH99.29 INTERSECTIONALITY AND INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONSRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Natasha Behl, Arizona State UniversityDisc: Adryan Wallace, Stony Brook University
Papers: Intersectionality and Feminist International RelationsCeleste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, BoulderAdvancing Security and Identity: From Difference toCategories of Threat (CoT)Nola Haynes, University of Southern CaliforniaAn Intersectional Analysis of the U.S. House ForeignAffairs Committee, 1979-2020Sara Angevine, Whittier CollegeIntersectionality and the International Dimensions ofSocial ReproductionS. Laurel Weldon, Simon Fraser Universitysrijani datta, Simon Fraser UniversityAmber N Lusvardi, Purdue UniversityKaitlin Kelly-Thompson, Tufts UniversitySummer Forester, Carleton College
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DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS99.30 PROMOTING METHODOLOGICAL PLURALISM:
INTERPRETIVE METHODS AND RACIALPOLITICS
Room: WSCC, 620Co-sponsored by Interpretive Methodologies & Methods
Chair: Jane Y. Junn, University of Southern CaliforniaCristina Beltran, New York University
Part: Ronald J Schmidt, California State University, LongBeachNadia E. Brown, Georgetown UniversityCathy J. Cohen, University of ChicagoLorrie Frasure, UCLANatalie Masuoka, University of California, Los Angeles
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS99.31 US CHRISTIANITYRoom: Sheraton, BallardChair: Kedron Bardwell, Simpson CollegeDisc: Andrew R. Lewis, University of Cincinnati
Geoffrey C. Layman, University of Notre Dame
Papers: Religion and American Attitudes Toward IsraelMatthew Wilson, Southern Methodist UniversityReligion and American PopulismJames L. Guth, Furman UniversityLyman Kellstedt, Wheaton CollegeReligion and Trump Loyalty in CongressNicole Asmussen Mathew, Oakland UniversityThe Response of U.S. Megachurches to the COVID-19Pandemic (Pre-Recorded)George Soroka, Harvard University
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS99.32 POLITICS OF ELECTORAL SYSTEM REFORMRoom: WSCC, 617Chair: Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann ArborDisc: Benjamin Reilly, University of Western Australia
Papers: Legislative Malapportionment and DemocraticTransitionsPedro Riera, Carlos III University of MadridIgnacio Lago, University Pompeu FabraElite Rhetoric About Indigenous Representation in ChileKelly Bauer, Nebraska Wesleyan UniversityInformation, Exposure, and Support for ChangingElection RulesTodd Donovan, Western Washington UniversityCaroline J. Tolbert, University of IowaOutcomes of Electoral Engineering in the 2018 TurkishParliamentary ElectionsUgurcan Evci, University of California, IrvineMarek M. Kaminski, University of California, Irvine
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR99.33 CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS IN THE UNITED
STATESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Scott J Basinger, University of HoustonDisc: Justin Buchler, Case Western Reserve University
DailySchedule
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Papers: The Impact of the Women's March on the U.S. HouseElectionMagdalena Larreboure, Busara Center forBehavioral EconomicsFelipe GonzalezThe Persistence of Local Roots and Place Identity inU.S. Senate ElectionsCharles Hunt, Boise State UniversityThe Paradox of VeteransĀParticipation in CongressionalCampaignsNicole Kliewer, Princeton University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR99.34 YOUNG VOTERSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Chair: James Joseph Tuite, Central Virginia Community
CollegeDisc: Masaaki Higashijima, Tohoku University
Papers: Political Interest Among the Young: Explaining theDecline in Advanced SocietiesIntifar Chowdhury, The Australian NationalUniversityIan McAllister, Australian National UniversityThe Virus and the Vote: Promoting Youth TurnoutDuring a Global PandemicRachel Barry, Michigan State UniversityDaniel E. Bergan, Michigan State UniversityAna Bracic, Michigan State UniversityDustin Carnahan, Michigan State UniversityNazita Lajevardi, Michigan State UniversitySarah E. Reckhow, Michigan State UniversityKjerstin Thorson, Michigan State University'Green and Young? Improving Turnouts in the 2019European Elections'Francesca Vassallo, University of Southern MaineGen Z and the Mental Health Correlates of PoliticalEngagement in Hard TimesMatthew A. Baum, Harvard UniversityRoy Perlis, Harvard Medical SchoolMauricio SantillanaJon Green, Northeastern UniversityJennifer Lin, Northwestern UniversityMatthew Simonson, Northeastern UniversityJames N. Druckman, Northwestern UniversityDavid Lazer, Northeastern UniversityKatherine Ognyanova, Rutgers UniversityJohn Della Volpe, Harvard Kennedy School
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION99.35 UNDERSTANDING EMOTIONSRoom: Sheraton, Willow BChair: Marie Schenk, Brown UniversityDisc: Kevin Aslett, New York University
Papers: Decoding PoliticiansĀEmotions on Facebook andInstagram with Computer VisionMichael Bossetta, Lund University, SwedenRasmus SchmøkelAgonistic Discourse: A Framework to Analyze AgonisticOnline CommunicationDennis Friess, University of Düsseldorf
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Year of the (Angry) Woman? Gendered EmotionalAppeals on TwitterAnnelise Russell, University of KentuckyBryan Gervais, University of Texas at San AntonioHeather Evans, University of Virginia College ofWiseAimed Emotions: Strategic Affective Appeals AcrossDiverse Campaign MediaAndrew R.L. Trexler, Duke University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS99.36 BEYOND CARBON PRICING: STRATEGIES FOR
ENACTING REGULATORY CLIMATE POLICIESRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Leigh S. Raymond, Purdue UniversityDisc: Michael Méndez, UC Irvine
Papers: Evaluating the Political Logic of the Green New DealMatto Mildenberger, University of California SantaBarbaraLeah Stokes, UCSBParrish Bergquist, Georgetown UniversityJust Transition, States Matter: Power, Policy, and theEnergy Transition (Pre-Recorded)J. Mijin Cha, Occidental CollegePolitically Enforced Neglect and the Politics of MethaneBarry G. Rabe, University of Michigan, Ann ArborPromoting Market-Based vs. Regulatory Climatepolicies: A Comparative AnalysisKayla Young, Purdue UniversityKayla Gurganus, Purdue UniversityLeigh S. Raymond, Purdue University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS99.37 DISINFORMATION ACROSS PLATFORMS AND
CONTEXTSRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah
Co-sponsored by Division 38: Political CommunicationChair: Kevin Munger, Pennsylvania State UniversityDisc: Kevin Munger, Pennsylvania State University
Papers: Designing Trust: Design Style, Political Ideology andTrust in ĄFakeďNews Sites (Pre-Recorded)Rachel Elizabeth Moran, University of WashingtonThomas J Billard, Northwestern UniversityDeterminants of Political Disinformation Sharing:A Survey of Bangkokians (Pre-Recorded)Surachanee Sriyai, Chulalongkorn UniversityMisinformation and Trusted News on Fringe Platforms:Telegram Propaganda (Pre-Recorded)Aliaksandr Herasimenka, University of OxfordAleksi Knuutila, Oxford Internet InstituteJonathan Bright, University of OxfordPhilip N. Howard, University of WashingtonPandemic Politics: Predictors of Misinformed COVID-19Beliefs in Brazil (Pre-Recorded)Patricia Rossini, University of LiverpoolAntonis Kalogeropoulos, University of Oxford
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM99.38 ORIENTING TO OTHERSRoom: WSCC, 3A
Co-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
Chair: Michelle M. Kundmueller, Old Dominion University
Thursday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Disc: Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University
Papers: Democratic Pluralism and the Modern Organization:Joseph K. to Jack ReacherDonald J. MatthewsonKenny Dorham and the Experience of Race During JimCrow and the Civil Rights EraRobert Michael Pallitto, Seton Hall UniversitySoul Talk and Abolishing Oppressive InstitutionsFelicity Stone-Richards, University of California,Santa BarbaraWollstonecraft's Radicalism: Social Relations inVindication and Maria (Pre-Recorded)Erica Kunimoto
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY99.39 DISASTER & DICTATORSHIP: COVID-19 AND
BEYONDRoom: Sheraton, AspenChair: Ora John Reuter, University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeeDisc: Jorge G Mangonnet, Nuffield College, University of
Oxford
Papers: COVID, Contagion & Contestation: LongitudinalEvidence from RussiaSamuel A. Greene, King's College LondonDecisive Democracies. Regime Type and GovernmentResponses to COVID-19Alexander Schmotz, WZB Berlin Social ScienceCenterOisin Tansey, King's College LondonDemocratic Consequences of Natural Disasters -Accidental Democratization? (Pre-Recorded)Marina Povitkina, University of OsloSverker C. Jagers, University of GothenburgMartin Sjöstedt, University of GothenburgOskar RydénDisasters and LeadersĀPolitical SurvivalChungshik Moon, Chung-Ang UniversityByungwon Woo, Yonsei University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS99.40 PLURALISTIC JUSTICE: CITIZEN/STATE
RELATIONSHIPS AFTER HUMAN RIGHTSABUSES
Room: WSCC, 2ADisc: Jelena Subotic, Georgia State University
Papers: Restitution in Rhythm: Social Healing and PoliticalRealitiesClaire Brittany Crawford, University of SouthernCaliforniaWhen States Pay Up: How Reparations Can Help StatesRegain CitizensĀTrustClaire Greenstein, University of Alabama,BirminghamLocating Transformative and Transitional Justice in theAmericasLauren Marie Balasco, Stockton UniversityThe State and Transitional Justice: A ConceptualFoundationFiorella Patricia Vera-Adrianzen, University of NewMexicoPeter J. Dixon, George Mason UniversityPamina Firchow, Brandeis University
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DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY99.41 BEYOND COVID-19: THE INFLUENCE OF
INFECTIOUS DISEASES ON PUBLIC HEALTHPOLICY (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Sarah E. Gollust, University of MinnesotaDisc: Jonathan Purtle, Drexel University
Papers: Trends in Political Polarization During DiseaseOutbreaks from Polio to COVID-19Caitlin McMurtry, Harvard UniversityThe Influence of COVID-19 on Public Support forHealth PolicyRenu Singh, Hong Kong University of Science andTechnologyHarm Reduction in a Pandemic: Opportunities andChallenges for Homeless PolicyCharley Ellen Willison, Cornell UniversityKasia Klasa, University of MichiganScott L. Greer, University of MichiganJulia A Wolfson, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School ofPublic HealthResponses to Covid-19: Party, Ideology, HealthInterests, and State Policymaking (Pre-Recorded)Karl Kronebusch, CUNY-Baruch College
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH99.42 EXPERIMENTS IN INTER-GROUP RELATIONSRoom: WSCC, 614Chair: Ryan D. Enos, Harvard UniversityDisc: Salma Mousa, Stanford University
Chagai Weiss, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Papers: Making the Case for DemocracyAlexander Wuttke, University of MannheimFlorian Foos, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceSocial Media, Contact and Conflict: Evidence fromBosnia-Herzegovina and CyprusNejla Asimovic, NYUJonathan Nagler, New York UniversityRichard Bonneau, NYUJoshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityReducing Inter-religious Antipathy in Nigeria ThroughMedia InterventionsAlexandra Scacco, WZB Berlin Social Science CenterRebecca Littman, MITMy History or Our History? Historical Revisionism andEntitlement to LeadNicholas Semi Haas, Aarhus UniversityEmmy Lindstam, University of Mannheim
DailySchedule
Friday, 6:00 AM to 6:30 AM
100.2 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: KIERKEGAARD ANDDEMOCRATIC THEORY: DAVID WALSH'S"PRIORITY OF THE PERSON"
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: David J. Walsh, Catholic University of AmericaPart: Robert Wyllie, Ashland University
Christopher Justin Brophy, Providence CollegeMatthew D. Dinan, St. Thomas UniversitySteven P. Millies, Catholic Theological Union
100.3 SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT:THE SOCRATIC RESPONSE TO THELIMITATIONS OF POLITICAL LIFE
Room: WSCC, 608Chair: Ariel Helfer, Wayne State UniversityDisc: Derek Duplessie
Papers: Political Moderation and Legislation in Book III ofPlato's LawsSamuel Warren Washburn Mead, University ofTexas, AustinThe Dual Accounts of Tyranny in PlatoĀs RepublicAvery Williams, University of Texas at AustinPleasure and Political Philosophy in AristotleĀsNicomachean EthicsJonathan Jiang, University of Texas at AustinTheaetetusĀHope to Be Without FalsityDerek Foret
Thursday, 4:30 PM to 5:30 PMAPSA Events101.1 COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF BLACKS AND
NCOBPS RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual
Thursday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PMTheme Panels102.1 117TH APSA ANNUAL MEETING PRESIDENTIAL
ADDRESS: "ENGAGED PLURALISM: THEIMPORTANCE OF COMMITMENT"(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CPart: Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Ohio State UniversityAPSA Events103.1 STATE POLITICS & POLICY SECTION
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: WSCC, 4C3
Thursday, 7:30 PM to 8:30 PMAPSA Events104.1 APSA OPENING RECEPTIONRoom: WSCC, Ballroom 6E
Thursday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PMAPSA Events105.1 APSA ASIA WORKSHOPS, SEAREG, SEAPRG &
FRIENDS RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Ballard105.2 APSR RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Aspen105.3 INSTITUTE FOR HUMANE STUDIES
RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A
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105.4 PS: POLITICAL SCIENCE & POLITICSRECEPTION
Room: WSCC, 620105.5 RELIGION AND POLITICS SECTION
RECEPTIONRoom: WSCC, 618105.6 URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS SECTION
RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB
Thursday, 8:30 PM to 9:30 PMAPSA Events106.1 APSA INTERNATIONAL ATTENDEE RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom
Friday, October 1, 2021VirtualFriday, 6:00 AM to 6:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES107.1 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois at ChicagoDisc: Timothy M. LaPira, James Madison University
Thomas T. Holyoke, California State University, Fresno
Papers: A Pacifying Effect? Radical Right Populist Parties andDefence PolicyMiku Matsunaga, The University of TokyoThomas Winzen, University of MannheimParty Organization and Electoral Clientelism:Disentangling the EffectsRaluca Lutai, Babes, Bolyai UniversitySergiu Gherghina, University of GlasgowMarius Nicolae Grad, Babes, -Bolyai UniversityPolitical Selection in the Competition Between Islamistand Secular PartiesAytug Sasmaz, Stanford UniversityStrategic Behavior in Presidential NominationsAndrew J. Taylor, North Carolina State UniversityTechnology as a Salient Political Issue and theEmergence of Pirate PartiesReese ZavalaNathan Henceroth, Albright CollegeThe Grand New Party: Changes and Continuities in theRepublican CoalitionBrian J. Brox, Tulane UniversityThe Survival of Party Leaders and Party OrganizationalChangeSelin Karabulut, UC Santa BarbaraCrisis Candidacies: Party Decline and Black/Asian MPs,Party Leaders in the WestKimberly L. Shella, Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondale
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS107.2 POLITICAL NETWORKS VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Joshua Boston, Bowling Green State University
Friday, 6:00 AM to 6:30 AM
Disc: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Papers: Immigrant Social Capital and U.S. Refugee IntegrationAlice Cho Timken, Syracuse University
DIVISION 59: EDUCATION POLITICS AND POLICY107.3 CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEES AND THE
DISTRIBUTION OF FEDERAL EDUCATIONFUNDING VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Katharine Elizabeth Neem Destler, Western Washington
UniversityDisc: Emmerich Davies, Harvard University
Papers: Subnational Resistance and the Uneven Geography ofState CapacityManuel Cabal, University of Chicago
Friday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AMTheme Panels108.1 CUTTING-EDGE RESEARCH METHODS IN
CLIMATE GOVERNANCE RESEARCHRoom: VirtualChair: Karina Shyrokykh, Stockholm UniversityDisc: Marina Povitkina, University of Oslo
Le Anh Nguyen Long, University of Twente
Papers: Learning to Classify: UN Communication of ClimateChange on TwitterLisa Maria Dellmuth, Stockholm UniversityKarina Shyrokykh, Stockholm UniversityUsing AI to Unpack National Governance of ClimateChange AdaptationRobbert Biesbroek, Wageningen UniversityUnderstanding Network Building Strategy inEnvironmental Governance (Pre-Recorded)Kristin Olofsson, Oklahoma State UniversityStudying Political Barriers to Disaster Risk ReductionUsing Geocoded DataKristina Petrova, Uppsala UniversityElisabeth Lio Rosvold, Stockholm University
108.2 UNEQUAL ACCESS? VOTING ANDPARTICIPATION OF DISABLED PEOPLE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and VotingBehavior
Chair: Stefanie Reher, University of StrathclydePapers: Progress or Regress? Disability and Voting Accessibility
in the 2020 ElectionsLisa Schur, Rutgers University-New BrunswickMason Ameri, Rutgers UniversityMeera Adya, Syracuse UniversityDouglas Kruse, Rutgers UniversityElection Accessibility: Responses to AccommodationRequests by Disabled VotersMandi Eatough, University of Michigan, Ann ArborPartisanship and Political Participation Among Peoplewith DisabilitiesApril A. Johnson, Kennesaw State UniversitySierra Powell, Mount San Antonio CollegeLeave Me Alone: Depression, Item Response, andPolitical RepresentationLuca Bernardi, University of LiverpoolRobert Johns, University of Essex
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Division PanelsDIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY109.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY:
METHODS AND APPROACHESRoom: VirtualChair: Brendon Westler, St. Olaf CollegeDisc: Hari Ramesh, Wesleyan University
Papers: A Defense of the Deliberative Model for ComparativePolitical TheoryYang-Yang Cheng, University of TorontoComparative Political Theory, Normative Inquiry, andInterpretive Social ScienceLincoln Rathnam, Duke Kunshan UniversityThe Exceptional Normal in Early Egyptian FeminismMichaelle L. Browers, Wake Forest UniversityReflections on Comparative Political TheoryTakamichi Sakurai, Keio University/GoetheUniversity Frankfurt
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY109.2 LORNA BRACEWELL'S "WHY WE LOST THE
SEX WARS: SEXUAL FREEDOM IN THE`METOO ERA"
Room: VirtualChair: Judith Grant, Ohio UniversityPart: Lorna Norman Bracewell, Flagler College
Jocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield UniversityLori Marso, Union College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY109.3 PAULINA OCHOA'S "ON BORDERS:
TERRITORIES, LEGITIMACY, AND THE RIGHTSOF PLACE"
Room: VirtualChair: Elizabeth F. Cohen, Syracuse UniversityPart: Margaret Moore, Queens University
Matthew Longo, Leiden UniversityAyelet Shachar, University of TorontoPaulina Ochoa Espejo, Haverford CollegeAvery Kolers, University of Louisville
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY109.4 THE RELEVANCE OF EARLY MODERN
THOUGHT IN CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVERoom: VirtualChair: Daniel J. Kapust, University of Wisconsin, MadisonPart: Leigh K. Jenco, London School of Economics
Emily Nacol, University of TorontoTorrey Shanks, University of TorontoSigny Thora Gutnick Allen, London School ofEconomicsTimothy Bowers Vasko, Barnard College of ColumbiaUniversity
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY109.5 LIBERATION, DOMINATION, RESISTANCERoom: VirtualChair: Stephen Siu Kay On, National Sun Yat-Sen UniversityPapers: Identity, Conflict, & Liberation: Postcolonial Lessons on
Democratic BackslidingSam Goodson, CUNY Graduate CenterSocial Reproduction as Political ResistanceGrace E Reinke, University of Washington
DailySchedule
Friday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY109.6 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND
LEADERSHIPRoom: VirtualChair: Paul E. Lenze, Northern Arizona UniversityDisc: Stefano Camatarri, Université catholique de Louvain
Papers: Agency and Responsibility in International Relations:A Cross-Linguistic StudyRuthie PertsisWhy Some Politicians Are forgiven and Others ArePunishedAnnemarie Sophie Walter, Saxion University ofApplied SciencesDavid P. Redlawsk, University of DelawareIntergroup Conflict Cross-Culturally HeightensPreferences for Dominant LeadersLasse Laustsen, Aarhus UniversityMark van VugtPublic Opinion on Nuclear Weapons: Lessons fromTerror Management TheoryDoreen Horschig, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY109.7 FACETS OF INEQUALITYRoom: VirtualChair: Kenneth F. Scheve, Yale UniversityDisc: Michael Albertus, University of Chicago
Papers: 3 Facets of Political Inequality: Evidence from CitizenConsultations in KampalaConstantin Manuel Bosancianu, WZB Berlin SocialScience CenterAna Garcia-Hernandez, NOVA SBE & WZBMacartan Humphreys, Columbia UniversityInequality and Radicalization in the PalestinianTerritoriesAmit Loewenthal, University of PotsdamThe German Trade Shock and The Rise of the Neo-Welfare State in BritainTheo Serlin, Stanford UniversityKenneth F. Scheve, Yale UniversityWhen Inequality Matters: The Role of Wealth duringDemocratic TransitionsAli Tanveer Ahmed, New York University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY109.8 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INNOVATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Konstantin Sonin, New Economic School/CEFIRDisc: Olga Loblova, University of Cambridge
Papers: A Theory of Strategic Diffusion on NetworksOlivier Bochet, NYU Abu DhabiRomain Reda Ferrali, Aix-Marseille School ofEconomicsYves ZenouReassessing the Effect of Institutions and Incentives onPatterns of InnovationMatt Wilder, Harvard UniversityThe Puzzling Politics of R&D: Political Connections andInnovation in RussiaNatalia Lamberova, Georgia Institute of Technology
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Why Governments Grow ĄLemonsď in the Market forTechnologyNatalia Lamberova, Georgia Institute of TechnologyKonstantin Sonin, New Economic School/CEFIR
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY109.9 EMBEDDINGS IN MULTIPLE LANGUAGESRoom: VirtualChair: Patrick Y. Wu, University of Michigan, Ann ArborDisc: Max Goplerud, University of Pittsburgh
Papers: A Comparison of Complex Language Processing Modelsin Political AnalysisAnnika Fredén, Karlstad UniversityMoa Johansson, Chalmers University of TechnologyPasko Kisic Merino, Karlstad UniversityDenitsa SaynovaIdentifying Party Families with Time Series MultilingualWord EmbeddingYaoyao Dai, University of North Carolina, CharlotteMatt Golder, Pennsylvania State UniversityBenjamin J Radford, University of North Carolina atCharlotteSupervised Classification of Political Texts UsingMultilingual EmbeddingsHauke Licht, University of Zurich, Political ScienceDepartment
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS109.10 MEDIA INFLUENCES ON POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Maxat Kassen, Nazarbayev UniversityDisc: Anton Sobolev, Yale University
Papers: Agenda-Setting Power of Media in Latvia: A CrossCountry PerspectiveLasma Skestere, Riga Stradins UniversityIdentifying Strategic Framing of Foreign Elections byChinaĀs State MediaPatrick Chester, New York UniversityTailored Information After Autocratic RegimePersonalizationJunHyeok Jang, University of California, MercedFake News and Its Electoral Consequence: A SurveyExperiment on MexicoYuriko Takahashi, Waseda UniversityTakeshi Iida, Doshisha UniversityJaehyun Song, Kansai UniversityJose Luis Estrada, Benemérita UniversidadAutónoma de Puebla
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS109.11 TRUSTRoom: VirtualChair: Subhasish Ray, Jindal School of Government and Public
Policy, O. P. Jindal Global UniversityDisc: Jacob S. Lewis, Washington State University
Papers: Democracy and Mass Skepticism of ScienceJunyan Jiang, Columbia UniversityKinman Wan, Chinese University of Hong KongInstitutional Trust and Concern About Terrorism inDifferent State ModelsLuke Field, University of IcelandMargrét Valdimarsdóttir, University of AkureyriGudbjorg Andrea Jonsdottir, University of Iceland
Friday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
The Urban-Rural Divide and Political Trust in theDeveloped and Developing WorldLawrence McKay, University of SouthamptonConfucianist Values Condition the Negativity BiasAmong East AsiansBaowen Liang, University of Montreal
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES109.12 THE SUBNATIONAL TURN (I):
DECENTRALIZATION AND POLITICALECONOMY
Room: VirtualChair: Irina Soboleva, Duke Kunshan UniversityDisc: Celeste Beesley, Brigham Young University
Yu Zeng, Peking University
Papers: The Rise of Competing Subnational Political Economiesin MaoĀs China (1949-1978)Kristine LeeDecentralization, Public Goods Provision, andCorruption: Evidence from UkraineAnastasiia Vlasenko, Florida State UniversityDecentralization and Democracy in Post-SovietKyrgyzstanDave Siegel, St. Joseph's CollegePoverty Traps? Clientelism and Local DevelopmentGeorge Stefan, Babes, Bolyai UniversityClara Volintiru, Bucharest University of EconomicStudies (ASE)Raluca Andreea Popa, Bucharest University ofEconomic StudiesAnca Maria Paraschiv, Bucharest University ofEconomic StudiesZlei Ecaterina Teodora, The Bucharest University ofEconomic StudiesState Corporatism and Public-Private Partnership inChinaĀs Basic EducationXiaoye She, California State University at SanMarcos
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY109.13 POLITICAL PARTIES IN CONTEMPORARY
EUROPERoom: VirtualChair: Gregory Charles Baldi, n/aDisc: J. Nicholas Ziegler, Brown University
Papers: The Rise of the Scottish National Party: A HistoricalInstitutional AccountGregory Charles Baldi, n/aGregory Charles Baldi, n/aāProtective-ConservativeĀAttitudes Among PopulistRight and Green SupportersWiebke Drews, University of the GermanBundeswehrJulia SchulteCloos, LMU MunichPRR PartiesĀSuccess & PC: A Spanish Tale AboutSymbolic EffectsJuan Pérez Rajó, Universitat Autònoma de BarcelonaCarol Galais, Universitat Autònoma de BarcelonaSeeking Shelter: The Sectoral Basis of Economic VotingDave WineroitherFlorian Weiler, ETH ZurichSimon Fink, University of Bamberg
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DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY109.14 LOCAL EFFECTS OF TRADE AND FOREIGN
INVESTMENT ENTRYRoom: VirtualChair: Erica Owen, University of PittsburghDisc: Sarah Bauerle Danzman, Indiana University
Papers: Local Economic Effects of Foreign Direct InvestmentLuca Elias Messerschmidt, TUM School ofGovernanceTabea PalmtagTobias Rommel, Technical University of MunichTrade Openness, Political Competition, and MassProtests in LDCsLi Zheng, The University of HoustonMoney and Scandal: Foreign Firms, Investment andCorruption ScandalsAndrey Tomashevskiy, Rutgers UniversityDomestic Firms and the Design of Bilateral InvestmentTreatiesMi Jeong Shin, Shanghai University of Finance andEconomicsFangjin Ye, Shanghai University of Finance andEconomics
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION109.15 LEGISLATIVE POLITICS OF THE UNITED
NATIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Erik Voeten, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Erik Voeten, Georgetown University
Margaret M. Pearson, University of Maryland
Papers: Foreign Pressure, Reputation Effects, and ChineseCooperation at the UNSCAlicia R. Chen, Stanford UniversityElected Influence? Thematic Issues and the UN SecurityCouncilSusan H. Allen, University of MississippiAmy Yuen, Middlebury CollegeAgenda Setting and Legislative Politics in InternationalOrganizationsSabrina Beth Arias, University of PennsylvaniaRising and Leading: China with the G77 at the UnitedNations General AssemblyTomoko Takahashi, University of Tokyo
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION109.16 THE CHANGING LANDSCAPE OF ECONOMIC
MULTILATERALISMRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
Chair: Oliver Westerwinter, University of St. GallenDisc: Oliver Westerwinter, University of St. Gallen
Tyler Pratt, Yale University
Papers: Competition and Collaboration Between U.S.- and Non-Western-Led Development BanksVinicius G. Rodrigues Vieira, Armando AlvaresPenteado Foundation (FAAP)
DailySchedule
Friday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Deep Preferential Trade Agreements and Global ValueChain (GVC) Trade NetworksKa Zeng, University of Arkansas, FayettevilleYue Lu, School of International Trade andEconomicsGaining Ground, Gaining Influence? Vote Shares andPower in the AIIBSoo Yeon Kim, National University of SingaporeThe Negative Externalities of Development: AidCompliance and At-Risk GroupsMike Denly, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY109.17 ARMED GROUPS AND INTERNATIONAL
SECURITYRoom: VirtualChair: Daniel S. Geller, Wayne State UniversityDisc: Chris C. Demchak, Naval War College
Papers: Radical Fortunes: Armed Groups & IdeologyMatthew Zelina, University of OxfordRelease, Kill, Rule, Recruit: The Role of Reputation inHostage-Taking ViolenceDanielle Gilbert, U.S. Air Force AcademyGuns, Butter, and Terrorism: The DomesticConsequences of Military SpendingSamantha HowellAdam Wunische, Boston CollegeInsurgency and Sanctions: Do economic SanctionsAgainst State Sponsors Work?Kerim Can Kavakli, Bocconi University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES109.18 EXTREMIST VIOLENCE IN THE U.S. AND
ABROADRoom: VirtualChair: Brandon Merrell, Yale UniversityDisc: Brandon Merrell, Yale University
Lauren Marie Balasco, Stockton University
Papers: Anti-Terrorism Law, Counterinsurgency, and theDynamics of Armed ConflictJessica Stanton, Temple UniversityFrom Beer Halls to the Streets: Elite Influence andViolence in Weimar GermanyDennis Atzenhofer, ETH ZürichThe Mob Made Me Do It? Identity, Agency, & Crowdsin the Capitol Siege and BLMAnne Marie Baylouny, Naval Postgraduate SchoolĄThe Spectacle and Quotidianď: Metaphors of WhiteSupremacist ViolenceAnna Meier, University of Wisconsin, Madison
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH109.19 GENDER AND AUTHORITARIAN POLITICS:
A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVERoom: VirtualChair: Ellen M. Lust, University of GothenburgDisc: Bozena Christina Welborne, Smith College
Daniela Donno, University of Cyprus
Papers: Gender Equality Reforms and AutocratsĀConsolidationof Power: A Research AgendaElin Bjarnegard, Uppsala UniversityPar Zetterberg, Uppsala University
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Responses to WomenĀs Rights Under Authoritarianism:Survey Evidence from MoroccoCarolyn Barnett, Princeton UniversityWhy Autocracies in Africa Adopt WomenĀs Rights?Aili Mari Tripp, University of Wisconsin, MadisonDiscerning Descriptive and Substantive RepresentationUnder AuthoritarianismMarwa Shalaby, University of Wisconsin-Madison
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS109.20 IDENTITY FORMATION AND MAINTENANCE IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative PoliticsChair: Mneesha Gellman, Emerson CollegeDisc: Erica Townsend-Bell, Oklahoma State University
Papers: Brazil: Affirmative Action and the Crossroad of a RacialDemocracyFelipe Ribeiro, Temple UniversityElectoral Incentives and Racial Switching in BrazilAndrew Janusz, University of FloridaThe Role of Religion and Country of Origin onEthnoracial Assignment in the U.S.Amanda Sahar d'Urso, Northwestern UniversityRepresentation and Indigeneity: The Maori Roll Optionin Aotearoa-New ZealandJack Vowles, Victoria University of WellingtonRuben Toa Kearney-Parata, Victoria University ofWellingtonMatthew Gibbons, Victoria University of WellingtonEthnic Identity and Violent Religious Organisations inSub-Saharan AfricaMakena Nyawira Micheni, London School ofEconomics and Political Science
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS109.21 THE AMBIVALENCE OF THE SACRED:
EMPIRICAL STUDIES ON RELIGION,CONFLICT, AND PEACE
Room: VirtualChair: Abu B Bah, Northern Illinois UniversityDisc: Alexander De Juan, Osnabrück University
Abu B Bah, Northern Illinois University
Papers: Please, Make Peace! The Religious Determinants ofPositive and Negative PeaceLisa Hoffmann, German Institute for Global andArea Studies (GIGA)Julia Köbrich, German Institute for Global and AreaStudiesEric Stollenwerk, German Institute for Global andArea Studies (GIGA)Pious Peacemaking: Religious Dimensions of Conflictsand Inclusive PeaceDesirée Nilsson, Uppsala UniversityIsak Svensson, Uppsala UniversityRebels with a Cause: Do Ideologies Make ArmedConflicts Longer and Bloodier?Matthias Basedau, GIGA German Institute of Globaland Area StudiesAriel Zellman, Bar Ilan UniversityMora Deitch, Bar-Ilan University
Friday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Religion & Equitable Governance: An Empirical Testwith New Data, 1960-2010Indra De Soysa, Norwegian University of Science andTechnology
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR109.22 REALIGNMENT? HOW BREXIT RESHAPED
BRITISH VOTING BEHAVIOURRoom: VirtualChair: Robert Ford, University of ManchesterDisc: Charles Pattie, University of Sheffield
Papers: Brexit and Political ValuesChristopher Prosser, Royal Holloway, University ofLondonEducation and Vote Choice After BrexitGeoffrey Evans, Oxford UniversityJonathan Mellon, University of ManchesterA New Electoral Geography?Edward A. Fieldhouse, University of ManchesterJack Bailey, The University of ManchesterJane Green, Nuffield College
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION109.23 PUBLIC OPINION ABOUT INTERNATIONAL
EVENTS AND ORGANIZATIONSRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 20: Foreign PolicyChair: Seo-Hyun Park, Lafayette CollegeDisc: Howard Bartlett Sanborn, Virginia Military Institute
Papers: Can a Sense of Shared War Experience IncreaseRefugee Acceptance?Christopher Paik, New York University Abu DhabiCecilia Hyunjung Mo, UC BerkeleyJi Yeon (Jean) Hong, Hong Kong University ofScience and TechnologyMicro-Foundations of Naming and Shaming: ProposedAnnexation of the West BankLotem Bassan-Nygate, University of Wisconsin -MadisonPublic Demand for the Democratization of InternationalOrganizationsHyo Won Lee, Incheon National UniversitySijeong Lim, Korea UniversityThe Distinctiveness of Public Response to Cyber andKinetic AttacksKathryn HedgecockLauren Sukin, Stanford UniversityLeah Matchett
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY109.24 INTERNATIONAL DIMENSIONS OF
AUTHORITARIAN RULERoom: VirtualChair: Edmund W. Cheng, City University of Hong KongDisc: Jongyoon Baik, The University of Chicago
Papers: China's Belt and Road Initiative: Democratization andRegime Change in PakistanGul-i-Hina Shahzad
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Democratic Citizenship Through Adult Civic Education?A Review and Meta-AnalysisSteven E. Finkel, University of PittsburghJunghyun LimAnja Neundorf, University of GlasgowAykut Ozturk, University of GlasgowThe Consequences of CIA-Sponsored Regime Change inLatin Americakevin grier, TTUWhen Autocrats Purchase Influence in WashingtonBrett Logan Carter, University of SouthernCalifornia
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH109.25 EXPERIMENTS IN LAB-STYLE GAMESRoom: VirtualChair: Malte Lierl, German Institute of Global and Area
StudiesDisc: Alessandro Del Ponte, Yale University
Malte Lierl, German Institute of Global and AreaStudies
Papers: Does Allowing Private Communication Lead to LessProsocial Collective Choice?Kira Pronin, University of PittsburghJonathan Woon, University of PittsburghLeaders Channel the Wisdom of Crowds in UltimatumBargainingBrad L. LeVeck, University of California, MercedCarly Nicole Wayne, Washington University in St.LouisMarcus Holmes, The College of William & MaryJoshua D. Kertzer, Harvard UniversityAn Experimental Study of Individual Risk and AltruismWithin a CollectiveGloria Cheung, Duke UniversityDavid A. Siegel, Duke UniversityPolarization and Group CooperationAndrea Robbett, Middlebury CollegePeter Hans Matthews, Middlebury College
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP109.26 ROUNDTABLE ON "UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL
MIGRATION"Room: VirtualChair: Neil Foley, Southern Methodist Univ.Disc: Daniel Tichenor, University of Oregon
Fiona B. Adamson, University of London, SOASErin Aeran Chung, Johns Hopkins UniversityHelene C Thiollet, Sciences PoGerasimos Tsourapas, University of GlasgowTriadafilos Triadafilopoulos, University of TorontoKamal Sadiq, University of California, Irvine
Part: James F. Hollifield, Southern Methodist UniversityDIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS109.27 ISLAM, CIVIL SOCIETY, AND THE MALIAN
CRISIS: UNDERSTANDING NON-STATE ACTORSRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and PoliticsChair: Lauren Honig, Boston CollegeDisc: Naunihal Singh, U.S. Naval War College
DailySchedule
Friday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Politics of Insecurity and Civil Society Participation inMalian politicsLamin Keita, Northwestern UniversityIlliberal Visions of Conflict Resolution in MaliAlexander ThurstonThe Sheikh versus the President: The Making of ImamMahmoud Dicko as a Big ManMorten Boas, Norwegian Institute of InternationalAffairsPerceptions of the Appropriate Role of Islam in theGovernance in MaliJaimie Bleck, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE, AND POLITICS109.28 EMPIRICAL ORIGINS OF POLITICAL IDEASRoom: VirtualChair: Jeffrey Friedman, Harvard UniversityDisc: Jeffrey Friedman, Harvard University
Papers: Can Comedy Be Convincing? An Experimental TestKevin J. Elliott, Murray State UniversityAndrew Guess, Princeton UniversityDiverse Methods for Diverse Ideas: PhilosophicalAnthropology of Tacit BeliefsRachel Lee Wahl, University of VirginiaDoes Market Exposure Influence Voting? Evidence froma Natural ExperimentKai Jäger, King's College LondonFrom Existential Conflict to Coexistence: Israel/Palestineand BeyondUriel Abulof, Cornell University
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS109.29 REGIME DYNAMICS IN THE MIDDLE EASTRoom: VirtualChair: Marc Lynch, George Washington UniversityPapers: Economic and Political Elite Turnover within the Syrian
RegimeAmmar Shamaileh, Doha Institute for GraduateStudiesWhat Determines Who Controls the Media in SaudiArabia?Safa Al Saeedi, Northwestern UniversityRed Lines: Legitimation and Dissent in ContemporaryMoroccoPatrick Snyder, University of MinnesotaTrash talk: Environmental Politics and Rhetoric(s) ofGarbage in the MENALauren Marie Baker, Northwestern University
Related Groups110.1 CONFERENCE GROUP ON ITALIAN POLITICS
AND SOCIETY: LEADERSHIP, MEDIA,POLITICS, AND PANDEMICS: THE ITALIANCASE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 15: European Politics and Society
Chair: Antonella Seddone, University of TurinDisc: Erik Jones, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: The Italian GovernmentĀs Readiness for the Covid-19PandemicMartin J Bull, University of Salford
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Social Media Politics: Parties and Leaders AcrossEuropeMoreno Mancosu, Collegio Carlo AlbertoGiuliano BobbaAntonella Seddone, University of TurinFrederico Vegetti, University of Mannheim, MZESHow Italian Parties Select Their LeadersFulvio Venturino, University of CagliariElectoral Accountability in the Italian Regions. TheEffects of a Double CrisisStefano Rombi, University of CagliariMarco Valbruzzi
110.2 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:MEDIA AND POLITICAL POLARIZATION INTAIWAN
Room: VirtualChair: T.Y. Wang, Illinois State UniversityDisc: Ching-Hsing Wang, National Cheng Kung University
Jinhyeok Jang, National Sun Yat-sen University
Papers: Measuring Polarization: Mass-Elite Cleavage versusPartisan Divide in TaiwanKarl Ho, University of Texas, DallasAlexander C. Tan, University of CanterburyCaleb M. Clark, Auburn UniversityMedia Use and Political Polarization in TaiwanEric Chen-hua Yu, National Chengchi University(Taipei)Yi-ching Hsiao, Tamkang UniversityMental Awareness Does Matter: Examining TaiwanPolitical Party Facebook UsesDa-Chi Liao, National Sun Yat-sen UniversityJiun-Chi Lin, National Sun Yat-sen UniversityMateusz Cytarzynski, Institute of PoliticalScience,National Sun Yat-sen University
110.3 GLOBAL FORUM OF CHINESE POLITICALSCIENTISTS: CHALLENGES IN CHINA'SEXTERNAL RELATIONS TODAY
Room: VirtualChair: Quansheng Zhao, American University-SISDisc: Robert S. Ross, Boston College
Yong Deng, U.S. Naval Academy
Papers: Why and How Countries Join ChinaĀs Belt and RoadInitiative?M. Taylor Fravel, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyDo ChinaĀs Foreign Economic Ties Lead to InfluenceAbroad?Scott L. Kastner, University of MarylandThe Snow Leopard, Dragon and Eagle: Tibet and US-China RelationsAllen Carlson, Cornell UniversityHow Does US-China Rivalry Affect Third Parties?The Case of South KoreaZhiqun Zhu, Bucknell University
110.4 IBERIAN POLITICS: POLITICS IN IBERIA:CHALLENGES, CHANGES, AND CHOICES
Room: VirtualChair: Lasse Thomassen, University of CopenhagenDisc: Thomas D. Lancaster, Emory University
Friday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Polarization and Incivility in Debates on WomenĀsRights in Spain.Jose Manuel RoblesJuan-Antonio Guevara, University Complutense ofMadridCOVID-19 in Spain: The Consequences of FaultyGovernance and DelaysSebastian Royo, Clark UniversityDifferential Adoption Across One Nation: VocationalEducation Reforms in SpainIsik D. Ozel, Carlos III University of MadridSalvador Parrado, Spanish Distance LearningUniversity
110.5 JAPAN POLITICAL STUDIES GROUP:GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE, CAPACITY, ANDLEADERSHIP IN JAPAN
Room: VirtualChair: Michael Strausz, Texas Christian UniversityDisc: Kenneth Mori McElwain, University of Tokyo
Papers: Heliocracy: A Comprehensive Reevaluation of JapanesePolitical HistoryDouglas Miller, Independent ResearcherLeaders After a Prisoner: Experience in Prison and theLeadership DevelopmentSayaka Kamoo, National Defense Academy of JapanStructural Reforms and the Consolidation of PartyGovernment in JapanNobuhiro Hiwatari, University of TokyoDo People Trust Government to Ensure Consistencywith Their Behavioral Choice?Miwa Nakajo, Tsuda University
111.1 BRAZIL IN PERSPECTIVERoom: VirtualChair: Marjorie Correa Marona, Universidade Federal de Minas
GeraisDisc: Marjorie Correa Marona, Universidade Federal de Minas
Gerais
Papers: A Tough Woman Around Gentle Men: Dilma Rousseffand the Gendered Double BindPedro G. dos Santos, College of Saint BenedictBrianna Elise Kreft, College of Saint Benedict and St.John's UniversityBrigid Mary SmithLizbet Brianna Martinez-PortFarida Jalalzai, Virginia TechBureaucratic Agencies as Gendered InstitutionsKarine Belarmino, University of Minnesota, TwinCitiesSergio Praca, Getulio Vargas FoundationPedro G. dos Santos, College of Saint Benedict
111.2 THE EVOLUTION OF PARTY MEMBERSHIPAND PARTISANSHIP
Room: VirtualChair: Karina Kosiara-Pedersen, University of CopenhagenPapers: Cultural Assimilation and Political Participation:
Venezuelan Americans in FLMaria Isabel Puerta, Valencia College
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Dimming M5Star: Penalties of Incumbency orAlternative Opportunities for ProtestMatthew Edward Bergman, University of ViennaGianluca PassarelliCandidate Recruitment and Policy Formulation AmongNew Types of AffiliatesKarina Kosiara-Pedersen, University of Copenhagen
111.3 DECOLONISING DEMOCRATIC INNOVATIONS:BEYOND THE WHITE AND WESTERN GAZE
Room: VirtualChair: Edana Beauvais, Simon Fraser UniversityDisc: Sonia Bussu, Manchester Metropolitan University
Dannica Fleuss, Helmut-Schmidt-University Hamburg
Papers: Decoding Democracy: How Racism Thrives ThoughParticipation and InclusionShana Almeida, Ryerson UniversityThe Dream of the DemocraciesJean-Paul Gagnon, University of CanberraIdentity Politics as a Basis for Participatory Democracyin Multi-Ethnic States in AfricaReginald MJ Oduor, University of Nairobi
Friday, 6:30 AM to 7:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS112.1 URBAN AND LOCAL POLITICS: NEW
DIRECTIONS IN URBAN POLITICS RESEARCHVIRTUAL POSTER SESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Jeffrey W. Paller, University of San FranciscoDisc: Jeffrey W. Paller, University of San Francisco
Papers: Left and Right: What Do They Stand for in Cities andCity-regions?NELSON ROJAS CARVALHO, UFRRJSelective Accountability: Varying Responsiveness toMinority Student PerformanceScott J Hofer, St. Francis CollegeYeaji Kim, California State University, DominguezHillsMarkie McBrayer, University of IdahoThe Dynamic City: Responsiveness in LocalGovernmentBryant James Moy, Washington University in St.LouisGeographic Context and Political Empowerment:Urbanicity as a ModeratorMichael Herndon, University of California, LosAngelesSalvation and Survival: The Expansion of Urban PublicGoods ProvisionJonathan Doucette, University of CopenhagenUnequal City, Unequal Attitudes: Citizenship and PublicGoods in São PauloJacob Turner, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS112.2 HUMAN RIGHTS ON A NATIONAL AND
INTERNATIONAL SCALE VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: VirtualDisc: Andrada Costoiu, University of Illinois, Chicago
DailySchedule
Friday, 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Papers: Confronting a Repressive Regime: Individuals in theHuman Rights CommitteeRachel Schoner, University of California, San DiegoCruise Ships, COVID-19, and Port/Flag StateObligationsElizabeth Mendenhall, University of Rhode IslandAndrew Tirrell, University of San DiegoDismantling the Nicaraguan Violence Against WomenLaw in a Context of PluralismShannon Drysdale Walsh, University of MinnesotaDuluthHuman Rights Defenders and Global JusticeAnn Marie Clark, Purdue University
Friday, 7:00 AM to 7:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY113.1 CLASS AND INEQUALITY VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Andreas Wiedemann, Princeton UniversityDisc: Nicole Yadon, Ohio State University
Andreas Wiedemann, Princeton University
Papers: Labor Strength & Globalization: Why Do More OpenEconomies Have Stronger Unions?Christian W Martin, New York UniversityAnne Metten, University of KielNils Steiner, Johannes Gutenberg University MainzCorporate Influence on Labor and Employment PoliticsDanny R. Daneri, Princeton UniversityEconomic Status Loss, Class Voting and the PopulistRadical RightGiuseppe CiccoliniIncome Inequality, Party Misperception and DemocracySatisfaction WedgeYen-Chieh Liao, University of EssexTzu-Ping LiuLi Tang, University of Birmingham
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES113.2 LEGISLATIVE POLITICS VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: James Joseph Tuite, Central Virginia Community
CollegeDisc: Carlos Algara, Claremont Graduate University
Papers: Are Donations Strategic or Expressive? Evidence from aSurvey of Verified DonorsMellissa Meisels, Vanderbilt UniversityJoshua D. Clinton, Vanderbilt UniversityGregory Huber, Yale UniversityCauses and Effects of Congressional Oversight:Evidence from Agency RulemakingDevin Judge-Lord, Harvard UniversityCongress and the Distribution of Benefits DuringRecessionsScott Newsome, University of California, Santa CruzThe Logic of Senatorial Lawmaking Under FederalismHirokazu Kikuchi, Institute of Developing Economies,JETRO
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Tracing Policy in CongressAndrew Ojala Ballard, American UniversityJames M. Curry, University of UtahKelsey Shoub, University of South CarolinaMary Kroeger, University of North Carolina, ChapelHillVeto Players and Policy Stability: A RegressionDiscontinuity ApproachErik Scheller, Uppsala UniversityWhen Parliaments Prevail: Legislative Override inEcuador and Peru (1995-2017)Sergio Huertas-Hernández, Pontificia UniversidadCatólica de ChilePablo Valdivieso Kastner, London School ofEconomics and Political ScienceAssessing the Value of Influence to Voters: Evidencefrom a Survey ExperimentHannah Wilson, University of Notre Dame
Friday, 8:00 AM to 8:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY114.1 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY: MILITARIES
BEYOND THE BATTLEFIELD VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Nadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, MadisonDisc: Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Domestic Military Deployments in Response to NaturalDisastersNadav G. Shelef, University of Wisconsin, MadisonPeter M Erickson, University of Wisconsin-MadisonMarko Kljajic, University of Wisconsin-MadisonCrimes by and Against Deployed U.S. MilitaryPersonnelCarla Martinez Machain, Kansas State UniversityMichael E. Flynn, Kansas State UniversityMichael A. Allen, Boise State UniversityAndrew Stravers, University of Texas, AustinMapping U.S. and Chinese Bilateral Health AidTanisha Fazal, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesLogan Stundal, University of MinnesotaSubverting Civilian Control: Military Resistance to Non-Conventional OperationsRisa A. Brooks, Marquette UniversityPeter M Erickson, University of Wisconsin-MadisonAppeasing Allies: State Responses to Terror Threats inSub-Saharan AfricaJemima Ackah-Arthur, London School of Economicsand Political ScienceAssessing the Link Between Nonaggression PactFormation and Violent RepressionJerry Urtuzuastigui, Indiana University -BloomingtonJeffery Shih-Chieh Wang, Indiana UniversityBloomingtonGravity of Dissatisfaction: An Indicator of ConflictEscalation & War InitiationHsiao-chuan Liao, National Taiwan UniversityIdentifying Effective Civil Conflict Peace AgreementsMatthew Hauenstein, University of Notre Dame
Friday, 8:00 AM to 8:30 AM
Latent Deterrence or Symbolic Retaliation: RevisitingChinaĀs Nuclear StrategyHongyu Zhang, University of North Carolina atWilmingtonLogics of Armed MobilizationAndrea Ruggeri, University of OxfordStefano Costalli, Università di FirenzeThe Diffusion of Peace: UN Peacekeeping andMilitarized Interstate DisputesYu Bin Kim, University of MissouriHeather M. Kopp, University of MissouriBryce W. Reeder, University of MissouriUN Peacekeeping, the Rule of Law, and FDI:Subnational Evidence from Liberia.Patrick Hunnicutt, University of California, SantaBarbara
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AMTheme Panels115.1 ADVANCES IN THE STUDY OF GENDER
INEQUALITY IN POLITICSRoom: WSCC, Ballroom 6CChair: Mona Lena Krook, Rutgers University, New BrunswickDisc: Rachel Bernhard, University of California Davis
Alexandra Hartman, UCL
Papers: Proxy Politics: Representation and Political Inequality inRural IndiaRachel E. Brule, Boston UniversitySimon Chauchard, Leiden UniversityAlyssa Heinze, University of California, BerkeleyWhen Radical Right Populist Parties Appeal to Women(Pre-Recorded)Ana Catalano Weeks, University of BathBonnie M. Meguid, University of RochesterMiki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State UniversityHilde Roza Coffe, University of BathHistorical Origins of the Gender Gap in PoliticalRepresentationAina Gallego, Institut de Barcelona d'EstudisInternacionalsDidac Queralt, Yale UniversityAna Tur Prats
APSA Events116.1 TEACHING CIVIC ENGAGEMENT GLOBALLYRoom: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Elizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University, New BrunswickPart: Alison Rios Millett McCartney, Towson University
Abraham Goldberg, James Madison UniversityDick Simpson, University of Illinois, ChicagoNicole Webster
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY117.1 READING FEMININE EXCLUSIONS BACK INTO
THE CANON (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Christine Dunn Henderson, Singapore Management
UniversityDisc: Michelle A. Schwarze, University of Wisconsin,
MadisonEmma Planinc, University of Notre Dame
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Papers: Educating Economic Relationships: Women & DomesticEconomy in TocquevilleBrianne M. W. Wolf, Michigan State UniversityThe Women of 1848: TocquevilleĀs Images of Gender &RevolutionGianna Englert, Southern Methodist UniversityRevisiting TocquevilleĀs American WomanChristine Dunn Henderson, Singapore ManagementUniversityWollstonecraft on Women's Education: A Non-IdealAccount of Cultivating VirtueAlexandra Oprea, Australian National University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY117.2 RELIGIOUS KNOWLEDGE, RELIGIOUS
PRACTICE, AND POLITICAL AUTHORITYRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan A
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and PoliticsChair: Catherine R. Power, Glendon College, York UniversityDisc: Graedon Zorzi, George Fox University
Papers: Divine Epiphany and Political Authority in PlatoĀsRepublicAvshalom M Schwartz, Stanford UniversityModel and Penitent: King David in NiccolòMachiavelliĀs WorkEly Orrego-Torres, Northwestern UniversityReligious Republicanism: Khomeini and Beyond(Pre-Recorded)Nura Alia Hossainzadeh, Stanford University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY117.3 BODIES, AGENCY, MASTERYRoom: WSCC, 604Disc: A.R. Pashayan, Howard University
Papers: Alienation Is of the BodyDavid W. McIvor, Colorado State UniversityRomance and Routine: Marx and the Agency ofRepetitionAlexander Diones, UCLAThe Role of the Body and the Senses in Machiavelli'sPolitical Thought (Pre-Recorded)Amanda Griffiths, University of California, LosAngelesFinding the Soul(Cycle): Embodied Self-Mastery in theNeoliberal Fitness RegimeZoe Moss, University of Colorado Boulder
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY117.4 DEMOCRACY, BORDERS, AND IMMIGRATIONRoom: WSCC, 611Disc: Adrian Favell, University of Leeds
Papers: Democracy Without BordersJoseph Warren, University of California, BerkeleyKristin Zuhone, University of California, BerkeleyBangladeshi Immigration to India: The Question ofNormative Responsibility (Pre-Recorded)Michael R. James, Bucknell UniversityWhy Pluralism Matters for Immigration PoliciesKai Yui Samuel Chan, University of California,Berkeley
DailySchedule
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Can Political Liberals Deal with the Issue of EconomicRefugees?Fumio Iida, Kobe University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY117.5 LISTENING, SPACE, BOUNDARYRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Guillaume Bogiaris, University of West AlabamaPapers: Countering Monumentality: Toward a Liberatory Politics
of Place NamesAlexandra De Ciantis, University of California, IrvineReconciling Political-Moral Claims Beyond the NarrowBoundaries of the PublicSabrina MarasaTowards a Narrative of Populism: Listening toDisgruntled IdentitiesPhilip Robert Olson, Rutgers the State University ofNew Jersey
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY117.6 ON DEMOCRACY: HOPE, DESIRE, CONSENT,
AND RESTRAINTRoom: WSCC, 618Chair: Saeed Ullah Khan, Higher Education Department, Govt.
of Khyber PakhtunkhwaPapers: Democratic Engagement and Consent Theory in
Governance, Medicine, and SexNaomi Scheinerman, University of PennsylvaniaDemocratic RestraintVincent JungkunzTehama Lopez Bunyasi, George Mason UniversityDigital Democracy: Optimism in the Face of CrisisGarrett Pierman, Florida International University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY117.7 MULTI-DIMENSIONALITY IN POLICY
PROBLEMSRoom: WSCC, 607Chair: Peter BilsDisc: David Robert Foster, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: Breadth in Judicial OpinionsAmna Salam, University of RochesterMultidimensional Policy ExperimentationJesse M. Crosson, Trinity UniversityFederica Izzo, UCSDGleason Judd, Princeton UniversityPolicy Bundling and Costly MonitoringGregory Sasso, Emory UniversityTwo Problems Can Be Better than OneZuheir Desai, IE UniversityGleason Judd, Princeton University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY117.8 IMPROVING DECISION-MAKINGRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom DChair: Geoffrey Sheagley, University of GeorgiaDisc: Katherine McCabe, Rutgers University
Geoffrey Sheagley, University of Georgia
Papers: Intergenerational Perspective-Taking and EnvironmentalAttitudes and BehaviorLala Muradova, Dublin City UniversityEdana Beauvais, Simon Fraser University
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Comparing the Time Horizon of Retrospective andProspective Economic EvaluationsMarkus Prior, Princeton UniversityTalbot M Andrews, University of ConnecticutWhat's in a Cue? How Citizens Infer Policy Informationfrom Party CuesRune Slothuus, Aarhus UniversityRasmus Skytte, Aarhus UniversityMartin Bisgaard, Aarhus UniversityCandidates and Moral Rhetoric in PresidentialCampaignsDavid P. Redlawsk, University of DelawareJiwon Nam, University of Delaware
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY117.9 NEW WORK ON THE HISTORICAL POLITICAL
ECONOMY OF ASIARoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Yuhua Wang, Harvard UniversityDisc: Volha Charnysh, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Francisco Garfias, University of California, San Diego
Papers: The Columbian Exchange and Conflict in AsiaMark Dincecco, University of MichiganThe Nexus of Elites and War Mobilization: The TaipingRebellion in ChinaRuixue Jia, ucsdFranchise Expansion and Electoral Mobilization inColonial IndiaPavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins UniversityThe Authoritarian Legacies of a Village DevelopmentProgram in South KoreaJi Yeon (Jean) Hong, Hong Kong University ofScience and Technology
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY117.10 WHITE BACKLASH AND STATE VIOLENCERoom: WSCC, 2AChair: David Alexander Bateman, Cornell UniversityDisc: Steven White, Syracuse University
Papers: Dismantling the War on Poverty: Race in NixonĀsRetrenchment StrategiesScott Spitzer, California State University, FullertonFrom Protest to Property: The Growth of NeoliberalNeighborhood ActivismJames Evans Morone, Wake Forest UniversityState Violence & Racial Remapping in ChicagoNeighborhoodsRebecca U. Thorpe, University of WashingtonThe Backlash: The Turn Against the New Deal and theCivil Rights StruggleTamar Hofnung, University of California Berkeley
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY117.11 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI-CONFERENCE:
DESCRIPTIVE REPRESENTATION IN THECRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Mirya R. Holman, Tulane UniversityDisc: Asya Magazinnik, MIT
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Papers: Political Representation and Police AccountabilityAdriane Fresh, Duke UniversityAbhay Aneja, UC BerkeleyNick Eubank, Vanderbilt UniversityEmily Zhang, Stanford UniversityDescriptive Representation and the Legislative Agenda:Evidence from CaliforniaRebecca Goldstein, University of California, BerkeleyPamela Ban, University of California, San DiegoHow Degrees of Discretion Conditions the Effect ofOfficer GenderKelsey Shoub, University of South CarolinaKatelyn E. Stauffer, University of South CarolinaMiyeon Song, University of South CarolinaDefining a Problem: Congressional Messaging AroundCriminal Justice ReformTravis Johnston, University of Massachusetts, Boston
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS117.12 NATURAL RESOURCES AND DEMOCRACYRoom: WSCC, 612Papers: Evaluating Oil BustsĀPolitical Effects: The 1980s Case
Emily Meierding, Naval Postgraduate SchoolReassessing the Natural Resource Curse: Effects of OilDiscovery on DemocracyHarish S.P., College of William & MaryJoseph Levine, International Growth Centre and YaleResearch Initiative on Innovation and ScaleReimagining the ECOWAS Energy Governance Systemin a Post-Pandemic WorldMichael Amoah Awuah, Universität Bonn
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES117.13 COMPARATIVE URBAN POLITICSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Chair: Emily Rains, Duke UniversityDisc: Katherine Marie McKiernan, Tulane University
Papers: Interest Representation in Mexico City's InformalMarketsFederico Fuchs, London School of EconomicsNegotiating Informality: Explaining Political Behavior inUrban SlumsEmily Rains, Duke UniversityPowering Through-Participation & Citizenship in HybridService Delivery RegimesErum Aly Haider, Georgetown University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES117.14 STATE CAPACITY IN COMPARATIVE LENSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 1Chair: Gabriel Ondetti, Missouri State UniversityDisc: James D. Long
Papers: Highway to Capacity? Theory and Evidence on EminentDomain Conflict in IndiaAliz Toth
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State Building via Electronic Governance: A FieldExperiment From BotswanaSebastian Ziaja, German Development Institute /Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE)David Sebudubudu, University of BotswanaArmin von Schiller, Deutsches Institut fürEntwicklungspolitik (DIE) - Hertie School ofGovernanceState Capacity for Catalyzing Energy Transitions in EastAfricaMark Purdon, Université du Québec à Montréal(UQAM)
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES117.15 WOMEN IN CHINESE POLITICS (PRE-
RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Dawn L. Teele, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Sarah S. Bush, Yale University
Tanushree Goyal, Harvard University
Papers: Sober Up: The Effect of Drinking Culture on FemaleOfficialsĀCareers in ChinaFengming Lu, Australian National UniversityErik H Wang, Princeton UniversityTreading Carefully: Chinese Female PoliticiansĀRisk-Aversion in GovernanceHanzhang Liu, Pitzer CollegeDoes Female Leadership Matter in a One-Party State?Tianyang Xi, Peking UniversityUnderrepresented Outperformers: Female Legislators inthe Chinese CongressMingxing Liu, Peking UniversityXinrui Feng, University of International Business andEconomics
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY117.16 POLITICAL ECONOMY IN CONTEMPORARY
WESTERN EUROPERoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Elizabeth Carter, University of New HampshireDisc: Hamid Rezai, Pitzer College
Papers: The Impact of Ideological Proximity on BudgetAllocation at the European CommissionNikolaj Broberg, European University InstituteOf Fields and Factories: Coordination in French Wineand German ManufacturingElizabeth Carter, University of New HampshireCompetition Paradigms, Jurisprudential Regimes & theAtlantic Antitrust DivideChase Michael Foster, Brown UniversityRedistributive Politics Under Spatial Concentration ofInequalityAndreas Wiedemann, Princeton University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY117.17 SOVEREIGN DEBT: MANAGING EXPECTATIONSRoom: WSCC, 603Chair: Layna Mosley, Princeton UniversityDisc: David A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins University
DailySchedule
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Papers: Credibility and Autonomy of Sovereign DebtManagementTal Sadeh, Tel Aviv UniversityEyal Rubinson, Truman Institute for theAdvancement of Peace, Hebrew UniversityThe Origins of Financialization in ComparativePerspectiveThomas Oatley, Tulane UniversityBilyana Petrova, City University of New YorkFoundations of Public Debt Management: Theories andConceptsHeidi Jane M. Smith, Universidad Iberoamericana
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY117.18 THE POLITICS OF THE BACKLASH AGAINST
GLOBALIZATION: DISCOURSE, ANDATTITUDES
Room: WSCC, 310Disc: James Hodgdon Bisbee, NYU
Papers: Gender Roles and Threat Perception Due toGlobalizationAndrew Kerner, Michigan State UniversityJane Lawrence Sumner, University of Minnesota,Twin CitiesRight-Wing Populism and Support for InternationalEconomic Integration in EuropeNina Obermeier, Cornell UniversityEconomic Shocks, Political Cues, and the BacklashAgainst GlobalizationAycan Katitas, University of VirginiaThe China Paradox: What Trade Rules for a(Developing) Economic Powerhouse? (Pre-Recorded)Kristen Hopewell, University of British ColumbiaMass Public Opinions Towards Trade Balances:Mercantilism 2.0 (Pre-Recorded)Tanja Schweinberger, University of Geneva
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION117.19 FOREIGN AID AND NGOS IN DEVELOPING
COUNTRIESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3
Co-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
Chair: Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Disc: Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignJennifer L Tobin, Georgetown University
Papers: Fragile States, Great Power Competition andDevelopment Assistance in Africa (Pre-Recorded)Agnieszka Paczynska, George Mason UniversityPractice by Design? Understanding the Patterns of NGOParticipation Within IGOsAndrew McWard, University of Wisconsin-MadisonThe Effect of Closing Civic Space on Aid: Cross-National Evidence from NGO LawsLucille E Right, Duke UniversityJeremy Springman, Duke UniversityErik M. Wibbels, Duke UniversityState Strength and Donor Demands: NGOs in theBalanceKelly Hunter
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DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION117.20 INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS COURTS
AND THE POLITICS OF MOBILIZATION ANDBACKLASH
Room: Sheraton, AspenCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and Courts
Chair: Lisa Conant, University of DenverDisc: R. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Papers: Saving the International Justice Regime: BeyondBacklashCourtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska,LincolnActivists in International Courts: Theorizing Dynamics(Pre-Recorded)Lisa McIntosh Sundstrom, University of BritishColumbiaFreek van der Vet, University of British ColumbiaLabor in Hard Times: Mobilizing WorkersĀRights at theECHR (Pre-Recorded)Filiz Kahraman, University of TorontoBrexit as Backlash Against the European Court ofJustice?Lisa Conant, University of Denver
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY117.21 21ST CENTURY DETERRENCERoom: Sheraton, IssaquahChair: Brian Lai, University of IowaDisc: Marina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern University
Papers: Going Critical: Nuclear Cooperation and Foreign DirectInvestmentSophie McMurray, University of GeorgiaJustin Conrad, University of GeorgiaDavid Gattie, University of GeorgiaJoshua Massey, University of GeorgiaToo Fast Too Furious: The Challenges of HypersonicMissile for Crisis BargainingPaige Price Cone, School of Advanced Air and SpaceStudiesRupal Mehta, University of Nebraska-LincolnOver There: The Deterrence Effect of ForwardDeployment.Cody Joseph Schmidt, University of IowaAddison Daniel Huygens, University of Iowa
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY117.22 COOPERATION AND CONFLICT IN RESPONSE
TO EMERGING THREATSRoom: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Robert F. Trager, UCLADisc: Mahendra Prasad, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: COVID-19, Fiscal Stimulus, and Emerging SocialNorms in a Time of CrisisEllen Quigley, University of CambridgeDual Moral Obligations and International CooperationJenny Wenquan Xiao, Columbia UniversityThe Offense-Defense Balance and The Costs of AnarchyRaymond Daniel Bressler, Columbia UniversityAllan Dafoe, University of OxfordRobert F. Trager, UCLAStrategic Closing Off in International Technology RacesNicholas Emery
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY117.23 RETRENCHMENT FROM THE GLOBAL
ORDER? US FOREIGN POLICY UNDER TRUMPAND BEYOND (LIVESTREAMED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Zoom RoomChair: Thomas Risse, Freie Universität BerlinDisc: G. John Ikenberry, Princeton University
Papers: The Liberal International Order and the TransatlanticSecurity CommunityTanja A. Boerzel, Freie Universität BerlinThomas Risse, Freie Universität BerlinTrump in Perspective: US Views Toward the LiberalWorld OrderStephanie Anderson, University of WyomingJean Garrison, University of WyomingThe Illiberalism of AmericaĀs Liberal InternationalismLora Anne Viola, Free University of BerlinImmigration in U.S.-Mexico Relations: Do HumanRights Matter?Ana Covarrubias, El Colegio de MéxicoMaría-Celia Toro, El Colegio de Mexico
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES117.24 COMMUNICATION AND COORDINATION
UNDER CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C2Chair: Alexandra Arons Siegel, University of Coloardo BoulderDisc: Alexandra Arons Siegel, University of Coloardo Boulder
Luwei Ying, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers: Civilian Behavior on Social Media During Civil WarZachary Steinert-Threlkeld, University of California -Los AngelesAnita R. Gohdes, Hertie SchoolOnline Presentation of Self in Repressive Contexts: ThePersian TwittersphereLayla M Hashemi, GMUSteven Lloyd Wilson, University of Nevada, RenoConstanza Sanhueza Petrarca, WZB Berlin SocialScience CenterArmed ForcesĀPublic Relations: Competition andDifferentiationAustin Knuppe, Utah State UniversityMatthew Nanes, Saint Louis UniversitySecurity Sector Fragmentation and the Duration of Peaceand WarPeter White, Auburn University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES117.25 NEGOTIATING BOUNDARIES IN IRRoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Ron Gurantz, Air War CollegeDisc: Ron Gurantz, Air War College
Aysegul Aydin, University of Colorado, Boulder
Papers: Incommensurable Territory: Moral Image Concerns andIntangibly Valued TerritoryFin Bauer, Princeton University
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Hills, Valleys, and Shoals: Israeli and Chinese TerritorialExpansion Without War (Pre-Recorded)Andrew P Overfield, University of SouthernMississippiJordan Greaser, University of Southern MississippiJoseph J. St. Marie, University of SouthernMississippiSamuel S. Stanton, Grove City CollegeUp in the Air: What We Know About AirspaceViolationsAlexandra Infanzon Rotzer, University of Tennessee,Knoxville
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES117.26 SOLIDARITY AND BACKLASH EFFECTS FROM
PROTESTSRoom: WSCC, 608Chair: Scott Gates, PRIO and University of OsloDisc: Scott Gates, PRIO and University of Oslo
Jacob S. Lewis, Washington State University
Papers: Conflicts and Student Activism Under Mao in the 1950sZheng Haolan, Keio Univeristy, Stanford UniversityFear and Loathing in St Louis: Gun Purchase asBacklash to BLM ProtestsMasha T Krupenkin, Boston CollegeDavid RothschildElad Yom Tov, Microsoft ResearchProtest Violence and Intra-movement Solidarity:Evidence from Hong KongBrian Leung, University of WashingtonUpping the Ante Without Taking Up Arms: Why MassMovements Escalate Demands (Pre-Recorded)Sooyeon Kang, University of Denver
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS117.27 COURTS AND JUDGES IN THE NEWS AND
`NEW' MEDIARoom: WSCC, 401Chair: Joshua Boston, Bowling Green State UniversityDisc: Joshua Boston, Bowling Green State University
Andrew R Stone, Harvard University
Papers: All the News ThatĀs Fit for the Internet? Coverage andSharing of SCOTUS NewsJustin Wedeking, University of KentuckyMichael Zilis, University of KentuckyBridging the Supreme Court & the Public: MediaCredibility & Judicial LegitimacyLydia Applin, Bowling Green State UniversityElectoral Effects of News Stories on Judicial CandidatesMarcy Shieh, University of Wisconsin-MadisonPursuing Change or Pursuing Credit? Litigation & CreditClaiming on Social MediaKirsten Widner, University of Tennessee, KnoxvilleMaggie Macdonald, New York UniversityAnna M Gunderson, Louisiana State University
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW ANDJURISPRUDENCE117.28 THE STRUCTURAL MECHANICS OF
CONSTITUTIONALISMRoom: WSCC, 2BChair: Connor Ewing, University of TorontoDisc: William Dawes Blake, University of Maryland,
Baltimore County
DailySchedule
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Lydia Brashear Tiede, University of Houston
Papers: Checks and Balances and the U.S. ConstitutionElvin T. Lim, Singapore Management UniversityĄāThe PeopleĀof the Tenth Amendment: SocialAuthority and Government PowerďLuke C Sheahan, Duquesne UniversityThe Theoretical Foundations of the Rehnquist CourtĀsFederalism RevolutionChristopher P. McMillion, Hampden-Sydney CollegeSocial Capital, Institutional Rules, and ConstitutionalAmendment RatesWilliam Dawes Blake, University of Maryland,Baltimore CountyJoe Cozza, University of Texas, AustinAmanda Friesen, Western University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH117.29 THE INTERSECTIONAL POLITICS OF THE
PRIVATERoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Jennifer Gaboury, CUNY-Hunter CollegeDisc: Jennifer Gaboury, CUNY-Hunter College
Papers: On the Struggle for Queer Reproductive JusticeErin Mayo-Adam, Hunter College, CUNYThe Political Economy of the FamilyPriscilla Yamin, University of OregonFear and Investing in Public ThingsJennifer Gaboury, CUNY-Hunter College
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS117.30 RELIGION AND PLURALISMRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: Dilshod Achilov, University of Massachusetts -
DartmouthDisc: Amy Erica Smith, Iowa State University
Dilshod Achilov, University of Massachusetts -Dartmouth
Papers: The Effect of Religion on Youth (Dis)Engagement inAdvanced DemocraciesIntifar Chowdhury, The Australian NationalUniversityPromoting Pluralism in Brazilian Congress: Stoking aFeminist-Evangelical Fight?Simone R. Bohn, York UniversityPedro G. dos Santos, College of Saint BenedictReligion, Bodily Action, and the Secular Subjects ofGlobal Humanitarianism (Pre-Recorded)Jonathan Agensky, Ohio University
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS117.31 CONSTRAINTS ON ELECTION
ADMINISTRATIONRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: John Alexander Curiel, Ohio Northern UniversityDisc: Mara Suttmann-Lea, Connecticut College
Papers: Election Administration Professionalization Index: 2020Update and CorrelatesMitchell Brown, Auburn UniversityKathleen Hale, Auburn UniversityJoseph Anthony, Oklahoma State University
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The Electoral Authority Under Digital Threat: The Caseof 2020 Bolivian ElectionDavid Carroll, Carter Center - Emory UniversityJuan Salvador Gomez-Cruces, Georgia StateUniversityCausal Effects of Universal Mail-In Voting on VoterTurnout and CompositionR. Michael Alvarez, California Institute ofTechnologyYimeng Li, California Institute of TechnologyThe Partisan and Racial Impact of Changing VotingHours: A Voter-Level AnalysisMarc Thomas Ratkovic, Princeton UniversityEric Manning, Princeton UniversityWill Lowe, Hertie School
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES117.32 LOBBYING AND STRATEGYRoom: WSCC, 615Chair: Scott H. Ainsworth, University of GeorgiaDisc: Scott H. Ainsworth, University of Georgia
Amy Melissa McKay, University of Exeter
Papers: Elite Adoption of Interest Group Narratives in theCOVID-19 PandemicCamilo Cristancho-Mantilla, Universitat de BarcelonaEx Post Lobbying and the Dynamics of LegislativeAttentionBrian Daniel Libgober, Yale UniversityFirm-level Risk, Lobbying Activity and FinancialPerformanceBenjamin Egerod, Copenhagen Business SchoolLasse Aaskoven, University of EssexMeaningful Interest Group Political Participation toPromote PluralismKristina L. Wright, University of Florida
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR117.33 EXPERIMENTAL STUDIES OF U.S. VOTERSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Magdalena Larreboure, Busara Center for Behavioral
EconomicsDisc: Amanda Wintersieck, Virginia Commonwealth
University
Papers: Do Partisan Norms Cause Citizens to Misreport HowThey Cast Their Ballots?Daniel R. Biggers, University of California, RiversideThe Hidden Electoral Incentive: How Voters RewardClimate Change PositionsKenneth MackieTweets, Electoral Fraud, and Political Violence:Evidence from Two ExperimentsJeffrey A. Karp, Brunel University LondonWhat Happened? Trump, Latinos, and the South TexasVote.Angel Saavedra Cisneros, St. Norbert CollegeNatasha Altema McNeely, University of Texas, RioGrande ValleyKassandra Elejarza
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION117.34 WHAT DETERMINES VIEWS ON
CONTEMPORARY POLITICAL ISSUES?Room: WSCC, 617
Friday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Chair: Wayde ZC Marsh, University of Notre DameDisc: April A. Johnson, Kennesaw State University
Papers: An Alternative Method for Understanding PublicSupport for Policy ProposalsJared McDonald, Stanford UniversityMichael J. Hanmer, University of Maryland, CollegeParkAttitudes Towards State Policy Regulating PublicBathroomsDonald P. Haider-Markel, University of KansasAndrew R. Flores, American UniversityDaniel C. Lewis, Siena CollegePatrick R. Miller, University of KansasJami K. Taylor, University of ToledoPost Materialism and Environmental Attitudes inKazakhstanJessica Elizabeth Neafie, Nazarbayev UniversityThe Surprising Stability of American Public OpinionTowards Legal AbortionMelissa Deckman, Washington CollegeSteven Greene, North Carolina State UniversityMary Kate Lizotte, Augusta University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION117.35 CENSORSHIP, CONTENT MODERATION, AND
GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BChair: Ziyi Wu, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDisc: Bryce Dietrich, University of Iowa
Papers: Who Censors What, When and Why? Findings from aNew Event Dataset of CensorshipCristina Corduneanu-Huci, Central EuropeanUniversityOnline Social Networks and Government Accountabilityin Authoritarian RegimesTongtong Zhang, Stanford UniversityHonor or Control? Defamation, Corruption and PoliticalOnline Content Removal (Pre-Recorded)Kyong L. Mazzaro, The Graduate Center, CUNYTweetkeeping: Why Politically-Engaged IranianAccounts Get Suspended on TwitterAndreu Casas, Vrije Universiteit AmsterdamMehdi Zamani, University of Amsterdam
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS117.36 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
DEFORESTATIONRoom: WSCC, 619Chair: Mark Buntaine, University of California, Santa BarbaraDisc: Tara L Slough, New York University
Papers: Traditional Governance and the Stewardship of theCommons: Evidence from MexicoCesar B. Martinez-Alvarez, University of California,Los AngelesThe Political Origins of the Tragedy of the Commons:Deforestation in BrazilAlice Z Xu, Harvard UniversityParties, Centralization and Forest ProtectionLuke Sanford, Yale UniversityMining, State Capture and Deforestation in BrazilKathryn Baragwanath
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DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS117.37 CONTENDING EXPLANATIONS OF CHINA'S
BEHAVIORRoom: WSCC, 620Chair: Robert Reardon, North Carolina State UniversityDisc: Shao Fan Lin, The University of
Papers: Images of Alliance Cohesion: Sino-Soviet Pact &TodayĀs China-Russia AllianceTimothy Crawford, Boston CollegePower Transition, Regional Order, and the Rise of theManchu QingMin Shu, Waseda UniversityRethinking the CCPĀs Interventions in the Korean Warand the Indochina War(Clark) Aoqi Wu, Department of Politics, TheCatholic University of AmericaThe Soviet Failure to Restrain ChinaĀs NuclearArmament (Pre-Recorded)Dong Sun Lee, Korea UniversityIordanka Alexandrova, Korea University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY117.38 OUTPUTS OF AUTOCRACY: POLICY AND
INEQUALITYRoom: WSCC, 303Chair: Stephan Haggard, University of California, San DiegoDisc: Maya Jessica Tudor, Oxford University
Papers: Autocrats and the Academy: How Dictatorship ShapesScientific OutputTore Wig, University of OsloSirianne Dahlum, Peace Research Institute OsloHaakon Gjerløw, Peace Research Institute OsloDoes Democracy Reduce Economic Ethnic Inequality?Lasse LeipzigerResetting Public Policy? Understanding Policy ChangeAcross Regime TypesEmilia Simison, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyThe Politics of Authoritarian Social Welfare ProvisionIbrahim Oker, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY117.39 HOW FRAMING SHAPES ABORTION, COVID-19,
AND MEDICAID POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 3AChair: Colleen M. Grogan, University of ChicagoDisc: Philip B. Rocco, Marquette University
Ashley Kirzinger, Kaiser Family Foundation
Papers: More Than Words: How Framing Affects Perceptions ofthe Medicaid ProgramSteven M. Sylvester, Utah Valley UniversitySimon F. Haeder, The Pennsylvania State UniversityTimothy Herbert Callaghan, Texas A&M UniversityNeutralizing COVID-19 Vaccine Politicization viaStrategic Health CommunicationMatthew P. Motta, Oklahoma State University
DailySchedule
Friday, 8:30 AM to 9:00 AM
Pro-Life Policymaking: Contingent Framing of InterestGroup Lobbying on AbortionRebecca J. Kreitzer, University of North Carolina atChapel HillKellen A. Kane, The University of North Carolina atChapel HillJohn Cluverius, University of Massachusetts Lowell
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP117.40 MIGRATION, REFUGEES, AND (HUMAN)
RIGHTSRoom: Sheraton, Willow BChair: Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, AmherstDisc: Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Papers: Why Do Migrants Take Recourse in the European Courtof Human Rights?Dia Anagnostou, Hellenic Foundation for Europeanand Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP)International Regime Complexity and Refugees in Southand Southeast AsiaTauhid Bin Kashem, University of California, IrvineOverburdened? How Immigrant Dispersal Policies CanMitigate Public BacklashOmer Solodoch, Tel Aviv UniversitySeeking Refuge: Factors Affecting Forced MigrantDestinations (Pre-Recorded)Grace Benson, American UniversityNichole Grossman, American University
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY117.41 ROUNDTABLE ON “THE AMERICAN
POLITICAL ECONOMY: POLITICS, MARKETS,AND POWER” (LIVESTREAMED)
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CChair: Sarah F. Anzia, University of California-BerkeleyPart: Paul Pierson, University of California, Berkeley
Zhao Li, Princeton UniversityCharlotte Cavaille, University of Michigan, Ford Schoolof Public PolicyJonas Pontusson, University of Geneva
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS117.42 INNOVATIONS IN MENA SURVEY RESEARCH
IN THE AGE OF COVID (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDisc: Melani Cammett, Harvard University
Papers: Research and Scholarship During the COVID-19PandemicGail Buttorff, University of HoustonMarwa Shalaby, University of Wisconsin-MadisonNermin Allam, Rutgers UniversityCOVID-19 and Gulf Citizen Attitudes Toward ForeignWorkersJustin Gengler, SESRI, Qatar UniversityLisa Blaydes, Stanford UniversityCOVID-19 and the 2021 Iranian Presidential ElectionDaniel Tavana, Princeton UniversityKevan Harris
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118.2 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: LIVING LIFE AS THEDISCLOSURE OF ORDER
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: Carol B Cooper, University of HoustonDisc: Carol B Cooper, University of Houston
Papers: On the Felt Sense of Being: An Approach toContemplative PsychotherapyRobert S. Seiler, Robert S. Seiler, Jr., LCSW-CSinAbigail L. Rosenthal, Brooklyn College of the City ofNew YorkMy Station and Its Duties, and Then What?Jerry L. Martin, University of Colorado at Boulder
Friday, 8:30 AM to 9:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY119.1 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY: ASSESSING AND
IMPROVING COUNTERING VIOLENTEXTREMISM PROGRAMS VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Peter Phillips Mandaville, George Mason University
Andrea Ruggeri, University of OxfordDisc: Chia-Chun Chen, Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence, FU
BerlinVictor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Papers: Authoritarian Personalism and Civil War MediationsRuixing Cao, University of VirginiaCivilian Agency During Conflict: Introducing the PeaceCommunities DatasetJennifer Hodge, University College LondonContextualizing Conflict: Breaking Down PoliticalViolence in MID DataRichie A Romero, Arizona State UniversityConvincing Them to Fight: How Rebel Groups FormTheir Recruitment StrategiesMichael James Soules, Pennsylvania State UniversityDo Alliances Deter? An Experimental Design in theU.S.Mark Souva, Florida State UniversityWeifang Xu, Florida State UniversityPatronage Power-Sharing and Rebel Group SplinteringMatthew Hauenstein, University of Notre Dame
Friday, 8:30 AM to 9:00 AM
Direct and Indirect Effects of UN PeacekeepingMissions on Civilian ViolenceBurak Giray, University of HoustonNationalist Dispositions of State-SanctionedDisinformationKangkyu LeeThe Changing Nature of Cyberwarfare: InternationalSecurity ImplicationsSpyridon Kotsovilis, University of TorontoMississauga
Friday, 10:00 AM to 10:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY120.1 POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Emily Nacol, University of Toronto
Russell Arben Fox, Friends UniversityDisc: Emily Nacol, University of Toronto
Russell Arben Fox, Friends University
Papers: Absolutism and Religious Toleration: John LockeĀsDebate with Edward BagshawTianhong Ying, Michigan State UniversityAdam SmithĀs Critique of Monopoly: A PersuasionAgainst Stockholders' SophistryXinzhi Zhao, University of Wisconsin-MadisonMachiavelliĀs Political Physiology of CorruptionZhiqiang JiThe Socratic Origins of Arendt's Theory of JudgmentLucas Entel, Yale-NUS CollegeThe Urban/Rural Divide in Athenian Political ThoughtCharles Nathan, Duke UniversityE.H. CarrĀs Theory of Law: Exploring the Elements ofInternational LawCarmen Chas Bartolome, University of KentPopular Sovereignty and RousseauĀs Repudiation of theRhetorical RepublicMegan Kathleen Dyer, Texas A&M UniversityProphetic Rhetoric: Aristotle and Douglass on thePurpose of Political SpeechMichael C. Hawley, Duke UniversityRawls on Justice, Well-Being, and the Stability ofJusticeJimmy Lim, McGill UniversityThe Caring Republic: Non-Domination and theStewardship of PluralismGrant Sharratt, The Ohio State UniversityThe Right to Overthrow the Government in IslamicThoughtAbdel-Fattah Mady, Alexandria University
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AMAPSA Events121.1 ALIGNING GRADUATE TRAINING WITH
HIRING INSTITUTION NEEDS: THINKING WAYBEYOND R1 (DEPARTMENT CHAIRS'ROUNDTABLE)
Room: VirtualChair: Susan Scarrow, University of HoustonPart: Shaun Bowler, University of California, Riverside
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Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University-CorpusChristiVeronica Reyna, Houston Community College
121.2 DEPARTMENT CHAIRS ROUNDTABLE VIRTUALVIEWING
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C121.3 MEET THE EDITORS: POLITICAL SCIENCE
JOURNAL EDITORS DISCUSS, ADVISE, ANDANSWER
Room: VirtualChair: Kelly M. Kadera, University of IowaPart: Paul Frymer, Princeton University
Davide Panagia, UCLAErik Voeten, Georgetown UniversityKathleen Dolan, University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeeJennifer L. Lawless, University of Virginia
121.4 METHODS CAFÉ 2021Room: Virtual Platform, Zoom RoomChair: Robin L. Turner, Butler University
Biko Koenig, Franklin & Marshall CollegeB Stone, CUNY-Graduate Center
Part: Osman Balkan, Swarthmore CollegeNadia E. Brown, Georgetown UniversityKevin Funk, Trinity CollegeRachel George, University of AlbertaRobert E. Kirsch, Arizona State UniversitySheryl R. Lightfoot, University of British ColumbiaJoseph E. Lowndes, University of OregonLauren M. MacLean, Indiana University, BloomingtonUahikea Maile, University of TorontoSamantha Ann Majic, CUNY-John Jay CollegeSarah E. Parkinson, Johns Hopkins UniversityAmy Cabrera Rasmussen, California State University,Long BeachDaniella Sarnoff, Social Science Research CouncilTanya Brooke Schwarz, Pi Sigma AlphaTani H Sebro, Humboldt State UniversityJessica Soedirgo, University of AmsterdamLahra Smith, Georgetown UniversityNicholas Rush Smith, CUNY-City CollegeDara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton UniversityTiffany J. Willoughby-Herard, University of California-IrvineElisabeth Jean Wood, Yale UniversityDeva Woodly, New School for Social ResearchRobin L. Turner, Butler UniversityPhilip Luke Johnson, The Graduate Center, CityUniversity of New York
121.5 MSRP BEST PRACTICES MEETINGRoom: Virtual121.6 PROMOTION, TENURE, CAREER, AND IMPACT
IN THE PROFESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Lisa Magana, Arizona State UniversityPart: Danielle P. Clealand, University of Texas at Austin
Yazmin Argentina Garcia Trejo, U.S. Census BureauBenjamin Marquez, University of Wisconsin, MadisonRaul Pacheco-Vega, Facultad Latinoamericana deCiencias Sociales (FLACSO) Sede MéxicoHeather Silber Mohamed, Clark University
121.7 SITUATING THE LEBANESE UPRISING:REVOLUTION, TRANSFORMATION, AND(DE)MOBILIZATION
Room: VirtualChair: Lama Mourad, Carleton University
DailySchedule
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Part: Rima Majed, American University of BeirutJeffrey G. Karam, Lebanese American UniversityLaryssa Chomiak, CEMATJillian M. Schwedler, Hunter CollegeMelani Cammett, Harvard UniversityRoland Riachi, American University of Beirut
121.8 TRANS JUSTICE 2021: ERASING TRANS YOUTHTHROUGH PUBLIC POLICY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 47: Sexuality & PoliticsCo-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
Chair: Alison Gash, University of OregonPart: Elizabeth A. Sharrow, University of Massachusetts
AmherstJoanna W. Wuest, Princeton UniversityKahina Marie Freeman, University of OregonCarl Charles, Lambda LegalEzra Young, Cornell University
121.9 LIGHTNING ROUND: RESEARCH IN FIVE:GRADUATE STUDENTS I
Room: VirtualChair: Mary Shiraef, University of Notre DameDisc: Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Daniela Osorio Michel, Vanderbilt University
Papers: Local Economic Effects of MoralesĀLegacy in BoliviaSina Smid, Copenhagen Business SchoolModel Credibility in Political ScienceShana Scogin, University of Notre DameUnderstanding Societal Divisions in Post-Conflict StatesNimendra Mawalagedara, Georgia State UniversityWater Crisis in Cape Town, South Africa: State andNonstate InteractionsShana Scogin, University of Notre DameWilliam Kakenmaster, University of Notre DameShasta Kaul, University of Notre DameWho Talks and Who Does Not? Gender Differences inEveryday Political TalkManuel Neumann, Mannheim Centre for EuropeanSocial ResearchWhy Limiting Aggressive Policing Led to Decreases inViolence in Rio de JaneiroJessie Bullock, Harvard University
Division PanelsDIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY122.1 COMEDY AND POLITICAL THEORYRoom: VirtualChair: Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeeDisc: John T. Lombardini, College of William & Mary
Papers: ĄStaying with the Troubleď: Comic Politics in theAnthropoceneLars Toender, University of CopenhagenRidicule This! Comedic Stylization and Its Role inPolitical HyperboleJulie A. Webber, Illinois State UniversityIt's Funny Because It's True? Reflections on Laughter,Deception, and CritiquePatrick Giamario, University of North Carolina,GreensboroComedy as Dissonant RhetoricSimon Lambek, University of British Columbia
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DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY122.2 DISAPPOINTED HOPES: RECLAIMING THE
PROMISE OF RESISTANCERoom: VirtualChair: Masa Mrovlje, University of ViennaDisc: Jamie Mayerfeld, University of Washington
Papers: Demands for Reparations and White Freedom DreamsLawrie Balfour, University of VirginiaRace and Loss: Between Resistance and RefusalJuliet Hooker, Brown UniversityNegative Affect and Political (De)MobilizationDeborah B. Gould, UC Santa CruzDisappointed Hope: Reimagining Resistance in theWake of the Egyptian RevolutionMasa Mrovlje, University of Vienna
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY122.3 BACKLASH AND BLAME: POLITICAL COSTS
AND CONSEQUENCESRoom: VirtualChair: Christina J. Schneider, University of California, San
DiegoDisc: Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-
Champaign
Papers: Aid, Blame, and Backlash: The Political Economy ofUnpopular AidCleo Marie O'Brien-Udry, Yale UniversityElectoral Responses to Economic CrisesYotam Margalit, Tel Aviv UniversityOmer Solodoch, Tel Aviv UniversityThe Political Cost of Economic Reforms: Evidence fromPrivatization in ChinaXingchen Lan, Stanford UniversityWho Blames Democracy for a Bad Economy?Puspa D Amri, Sonoma State UniversityNathanael Gratias Sumaktoyo, Universität KonstanzBurhanuddin Muhtadi, State Islamic University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY122.4 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI-CONFERENCE:
POLICY IMPLEMENTATION AND DISCRETIONIN THE CRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Michael Leo Owens, Emory UniversityDisc: Allison P. Harris, Yale University
Papers: Political Bias in Judicial Pre-Trial Decisions on GenderViolenceJoan-Josep Vallbe, University of BarcelonaPolicy Change and Strategic Prison ViolenceKanisha Bond, Binghamton UniversityCourtenay R. Conrad, University of California,MercedI Fought the (Gun) Laws: Why Sheriffs Oppose GunControl and Why It MattersMirya R. Holman, Tulane UniversityEmily Farris, Texas Christian University
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Vigilante Bureaucrats: Police killings as an InformalInstitution in BrazilYanilda Maria Gonzalez, Harvard University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS122.5 SUB-NATIONAL POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Alison E. Post, University of California, BerkeleyDisc: Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University
Papers: Beyond Left-Right Division: Party LeadersĀSpeechesOver DecentralizationAlberto de Leon, University of StrathclydeWartime Peasant Mobilization: The Chinese CommunistParty and Local InstitutionsXiufan WuWhy Some Subnational Democracies Fail? TheIndonesian CaseFnu Testriono, Northern Illinois UniversityGovern Thy Neighbor: The Fiscal Governance ofSocially-Embedded Local OfficialsSimone Paci, Columbia University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY122.6 EUROPEAN UNION POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Craig A. Parsons, University of OregonDisc: Andrew Kirkpatrick, Christopher Newport University
Papers: Constraining the Agency to Please the Public: The NewMode of EU ResponsivenessAnastasia Ershova, Leiden UniversityAleksandra Khokhlova, Leiden UniversityNikoleta Yordanova, Leiden UniverisityPolitical Work in the European CommissionFrederic Merand, Université de MontréalPolanyian Means to Hayekian Ends: āOrdoliberalism onSteroids' in EU GovernanceCraig A. Parsons, University of OregonMatthias Matthijs, Johns Hopkins UniversityPluralism or Democratic Erosion in the EuropeanUnion? (Trans-)National DebatesA. Maurits van der Veen, College of William & Mary
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY122.7 INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS:
BUREAUCRACY AND BEHAVIORRoom: VirtualChair: Leslie Johns, University of California, Los AngelesDisc: Bernhard Reinsberg, University of Cambridge
Papers: Do IMF Article IV Consultations Improve NaturalResource Governance?Terrence Chapman, University of Texas, AustinIasmin Goes, Carlos III-Juan March Institute ofSocial SciencesIdeology and Donations in the UN SystemSvanhildur Thorvaldsdottir, Technical University ofMunichWhen Outsiders Get in: Appointment Incentives inInvestment ArbitrationAnton Strezhnev, New York UniversityThreat and Exit in International AgreementsFaon Crystal, University of Illinois
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DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY122.8 INTERSTATE POWER DYNAMICSRoom: VirtualChair: Aarie Glas, Northern Illinois UniversityPapers: America's Selective Expansion
Sarah Burns, Rochester Institute of TechnologyRising Power Disputes: How Social Ties Shape Severityand LocationPatrick Gill-Tiney, University of OxfordPower Vacuum Politics and the Origins of the Cold Warin EuropeMoritz Sebastian Graefrath, University of NotreDamePower, Parity and Proximity: How Distance andUncertainty Condition PowerLauren GilbertErik Gartzke, UCSDAlex Braithwaite, University of ArizonaMichael Patrick Hulme, University of California, SanDiego
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY122.9 THE UNITED NATIONS AND GLOBAL NORMSRoom: VirtualChair: Jeffrey T. Checkel, European University InstituteDisc: Erin Baggott Carter, University of Southern California
Papers: Talking the Talk, Walking the Walk? DeliberationsWithin the UNSC, 1945-2018Evgenija Kröker, University of OxfordCostly Cheap Talk? How Severity of UNSCCondemnation Impacts Crisis BehaviorHyunki Kim, University of MarylandCan United Nations Peacekeeping Operations ReduceTerrorism?Wukki Kim, Korea Military AcademyMinju Kwon, Chapman UniversityGender Diversity and International Security: DoesGender Politics Promote Peace?ZHAOYU CHEN, Aoyama Gakuin University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY122.10 FOREIGN ELECTION INTERFERENCERoom: VirtualChair: Adam E. Casey, University of MichiganDisc: Lauren Prather, University of California, San Diego
Adam E. Casey, University of Michigan
Papers: Public Support for U.S. Intervention in Foreign ElectionsMichael R. Tomz, Stanford UniversityJessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-MadisonThe Impacts of Russian Election Interference on Allies'Confidence in the USBenjamin E. Goldsmith, Australian NationalUniversityYusaku Horiuchi, Dartmouth CollegeDo Unto Others? Americans Attitudes on ConductingElectoral Interventions AbroadPaul Musgrave, University of MassachusettsDov H. Levin, University of Hong KongWhat Have You Done for Me Lately? Electoralinterventions Effects on CooperationMarshall Palmer, Norman Paterson School ofInternational Affairs, Carleton University
DailySchedule
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES122.11 JOSEPH M. BROWN'S "FORCE OF WORDS: THE
LOGIC OF TERRORIST THREATS"Room: VirtualChair: Peter Krause, Boston CollegePart: Joseph Brown, University of Massachusetts Boston
Peter Krause, Boston CollegeBrian J. Phillips, University of EssexCharles W. Mahoney, California State University, LongBeachErin Kearns
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES122.12 NEW IDEAS IN THE STUDY OF GENOCIDE –
INSIGHTS FROM OMAR MCDOOM'S BOOK ONRWANDA
Room: VirtualChair: Omar Shahabudin McDoom, London School of
EconomicsPart: Stathis N. Kalyvas, Yale University
Scott Straus, University of California, BerkeleyBenjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth College
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS122.13 EXECUTIVE POLITICS IN THE COMPARATIVE
CONTEXTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative PoliticsChair: Lilly J. Goren, Carroll UniversityDisc: Farida Jalalzai, Virginia Tech
Lilly J. Goren, Carroll University
Papers: Do Female and Male Cabinet Ministers Do Their JobDifferently?Michelle M. Taylor-Robinson, Texas A&M UniversityAdrián Pignataro, University of Costa Rica/Universidad de Costa RicaGender and Political Selection: How Do LeadersAppoint Their Teams?Alba Huidobro, Universitat Pompeu FabraCountry Presidents and their Former Political Parties inRomaniaPaul TapSergiu Gherghina, University of GlasgowCabinet Ministers: From Agenda Setting to PolicyMakingIlana Shpaizman, Bar Ilan University
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION122.14 GOVERNMENT AGENCIES AND THE COVID
PANDEMICRoom: VirtualChair: Scott Lamothe, University of OklahomaDisc: David Switzer, University of Missouri
Papers: Causal Paths that Explain Differential Policy Stringencyin 50 statesChan Wang, Arizona State UniversityYushim KimWei Zhong, Tsinghua UniversityHow the Global Pandemic Has Impacted StakeholderEngagement in Public SchoolsThaddieus W. Conner, New Mexico State UniversityLocal Health DepartmentsĀResponses to COVID-19Earlene Camarillo, Western Oregon UniversityChristina Barsky, The University of Montana
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South KoreaĀs Early Response to COVID-19:Mechanismic Explanations and LessonsShin Kue Ryu, Idaho State University
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY122.15 NEW METHODOLOGICAL APPROACHES IN
STATE POLITICS RESEARCHRoom: VirtualChair: Michael Kistner, University of HoustonDisc: Bruce Desmarais, Pennsylvania State University
Scott James LaCombe, Smith College
Papers: Direct Democracy and Policy Responsiveness UsingCardinal ScalesJohn Cluverius, University of Massachusetts LowellJoshua J. Dyck, University of Massachusetts LowellEdward L. Lascher, California State University-SacramentoEstimating Constituency Ideology to StudyRepresentation and ElectionsLynda W. Powell, University of RochesterThe Effects of Mass Shootings on State Legislation:A New Methodological ApproachIliyan Iliev, University of Southern MississippiJoshua B Hill, The University of Southern MississippiThe Ideological Polarization of State Party Platformsfrom 1960-2020Christopher Warshaw, George Washington UniversityMatthew Carr, Columbia UniversityJustin Phillips, Columbia UniversityGerald Gamm, University of Rochester
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH122.16 GENDER AND INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Laura Sjoberg, Royal Holloway, University of LondonDisc: Laura Sjoberg, Royal Holloway, University of London
Bronwyn Anne Leebaw, University of California,Riverside
Papers: Boom to Bust: A Conceptual History of "Gender" inCzechiaAlexandria N. Wilson-McDonald, Eastern IllinoisUniversityEpistemological Compatibility of Critical Approachesand Statistical ModellingLenka Olejníková, University of New South WalesGender Blindness in Cybersecurity: Rethinking Genderand Technological PracticeKatharine M MillarJames Shires
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS122.17 RELIGIOUS IDENTITIESRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Abigail Lee Bitterman, University of OklahomaDisc: Michael D. Martinez, University of Florida
Kyle McWagner, University of California Irvine
Papers: The Greatest Commandments: How ReligiousPolarization Can Reshape BeliefAmy Lakeman, Harvard University
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Religion, Race, and Polarization: A Social IdentityTheory ApproachJeremiah Castle, Metropolitan State University ofDenverKyla Stepp, Central Michigan UniversityA Measure of Political Islam and How It Relates toPolitical Attitudes in IranAli Sanaei, Shahid Beheshti UniversityMajid Hadavi, Sharif university of technologyReconceptualizing Religious Identity: ExaminingReligious Identity and ViolenceRobert Thuan Brathwaite, Michigan State UniversityBaekkwan Park
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS122.18 ISSUES IN REDISTRICTING REFORM
(VIRTUAL)Room: VirtualChair: Danielle Thomsen, University of California, IrvineDisc: Charles Hunt, Boise State University
Papers: A Logical Model Approach to Detect Racially PolarizedVotingYuki Atsusaka, Rice UniversityThe Denominator of DemocracyNicholas Stephanopoulos, Harvard Law SchoolJowei Chen, University of MichiganGerrymandering in County CommissionsBrian Amos, Wichita State UniversityEndogenous Polarization? The Rise of Safe Seats &Party Indiscipline in CongressAlexander Kustov, Yale UniversityMaikol Cerda, Yale Jackson Institute for GlobalAffairsAkhil Rajan, Yale UniversityFrances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale UniversityIan Shapiro, Yale University
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES122.19 PARTIES, DIVISIVE ISSUES, AND NEW
TECHNOLOGIESRoom: VirtualChair: Subhasish Ray, Jindal School of Government and Public
Policy, O. P. Jindal Global UniversityDisc: Subhasish Ray, Jindal School of Government and Public
Policy, O. P. Jindal Global University
Papers: Fighting to Win! How Discrimination TechnologyConditions Electoral ViolenceTolgahan Dilgin, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignLobbying for Change in Addiction PolicyTaleed El-Sabawi, Elon UniversityParty Behavior and Issue OwnershipDieter Stiers, KU LeuvenRuth Dassonneville, Universite de Montreal
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION122.20 MEDIA AND POLARIZATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Anna Stanziano, University of PerugiaDisc: Erik Peterson, Texas A&M University
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Papers: Does News Exposure Increase Perceived Polarization?Evidence from Trace DataMagdalena Wojcieszak, UC Davis, U of AmsterdamBernhard Clemm von HohenbergRecommended Polarization: How YouTube's AlgorithmPushes Real People ContentMegan Brown, New York UniversityJames Hodgdon Bisbee, NYURichard Bonneau, NYUJoshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityJonathan Nagler, New York UniversityDigital Deluge: Internet Media and AffectivePolarizationAndrew Bennett, SUNY Binghamton
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS122.21 FROM FRAMING TO SHAMING: GENERATING
SUPPORT FOR ENVIRONMENTAL POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Elizabeth Koebele, University of Nevada, RenoDisc: Timothy Fraser, Northeastern University
Papers: The Environmental Justice Movement's Impact inAgency RulemakingDevin Judge-Lord, Harvard UniversityThe Impact of Green Shaming: EnvironmentalRegulations and NGOsFaradj KolievBaekkwan ParkAndreas Duit, Stockholm UniversityChinese Environmental Policy: Domestic Legitimacy andNarrativesThomas Benson, University of Delaware
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS122.22 INNOVATIONS IN TEACHING HUMAN RIGHTS:
ROUNDTABLE HONORING DR. BETHANYBARRATT
Room: VirtualChair: Shareen Hertel, University of ConnecticutPart: Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat, University of Connecticut-
StorrsCarrie Booth Walling, Albion CollegeCourtney Hillebrecht, University of Nebraska, LincolnAlison Dundes Renteln, University of SouthernCaliforniaKaren Zivi, Grand Valley State UniversityGeorge J. Andreopoulos, CUNY- John Jay College andthe Graduate Center
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP122.23 INDIGENEITY, SETTLER COLONIALISM, AND
POSTCOLONIALITYRoom: VirtualChair: Antje Ellermann, University of British ColumbiaDisc: Elspeth Wilson, Franklin & Marshall College
Papers: 1924: Two Acts that Shaped American CitizenshipRebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts,AmherstThe Border Crossed Us: Restoring Indigenous FreeMovement RightsMichael J. Sullivan, St. Mary's UniversityIndigeneity and Immigration in Settler Colonial StatesAntje Ellermann, University of British Columbia
DailySchedule
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
The Praxis of Partnering: De-Colonizing TraditionalWays of KnowingAdriano Udani, University of Missouri, St. Louis
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP122.24 MIGRATION AND THE COVID-19 CRISISRoom: VirtualChair: Amir Abdul Reda, Mohammed VI Polytechnic
University, African Institute for Research inEconomics & Social Sciences
Disc: Abigail Fisher Williamson, Trinity College
Papers: How Lack of Legal Status Worsens the Impacts of theCovid-19 PandemicRobert Courtney Smith, Marxe School of Public andInternational Affairs, Baruch College, and Sociology,Grad Center, CUNYAndres Besserer Rayas, The Graduate Center, CityUniversity of New YorkRefugee Women, Livelihoods, and Community During aGlobal PandemicLara-Zuzan Golesorkhi, University of PortlandKate HarderGrace Fortson, University of PortlandTrevor Bryan Riedmann, Center for Migration,Gender, and JusticeCurbing Xenophobia? Testing the Contact TheoryThrough COVID 19Ās Mobility CurbsAmir Abdul Reda, Mohammed VI PolytechnicUniversity, African Institute for Research inEconomics & Social SciencesDo Public Health Crises Dampen Public Support forImmigration?Nicholas Alexander Rymal Fraser, Munk School ofGlobal Affairs and Public Policy, University ofTorontoMichael J. Donnelly, University of Toronto
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS122.25 CONSEQUENCES OF AFRICAN ELECTORAL
INTEGRITYRoom: VirtualChair: Daniela Donno, University of CyprusDisc: George Kwaku Ofosu, London School of Economics and
Political Science
Papers: Election Quality and the Dynamics of Voter Turnout:Evidence from NigeriaBodunrin Joseph Adebo, National DemocraticInstituteNicholas KerrParliamentarians Back in Parliament: Fairer Electionsand MPs as RepresentativesNikolaos Frantzeskakis, Michigan State UniversityParty Primaries and Female Representation: Too Muchor Too Little Democracy?Merete Bech Seeberg, Department of PoliticalScience, Aarhus UniversityMichael Wahman, Michigan State UniversityThe Enduring Effects of Election Violence: Evidencefrom KenyaKathleen Klaus, University of San Francisco
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DIVISION 59: EDUCATION POLITICS AND POLICY122.26 U.S. EDUCATION SYSTEMS AND ANTI-BLACK
RACISMRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, Ann
ArborDisc: Claire Leslie Adida, UCSD
David E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame
Papers: Buried History of Black Public High Schools DuringSegregation:Shayla C. Nunnally, University of TennesseeFrank T. Manheim, George Mason UniversityDoes University Make You Less Prejudiced?Ralph Scott, University of ManchesterTeacher-Student Racial Congruence and Civics TestScoresJason Giersch, University of North Carolina,CharlotteElizabeth Stearns, UNC CharlotteMartha E. Kropf, University of North Carolina atCharlotteRoslyn Arlin Mickelson, University of NorthCarolina, CharlotteThe 'Good' Schools: Parental Preferences, StudentGrowth, and School SegregationDavid Houston, George Mason UniversityJeffrey R. Henig, Columbia University
Related Groups123.1 ASIAN PACIFIC AMERICAN CAUCUS: ASIAN
AMERICAN POLITICS IN CONTEMPORARY USSOCIETY
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Tony Affigne, Providence CollegeDisc: Tony Affigne, Providence College
Bang Quan Zheng, UCLA
Papers: Asian American Group Identity, Consciousness andPolitical ParticipationKayee Zhou, University of Texas, AustinDennis P. Patterson, Texas Tech UniversityDiscriminationĀs Impact on Coalition-building: AsianAmericans During COVID-19Sonya Chen, Princeton UniversityStephanie Chan, Princeton UniversityAsian and Latino American Political Conceptualization:A Dual-Concept ModelBang Quan Zheng, UCLA
123.2 CIVIL SOCIETY, POLICY, AND POWER:REPRESSION TO REGULATION: THE STATE &CIVIL SOCIETY AROUND THE GLOBE
Room: VirtualChair: Kristin Goss, Duke UniversityDisc: Andrew Heiss, Georgia State University
Summer Marion, University of Maryland
Papers: Mechanisms of Civil Society Policy DiffusionWorldwide, 1994-2014Anthony James DeMattee, Emory UniversityLuke Martin Shimek
Friday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Curating Sovereignty: Grassroots Organizations andSocial Change in PalestineCatherine E. Herrold, Syracuse UniversityThe Making of Senior Associations in Rural ChinaJi Ma, University of Texas, AustinAssessing the Legal and Regulatory Frameworks forU.S. Civil SocietyElizabeth T. Boris, Urban InstituteCindy Lott, Columbia University
123.3 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:POLITICAL INSTITUTION AND TAIWAN'SDEMOCRACY
Room: VirtualChair: Joel R. Campbell, Troy UniversityDisc: Austin Horng-En Wang, University of Nevada, Las
VegasChia-Chien Chang, National Sun Yat-sen University
Papers: Centralization, Elite Capture, and Service Provision:Evidence from TaiwanHsu Yumin Wang, Emory UniversityDirect Democracy's Indirect Effect on LegislativeRepresentation in TaiwanJinhyeok Jang, National Sun Yat-sen UniversityNick Lin, Academia SinicaExamining Dynastic Politicians' Advantages: Cases ofTaiwan's LegislatorsLi-Hong Weng
123.4 WOMEN'S CAUCUS FOR POLITICAL SCIENCE:OLD, WHITE AND MALE? DOCUMENTINGEXCLUSIONARY NETWORKS IN THEPROFESSION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Fernando Arturo Tormos Aponte, University ofMaryland Baltimore CountyCeleste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder
Part: Christina Xydias, Bucknell UniversityFernando Arturo Tormos Aponte, University ofMaryland Baltimore CountyNatasha Behl, Arizona State UniversityMaricruz Ariana Osorio, University of California,RiversideAmy L. Atchison, Valparaiso UniversitySusan Franceschet, University of CalgaryJennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental CollegeMalliga Och, Idaho State University
124.1 REMEMBERING ROBERT ELGIE:A SCHOLARLY RETROSPECTIVE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 15: European Politics and Society
Chair: Amy G. Mazur, Washington State UniversityPart: Emiliano Grossman, Sciences Po
David Doyle, University of OxfordGary Murphy, Dublin City UniversityBen Clift, University of WarwickErik Jones, Johns Hopkins Universityantoine auberger, University of Paris 2Iain McMenamin, Dublin City UniversityPhilipp Koeker, Leibniz University Hannover
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Friday, 10:30 AM to 11:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS125.1 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY AND POLITICS
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Jessica Baldwin-Philippi, Fordham UniversityDisc: Jessica Baldwin-Philippi, Fordham University
Papers: Memeification: Ontological Security of Nomadic InternetIdentitiesJackie Chuan Yin Ku, University of California,IrvineShaping Digital Human Rights: The Global Impact ofLegal DiffusionRachel A Hulvey, University of PennsylvaniaWhen Leviathan Encounters Unicorns: GovernanceChallenges and New TechnologiesDancheng LiIranĀs ĄHalalď Internet, 15 years laterHeather L. Katz, Southwestern Oklahoma StateUniversityDigital Media Use for News and Institutional TrustMatthew Jenkins, Gyeongsang National University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY125.2 FORMAL THEORY VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Giovanna Invernizzi, Columbia UniversityDisc: Scott Tyson, University of Rochester
Papers: Conditional Aid as a Risk-Sharing AgreementBoris Brekhov, Freie Universität BerlinDivision and Connection: How Does Networking SwayMobilization in Autocracy?Yuequan Guo, University of MichiganHow Does Violence Deter? Functional and InformationalEffects of RepressionDogus AktanSimiles Cum Similibus: How Shared Traits ShapeElection and Policy OutcomesFrancesco Bromo, Texas A&M UniversityBenjamin Ogden, Texas A&M UniversityWhale of a Deal: A Bargaining Model of Treaty ExitTaylor Dalton, University of Southern California
DIVISION 56: AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT125.3 AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Jeremy D. Bailey, University of OklahomaDisc: James H. Read, St. John's University/ College of Saint
Benedict
Papers: The Constitution and the Problem of ModernityMarc Landy, Boston CollegeAre There 100 Acts of Congress Everyone ShouldKnow?James R. Stoner, Louisiana State UniversityHunter Michael Holliday, Louisiana State University
DailySchedule
Friday, 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Friday, 11:00 AM to 11:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION126.1 POLITICAL COMMUNICATION VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSION IRoom: VirtualChair: Babak Bahador, George Washington UniversityDisc: Babak Bahador, George Washington University
Papers: Measuring and Mapping the Use of Data-DrivenCampaigning by Party OrganizationsEsmeralda V. Bon, University of ManchesterRachel K. Gibson, University of ManchesterAndrea Roemmele, Hertie School of GovernanceLegitimizing Protests via Multimedia Platforms:Evidence from TikTok in āBLMYanru Jiang, University of Southern CaliforniaXin Jin, City University of Hong KongQinhao DengAgenda Setting on Social Media in Asia: A Text-Mining & Statistical ApproachHugo Tai, University of OxfordLearning from Online News: Selective and IncidentalExposureGyo Hyun Koo, University of Texas at AustinViral Media as a Means of Closing the Knowledge Gap:TikTok & Qualified ImmunityRobin Bayes, Northwestern UniversitySam Gubitz, Kent Denver School
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION126.2 POLITICAL COMMUNICATION VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSION IIRoom: VirtualChair: Matthew Barnidge, University of AlabamaDisc: Matthew Barnidge, University of Alabama
Papers: Communicating Policy: A Twitter Analysis of the UKĀsEU Settled Status SchemeDonna ArrondelleHispanics in the United States CongressCarlos Daniel Gutierrez MannixTo Parrot or Not to Parrot: Media Adoption ofGovernment Foreign Policy RhetoricJenna Gibson, University of ChicagoElsy Gonzalez, University of ChicagoYouth Political Consumerism: Expression, Discussion &Social Media AntecedentsZicheng Cheng, Pennsylvania State UniversityBingbing Zhang, Pennsylvania State UniversityHomero Gil de Zúñiga, University of Salamanca /Pennsylvania State University
Friday, 11:00 AM to 12:00 PMAPSA Events127.1 DEMOCRACY BEHIND BARSRoom: VirtualChair: Julia Walters (APSA), American Political Science
Association
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Friday, 11:30 AM to 12:00 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY128.1 EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Hei Yin ChanDisc: Tereza Novotna, Free University Berlin
Papers: Covid-19 National Recovery and Resilience Plans:A Tale of Many Europes?Matilde Ceron, University of MilanCarlo Maria PalermoGreen Postulate or Action? Environmental Dimension ofthe EU Aviation PolicyDominika Furtak, Jagiellonian UniversityHow Does Municipality Amalgamation Reduce VoterTurnout? The Case of NorwayHei Yin ChanIntelligence Services on Social Media: ExplainingCitizensĀPerceptionsRaluca Lutai, Babes, Bolyai UniversityReconceptualizing the Nation: European Union CivilReligionPaul Max Love, University of California, IrvineToo Important to Ignore? When Voters Seek ClarityAbout Policy PositionsJonne Kamphorst, European University InstituteUnconstrained Access: Immigration Policy DiffusionAcross the European UnionAndrea Pena-Vasquez, University of Notre DameHannah Wilson, University of Notre DameWhat Future for the EU-ROK Partnership in the Light ofthe US-China Competition?Tereza Novotna, Free University BerlinThe Police and the Radical Right in GermanyJeyhun Alizade, Princeton University
Friday, 11:30 AM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events129.1 DEPARTMENT CHAIRS' NETWORKING
LUNCHEON (INVITE ONLY) (LIVESTREAMED)Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A
Friday, 12:00 PM to 12:30 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION130.1 INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Daniela Donno, University of CyprusDisc: Daniela Donno, University of Cyprus
Felicity Vabulas, Pepperdine UniversityHyeran Jo, Texas A&M University
Papers: Constraints and Incentives in the Investment TreatyRegimeTuuli-Anna Huikuri, University of OxfordDemocracies and the Domestic Politics of BilateralInvestment TreatiesYumi Park, University of Wisconsin-MadisonAndrew McWard, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Friday, 12:00 PM to 12:30 PM
Discriminatory DiplomacyClara H. Suong, Virginia TechImplications of Politically Driven Investment: DebtTrappers or Growth Boosters?Yue Lin, University of California, BerkeleyLegalization and Treaty WithdrawalBree Laura Bang-Jensen, University of WashingtonOrganizing Agency: Social Beliefs and the Emergenceof GovernanceDavid Peterson, Ohio State UniversityPoliticized Aid Does Harm: American Exceptionalismand Global HealthRuth Carlitz, Tulane UniversitySebastian Ziaja, German Development Institute /Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE)Reduce Violence: Integrated Effect of HumanitarianAgency and UN PeacekeepingShenghao ZhangSelection, Retention, and Affiliation Bias in the ICJAlex K PughThe Effects of Transparency Reform on the Legitimacyof the UN Security CouncilVegard TørstadCustomary International Law and Public Support for theUse of ForceMelinda Haas, University of PittsburghCountriesĀResponse to Global Systemic ShocksKatherine T. Tyson, Oxford University
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events131.1 INTERPRETIVE METHODOLOGIES AND
METHODS ANNUAL BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PMTheme Panels132.1 PLENARY ADDRESS: RUNNING AN ELECTION
DURING A PANDEMIC (LIVESTREAMED)Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CPart: Thomas Hicks, U.S Election Assistance Commission
Sara Sadhwani, Pomona CollegeAPSA Events133.1 INTERNSHIPS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE: BEST
PRACTICES IN THE DISCIPLINE(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6AChair: Renee B. Van Vechten, University of RedlandsPart: Bobbi Gentry, Bridgewater College
Michelle Chin, University of Texas at DallasSusan L. Wiley, George Washington UniversityClinton Jenkins, Birmingham-Southern CollegeRichard A. Clucas, Western Political ScienceAssociationArthur H. Auerbach, University of Southern CaliforniaAmy Cabrera Rasmussen, California State University,Long BeachDaniel J Mallinson, Penn State, Harrisburg
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133.2 STRUCTURING INCLUSION INTOUNDERGRADUATE PEDAGOGY, GRANTAPPLICATIONS, MASTERS RECRUITING, ANDDOCTORAL PROGRAMS IN POLITICALSCIENCE
Room: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Gina Yannitell Reinhardt, University of EssexPart: Bridgett King, Auburn University
Stephen Michael Utych, Boise State UniversityElaine K. Denny, University of California, MercedAna MurilloAmy H. Liu, University of Texas at AustinZeynep Somer-Topcu, University of Texas at AustinAshley Karina Tulle VarelaBianca O Amechi, UC Merced
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY134.1 AFFECT, FEELING, AND IDENTITY IN THE
HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Camila Vergara, Columbia UniversityPapers: Amor Mundi as Capability to Transcend: ArendtĀs
Conception of the Human (Pre-Recorded)Zhangmei Tang, University of ExeterThe Relationship Between Anxiety and Liberty:Epicureans & Stoics vs. Hobbes (Pre-Recorded)Vertika Vertika, McGill UniversityThe Virtuous Collision: Chaos and Redemption inMachiavellian Fortuna (Pre-Recorded)Amanda Griffiths, University of California, LosAngeles
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY134.2 DEMOCRACY AND DICTATORSHIPRoom: WSCC, 611Chair: Adam Lebovitz, Trinity Hall, Cambridge
Samuel Garrett Zeitlin, Corpus Christi College,University of Cambridge
Disc: Tae-Yeoun Keum, University of California, SantaBarbara
Papers: HellerĀs Concept of āAuthoritarian LiberalismĀRevisitedMargarete Tiessen, University of TechnologyChemnitzThe American Dictatorship, 1781-1787Adam Lebovitz, Trinity Hall, CambridgePopulism and CaesarismAnton Jäger, Cambridge University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY134.3 PLURALIZING FEMINISMRoom: WSCC, 618Chair: Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, BoulderDisc: Veronica Zebadua-Yanez, University of Maryland
Papers: ĄWe are all Hystericsď: Hélène CixousĀPoetics ofFeminist ProtestAni Chen, Cornell UniversityPluralizing Activism: Toni Morrison, Black Womanism,and the Role of the Editor (Pre-Recorded)Lisa Gilson, Bates CollegeSalvaging as Feminist Praxis: Affective Orientation andthe Will to Go OnDanielle Hanley, Clark University
DailySchedule
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
ĄWe must become traitorsď: āMeToo and Its AbolitionistCriticsAgatha Anna Slupek, University of Chicago
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY134.4 DOMESTIC ORIGINS OF CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 3AChair: Jack Paine, University of RochesterDisc: Katherine Ingram, Princeton University
Papers: On the Peaceful Transition of PowerScott Tyson, University of RochesterTargeting Livelihoods in Civil ConflictJessica Sun, Emory UniversityViolence, Peace, and Intervention in Illicit Drug MarketsMartin Castillo Quintana, NYUStrategic Reporting: A Formal Model of Biases inConflict EventsMichael Gibilisco, California Institute of TechnologyJessica Steinberg, Indiana University- InternationalStudies
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY134.5 PARTISANSHIP AND SOCIAL IDENTITYRoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Alexa Bankert, University of GeorgiaDisc: Alexa Bankert, University of Georgia
Geoffrey Sheagley, University of Georgia
Papers: Social Identity, Threat-Processing and Prosocial PoliticsMarika Danielle Csapo, Loyola MarymountUniversityDoes Eligibility to Vote Increase Partisan Bias?Sonja Castaneda Dower, University of ChicagoNegative Partisanship Among IndependentsAlexa Bankert, University of Georgia
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY134.6 PARTY ACTIVISTS, RECRUITMENT AND
PARTY-BUILDINGRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Tanushree Goyal, Harvard UniversityDisc: Rachel Beatty Riedl, Cornell University
Gareth Nellis, University of California, San Diego
Papers: Women and Party-Building: Evidence from MunicipalGovernments in BrazilCameron Sells, Tulane UniversityTanushree Goyal, Harvard UniversityNetworks and Candidate Selection in ConsolidatingDemocraciesCesi Cruz, University of California, Los AngelesCan Party Elites Shape the Rank and File?A Recruitment Campaign in IndiaSaad Gulzar, Stanford UniversityDurgesh PathakSarah F. Thompson, Stanford UniversityAliz TothPaying Party Brokers: How Patronage Sustains MachinePartiesSarah Brierley, London School of EconomicsNoah Nathan, University of Michigan
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY134.7 DOES THE STATE WORK FOR THE PEOPLE?Room: Sheraton, Willow B
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Chair: Ben William Ansell, University of OxfordPapers: Equalizing Access and the Rise of (E)quality Politics
Quinn W. Mulroy, Northwestern UniversityHeather McCambly, Northwestern UniversityVarieties of Maternalist States: Health Politics inInterwar US and JapanNuannuan XiangWelfare Provision: Combining Historical and ModernTheories of the StateEileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY134.8 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI-CONFERENCE:
CRIMINAL LEGAL INTERSECTIONS ANDBOUNDARIES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Megan Ming Francis, University of WashingtonDisc: Laurel Eckhouse, University of Denver
Papers: Immigration Enforcement and Minority PoliticalParticipationMayya Komisarchik, University of RochesterAsya Magazinnik, MITScott Abramson, University of RochesterCrossover Mothers: Experiencing Child Protection andCriminal Justice SystemsAshLee Smith, University of MinnesotaPolicing Behavior with Violence: Introducing theBridging Racial Violence DatasetKiela Crabtree, University of Michigan, Ann ArborĄIĀll Will Tell You What I Know:ďThe David JonesStoryLisa L. Miller, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION134.9 TEACHING UNDERGRADUATE & GRADUATE
POLITICAL METHODOLOGYRoom: WSCC, 608Chair: Mitchell Brown, Auburn UniversityPart: Cameron G. Thies, Michigan State University
Shane Nordyke, University of South DakotaDIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS134.10 ARE WE SEEING A GENERATIONAL SHIFT IN
SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS?Room: WSCC, 612
Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian PoliticsChair: Eva Louise Hansson, Stockholm UniversityDisc: Eva Louise Hansson, Stockholm University
Sarah Shair-Rosenfield, University of Essex
Papers: IndonesiaĀs Generation Gap: Youth Preferences in aDeclining DemocracyBurhanuddin Muhtadi, State Islamic UniversityEve Warburton, National University of SingaporeMalaysiaĀs Democratic Deficit: Why DonĀt the YouthSeem to Mind?Ibrahim Suffian, Merdeka Center for OpinionResearchMeredith L. Weiss, SUNY, University at AlbanyTai De Lee, Merdeka Center for Opinion Research
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Signs of Dissent and Idealism Amidst Political PassivityAmong Philippine YouthRonald David Holmes, De La Salle UniversityThe Rise and Dynamics of the 2020 Thai Anti-Establishment Youth MovementKanokrat Lertchoosakul, Department ofGovernment,
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS134.11 REGIME TYPERoom: WSCC, 401Chair: Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los AngelesDisc: Barbara Geddes, University of California, Los Angeles
Papers: Classifying Political Regimes, 1900-2019 a New DatasetBased on V-DemScott Mainwaring, University of Notre DameFernando Bizzarro Neto, Harvard UniversityNatan Skigin, University of Notre DameDemocracy-at-Risk: Estimate Stability and Vulnerabilityof DemocracyKenya Amano, University of WashingtonPower Concentration and Economic GrowthNicolai Schulz, Humboldt-Universität zu BerlinPromises over Principles: How Regimes Manage theNGO SectorJordan A Holsinger, Florida State University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES134.12 WHO REPRESENTS, WHO GETS
REPRESENTED: POLITICS IN THEDEVELOPING WORLD
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Chair: Gabriela Camacho, Humboldt Universität zu BerlinDisc: Erum Aly Haider, Georgetown University
Papers: After the Pink Tide: Social Movements in Ecuador andBoliviaGabriela Camacho, Humboldt Universität zu BerlinReexamining Latin AmericaĀs Pink Tide: In Search of aSocial Democratic LeftPaul Wesley Posner, Clark UniversityWho Owns the City? Migration, Ownership and UrbanEthnic PartiesMashail Aman Malik, Harvard University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES134.13 POLITICAL AFFAIRS THROUGH THE LENS OF
RUSSIAN MEDIARoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3Chair: Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State UniversityDisc: Samuel A. Greene, King's College London
Tom Paskhalis, New York University
Papers: Online and Offline Repression in Electoral Autocracies:Evidence from RussiaAnita R. Gohdes, Hertie SchoolKaterina Tertytchnaya, University College LondonWarfare Agenda-Setting on Russian Television, 2009 -2019 (Pre-Recorded)Lana Bilalova
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RTĀs Coverage of the Pandemic and Its Circulation onNew Media PlatformsVitaly Kazakov, The University of ManchesterMethodology of International Agency War Reporting:Promiscuity and Plurality (Pre-Recorded)Kenzie Burchell, University of Toronto Scarborough
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY134.14 A RESPONSE DELAYED: POLITICAL SCIENCE
AND THE HOLOCAUSTRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom DChair: Jeffrey Kopstein, University of California, IrvinePart: Susan Welch, The Pennsylvania State University
Jelena Subotic, Georgia State UniversityRobert Braun, UC BerkeleyVolha Charnysh, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDaniel Solomon, Georgetown University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY134.15 COVID POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 2AChair: Elisabetta De Giorgi, University of TriesteDisc: Alessandro Del Ponte, Yale University
Papers: Radical Right Populists and the Spread of Covid-19Conspiracies on FacebookRosario Aguilar, Newcastle UniversityBruno de Paula Castanho Silva, University ofCologneFrederico Vegetti, University of Mannheim, MZESPublic Support for EU Economic Solidarity during theCovid-19 PandemicNicholas Charron, Goteburg UniversityMonika Bauhr, University of GothenburgThe Pandemic as an Opportunity for the Government-Opposition Relationship? (Pre-Recorded)Elisabetta De Giorgi, University of TriesteJose António Afonso Santana-Pereira, ISCTE-IULGianluca PiccolinoPandemic and Nationalism: Evidence from the EuropeanParliamentAbdul G. Noury, New York University Abu Dhabi
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY134.16 MEMORY & THE FUTURE OF EUROPE:
RUPTURE AND INTEGRATION IN THE WAKEOF TOTAL WAR (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Peter J. Verovĥek, University of SheffieldPart: Bojan Bugaric, University of Sheffield, Department of
LawKalypso Nicolaidis, University of OxfordPaul Petzschmann, Carleton CollegeCatherine Blanche Guisan, University of MinnesotaOnur Bakiner, Seattle University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY134.17 GOVERNANCE IMPLICATIONS OF
MULTINATIONAL FIRM ACTIVITYRoom: WSCC, 603Chair: Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard UniversityDisc: Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University
Sonal S. Pandya, University of Virginia
DailySchedule
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Papers: Multinational Firms and the Impact of Trade Disputeson Investment DecisionsYoo Sun Jung, University of California, San DiegoErica Owen, University of PittsburghGlobal Value Chains as a Constraint on Sovereignty:Evidence from ISDSCarolina Moehlecke, Fundação Getulio VargasRachel Wellhausen, University of Texas at AustinCalvin ThrallClosing the Institutional Gap: Protecting Technology inFDISiyao Li, University of PennsylvaniaHome Advantage in the Politics of Shaming: Evidencefrom the OECD Guidelines (Pre-Recorded)Boram Lee, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION134.18 LIVING WITH THE CONSEQUENCES OF
CLIMATE CHANGE (LIVESTREAMED)Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6BChair: Vally Koubi, ETH ZurichDisc: Dustin Halliday Tingley, Harvard University
Papers: The Citizen and the State in a Changing ClimateAmanda Kennard, New York UniversityCarlos Felipe Balcazar, New York UniversityNatural Disasters and the Tradeoffs of Climate ChangeAttributionRebecca Perlman, Princeton UniversityZuhad HaiThe Determinants of Mass Support for Cross-BorderClimate CompensationFederica Genovese, University of EssexNikhar Gaikwad, Columbia UniversityDustin Halliday Tingley, Harvard UniversitySupporting Climate Adaptation Overseas by ProvidingAid or Accepting RefugeesAzusa Uji
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY134.19 ALLIANCE STRATEGIES: HOW STATES
MANAGE THEIR SECURITY ALLIANCESRoom: Sheraton, IssaquahChair: Timothy Crawford, Boston CollegeDisc: Michaela Mattes, UC-Berkeley
Yasuhiro Izumikawa, Chuo University
Papers: The Benefits of Weak Allies: Burden-Sharing and theDilemmas of Alliance ControlBrian Blankenship, University of MiamiVarieties of Junior Partner Alliance StrategyMayumi Fukushima, Harvard UniversityUse Their Force: Security Alignments and theDistribution of CapabilitiesJ Andres Gannon, University of California, SanDiego
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY134.20 INTERNATIONAL ORDER AND REPERTOIRES
OF POWER POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 607Chair: Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Ayse Zarakol, University of Cambridge
Stacie E. Goddard, Wellesley College
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Papers: Partial Hegemony, Oil, and International OrderJeff Colgan, Brown UniversityThe Repertoire of ĄDiplomatic EmbeddednessďMarina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern UniversitySignaling Repertoires: Beyond Costly Signaling vsCheap TalkJennifer Spindel, University of New HampshireGreat-Power Subversion in the Power-PoliticalRepertoireWilliam C. Wohlforth, Dartmouth College
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY134.21 SECURITY IN MULTI-ETHNIC SYSTEMSRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: Brandon Merrell, Yale UniversityDisc: Rachel Sweet, University of Notre Dame
Papers: Interstate Hostility and Maritime Crime: Evidence fromSouth East AsiaBrandon C. Prins, University of TennesseeAaron Gold, Sewanee: The University of the SouthAnup Phayal, University of North CarolinaWilmingtonIs Terrorist Designation an Effective Counterterror Tool?(Pre-Recorded)Chia-yi Lee, National Chengchi UniversityYasutaka Tominaga, Hosei University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY134.22 THE EFFECTS OF LEADERS' GENDER ON
FOREIGN POLICY DECISIONMAKINGRoom: WSCC, 619Chair: Christine Cheng, King's College LondonDisc: Christine Cheng, King's College London
Papers: A Cross-National Analysis of Gender and MinorityInclusion in FP MakingSaad Ullah Khan, Georgia State UniversityForeign Aid and Gender Parity in the CabinetMarijke Breuning, University of North TexasGender & Foreign Policy: Do Women in the StateDepartment Lead Differently? (Pre-Recorded)Maryann E. Gallagher, University of GeorgiaJena JibreenLeaders' Gender and Public Support for Foreign PolicyDecisionsAnna O. Pechenkina, Utah State UniversityMicala GillespieKiron Kanina Skinner, Carnegie Mellon UniversityEunbin Chung, University of Utah
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES134.23 ADVANCES IN CONFLICT PROCESSESRoom: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Holley E. Hansen, Oklahoma State UniversityDisc: Holley E. Hansen, Oklahoma State University
Caroline Brandt, University of Southern California
Papers: How Nonviolent Action Works: Evidence from FieldExperiments in LATAM and Africa (Pre-Recorded)Consuelo Amat, Johns Hopkins UniversityJonathan Pinckney, United States Institute of PeaceSergio Miguel Cabrales DomínguezStealing the Fight -- Restraint and Victory in PartnerWarfareKyle Atwell
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Violence During Civil War NegotiationsBrian Lai, University of IowaStephen C. Nemeth, Oklahoma State UniversityWhen Words Hurt: How Verbal Attacks on ISISIncreased Violence Against CiviliansIliyan Iliev, University of Southern MississippiNahrain Senharib Rasho, University of California,DavisBrandon J. Kinne, University of California, Davis
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES134.24 CRISIS ESCALATION AND PREVENTIONRoom: WSCC, 4C2Chair: Patrick James, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Kyle Beardsley, Duke University
Patrick James, University of Southern California
Papers: ĄNear Crises and Escalation Processes in World Politics:A Pathway AnalysisďEdward Gonzalez, University of Southern CaliforniaAnne Wijk, University of Southern CaliforniaPatrick James, University of Southern CaliforniaIsraelĀs Decision to Escalate: From Near-Crisis to the2006 Israel-Lebanon WarSteven E. Lobell, University of UtahDefense Policy Implications of the Near-Crisis FindingsScott A. Silverstone, United States Military AcademyPostures and Portents: Action-Level Predictors of CrisisEscalationAnne Wijk, University of Southern CaliforniaEdward Gonzalez, University of Southern CaliforniaKyle Beardsley, Duke University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES134.25 MODES AND CONSEQUENCES OF STATE
REPRESSIONRoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Courtney Burns, Bucknell UniversityDisc: Renard J Sexton, Emory University
Courtney Burns, Bucknell University
Papers: Post-Conflict Civil Society Repression and Civil WarRecurrenceAlex Bruens, University of ArizonaRepertoires of Coercion in Mass Violence: AFramework from CambodiaĀs Genocide (Pre-Recorded)Rachel P Jacobs, Dickinson CollegeRepression, Emotion, Contagion: Analyzing the(De)Escalation of Protest Violence (Pre-Recorded)Edmund W. Cheng, City University of Hong KongYuner Zhu, City University of Hong KongRichard M Walker, City University of Hong KongFei Shen, City University of Hong KongState Repression and Social ConflictMichael A. Rubin, University of ConnecticutRichard McAlexander, Columbia UniversityDaniel Arnon, Emory University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES134.26 INTERBRANCH RELATIONS IN LATIN
AMERICARoom: WSCC, 615Chair: Taeko Hiroi, The University of Texas at El PasoDisc: Mauricio Yoshida Izumi, Federal University of Espírito
Santo
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Papers: Legislative Review and Obstruction in CoalitionalPresidentialismTaeko Hiroi, The University of Texas at El PasoMinistries that We Want: Parties' Agendas and Signalingof Portfolio SalienceMagna Inácio, Federal University of Minas GeraisRosiene Guerra de Andrade, Federal University ofMinas GeraisFernando Meireles, Federal University of MinasGeraisPolicy Competition and Cooperation in PresidentialCoalition GovernmentsArgelina Cheibub Figueiredo, Universidade doEstado do Rio de JaneiroNara SallesPolicy Monitoring and Ministerial SurvivalThiago Nascimento da Silva, Universität MannheimAlejandro Medina, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS134.27 PHANTOMS OF A BELEAGUERED REPUBLIC:
THE DEEP STATE AND THE UNITARYEXECUTIVE
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BChair: Margaret Weir, Brown University
John A. Dearborn, Vanderbilt UniversityDesmond King, University of Oxford
Part: Saladin Malik Ambar, Eagleton Institute of Politics -Rutgers UniversityAmanda Hollis-Brusky, Pomona CollegeFrances E. Lee, Princeton UniversitySuzanne Mettler, Cornell UniversityJeffrey K. Tulis, The University of Texas, AustinStephen Skowronek, Yale University
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION134.28 REPRESENTATIVE BUREAUCRACYRoom: WSCC, 2BChair: Jill Nicholson-Crotty, Indiana UniversityDisc: Lael R. Keiser, University of Missouri
Papers: A New Approach for Assessing the Effects ofRepresentative BureaucracyDaniel P. Hawes, Kent State UniversityAt the Margins: Budget Cuts and RepresentativeBureaucracyXiaoyang Xu, American UniversityCarla M. Flink, American UniversityAngel Luis Molina, Arizona State UniversityFemale Leaders, Organizational Contexts and ActiveRepresentationXiaoyang Xu, American UniversityLing Zhu, University of HoustonKen Meier, American UniversityThe Theory of Representative Bureaucracy and theDiscipline of Female StudentsKenicia Wright, University of Central
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS134.29 LAWYERS AND EXTERNAL ACTORS IN THE
JUDICIAL PROCESSRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Erin B. Kaheny, University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeeDisc: Robert Michael Pallitto, Seton Hall University
DailySchedule
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Papers: Exploring the Effect of Voice Pitch in Lawyer Successat the U.S. Supreme CourtYiqiang WangSiyu Li, University of MinnesotaWrite like a Lady!: The Role of Gender Norms inAttorney Brief SuccessShane A. Gleason, Texas A&M University- CorpusChristiJohn J. Szmer, University of North Carolina,CharlotteThe Office of the Solicitor General: Negative AgendaSetting and CertiorariChristine Bird, The University of Texas at AustinOld vs New: Legal Entrepreneurship and AmicusInfluence at the Supreme CourtElizabeth Lane, Louisiana State UniversityJessica Schoenherr, University of South CarolinaOutside Actors and Constitutional Court DecisionMaking (Pre-Recorded)Benjamin Bricker, Southern Illinois University,CarbondaleScott A. Comparato, Southern Illinois University,Carbondale
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY134.30 POLICY ADOPTION AND RESPONSIVENESS:
A VIEW FROM THE STATESRoom: WSCC, 620Chair: Glen S. Krutz, Oklahoma State UniversityDisc: Christopher Z. Mooney, University of Illinois at Chicago
Derek Epp, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Energy Transition: Multiple Streams Framework,Republicans, & Renewable EnergyJuliann Emmons-Allison, University of California,RiversideKathleen J. Hancock, Colorado School of MinesState Labor Laws and Government Responsiveness toPublic OpinionDaniel R. DiSalvo, CUNY-City College of New YorkPatrick Flavin, Baylor UniversityMichael T. Hartney, Boston CollegeThe Adoption of Open Meetings Laws in the AmericanStatesJustin Kirkland, University of VirginiaJeffrey J. Harden, University of Notre DameClass Dismissed: The Determinants of K12 SchoolClosure in the Wake of COVID-19Ethan Fried, Temple University
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS134.31 NEW DIRECTIONS IN THE RIGHT TO THE
CITYRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: Harlan Downs-Tepper, Duke UniversityPapers: Covid-19, Eviction and Livelihoods in a "Developing"
Indian City (Pre-Recorded)Harlan Downs-Tepper, Duke UniversityEmily Rains, Duke UniversityMateo Villamizar Chaparro, Duke UniveristyInternet Dance Communities and the Right to theInternet (Pre-Recorded)Rebecca Krisel, CUNY Graduate CenterThe Electoral Politics of Homeless Policy in UrbanCalifornia (Pre-Recorded)David J Amaral, UC Santa Cruz
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Youth, Sustainability and Democracy: the EverydayPolitics of Young Londoners (Pre-Recorded)James Sloam, University of London, Royal HollowayBen O'Loughlin, University of London, RoyalHolloway
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH134.32 POLICY AND POLITICS OF GENDERRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan AChair: Anne Whitesell, Miami UniversityDisc: Anne Whitesell, Miami University
Papers: The Mechanisms of Descriptive Representation: 'Weight-Bearing' RepresentationHaley V Norris, Rutgers UniversityWorkforce Automation Risks Across Race and Genderin the United StatesIan P. McManus, Emerson College
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS134.33 ASIAN AMERICAN ATTITUDES AND ANTI-
ASIAN SENTIMENT IN THE TRUMP ERARoom: WSCC, 609
Co-sponsored by Asian Pacific American CaucusChair: Ngoc Phan, Hawaii Pacific UniversityDisc: Taeku Lee, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: AmericansĀAttitude towards Asian Americans in TrumpAdministrationDan Qi, Louisiana State UniversityJames C. Garand, Louisiana State UniversityTo Flee or to Flock? Challenges to Asian AmericanCollective Action and IdentityChinbo Chong, Indiana University, BloomingtonYellow Peril Revived? Anti-Asian Racism and AmericanPublic Opinion on China (Pre-Recorded)D.G. Kim, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS134.34 REACTIONS TO RANKED-CHOICE VOTINGRoom: WSCC, 310Chair: Benjamin Reilly, University of Western AustraliaDisc: Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
Papers: Do Americans Support the Transfer Feature ofPreferential Voting?Joseph Anthony, Oklahoma State UniversityDavid C. Kimball, University of Missouri, St. LouisJack Santucci, Drexel UniversityJamil Shatema Scott, Georgetown UniversityAre āCome-from-Behind' RCV Winners Different?A Comparative AnalysisBenjamin Reilly, University of Western AustraliaJack Santucci, Drexel UniversityU.S. VotersĀSatisfaction with Ranked-Choice Voting,Runoff, and PluralityJoseph Cerrone, George Washington UniversityCynthia McClintock, George Washington UniversityRCV, STV, and Party Systems: A New Scaling Methodon Ranked Ballots (Pre-Recorded)Jesse Clark, Princeton University
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES134.35 PARTIES AND CHANGING ORGANIZATIONSRoom: WSCC, 303Chair: John J. Pitney, Claremont McKenna CollegeDisc: Carlos Algara, Claremont Graduate University
Papers: Financing State Party OrganizationsJohn Alexander Curiel, Ohio Northern UniversityResponsive to Whom? Interest Groups versus the PublicAnne Rasmussen, University of CopenhagenSolidarity Frames and the Party Political Sphere:A European Thing? (Pre-Recorded)Peter Thijssen, Universiteit Antwerpen
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR134.36 (COMPULSORY) CIVIC DUTY AND TURNOUTRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Nazita Lajevardi, Michigan State UniversityDisc: Zachary F. Peskowitz, Emory University
Papers: The Effect of Compulsory Civic Duty on PoliticalParticipationIgnacio Jurado, Carlos III UniversityJoaquin Artes, Universidad ComplutenseToward a Unified Model of Turnout and Vote ChoiceWon-ho Park, Seoul National UniversityChristopher H. Achen, Princeton UniversityTo What Extent Does Compulsory Voting IncreaseTurnout?Shane P. Singh, University of GeorgiaFilip Kostelka, University of EssexAndré Blais, University of MontrealWhy Vote? Tests of Competing TheoriesRichard Jankowski, SUNY, Fredonia
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION134.37 CLASS, ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, & PUBLIC
OPINIONRoom: WSCC, 617
Co-sponsored by Division 55: Class and InequalityChair: Elizabeth Suhay, Government, American UniversityDisc: Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
Papers: Get It Together, Do Something! Opinions AboutHandling Struggling NeighborhoodsJacob Sohlberg, University of GothenburgPeter Esaiasson, University of GothenburgIncome Composition Inequality and Preferences forEconomic Redistribution.Bilyana Petrova, City University of New YorkLocal Income Inequality and Citizens' Demand forRedistributionMatias Engdal Christensen, Aarhus UniversityPeter Thisted Dinesen, University of CopenhagenKim Mannemar Soenderskov, Aarhus UniversitySocial Class as a Predictor of Public Opinion (Pre-Recorded)Svenja Hense, Goethe University FrankfurtCitizensĀPerceptions of Economic Distances andPreferences for RedistributionMatias Engdal Christensen, Aarhus University
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DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION134.38 MEDIA IN THE TIME OF COVIDRoom: WSCC, 3BChair: Nicklas Johansen, University of CopenhagenDisc: Sumitra Badrinathan, University of Oxford
Papers: Pandemic Politics: Immigration, Framing, and COVID-19Benjamin Fontaine Gonzalez O'Brien, San DiegoState UniversityJustin Reedy, University of OklahomaElizabeth Hampton Hurst, University of OklahomaThe Other Big News- BLM in TV Evening News in theTime of COVIDAida Ramusovic, University of CincinnatiBrian R. Calfano, University of CincinnatiConstructing the News: The President, the Press, and thePandemicAnn N. Crigler, University of Southern CaliforniaMarion R. Just, Wellesley CollegeJoseph Saraceno, University of Southern CaliforniaResearch on Opinion Formation During Covid Era:Media Dependency Model RevisitedFurkan Cakmak, Washington State University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS134.39 INDUSTRY/ACADEMIC RESEARCH ON
FACEBOOK CONTENT AND USE IN ELECTION2020
Room: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Joshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityDisc: Natalie Jomini Stroud, University of Texas, Austin
Part: Devra Coren Moehler, FacebookChad Kiewiet de Jonge, FacebookRebekah Tromble, George Washington UniversityJaime E. Settle, College of William & MaryJennifer Pan, Stanford UniversityDavid Lazer, Northeastern UniversityShanto Iyengar, Stanford University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY134.40 DEMANDS AND DISTRIBUTION UNDER
AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Chair: Arturas Rozenas, New York UniversityDisc: Henry Thomson, Arizona State University
Papers: Authoritarian Distribution and Family Networks:Evidence from ParaguayJorge G Mangonnet, Nuffield College, University ofOxfordHoracio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard UniversityAntonella Bandiera, ITAMEconomic Crises and Media Freedom UnderAuthoritarian RegimesEoghan Stafford, University of OxfordElectoral Cycles in Closed Autocracies: Evidence fromPetitions in the GDRHans Lueders, Stanford University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY134.41 REPRESSION, MOBILIZATION AND PROTEST
UNDER AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 1Chair: Colleen Wood, Columbia University
DailySchedule
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Disc: Junius Flagg Brown, University of California, Berkeley
Papers: When "Voice" Gets the Opportunity to "Exit": Evidencefrom Hong KongJulian Michel, UCLAMargaret E. Peters, University of California, LosAngelesWhy Do Nondemocratic Governments Respond toProtest with Concessions?Katherine Geneya Crofts-Gibbons, King's CollegeLondonDecision-Making and Tactical Shifts in Anti-Authoritarian Movements (Pre-Recorded)Aliaksandr Herasimenka, University of Oxford
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY & POLITICS134.42 OPPOSITION IN ACTIONRoom: WSCC, 614
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
Chair: Cyril Ghosh, Wagner CollegePapers: Elite-led Mobilization and Gay Rights:The Myth of
Mass Opinion BacklashBenjamin Bishin, University of California, RiversideThomas J. Hayes, University of ConnecticutMatthew Incantalupo, Yeshiva UniversityCharles Smith, University of California, IrvineLegislating Gender IdentityMatthew Mendez, California State University, LongBeachSara Angevine, Whittier CollegeChristian Nationalism & Queer Politics: PredictingSupport for LGBT CandidatesRoyal Gene Cravens, California Polytechnic StateUniversity
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS134.43 NEW FRONTLINES: MODELING
INTERDEPENDENCE DURING INTRASTATECONFLICTS
Room: WSCC, 613Chair: Navid Mehrdad, Columbia UniversityDisc: Olga Chyzh, University of Toronto
Papers: A Network Measure of Systemic Conflict inInternational Relations and InsurgencyMegan Morrison, University of WashingtonMichael Gabbay, University of WashingtonIt's Complicated: Explaining Frenemies Relationships inCivil WarEmily K. Gade, Emory UniversityWilla Jeffers, Emory UniversityArica N Schuett, Emory UniversityTransnational Opposition: Ambazonia Networks and theEffect on MobilizationSandra Tombe, George Mason University
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH134.44 EXPERIMENTS IN ELITE BEHAVIORRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: Miguel M. Pereira, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Jennifer L. Bussell, University of California, Berkeley
Christian R. Grose, University of Southern California
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Papers: How Trust in Bureaucracy Matters for How PoliticiansUse InformationMartin Baekgaard, Aarhus UniversitySoren Serritzlew, Aarhus UniversityWhat Drives Politicians to Act on Climate? A Cross-National Field ExperimentMiguel Maria Pereira, Washington University in St.LouisMaria Dominguez-Perez, Univeraity of SouthernCaliforniaKaya Axelsson, University of OxfordPersonality and the Policy Positions of PoliticiansEran Amsalem, The Hebrew University of JerusalemLior Sheffer, Tel Aviv UniversityElite Influence on Receptiveness to Refugee HostingFrancesco Colombo, European University InstituteAnnabelle Wittels, European University Institute
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP134.45 IMMIGRANT AND REFUGEE INCORPORATION
IN TURKEYRoom: Sheraton, Aspen
Co-sponsored by Division 57: Middle East and NorthAfrican Politics
Chair: Kristen Kao, University of GothenburgDisc: Gerasimos Tsourapas, University of Glasgow
Papers: Refugee Inclusion at the Localities: A Study of Turkey'sMunicipalitiesReha Atakan Cetin, University of FloridaThreat Perceptions and Integration: The Case of SyrianRefugees in TurkeyBurcu Pinar Alakoc, Webster UniversityAlan Zarychta, University of ChicagoGulay Ugur Goksel, Istanbul Bilgi UniversitesiNational Crises and Anti-Refugee Sentiment in TurkeyOmer Faruk Yalcin, Pennsylvania State UniversityAhmet AkbiyikM. Tahir Kilavuz, Marmara UniversityAbdullatif Köksal, Bogaziçi UniversityThe Next Generations Matter: TurkeyĀs and ChinaĀsOutreach to Diaspora Youth (Pre-Recorded)Ayca Arkilic, Victoria University of WellingtonJames Jiann Hua To, Asia New Zealand Foundation
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS134.46 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS IN AFRICARoom: Sheraton, Ballard
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International CollaborationChair: Natalie Chwalisz, American UniversityDisc: Ryan Saylor, University of Tulsa
Natalie Chwalisz, American University
Papers: How Natural Resource Use Generates Externalities forNeighboring CountriesJohn Taden, Pepperdine UniversityExplaining IMF Sectoral Development Policies in Kenyaand The GambiaSarai-Anne Ikenze, Lund UniversityWho Testifies Before Congress on Africa?Carl LeVan, American University
Friday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Related Groups135.1 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICALPHILOSOPHY: LIBERALISM AND THEAMERICAN FOUNDING
Room: VirtualChair: Joseph Postell, Hillsdale CollegePart: Charles R. Kesler, Claremont McKenna College
Michael P. Zuckert, University of Notre DameC. Bradley Thompson, Clemson UniversityRalph C. Hancock, Brigham Young University
136.1 DEMOCRACY UNDER ATTACK? CHALLENGESFACING CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE
Room: WSCC, 205Chair: Miro Hacek, University of LjubljanaPapers: Perception of National Populist Parties in CE: Case
Study of SlovakiaPetr Just, Metropolitan University PragueSocial and Political Factors of Deconsolidation ofDemocracy in PolandAgnieszka Turska-Kawa, University of Silesia inKatowiceWaldemar Wojtasik, University of Silesia in KatowiceThe Perception of Europe and Narrative Politics inContemporary HungaryBoglárka Koller, Nemzeti Közszolgálati EgyetemThe Unpleasant Look Back: Slovenian DemocraticDecline after Accession to the EUMiro Hacek, University of LjubljanaSimona Kukovic, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Friday, 1:00 PM to 1:30 PMAPSA Events137.1 THE BENEFITS OF CLAIMING YOUR EARLY
RESEARCH USING PREPRINTSRoom: VirtualDisc: Jon Gurstelle, APSA
Emily Marchant, Cambridge University Press
Papers: The Benefits of Claiming Your Early Research UsingPreprintsJon Gurstelle, APSAEmily Marchant, Cambridge University Press
Friday, 1:00 PM to 2:00 PMAPSA Events138.1 POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION SECTION
BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Friday, 1:30 PM to 2:00 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY139.1 POLITICAL METHODOLOGY VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Luke Sanford, Yale UniversityDisc: Luke Sanford, Yale University
Papers: Addressing Design Effects in Double List ExperimentsGustavo Diaz, Tulane University
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Extending the Search Space for Genetic Matching:ExpoMatchIdriss BennisMikulas Plesak, Minerva Schools at KGIInference in Gaussian Process Models for PoliticalScienceJBrandon Duck-Mayr, Washington University in St.LouisMeasuring polarization: A Fuzzy Set TheoreticalApproachJose Manuel RoblesJuan-Antonio Guevara, University Complutense ofMadridTesting Anti-Money Laundering Laws: Evidence fromCryptocurrency TransactionsKaren Nershi, Stanford UniversityWho are Persuadable: Assessing External Validity ofLocal Persuasion RateArthur Zeyang Yu, University of ChicagoA Dictionary-Based Textual Analysis of DomesticSupport for Government LeadersJingjing An, Claremont Graduate UniversityAdvanced Machine Learning to explore Public Reactionsand Government ResponsesMdkhayrul BasharIndividualsĀIdeologies as NetworksPeter Levine, Tufts UniversityA Entropy-Based Measure of Mass Political Polarizationand Its ImplicationsLe Bao, American UniversityJeff Gill, Washington University
Friday, 2:00 PM to 2:30 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES140.1 POLITICS OF COMMUNIST & FORMER
COMMUNIST COUNTRIES VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION I
Room: VirtualChair: Saul Kriger Wilson, Harvard UniversityDisc: Saul Kriger Wilson, Harvard University
Papers: Rebuilding Legitimacy: Vicissitudes of "Unemployment"in ChinaYuki Mikiya, Keio UniversityYue XULocal-Level Incentives and Government Responsivenessin ChinaHaemin Jee, Stanford UniversityDark Side of Social Capital: Legislative Networks andCorruption in UkraineAnastasiia Vlasenko, Florida State UniversityRally Around the Tweet? Russian Disinformation andthe Ukraine CrisisSean Norton, University of North Carolina, ChapelHillPolitical Survival of Russian Governors in the EarlyXXI CenturyMikhail Leonidovich Rybalko, Irkutsk StateUniversity
DailySchedule
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Bridal Kidnapping in Central Asian StatesDavid Muchlinski, Georgia Institute of TechnologyTaylor Poole, Georgia Institute of TechnologyChandler Thornhill, Georgia Institute of TechnologyThe Use of Censored Sources by the Party Media inChinaZiyi Wu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PMTheme Panels141.1 MEASURING MISPERCEPTIONS AND
MISINFORMED BELIEFSRoom: VirtualChair: Matthew H Graham, George Washington UniversityDisc: Jennifer Jerit, Dartmouth College
Scott Clifford, University of Houston
Papers: Reconsidering Political Knowledge and MisinformationRobert C. Luskin, University of Texas, AustinGaurav Sood, IndependentMeasuring Misperceptions?Matthew H Graham, George Washington UniversityThe Prevalence and Consequences of Certainty inPolitical MisperceptionsBrian Guay, MITA Multilevel Approach to COVID-19 MisperceptionsJianing Li, University of Wisconsin-MadisonMichael W. Wagner, University of Wisconsin,Madison
APSA Events142.1 ANTI-RACISM MOVEMENTS, COALITION-
BUILDING, AND INTERSECTIONALEMPOWERMENT
Room: VirtualChair: Nicole Filler, Highline CollegePart: Kimberly Mealy, American Political Science Association
Rebecca E. Deen, University of Texas, ArlingtonCharles T. Lee, Arizona State UniversityLisa Magana, Arizona State UniversityZein Murib, Fordham University-Lincoln Center
142.2 GET THE JOB: TIPS FOR THE ACADEMIC JOBMARKET
Room: VirtualChair: Emily Farris, Texas Christian UniversityPart: Jennapher Lunde Seefeldt, Augustana University
Robert E Nyenhuis, Cal Poly PomonaNukhet Ahu Sandal, Ohio University
142.3 MAKE IT WORK! PITCHING YOUR RESEARCHSUCCESSFULLY TO A GENERAL INTERESTJOURNAL
Room: VirtualChair: Julie L. Novkov, University at Albany, SUNYPart: Michelle L. Dion, McMaster University
Clarissa Rile Hayward, Washington University in St.LouisKelly M. Kadera, University of IowaCeleste M. Montoya, University of Colorado, Boulder
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Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY143.1 NARRATIVE AND POLITICAL THEORY:
EXPERIMENTATION, CANON DYNAMICS, ANDREINVENTION
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 41: Politics, Literature, and Film
Chair: Andrew Norris, University of California, Santa BarbaraDisc: Joshua Foa Dienstag, University of California, Los
Angeles
Papers: Whiteness, Mobility, and 'The Line' in Hochschild'sStrangers In Their Own LandJennie Choi Ikuta, University of Missouri-ColumbiaEve and the Symbols of Evil: The Book of Genesis inthe 21st CenturyAdriana Alfaro, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo deMexicoThe Open Tangle: On Fred Moten and ExperimentalPolitical TheoryLowry Pressly, Brown UniversityVoltaireĀs Socrates and the Enlightenment PlatoTae-Yeoun Keum, University of California, SantaBarbara
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY143.2 PLURALISM AS A DEMOCRATIC
COMMITMENTRoom: VirtualChair: Deva Woodly, New School for Social ResearchDisc: Michaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, Boulder
Papers: Wrecking the Public Sphere: New-AuthoritariansĀAttacks on Pluralism and TruthSimone Chambers, University of California, IrvineJeffrey Kopstein, University of California, IrvineSymbolic Struggles: āMeToo and the Power to MakeThings SeenEdana Beauvais, Simon Fraser UniversityThe Purpose of Democracy and the Need for PluralismJamie Mayerfeld, University of WashingtonBabelfish Democracy? New Technologies and Multi-Lingual ParticipationLuis Cabrera, Griffith University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY143.3 OPPRESSION, RACE, AND RESILIENCERoom: VirtualDisc: Juman Kim, Towson University
Papers: Race, Rawls, and Relational Equality: Liberalism andRacial JusticeDan Engster, University of HoustonRisk, Race, and Rehabilitative Ideology: An Assessmentof the FIRST STEP ActAnthony Grasso, Rutgers UniversityAgnosticism on Racial Integration: Liberal orLibertarian?Nathan Pippenger, U.S. Naval AcademyA Political Ethic of the ComplicitTeddy Harrison, Harvard University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY143.4 PARTISANSHIPRoom: Virtual
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Chair: Christina Farhart, Carleton CollegeDisc: Christina Farhart, Carleton College
Laura Jakli, Harvard University
Papers: Negative Experience Overcomes Partisan Differences inPolarized CrisesSara Constantino, Princeton UniversityAlicia Dailey Cooperman, Texas A&M UniversityRobert O. Keohane, Woodrow Wilson School,Princeton UniversityPartisan Dehumanization in Strategic ReasoningJung Chen, University of California, MercedThe Impact of Vicarious Experiences in US PartisanConflictRachel Meade, Boston UniversityRebecca V. Bell-Martin, Tecnologico de Monterrey
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY143.5 BRIBERY AND CORRUPTIONRoom: VirtualChair: F. Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute of
TechnologyDisc: Nara Pavão, UFPE
Papers: Corruption and Tax Evasion: Evidence from ChinaChengyu Fu, Harvard UniversityDo Anti-Corruption Electoral Campaigns Attract Votes?Mats Ahrenshop, University of OxfordRevolving-Door Channels and Public ResourceMisallocation in ChinaZeren Li, Yale University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY143.6 RACIAL FORMATIONS, COLONIALISM, AND
AMERICAN CITIZENSHIPRoom: VirtualChair: Carol Nackenoff, Swarthmore CollegeDisc: David Alexander Bateman, Cornell University
Papers: Civic Lineage Regimes and American State-Building(1875-1930)Elspeth Wilson, Franklin & Marshall CollegeRacial Formation in the Protection of Seamen andImmigrants, 1866-1880Kathleen S. Sullivan, Ohio UniversityThe Empty Gift: Citizenship and American Imperialismin Puerto RicoMaye Henning, Johns HopkinsThe Imposition of Race-based Policies in ColonialAmericaBartholomew H. Sparrow, The University of Texas atAustin
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY143.7 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI-CONFERENCE:
ROUNDTABLE: POLITICAL SCIENCE FOR THEPUBLIC GOOD
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Ariel Rebecca White, MITPart: Amy E. Lerman, UC Berkeley
Elizabeth Linos, UC Berkeley
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DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION143.8 INSIDE THE CLASSROOM: INCLUSIVENESS,
EFFICACY, AND IDEOLOGYRoom: VirtualChair: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State UniversityDisc: Michelle D. Deardorff, University of Tennessee at
Chattanooga
Papers: Impact of Course Structure on Students' PoliticalEfficacy and KnowledgeEve M. Ringsmuth, Oklahoma State UniversityJoshua Jansa, Oklahoma State UniversityThe DKE Conundrum and Collegiate AmericanGovernment CoursesMichael T. Rogers, Arkansas Tech UniversityDonald M. Gooch, Stephen F. Austin State UniversityThe Effects of Political Simulations on StudentĀsIdeological PositionsNicholas J. Clark, Susquehanna UniversityJohn A. Scherpereel, James Madison University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS143.9 EMERGING RESEARCH ON GENDER AND
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION IN DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES
Room: VirtualChair: Sarah Khan, Yale UniversityDisc: Sarah Khan, Yale University
Jonathan Homola, Rice University
Papers: Gendered Networks and the Patriarchal HouseholdSoledad Artiz Prillaman, Stanford UniversityRemoving Social Barriers to WomenĀs Candidacy:A Field Experiment in CambodiaCesi Cruz, University of California, Los AngelesJiyoung Kim, University of California, Los AngelesElayne StecherEngendering WomenĀs Collective Efficacy in Malawi:A Field Experimental DesignAmanda Lea Robinson, Ohio State UniversityAsiyati Lorraine Chiweza, University of MalawiAmanda Clayton, Vanderbilt UniversityBoniface Madalitso DulaniSupply and Demand: Descriptive Representation, Genderand Local Political OfficeJulie Anne Weaver, Harvard UniversityAudrey Latura, Harvard University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES143.10 CIVIL SOCIETY AND LOCAL POLITICAL
PLURALISM: EVIDENCE FROM COLOMBIARoom: VirtualChair: Ana M. Arjona, Northwestern UniversityDisc: Lindsay Rose Mayka, Colby College
Papers: Community Organizations and COVID-19 ReliefDistribution in ColombiaJuan Diego Prieto Sanabria, Carleton CollegeParticipatory Mechanisms in Transition: SubnationalVariation in ColombiaJamie Lee Shenk, University of Oxford
DailySchedule
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Pathways of Post-Conflict Violence: Assassinations ofSocial Leaders in ColombiaJuan Pablo MIlanese, Universidad IcesiJuan Albarracin Dierolf, Universidad IcesiContracting Firms and Subnational State Capture inColombiaWill Garrett Freeman, Princeton University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES143.11 POLITICAL INEQUALITY: CAUSES AND
EFFECTS (PRE-RECORDED)Room: VirtualChair: Daewoo Lee, Columbus State UniversityDisc: Santiago Anria, Dickinson College
Juan Ariel Bogliaccini, Universidad Católica delUruguay
Papers: Consequences of Inequality: Distributive Fairness andPolitical EfficacyDaewoo Lee, Columbus State UniversityChae Young Chang, Indiana University NorthwestHyunkang Hur, Indiana University, KokomoSocial Mobility and Horizontal Inequality: A Model,with Illustrations (Pre-Recorded)Rachel M. Gisselquist, United Nations UniversityPatricia Funjika, University of ZambiaMigration and Conflict in the Developing World - TheCase of South AfricaYusuf Bulbulia, University of Toronto
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES143.12 RESPONSIVENESS AND POLITICAL EFFICACY
IN ADVANCED DEMOCRACIESRoom: VirtualChair: Jennifer Oser, Ben-Gurion UniversityDisc: Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University
Anne Rasmussen, University of Copenhagen
Papers: CitizensĀInternal and External Political Efficacy:A Comparative InvestigationJennifer Oser, Ben-Gurion UniversityFernando Feitosa, McGill UniversityRuth Dassonneville, Universite de MontrealCOVID-19, Mental Health, and Political SupportLuca Bernardi, University of LiverpoolIan H Gotlib, Stanford UniversityThe Representation DeficitMikael Persson, University of GothenburgAnders Sundell, University of GothenburgHeterogeneity and Homogeneity in PublicResponsiveness to Media and PolicyChristopher Wlezien, University of Texas at AustinStuart N. Soroka, University of Michigan
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY143.13 IPE THEORY IN TRANSITIONRoom: VirtualChair: Emily K.M. Scott, McGill UniversityDisc: David A. Deese, Boston College
Papers: Economic Espionage: A Framework for Future ResearchWilliam Akoto, Fordham University
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From Chimerica to Decoupling: US-China Trade Warand Failed NeoliberalismWei Liang, Middlebury Institute of InternationalStudiesThe Political Economy of Aid: Can We Follow theMoney?Emily K.M. Scott, McGill UniversityMerve Erdilmen, McGill UniversityThe New Geography of TradeGary Winslett, Middlebury College
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY143.14 NOVEL SURVEY EXPERIMENTS IN NUCLEAR
POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Benjamin A. Valentino, Dartmouth CollegeDisc: Rose McDermott, Brown University
Papers: A-Bomb for the People: Domestic Drivers of NuclearLatencyAriel F.W. Petrovics, Harvard UniversityAssessing the Effects of Credible CommitmentsLauren Sukin, Stanford UniversityRetaliation Risk, Strike Justification, and Public Supportfor Nuclear UseDavid Minchin Allison, Yale UniversityStephen Herzog, ETH ZurichA Comparative Experimental Study of Nuclear andChemical Weapons ĄTaboosďMichal Smetana, Charles UniversityOndrej Rosendorf, Institute of Political Science,Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES143.15 POST-CONFLICT INSTITUTIONAL
STRUCTURESRoom: VirtualChair: Annette Iris Idler, Harvard UniversityDisc: Annette Iris Idler, Harvard University
Regina A. Bateson, University of Ottawa
Papers: Impact of Consensus Among Key Political Actors onCivil War RecurrenceIsa Haskologlu, University of DelawareIncremental or Transformative? The Effect of Civil Waron Institutional ChangeLiana Eustacia Reyes, Rice UniversityKeith E. Hamm, Rice UniversityNancy Martorano Miller, University of DaytonRonald D. Hedlund, Northeastern UniversityMeta-Analysis of Impact of Violence on Post-ConflictSociopolitical DynamicsBiz Herman, UC BerkeleyJustine Davis, University of MichiganPost-Civil War Interim Governments: Bargaining byOther Means?Marcella Morris, Emory University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES143.16 LEGISLATORS AND THEIR CONSTITUENTSRoom: VirtualChair: Kris Miler, University of Maryland, College ParkDisc: C. Lawrence Evans, College of William & Mary
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Papers: Antagonistic Advantage: Personality Representation andOutcomes in the U.S. SenateRyan Frazier, University of MarylandTristan Hightower, University of Maryland, CollegeParkDistrict Competitiveness and Cultivating the PersonalVoteJaclyn Kaslovsky, Rice UniversityDaniel J. Moskowitz, University of ChicagoBenjamin Schneer, Harvard UniversityHow Modern Lawmakers Advertise Their LegislativeEffectiveness to ConstituentsKris Miler, University of Maryland, College ParkCharles Hunt, Boise State UniversityMembers of Congress' Willingess to Deliberate withConstituentsMichael Neblo, Ohio State UniversityAbigail Kielty, Ohio State UniversityWilliam Minozzi, Ohio State UniversityRyan P. Kennedy, University of HoustonClaire Abernathy, Stockton UniversityJonathon Kingzette, Ohio State University
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS143.17 CONSTRAINTS ON EXERCISES OF EXECUTIVE
POWERRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 22: Legislative StudiesChair: Mary A. McHugh, Merrimack CollegeDisc: Kenneth Lowande, University of Michigan
Mary A. McHugh, Merrimack College
Papers: The Boundaries of Presidents and InstitutionalLegitimacyAlejandra Aldridge, Stanford UniversityJeremy C. Pope, Brigham Young UniversityCongressional Oversight of the Executive Branch in theTrump EraGraham G. Dodds, Concordia UniversityCongressional Power and the Composition of theFederal BureaucracyJon C. Rogowski, Harvard UniversityTyler Simko, Harvard UniversityThe Congressional Regular Order and PresidentialInfluence on AppropriationsLee Dionne, University of Mount UnionHuchen Liu, Princeton University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS143.18 COURT OPINION LANGUAGE AND INFLUENCERoom: VirtualChair: Michael Salamone, Washington State UniversityDisc: Michael Salamone, Washington State University
Connor Ewing, University of Toronto
Papers: Can Supreme Court Convince Americans? Ě AnExperiment on Court ReasoningYiwei Tang, Harvard UniversityJudicial Communication Beyond BordersKelley G. Littlepage, University of Houston
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Lower Court Influence on High Court Decisions in theUnited KingdomJennifer Bowie, University of RichmondAli Shiraz Masood, Rhodes CollegeElisha Savchak-Trogdon, Elon UniversityCameron Micah Abrams, Rhodes CollegeKimberly CameronMeghna Parvati Melkote, University of RichmondNatalie Smith, Rhodes CollegeBianca Wieck, Vanderbilt Law SchoolTwitter Style in Court: The Effect of Twitter UseOpinion ReadabilityTodd A. Curry, University of Texas at El PasoBailey Rose-Marie Fairbanks, University of CentralArkansasMichael P. Fix, Georgia State UniversityMichael K. Romano, Shenandoah University
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS143.19 POWER AND POLITICS IN URBAN SPACERoom: VirtualChair: Benjamin L. Read, University of California, Santa CruzDisc: Alice Z Xu, Harvard University
Papers: City-Coups: How American Police Forces Shape CityGovernmentsVasabjit Banerjee, Mississippi State UniversityCharley Ellen Willison, Cornell UniversityContesting Local Elections: The Effect of Partisanship,Timing, and Office-TypeEvan Crawford, University of San DiegoWhen Can Councils Hold Mayors Accountable?Evidence from Chile and TaiwanMartin Ordonez, UC Santa CruzBenjamin L. Read, University of California, SantaCruzBrokers, NGOs, and the Varying Pattern of Clientelismin IndiaĀs Urban SlumsSoundarya Chidambaram, Bucknell University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH143.20 GENDERED POLICY IN THE HOME AND THE
STATERoom: VirtualChair: Lilly J. Goren, Carroll UniversityDisc: David Niven, University of Cincinnati
Papers: Does Parental Conflict Resolution Mode Affect YouthGender & Racial Attitudes?Vera Beloshitzkaya, FIU Jack D. Gordon Institute forPublic PolicyKathleen P. ReillyEffects of Reproductive Justice on Intrastate PeaceSarah Burke, University of California, IrvineFrom Jackson to Tubman? International and DomesticDrivers of U.S. Banknote DesignJacques E.C. Hymans, University of SouthernCaliforniaRewriting the Past: Domination, Agency, andSubjectivityAlexandra Kogl, University of Northern Iowa
DailySchedule
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS143.21 COVID-19 AND THE RACIAL POLITICS OF A
PANDEMICRoom: VirtualChair: Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern UniversityDisc: Jonathan Collins, Brown University
Papers: Descriptive and Substantive Representation During theCOVID-19 PandemicManeesh Arora, Wellesley CollegeHannah June Kim, University of Nebraska, OmahaNatalie Masuoka, University of California, LosAngelesChristopher T. Stout, Oregon State UniversityExamining Shifts in Asian American Racial IdentityDuring COVID-19Vivien Leung, University of California, Los AngelesNatalie Masuoka, University of California, LosAngelesExamining the Link Between COVID19 & VotingBehavior Among Racial Groups in 2020Gabriel Sanchez, University of New MexicoJason L. Morin, California State University,NorthridgeBarbara Gomez-Aguinaga, University of NebraskaOmahaRacial Solidarity and Attitudes Toward COVID HygeineAndra Gillespie, Emory UniversityMedia Framing of Coronavirus Pandemic Across TribalNationsEarlene Camarillo, Western Oregon UniversityStefanie Kunze, Northern Arizona University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS143.22 LATINXS IN THE 2020 PRESIDENTIAL
ELECTIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and VotingBehaviorCo-sponsored by Latino Caucus in Political Science
Chair: Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo CollegeDisc: Bernard L. Fraga, Emory University
Papers: Latinx Resentment of Immigrants & Support for Trump/Restrictive ImmigrationFlavio R. Hickel, Washington CollegeLoren Collingwood, UC RiversideKassra AR Oskooii, University of DelawareMaybe It Is Just Partisanship After AllĐ Latinxs,Trump, and the 2020 ElectionHajer Al-Faham, University of PennsylvaniaRoberto Carlos, University of GeorgiaMichael Jones-Correa, University of PennsylvaniaLatinos, Trump, and Biden: Assessing the Latino Votein 2020David L. Leal, University of Texas at AustinAlvaro Jose Corral, The College of WoosterUnderstanding what Drives Latino ConservativeIdeologyYoshira Macias Mejia, Michigan State UniversityRuben Martinez, Michigan State University
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DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS143.23 BIDEN'S CATHOLICISM: POLITICS, RELIGION,
AND AMERICAN PLURALISMRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 23: Presidents and ExecutivePolitics
Chair: Timothy A. Byrnes, Colgate UniversityDisc: Steven P. Millies, Catholic Theological Union
Thomas J. Reese, Religion News Service
Papers: The Catholic Vote in 2020: Did Biden's CatholicIdentity Matter?Mark J. Rozell, George Mason UniversityThe Second United States Catholic PresidentJo Renee Formicola, Seton Hall UniversityThe Personal is the Political: Biden and PersonalismCome to the White HouseChristopher M. Duncan, Saint Louis UniversityCharles Taylor on the Moral Imaginary of the BidenPresidencyWilliam A. McCormick, Saint Louis University
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES143.24 POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS AND PARTIES IN
HISTORICAL CONTEXTRoom: VirtualChair: James Manning Strickland, Arizona State UniversityDisc: David Karol, University of Maryland
Neil O' Brian, University of Oregon
Papers: A Primary Cause of Weak Parties? Evidence from U.S.Primary Campaigns Before 1972Jack Garigliano, Northwestern UniversityPolitical Parties and American Empire Since 1945Austin Bussing, Sam Houston State UniversityElliot Mamet, Duke UniversityRethinking Parties in American History: Facets,Prophets, and StrandsDaniel SchlozmanSam Rosenfeld, Colgate UniversityThe Political Implications of Fraternal Orders in theUnited States, 1876-1920Adam Chamberlain, Coastal Carolina UniversityAlixandra B. Yanus, High Point University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR143.25 GENDER AND VOTING BEHAVIORRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
Chair: James Harris Sunday, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Christine Marie Slaughter, University of California Los
Angeles
Papers: Can the Fairer Sex Save the Day? Voting for WomenAfter Corruption ScandalsEmily Elia, Rice UniversityDifferently Divisive: Sexism, Racial Resentment, andIncongruent Candidate SupportGabriel Borelli, Princeton UniversityRyan Bell, Princeton UniversityRafaela Dancygier, Princeton UniversityDaniel J. Hopkins, University of Pennsylvania
Friday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Do Minority Leaders Face Harsher Penalties forImperfections in U.S. Elections?Soosun You, University of California, BerkeleyCecilia Hyunjung Mo, UC BerkeleyMaking Gender Matter: Gender Based Sterotypes andCandidate SuccessTara Riggs, Binghamton University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION143.26 MISINFORMATION: EFFECTSRoom: VirtualChair: Mona Krewel, Victoria University of WellingtonDisc: Jaime E. Settle, College of William & Mary
Papers: Despair or Defiance? Assessing Turnout Effects ofElection MisinformationStefan McCabe, Northeastern UniversityJon Green, Northeastern UniversityWilliam Hobbs, Cornell UniversityDavid Lazer, Northeastern UniversityIs Seeing Believing? Misinformation & Incidental NewsExposure on Social MediaMatthew Barnidge, University of AlabamaTrevor H Diehl, University of ViennaDaniel Lane, UC Santa BarbaraThe LiarĀs Dividend: How Deepfakes and Fake NewsAffect Politicians and MediaDaniel S. Schiff, Georgia Institute of TechnologyKaylyn Jackson Schiff, Emory UniversityNatalia Salgado Bueno, Emory UniversityDoes Fake News Affect Voting Behavior?Nicolò Fraccaroli, Brown UniversityMichele Cantarella, University of Helsinki
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS143.27 CLIMATE CHANGE POLITICS: THE VIEW
FROM JUNIOR SCHOLARSRoom: VirtualChair: Jennifer Hadden, University of Maryland, College ParkDisc: Michael Aklin, University of Pittsburgh
David Konisky, Indiana University, Bloomington
Papers: Anticipating Possible Moral Hazards UnderminesClimate Change MitigationTalbot M Andrews, University of ConnecticutAndrew Delton, Stony Brook UniversityReuben Kline, SUNY, Stony Brook UniversityCorporate Governance, Time Horizons, and the ClimatePolicy Preferences of FirmsJared J Finnegan, University College LondonJonas Meckling, University of California, BerkeleyLocal Power: Understanding the Adoption of CountyWind Energy RegulationMichael Henry Lerner, London School of EconomicsOne Size DoesnĀt Fit All: Feed in Tariff Design inDeveloping CountriesIshana Ratan, University of California, Berkeley
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE143.28 RE-IMAGINING CAPITALISM & POST-
CAPITALISMRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Labor PoliticsChair: Eric Stein, University of California, Santa BarbaraDisc: Andy Scerri, Virginia Tech
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Papers: Deserting the Bigbox Store: Narratives of Apathy,Shrink and Exit in Retail WorkNoah Shuster, CUNY-Brooklyn CollegeFrom Tinkering to Hacking and the Rise ofNeoliberalismRobert E. Kirsch, Arizona State UniversityLabor Contestation of Amazon's Global Expansion inthe Walmart Looking GlassScott B. MartinTwo Problems for Imagining and Achieving MarxĀsPostcapitalist WorldBryant William Sculos, The University of Texas RioGrande Valley
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS143.29 RELIGIOUS AGENCY AND CONFLICT UNDER
COLONIALISMRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 33: Religion and PoliticsChair: Mary Anne Mendoza, California State Polytechnic
University, PomonaDisc: Humeira Iqtidar, King's College London
Papers: Reconceptualizing Opposition: Historical Origins ofAhmadi Religious PracticesMisbah Hyder, University of California, IrvinePrecolonial Ethnic Violence: The Roots of Hindu-Muslim Conflict in IndiaAjay Verghese, Middlebury CollegeRoberto Stefan Foa, University of MelbournePluralism in Colonial South AsiaRebecca Faulkner, Princeton UniversityLand and Islamic Authority: The Origins of the DarulIslam Rebellion in JavaAlexandre Pelletier, Cornell University
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS143.30 COLLABORATIVE METHODOLOGY FOR
POLITICAL SCIENCE: A CRITICALEXPLORATION
Room: VirtualChair: Mneesha Gellman, Emerson CollegePart: Susan M. Thomson, Colgate University
Lauren M. MacLean, Indiana University, BloomingtonJennifer Cyr, Universidad Torcuato di TellaThomas E. Flores, George Mason UniversityNaomi Levy, Santa Clara UniversityJulie Norman, UCLPamina Firchow, Brandeis University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP143.31 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: LAMIS
ABDELAATY'S "DISCRIMINATION ANDDELEGATION"
Room: VirtualChair: Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, AmherstPart: Alexander Betts, University of Oxford
Claire Leslie Adida, UCSDSara Wallace Goodman, University of California, IrvineLamis Abdelaaty, Syracuse University
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY143.32 THE ECONOMIC OTHER: INEQUALITY IN THE
AMERICAN POLITICAL IMAGINATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Nicholas Carnes, Duke UniversityPart: Meghan Condon, Loyola University Chicago
DailySchedule
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:00 PM
Amber Wichowsky, Marquette UniversityJennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard UniversityJames N. Druckman, Northwestern UniversityMatt Grossmann, Michigan State UniversityEunji Kim, Vanderbilt University
Related Groups144.1 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: NALIN
RANASINGHE'S ODYSSEYRoom: VirtualChair: Zdravko Planinc, McMaster UniversityPart: Predrag Cicovacki, College of the Holy Cross
Gwenda-lin Kaur Grewal, The New School for SocialResearchMichelle M. Kundmueller, Old Dominion UniversityBernat Torres Morales, Universitat Internacional deCatalunya, Barcelona
144.2 POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP: POLITICALFORECASTING METHODOLOGY
Room: VirtualChair: Carl E. Klarner, KlarnerpoliticsDisc: Peter Enns, Cornell University
Papers: How to Handle Outliers and Influential CasesMichael S. Lewis-Beck, University of IowaCharles P. Tien, CUNY, Hunter College & TheGraduate CenterAssessing Panel vs. Time-Series Designs in U.S.ElectionsCarl E. Klarner, KlarnerpoliticsBritish Election Forecasting and the Future of Single-Equation ModelingRoss E. Burkhart
Friday, 2:00 PM to 4:30 PMAPSA Events145.1 GAUS AWARD LECTURE & RECEPTIONRoom: VirtualPart: Christopher Hood, University of Oxford
Friday, 2:30 PM to 3:00 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES146.1 POLITICS OF COMMUNIST & FORMER
COMMUNIST COUNTRIES VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION II
Room: VirtualChair: Mikhail A. Strokan, University of PennsylvaniaDisc: Mikhail A. Strokan, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Local Budgets Allocation: Topic Models of RussianPublic Procurement ContractsOlga Gasparyan, University of RochesterChinaĀs Political Indoctrination of the 1980sLuyang Zhou, Zhejiang UniversityAs Good as It Gets: Incumbent Re-Election and PublicExpenditures in RomaniaSergiu Gherghina, University of GlasgowClara Volintiru, Bucharest University of EconomicStudies (ASE)George Stefan, Babes, Bolyai University
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Attitudes Towards FDI: Effects of Exposure to FDI inUkraineCeleste Beesley, Brigham Young UniversityChallenges and Opportunities for DemocratizationThrough Civil SocietyNariman FARAJEV, University of JenaWhat Has Been Left to Feminist and WomenĀs Protestin PutinĀs Russia?Natalia Kovyliaeva, University of Tartu
Friday, 3:00 PM to 3:30 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY147.1 AUTOCRACY & DEMOCRACY VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Hubert Tworzecki, Emory UniversityDisc: Lorena G. Barberia, University of São Paulo
Ye Wang, New York University
Papers: Economic Wellbeing and Authoritarian Values: AnEvidence from 14 Asian SocietiesYen-Hsin Chen, Trinity UniversityHow Linkage to the West Affect Electoral ManipulationJaroslav Bílek, University of Hradec KrálovéIndirect Favor Exchanges and Pro-Government SlantFatih Serkant Adiguzel, Duke UniversityJudicial Decision-Making in Authoritarian Regimes:Evidence from RussiaKatelyn Hess, Florida State UniversityLegacies of Radical, Liberal, and Aborted LiberalApproaches in Southern AfricaSalih O. Noor, Northwestern UniversityMark Dictators' Calendars: A Model of ElectionScheduling in AutocraciesJia Li, Penn State UniversityPersonalism as an Autocratic Survival Strategy in theFace of Foreign ThreatsChen-Yu Lee, National Taiwan UniversityLegitimation Strategies of Electoral AuthoritarianRegimes: A Comparative Study of Bangladesh, Hungary,and TurkeyMD Sohel Rana, Indiana University BloomingtonThe Rise of Democracy-Authoritarianism Cleavage inthe US, Turkey, and HungaryOrçun Selçuk, Luther CollegeDilara Hekimci, Florida International UniversityState Capacity, Election Outcomes and Democratisation:Evidences From MyanmarConstant Courtin, University of British Columbia
Friday, 3:00 PM to 4:00 PMAPSA Events148.1 APSA MEMBER APPRECIATION RECEPTIONRoom: WSCC, Exhibit Hall 4B
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:00 PMAPSA Events149.1 APSA RECEPTION HONORING WOMEN OF
COLOR IN THE PROFESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Jasmine Scott, American Political Science Association
Kimberly Mealy, American Political Science Association
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PMTheme Panels150.1 (MIS)INFORMATION IN GREAT POWER
COMPETITION AND DEMOCRATICGOVERNANCE
Room: WSCC, 609Chair: Joshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityDisc: Jacob Norman Shapiro, Princeton University
Papers: Interstate Influence Operations and International SecurityStudiesJoshua A. Goldstein, University of OxfordInformational Statecraft and Diaspora MobilizationAudrye Wong, University of Southern CaliforniaManufacturing Status Loss: Smearing Through ForeignInfluence OperationsAlex Yu-Ting Lin, University of Notre DameThe Effect of Emerging Technologies on DemocraticGovernanceSarah E. Kreps
150.2 THE PLURALISTIC POLITICS OF RESOURCEEXTRACTION
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CCo-sponsored by Division 13: Politics of Communist andFormer Communist Countries
Chair: Ian M. Hartshorn, University of Nevada, RenoPapers: Mountains & Mobilization: Appalachia and North China
in Comparative PerspectiveManfred Elfstrom, University of British Columbia,OkanaganShale Gas in Eastern Europe: Local Hostility andGrassroots ProtestsAndreea Raluca Maierean, Wilkes UniversityProtest and Elite Strategies in the Oil Capital of Russia:Surgut in TransitionAllison D. Evans, University of Nevada, RenoVarieties of Eurasian Petrostates: Limits of the"Resource Curse" in the FSURudra Sil, University of PennsylvaniaMikhail A. Strokan, University of Pennsylvania
APSA Events151.1 APSA BEST BOOK AWARDEE AUTHOR MEETS
CRITICSRoom: WSCC, 4C3Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY152.1 DEMOCRACY, FREEDOM, AND PLURALISM IN
THE DIGITAL AGERoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan A
Co-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
Chair: Davide Panagia, UCLADisc: John Christman, Pennsylvania State University
Jennifer Forestal, Loyola University, Chicago
Papers: Thought and Freedom in an Age of Third Screens and5GBenjamin A. Schupmann, Yale-NUS CollegeArendt and the Algorithm: Re-Reading the HumanCondition in the Digital AgeKiran Banerjee, University of Toronto
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Understanding Each Other Online. A HermeneuticApproach to Online CommunicationLuise Papcke, New York UniversityDistrust in Science and Technology's Penetration of LifeJavier Burdman, University of Strasbourg
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY152.2 DEMOCRACY, (IN)EQUALITY, COHESIONRoom: WSCC, 611Chair: Tamar Malloy, University of Colorado BoulderDisc: Wynne Walker Moskop, Saint Louis University
Papers: Partisan Community: Democratic Cohesion as SharedActionJay Ruckelshaus, University of OxfordRespect and Respectability: Marginalization,Performance and Respect AsymmetriesTamar Malloy, University of Colorado BoulderTwo Kinds of Polarization and Democratic TheoryChristian F. Rostboll, University of CopenhagenMulticultural Theory in a Context of WidespreadUnreasonablenessPhil Parvin, Loughborough University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY152.3 WOMEN IN AND OUT OF POWERRoom: WSCC, 612
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
Chair: Elizabeth R. Wingrove, University of Michigan, AnnArbor
Disc: Lida E. Maxwell, Boston University
Papers: Violence Against Women in Carole PatemanĀs "TheSexual Contract"Rose OwenPrefiguration and Promise-Making: Lesbian Feminismand Social Contract TheoryElena Gambino, Rutgers University, New BrunswickGynaikokratia and the Problem of Politics as Rule inAristophaneĀs EcclesiazusaeSilvia Fedi, University of ChicagoSor Juana Inés de la Cruz and Hortense Spillers on theCirculation of PowerTessy Schlosser, Cornell University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY152.4 PATHOLOGY TO PLURALITY: RE-THINKING
THE POLITICS OF SELF-DESTRUCTIVEVIOLENCE
Room: WSCC, 618Chair: Banu Bargu, University of California, Santa CruzDisc: Michelle Spotts
Papers: Political Ontologies of (Animal) SuicideChloë TaylorZoë or Bíos? The Contested Status of PoliticallyMotivated Self-KillingThomas F. Tierney, College of WoosterSuicidism: A New Framework to Re-think the Politics ofSuicide & Assisted Death (Pre-Recorded)Alexandre Baril, University of OttawaSymptoms to Strategies: The Affective Language ofSelf-Burning as ProtestSara Hassani, The New School
DailySchedule
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY152.5 MONEY AND SPECIAL INTEREST INFLUENCE
IN POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 619Chair: Federica Izzo, UCSDDisc: Umberto Mignozzetti, Emory University
Papers: Dark Money and Voter InformationKeith E. Schnakenberg, Washington UniversityCollin Thomas Schumock, Yale UniversityIan R. Turner, Yale UniversityThe Business Cycle Dynamics of ClientelismBenjamin Ogden, Texas A&M UniversityChecks and Balances and Vote Buying in LegislaturesMarcos Yamada Nakaguma, Sao Paulo School ofEconomics - FGVOffice-Holding Premia and Representative DemocracyJan Auerbach, University of Exeter Business School
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY152.6 POLITICAL GEOGRAPHY, POLITICAL
ECONOMY, AND REPRESENTATIONRoom: WSCC, 303Chair: Georg Vanberg, Duke UniversityDisc: Irene Menendez, IE University
Papers: Accountability or Representation? Trade-Offs inElectoral EngineeringMichael Becher, IE School of Global and PublicAffairsCarl Georg MaierPolitical Geography and Distributive Politics (Pre-Recorded)Daniel Max Kselman, IE UniversityPablo Beramendi, Duke UniversityPublic Sector Employment and the Urban-Rural DivideJonathan Rodden, Stanford UniversityVoting Pocketbook or Voting Your Place? DecomposingVariance in Economic VotingDong Wook Lee, Adelphi UniversityMelissa Ziegler Rogers, Claremont GraduateUniversity
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY152.7 AUTHOR-MEETS-CRITICS: DANIEL
CARPENTER'S "DEMOCRACY BY PETITION"(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6AChair: Robert C. Lieberman, Johns Hopkins UniversityPart: Christopher S. Parker, University of Washington
Frances E. Lee, Princeton UniversityDaniel P. Carpenter, Harvard University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY152.8 STATE CAPACITY BEYOND TAXATIONRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Volha Charnysh, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDisc: Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins University
Xiaobo Lu, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: From Pluribus to Unum? Statebuilding in 19th CenturyAmericaMelissa M. Lee, Princeton UniversityNan Zhang, Max Planck Institute for Research onCollective Goods
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State Capacity and Fiscal Legibility: Evidence fromNapoleonic CadasterAnne Degrave, New York UniversityMeritocracy and State Capacity: Evidence from ImperialChinaPeng Peng, Duke University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY152.9 JUSTICE AND INJUSTICE MINI-CONFERENCE:
IN-PERSON JUNIOR SCHOLAR POSTERSESSION
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Co-sponsored by Division 25: Public PolicyCo-sponsored by Division 26: Law and CourtsCo-sponsored by Division 30: Urban PoliticsCo-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and Politics
Chair: Hannah Walker, University of Texas at AustinPapers: The Constituents of Criminal Justice Preferences
Dvir Yogev, UC BerkeleyPerceptions of Criminality and Drug Policy AttitudesLilla Orr, Stanford UniversityAfter the Storm: BLM Protests and the Spatial Variationof Policing in ChicagoMonique Newton, Northwestern UniversityPolice Fragmentation and Implications for Patterns ofViolence in IraqMara Revkin, Yale UniversityCut the Confusion: The Broad Effects of CommunityRe-EnfranchisementKevin Thomas Morris, Brennan Center for JusticeExplaining Support for the Tough-on-Crime Left:Evidence from BrazilIsabel Laterzo, UNC Chapel HillPre-Trial Intervention and Political Participation:Evidence from Broward CountyKlara Maria Cecilia Fredriksson, University of Texasat AustinStephen Jessee, University of Texas, AustinThree Faces of the State: Protection, Punishment andInvestmentElizabeth Pfeffer, University of OxfordJane R. Gingrich, University of OxfordHow Police Presence Affects Political EngagementArvind Ram Krishnamurthy, Duke UniversityDemocratic Accountability, Partisanship and CriminalProsecutionsSidak Yntiso, New York UniversityRace, Class, and the Politics of Situational Trust: HowChicagoĀs Race-Class Subjugated CommunitiesAdvocate Against State and Community ViolenceJustin Zimmerman, Northwestern UniversityLaw Makers or Law Breakers? The Impact of CriminalPoliticians on Local CrimeShruti LakhtakiaThe Partisan Consequences of Contact with the CarceralStateKatie Krumbholz, Rutgers UniversityLocking Up Their Own: Rethinking Carceral Solutionsin Indian CountryMehrdad Dariush
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
DIVISION 10: POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION152.10 ONE OF A KIND MEETS THE TIES THAT BIND
USRoom: WSCC, 310Chair: Mark Carl Rom, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Daniel J Mallinson, Penn State, Harrisburg
Papers: Considering the Alternatives: A Typological FrameworkMichael J. Reese, University of ChicagoFrom Experience to Engagement: Civic EngagementThrough Experiential LearningChelsea Kaufman, Wingate UniversityLimited IR: Why Are International Relations Notglobal?Bulat Akhmetkarimov, Kazan Federal UniversityRenat Shaykhutdinov, Florida Atlantic UniversityRamin Ahmadoghlu, Emory University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS152.11 AUTHORITARIAN RESPONSIVENESS IN CHINA,
RUSSIA AND VIETNAMRoom: WSCC, 3BChair: Sasha de Vogel, University of Michigan, Ann ArborDisc: Iza Ding, University of Pittsburgh
Andrew Little, University of California-Berkeley
Papers: Authoritarian Expropriation and Responsiveness inVietnam and ChinaNhu Truong, Yale UniversityExperimental Evidence on Electoral Accountability inSingle-Party RegimesEdmund J. Malesky, Duke UniversityJason Douglas Todd, Duke Kunshan UniversityAnh Tran, Indiana University, BloomingtonOnline Petitions, Responsiveness and Risk-AversePolitical Selection in ChinaChao-yo Cheng, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceTianguang Meng, Tsinghua UniversityZesen Yang, Tsinghua UniversityQuality, Quantity, & Credibility: Concessions &Demobilization in Moscow, RussiaSasha de Vogel, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS152.12 THE CONTOURS OF POLITICAL
POLARIZATION IN 21ST CENTURY LATINAMERICA
Room: WSCC, 401Chair: Paolo Moncagatta, Universidad San Francisco de QuitoDisc: Amy Erica Smith, Iowa State University
Papers: Birds of a Feather? Elite Polarization and IdeologicalCohesion in Latin AmericaMariano Torcal, Universitat Pompeu FabraEmily B Carty, University of SalamancaElite Polarization and Demographic-Based ElectoralCleavages in the AmericasMatthew Singer, University of ConnecticutAffective Polarization and Negative Identities in PeruLisa Zanotti, Diego Portales UniversityCarlos Melendez, Universidad Diego Portales
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Processes of Ideological Polarization in 21st CenturyLatin AmericaPaolo Moncagatta, Universidad San Francisco deQuitoJavier Rodríguez, University of Wisconsin-Madison
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES152.13 COMPARATIVE ETHNIC POLITICSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: Carew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, BoulderDisc: James D. Long
Papers: Conflict, Ethnicity, and Votes: The Failure of EthnicParties in MyanmarJiwon Lee Kim, Stanford UniversityEthnic Diversity and Political Activism Across LatinAmericaChristopher Hale, University of AlabamaMajoritarian Responses to Minority Mobilization:Evidence from Protests in IndiaAnirvan Chowdhury, University of CaliforniaBerkeleyShahana Sheikh, Yale University, Political SciencePartisanship and Indigenous Political Behavior in LatinAmericanCarew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, BoulderRaymond Foxworth, First Nations DevelopmentInstitute
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES152.14 REVEALING SCHEMES: CONSPIRACY
THEORIES AND POLITICS IN THE POST-SOVIET REGION (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State UniversityPart: Maria Lipman, PONARS Eurasia
Mark Beissinger, Princeton UniversityJesse Driscoll, University of California, San DiegoSarah A. Oates, University of MarylandScott B. Radnitz, University of Washington
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES152.15 PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR REDISTRIBUTION
REVISITEDRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt UniversityDisc: David Rueda, University of Oxford
Papers: What We Get Wrong About Demand for Redistributionand How to Get It RightCharlotte Cavaille, University of Michigan, FordSchool of Public PolicyInequality and Changes in Redistributive PolicyPreferences Since 2008Jonas Pontusson, University of GenevaJan RossetMore Than Self-Interest? Fairness Beliefs andIntergenerational MobilityVerena Rebecca Fetscher, University of HamburgDavid Rueda, University of Oxford
DailySchedule
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY152.16 THE POLITICS AND CONSEQUENCES OF
TRADE AGREEMENT DESIGNRoom: WSCC, 603
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International CollaborationChair: Jon C. W. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, MadisonDisc: Christina Davis, Harvard University
Papers: The Effect of Deep PTAs on Trade in Global ValueChainsZarlasht Razeq, McGill UniversityUndermining Human Rights? The Misuse of Non-TradeProvisions in Autocratic PTAs (Pre-Recorded)Susanne Mueller-Redwood, Mount Holyoke CollegeRedundancy in International Institutions: StandbyForums in the Trade RegimeSung Mi Kim, Stanford UniversityA New Technique for Determining the Authorship ofPreferential Trade AgreementsAndrew David LuggNeil LundTodd Allee, University of Maryland, College ParkManfred Elsig, University of Bern
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION152.17 PUBLIC OPINION AND INTERNATIONAL
COOPERATIONRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Daniel L. Nielson, University of Texas at AustinDisc: Simone Dietrich, University of Geneva
Daniel L. Nielson, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Do Countries Follow the Golden Rule in Foreign Aidand Public Diplomacy?Jong Hee Park, Seoul National UniversityInbok Rhee, KDI School of Public Policy andManagementSung Eun Kim, Korea UniversityJoonseok Yang, Sungkyunkwan UniversityUnintended Consequences of Cooperation: When IOsEnable PopulistsAllison Carnegie, Columbia UniversityRichard Clark, Princeton UniversityWho is Winning the U.S.-China Power Competition?Foreign Aid and Public Support (Pre-Recorded)Jeeseon HwangWonjae Hwang, University of Tennessee
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY152.18 CHINA AND GREAT POWER COMPETITION:
SECURITY, ECONOMY, AND INSTITUTIONRoom: WSCC, 608Chair: Roselyn Hsueh, Temple UniversityDisc: M. Taylor Fravel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Stephen B. Kaplan, George Washington University
Papers: Better Than Bipolar: U.S.: China Competition Throughthe TPP, BRI, and FOIPMin Ye, Boston UniversitySecuritization and Partial Decoupling of US-ChinaRelationsXiaoyu Pu, University of Nevada, RenoWhat is China Striving for? International Institutions andChina's InfluenceYong Deng, U.S. Naval Academy
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China in the World Bank and IMF: National Interests,Rules, and StrategiesJames Aubrey Frick, U.S. Army War College
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY152.19 RESURGENCE OF GREAT POWER
COMPETITIONRoom: WSCC, 607Chair: David A. Cooper, Naval War CollegePapers: Russian Economic Growth and Foreign Policy
AggressivenessDavid H. Sacko, U.S. Air Force AcademyCharles R. Boehmer, University of Texas at El PasoSurprise Strategy in China's Military Thinking (Pre-Recorded)Xiao Han, The University of Hong Kong
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY152.20 THE ANATOMY OF CONFLICT: CAMPAIGN
ANALYSIS, WARGAMING, AND CONFLICTDATA
Room: WSCC, 604Disc: Reid Pauly, Brown University
Erik Lin-Greenberg, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology
Papers: The Case for Campaign Analysis: A Method forStudying Military OperationsRachel Tecott, MITAndrew Halterman, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyExplaining High-Techology Strategies for U.S. MilitaryInterventionJ Andres Gannon, University of California, SanDiegoKerry Chavez, Texas Tech UniversityA Lot of Cyber Fizzle, but Not a Lot of BangJacquelyn Schneider, Stanford UniversityRachael ShafferBenjamin H SchechterMeasuring Conflict Escalation: Evidence from Wargameand Survey ExperimentsAndrew William Reddie, University of California,Berkeley
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY152.21 KNOWLEDGE AND TECHNOLOGY AS INPUTS
IN FOREIGN POLICYMAKINGRoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Jacob Aars, UNI ResearchDisc: Jacob Aars, UNI Research
Papers: The Power of Knowledge: How Think Tanks ImpactU.S. Foreign PolicyDmitry Zaytsev, National Research University HigherSchool of EconomicsValentina Kuskova, NRU Higher School ofEconomicsDigital Foreign Policy: Influence of Digital Platforms inU.S. Foreign PolicyJean-Christophe Boucher, University of CalgaryCameron G. Thies, Michigan State UniversityChinese ĄWolf WarriorďDiplomacy and Overseas PublicOpinionChaohong Pan
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
COVID-19 and ChinaĀs Relations with the Middle EastDawn C. Murphy, Air War College
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES152.22 DIPLOMACY AND CONFLICT IN THE MIDDLE
EASTRoom: WSCC, 4C2Chair: Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young UniversityDisc: Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young University
Paul E. Lenze, Northern Arizona University
Papers: Proxy Wars and Superterrorism: A Challenge forIntelligences in the Middle East (Pre-Recorded)Gabriel Henrique de Paula Alves, University ofLisbon - ISCSPRevolutionary Coups and Interstate Violence: The Caseof NasserĀs EgyptPaul Ewenstein, Boston UniversityRole of Humanitarian Diplomacy in Mitigating Impactsof Conflicts in Middle EastAiham Al SukhniSupport for Violent versus Non-Violent Strategies in thePalestinian TerritoriesDana El Kurd, University of Richmond
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES152.23 INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL BARGAINING
AMONG REBEL GROUPSRoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Brian Lai, University of IowaDisc: Brian Lai, University of Iowa
Christina A Boyes, Centro de Investigación y DocenciaEconómicas
Papers: Internal Politics and Inter-Rebel Alliance Agreements inMultiparty Civil WarsBrandon Lee Bolte, Pennsylvania State UniversityNon-State Actor Alliances: Al-Qaeda and the Taliban asPersistent PartnersBarbara Elias, Bowdoin CollegeRebel with a Cause: The Influence of Goals in RebelGroup CooperationLeonardo Fernandes, University of Pittsburgh
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES152.24 OVERSIGHT, DELEGATION, BARGAINING, AND
CONTROL BY THE U.S. CONGRESSRoom: WSCC, 617Chair: Melinda Ritchie, The Ohio State UniversityDisc: David Karol, University of Maryland
Papers: Congressional Access and Influence in the BureaucracyMelinda Ritchie, The Ohio State UniversityCongressional Bargaining and the Distribution of GrantsLeah Rosenstiel, Vanderbilt UniversityInterbranch Bargaining and Discretionary AppropriationsBen Hammond, Princeton UniversityThe Institutionalization of the Congressional Review ActSteven J. Balla, George Washington UniversityBridget C.E. Dooling, GW Regulatory Studies CenterDaniel Royuela Pérez, George Washington UniversityRegulatory Studies Center
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DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS152.25 POLITICS OF RULEMAKING IN THE
ADMINISTRATION STATERoom: WSCC, 2AChair: Evan Haglund, US Coast Guard AcademyDisc: Brian Daniel Libgober, Yale University
Evan Haglund, US Coast Guard Academy
Papers: Bureaucratic Revolving Doors and Interest GroupParticipation in PolicymakingKyuwon Lee, New York UniversityHye Young You, New York UniversityĄDeconstructingď the Green State: The AdministrativePresidency of Donald TrumpDavid M. Shafie, Chapman UniversityLegislator Influence in Rulemaking: The Impact ofCampaign ContributionsMaria SilfaDuplicative or Duplicitous? The Rise of CitizenParticipation in RulemakingSteven Rashin, McCombs School of Business,University of Texas, AustinBrian Kelleher Richter, University of Texas at Austin- McCombs School of Business
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION152.26 POPULISM, DEMOCRATIC BACKSLIDING, AND
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATIONRoom: WSCC, 620Chair: Michael W. Bauer, European University InstituteDisc: Jon Pierre, Goteborg University
Papers: The Politics of Populist Bureaucracy: Towards anAnalytical FrameworkMichael W. Bauer, European University InstituteJon Pierre, Goteborg UniversityKutsal Yesilkagit, University of UtrechtResisting Political Control: The Public Bureaucracy inan Era of PopulistsB. Guy Peters, University of PittsburghJoão V. Guedes-Neto, University of PittsburghIlliberal Transformation of Government Bureaucracy:.The Case of HungaryZsolt Boda, Centre for Social SciencesVenezuela: Sidelining Public Administration UnderRevolutionary-Populist RegimeWolfgang Muno, Rostock University
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY152.27 ASSESSING INCLUSION AND DIVERSITY IN
THE POLICY PROCESSRoom: Sheraton, IssaquahChair: Clayton M. Nall, University of California, Santa BarbaraPapers: Advisory Commissions Build Consensus from
Ideological DiversityKira Pronin, University of Pittsburgh(When) Does Citizen Engagement Affect Legitimacy?Evidence from an ExperimentAnne Rasmussen, University of CopenhagenStefanie Reher, University of StrathclydeRepresentation or Information? Understanding EUĀsNew āUbiquitousĀConsultationsAdriana Bunea, University of BergenJoe Chrisp, University of Bergen
DailySchedule
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
How Money, Lobbying Capacity and Group Type ShapeLobbying Influence (Pre-Recorded)Fintan Damien Oeri, University BaselAdrian Rinscheid, University of St.GallenAya Kachi, University of Basel
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH152.28 STATES, FEMINISM AND ADVOCACYRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BChair: Courtney Burns, Bucknell UniversityDisc: Courtney Burns, Bucknell University
Papers: How Women Win the (Latin American) Presidency (Pre-Recorded)Catherine Reyes-Housholder, Pontificia UniversidadCatólica de ChileThe Politics of Multiculturalism and Women's RightsDenise Marie Walsh, University of VirginiaāThe Women of Egypt are a Red LineĀ: Anger andWomenĀs Collective Action (Pre-Recorded)Nermin Allam, Rutgers University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS152.29 HARRIS, OBAMA, AND THE POLITICS OF
MULTIRACIALS IN AMERICARoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Vladimir Enrique Medenica, University of DelawareDisc: Sara Sadhwani, Pomona College
Papers: Multiracial America and the Curious Case of KamalaHarrisAndy L. Aoki, Augsburg CollegeJames S. Lai, Santa Clara UniversityOkiyoshi Takeda, Aoyama Gakuin UniversityObama and Harris in the White House: Do MultiracialVoters Care?Gregory John Leslie, University of California, LosAngelesUnderstanding Perceptions of Asian-ness andMembership Among Asian AmericansJennifer Wu
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS152.30 RELIGIOUS NATIONALISM (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded Presentations
Co-sponsored by Division 43: International History andPolitics
Chair: Rebecca A. Glazier, University of Arkansas, Little RockDisc: David T. Buckley, University of Louisville
Papers: Religious Nationalism and Faith Based OrganizationsNandini Deo, Lehigh UniversityRajeshwari Balasubramanian, G D GoenkaUniversityFarhat Naz, Indian Institute of Technology JodhpurMargit van Wessel, Wageningen University &ResearchReligion and Nation-Building in Post-Communist andPost-Socialist CountriesNela MrchkovskaDestruction of Minority Religious Sites as a Strategy ofNationalismAndrea Malji, Hawaii Pacific University
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DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES152.31 COMPARATIVE PARTY FORMATIONSRoom: WSCC, 2BChair: John Ishiyama, University of North TexasDisc: Pedro Riera, Carlos III University of Madrid
John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Papers: Contentious Institutions and Party OrdersJessica Hejny, APDAdam Hilton, Mount Holyoke CollegeObamaĀs Democratic Party: Who is the Creature ofWhom?Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette UniversitySeth E. Masket, University of DenverThe Effect of Primaries on Intra-Campaign Positions inCongressional ElectionsMike Cowburn, Freie Universität BerlinMarius Sältzer, Universtität MannheimWartime Legacies and the Survival of Post-Rebel PartiesKyle Allen, University of North TexasPost Basnet, University of North Texas
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR152.32 LOCAL ELECTION ADMINISTRATION AND THE
VOTER EXPERIENCERoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: David C. Kimball, University of Missouri, St. LouisDisc: Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
Papers: Local Election Experiences During the PandemicBarry C. Burden, University of WisconsinOne Change To Make: How U.S. Local ElectionOfficials Would Improve ElectionsPaul Gronke, Reed CollegePaul Manson, Reed CollegeCOVID-19 and In-Person Voting: Public HealthPerceptionsCharles Stewart, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyEducating Voters: Local Election Official Use of SocialMediaMara Suttmann-Lea, Connecticut CollegeThessalia Merivaki, Mississippi State University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR152.33 PAPERS THAT STUDY VOTING BEHAVIOR
WITH CLEVER IDENTIFICATION STRATEGIESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Chair: Shane P. Singh, University of GeorgiaDisc: Jeremy Ferwerda, Dartmouth College
Papers: Different Worlds, Same Address: Social Voting AmongDissimilar RoommatesBrad T. Gomez, Florida State UniversityMatthew Pietryka, Florida State UniversityHow Bad Weather Excludes Marginal Voters fromTurning Out for ElectionSøren Damsbo-Svendsen, University of CopenhagenKasper M. Hansen, University of CopenhagenTaking the L: NFL Super Bowl Outcomes and GovernorApprovalMorgan Noel Smith, Georgia State University
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Voting in the Cold November Rain? Effects of theWeather on Turnout in AustriaThorsten Simon, University InnsbruckReto Stauffer, Universität InnsbruckLore Hayek, University of InnsbruckPhilipp Umek, University of Innsbruck
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION152.34 POLARIZATION EXPLAINEDRoom: Sheraton, AspenChair: Kevin Aslett, New York UniversityDisc: Gina M. Masullo, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Theorizing a Typology of Political Self-Silencing (Pre-Recorded)Gina M. Masullo, University of Texas at AustinMarley Duchovnay, University of Texas at AustinCasey Kennedy MooreMotivated Reasoning or Selective Exposure? TestingSources of Partisan DividesErik Peterson, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS152.35 ADVANCES IN THEORIES OF THE POLICY
PROCESSRoom: WSCC, 615Chair: Sarah B. Pralle, Syracuse UniversityDisc: Sara Hughes, University of Michigan
Papers: Disaster, Crisis and Shock: A Meta-Analysis ofFocusing Events in Public PolicyKristin Taylor, Wayne State UniversityThomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State UniversityRob A. DeLeo, Bentley UniversityAssessing the Robustness of Urban Water Systems withthe Institutional GrammarAaron Deslatte, Indiana University BloomingtonMadeline Yozwiak, Indiana UniversityLaura Helmke-Long, Indiana UniversityElizabeth Koebele, University of Nevada, RenoLauren Bartels, University of Nevada, RenoMargaret Garcia, ASUThe Diversity of Policy Conflict: Insights from the Oiland Gas Policy DomainTanya Heikkila, University of Colorado-DenverJennifer Kagan, University of Hawaii at ManoaRamiro Berardo, The Ohio State UniversityJill Yordy, University of Colorado DenverChris Weible, University of Colorado-DenverHongtao Yi, The Ohio State UniversityCatherine Chen, The Ohio State UniversityFederico Holm, The Ohio State UniversityImpact of Narrative Messages on COVID-19 VaccineUptake IntentionsElizabeth Ann Shanahan, Montana State UniversityElizabeth Ann Albright, Duke UniversityDeserai Anderson Crow, University of ColoradoDenverElizabeth Koebele, University of Nevada, RenoKristin Taylor, Wayne State University
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS152.36 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: BEFORE THE WEST:
RISE AND FALL OF EASTERN WORLD ORDERSRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom C
Co-sponsored by Division 20: Foreign Policy
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Chair: Ayse Zarakol, University of CambridgeBrent Steele, University of Utah
Part: Daniel H. Nexon, Georgetown UniversityIan F. Hurd, Northwestern UniversityNora Fisher Onar, University of San FranciscoFrederic Merand, Université de MontréalDavid A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY152.37 PUBLIC SUPPORT FOR AUTOCRACY AND
DEMOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Chair: Noah Buckley, Trinity College DublinDisc: Natalie Wenzell Letsa, University of Oklahoma
Papers: Does Affective Polarization Undermine Democracy?Preliminary FindingsYunus E Orhan, University of Wisconsin MilwaukeeThe Ideological Legacies of Authoritarianism: Pro-dictator Bias in IdeologySanghoon Kim-Leffingwell, University of Illinois atUrbana-ChampaignWhen the Guns Get Loud: Democratic Attitudes inStates with Militarized ConflictsEvgenia Jane Kitaevich, University of Michigan
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS152.38 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: JAMES MAHONEY'S
"THE LOGIC OF SOCIAL SCIENCE" (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Alan M. Jacobs, University of British ColumbiaPart: Gary Goertz
James Mahoney, Northwestern UniversityHillel David Soifer, Temple UniversityJennifer Cyr, Universidad Torcuato di TellaCarsten Q. Schneider, Central European University PU
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY152.39 COVID-19 AND DISPARITIES (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Adam Koon, Johns Hopkins University, Bloomberg
School of Public HealthDisc: Renu Singh, Hong Kong University of Science and
TechnologyAdam Koon, Johns Hopkins University, BloombergSchool of Public Health
Papers: The Cost of Equity: COVID Vaccine Priority,Deservingness and DisabilityAri NeemanMonica C. Schneider, Miami UniversityUsing Location Data to Detect Income-Driven MobilityGaps During Lock-DownAlexander Ruiz-Euler, CuebiqDoes Framing Coronavirus in Terms of DisparitiesReduce Vaccine Hesitancy?Ashley M Fox, SUNY at AlbanyHeather Elisabeth Lanthorn, IDinsightYongjin Choi, University at Albany, RockefellerCollege of Public Affairs and PolicyKevin Croke, Harvard School of Public HealthThe EU, Covid-19 and the State of the Health (Dis)-UnionCarlo Maria PalermoMatilde Ceron, University of Milan
DailySchedule
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
DIVISION 49: CANADIAN POLITICS152.40 ELECTORAL BEHAVIOUR IN CANADARoom: WSCC, 613Chair: Keith Douglas Brownsey, Mount Royal UniversityDisc: Richard Johnston, University of British Columbia
Papers: A New Class Politics in Canada? From BrokeragePolitics to PolarizationJoshua C. Gordon, Simon Fraser UniversityEric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University ofLondonThe Effect of Racial Attitudes on Vote Choice in the2019 Canadian ElectionIsaac Hale, University of California, Santa Barbara
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP152.41 MIGRATION AND RESTRICTION IN THE
GLOBAL SOUTHRoom: Sheraton, Willow BChair: Maria Isabel Puerta, Valencia CollegeDisc: Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University
Papers: The Postcolonial Migration State in the Global SouthGerasimos Tsourapas, University of GlasgowKamal Sadiq, University of California, IrvineThe Effects of Visa Restrictions on Migrants' Well-Being: A Diff-in-DiffOmar Hammoud Gallego, The London School ofEconomics and Political ScienceDifferentiating Between Race and Ethnicity forImmigrant Communities in BrazilAngela Ju, St. Edward's UniversityContent Analysis of News Stories of the VenezuelanMigratory Crisis in ColombiaCatalina Vega, Purdue UniversityElis Vllasi, Purdue UniversityStacey L. Connaughton, Purdue University
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS152.42 WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICS IN AFRICARoom: Sheraton, Ballard
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearch
Chair: Chiedo Nwankwor, Johns Hopkins School of AdvancedInnterntional Studies
Disc: Melanie Lauren Phillips, University of California,Berkeley
Papers: Women, Power & Markets: The Gendered Economics ofPolitical Behavior in NigeriaPamela Nwakanma, Harvard UniversityDoing Gender or Campaigns? How Candidate Signalingof Wealth Affects VotersRagnhild Louise Muriaas, University of BergenVibeke Wang, Chr. Michelsen InstituteMatthew K Gichohi, University of BergenConceptualizing Political Participation in Rural Mali andBurkina FasoCathryn Evangeline Johnson, University of LouisvilleWomen in Social Movements in Nigeria: Case Study ofthe ENDSARS MovementJoseph Olayinka Fashagba, Federal UniversityLokojaChiedo Nwankwor, Johns Hopkins School ofAdvanced Innterntional Studies
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DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY152.43 POLITICS OF PERSONAL EXPERIENCERoom: WSCC, 3AChair: Delphia Shanks, Hendrix CollegeDisc: Delphia Shanks, Hendrix College
Adam Seth Levine, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Experiences with Mobility, Economic Context, andAttitudes About OpportunityWilliam W. Franko, West Virginia UniversityLessons from the Fair: Practicing Quality of Life PoliticsAdam J Lê, University of MinnesotaJane Lawrence Sumner, University of Minnesota,Twin CitiesNo Country for Old Men: Homeownership Inequalityand Welfare State in KoreaEun Young Kim, University of PittsburghPolitical Socialization at Work: Asian Americans in theTech Sector WorkplaceClaire Ma, University of PennsylvaniaTanika Raychaudhuri, University of HoustonThe Impact of Self-Interest on Policy Attitudes duringthe PandemicAdam Seth Levine, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS152.44 HISTORICAL POLITICAL ECONOMY OF THE
MIDDLE EASTRoom: WSCC, 614Chair: Yusuf Magiya, Columbia UniversityDisc: Avital Livny, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
Papers: Colonial Legacies and Human Capital Development inthe Middle EastMelani Cammett, Harvard UniversityAllison Spencer Hartnett, University of SouthernCaliforniaGabriel Koehler-Derrick, Brown UniversityOttoman Legacies and the Political Economy of State-building in Northern GreeceKristin E. Fabbe, Harvard Business SchoolLocal Elites, Land Inequality, and Nation-buildingThrough Public EducationAsli Cansunar, University of WashingtonTugba Bozcaga, Harvard UniversityEthnic Composition, Legibility and War's ConditionalEffect on Fiscal CapacityYusuf Magiya, Columbia University
DIVISION 59: EDUCATION POLITICS AND POLICY152.45 HOW THE STATE SHAPES SOCIETY:
COMPARATIVE EDUCATION POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 205
Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative PoliticsChair: Robin Harding, University of OxfordDisc: Ben William Ansell, University of Oxford
Agustina S Paglayan, UCSD
Papers: The Determinants of the Subnational Implementation ofCostly ReformsJulia Smith Coyoli, Harvard UniversityCitizen Voice, State Exit: Electoral Incentives andEducation Provision in IndiaBlair Read
Friday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Dictators and UniversitiesFlorian Hollenbach, Copenhagen Business SchoolJan Henryk Pierskalla, Ohio State UniversityRight-Wing Nationalists, Historical Narratives, andEducationAhsan Ishaq ButtNon-State Origins of State Education: Evidence fromBritish BurmaHtet Thiha Zaw, University of Michigan
Related Groups153.1 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE FOR THE STUDY OF
STATESMANSHIP AND POLITICALPHILOSOPHY: NEW PERSPECTIVES INAMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT &DEVELOPMENT
Room: VirtualChair: Joseph Postell, Hillsdale CollegeDisc: Carson L. Holloway, University of Nebraska, Omaha
Papers: The Jefferson Presidency and Restraints on ExecutivePowerJordan T. Cash, Baylor UniversityThe Assault on American Political ThoughtElizabeth EastmanHenry Clay and the Emergence of LegislativeStatesmanshipSamuel Postell
153.2 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: GLENN HUGHES'S"FROM DICKINSON TO DYLAN:TRANSCENDENCE IN MODERNISTLITERATURE"
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 3Chair: John F. von Heyking, University of LethbridgeDisc: Glenn Hughes, St. Mary's University
Part: Henrik Syse, Peace Research Institute Oslo (PRIO)Paul E. Kidder, Seattle UniversityJames Greenaway, St. Mary's UniversityThomas J. McPartland, Kentucky State University
154.1 CATHOLIC INTEGRALISM: GOOD OR BAD FORTHE AMERICAN POLITICAL ORDER?
Room: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Steven J. Brust, Eastern New Mexico UniversityPart: Steven J. Brust, Eastern New Mexico University
Thomas Varacalli, Texas State University - San MarcosMatthew J. Peterson, Claremont Institute for the Studyof Statesmanship and Political PhilosophyAlan Paul Fimister, Saint John Vianney TheologicalSeminary
Friday, 4:30 PM to 5:30 PMAPSA Events155.1 CLAREMONT INSTITUTE RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual155.2 DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY SECTION
RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual155.3 IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE, AND POLITICS
RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual
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155.4 INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS(IHAP) RECEPTION
Room: Virtual155.5 JOINT RECEPTION FOR ALLIED STATUS
COMMITTEES, CAUCUSES, AND ORGANIZEDSECTIONS
Room: VirtualChair: Jasmine Scott, American Political Science Association
Kimberly Mealy, American Political Science Association
Friday, 6:00 PM to 7:30 PMAPSA Events156.1 ENGAGED METHODOLOGICAL PLURALISM
RECEPTION FOR TASK FORCE/OXFORDHANDBOOK (INVITE ONLY)
Room: Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom156.2 MENA POLITICS RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Madrona
Friday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PMAPSA Events157.1 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY SECTION 19
BUSINESS MEETING (ALL WELCOME)Room: Sheraton, Willow B157.2 POLITICAL SCIENCE EDUCATION SECTION IN-
PERSON BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: WSCC, 3B
Friday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PMAPSA Events158.1 CLASS AND INEQUALITY SECTION
RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Ballard158.2 HEALTH POLITICS AND POLICY RECEPTIONRoom: WSCC, 4C1158.3 INTERNATIONAL SECURITY SECTION 19
RECEPTION AND AWARD CEREMONYRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A158.4 JACK MILLER CENTER RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom D158.5 JOINT BOOK LAUNCH RECEPTION:
INTERNSHIPS IN POLITICAL SCIENCE ANDTEACHING CIVIC ENGAGEMENT GLOBALLY
Room: WSCC, 401158.6 POLITICAL COMMUNICATION SECTION
RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB158.7 PRESIDENTIAL TASK FORCE ON NEW
PARTNERSHIPS RECEPTION (INVITE ONLY)Room: Sheraton, Issaquah158.8 SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY & ENVIRONMENTAL
POLITICS RECEPTIONRoom: WSCC, 4C3
Saturday, October 2, 2021VirtualSaturday, 6:00 AM to 6:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH159.1 VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION: EXPERIMENTAL
RESEARCHRoom: Virtual
DailySchedule
Saturday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Chair: Amber Wichowsky, Marquette UniversityDisc: Chagai Weiss, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Papers: Gendered Labor Markets, Social Identity, and TradeAttitudesSoohyun Cho, Ohio State UniversityParty Ambiguity and Voter Uncertainty: A Re-AssessmentGuido Tiemann, Institute for Advanced StudiesLess Than Lethal: Minimal Support for PartisanViolenceJustin Grimmer, Stanford UniversityClayton M. Nall, University of California, SantaBarbaraMatthew Tyler, Stanford UniversitySean Westwood, Dartmouth College
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP159.2 MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Alberto Beltran, Purdue UniversityDisc: Alberto Beltran, Purdue University
Papers: IndiaĀs Settler Colonialism and Its Effects on theNomadic Migration.Syed Waqar ShahPsychic Numbing and Mixed Appeals in ImmigrationAdvocacyJeffrey Staton, Emory UniversityTrust, Diversity and Migrant TrajectoriesSusanne Wallman Lundasen, Linköping universityViolence as a Factor for MigrationAlberto Beltran, Purdue University
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM159.3 POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Darin DeWitt, California State University, Long BeachDisc: Darin DeWitt, California State University, Long Beach
Papers: The Impact of World Wars on Culture: Evidence fromClassical Music PerformancesMasanori Kikuchi, Waseda University
DIVISION 58: CIVIC ENGAGEMENT159.4 CIVIC ENGAGEMENT VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualDisc: Leah A. Murray, Weber State University
Papers: How Can Civic and Political Education ImproveDemocratic Governance at Scale?Titus Alexander, Democracy Matters
Saturday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AMTheme Panels160.1 OPPOSITION STRATEGIES TO OVERCOME
AUTOCRATIZATION IN POLARIZEDDEMOCRACIES
Room: VirtualChair: Jennifer McCoy, Georgia State UniversityPart: Laura Gamboa, University of Utah
Tom Ginsburg, University of ChicagoMelis G. Laebens, Nuffield College
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Adrienne LeBas, American UniversityTahmina RahmanMurat Somer, Koç UniversityAndreas Ufen, German Institute of Global and AreaStudies
APSA Events161.1 LIGHTNING ROUND: RESEARCH IN FIVE:
UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTSRoom: VirtualChair: Rachel Vanderhill, Wofford College
Nancy E. Wright, Pace UniversityDisc: Nancy E. Wright, Pace University
Rachel Vanderhill, Wofford College
Papers: Airstrikes and Rebel Use of Force in the Syrian CivilWarRamin Farrokhi, Emory UniversityBernadette Catherine Bresee, Emory UniversityDeudney and International Government: ThePhiladelphian System At WorkHenry Haynes Thompson, United States MilitaryAcademyFormer Experiences and a Terrorist Leader's Decision toRecruit Female MembersKristen Budsberg, University of GeorgiaAmanda Murdie, University of GeorgiaHow Local Structural Conditions Influence Adoption inICE's 287(g) ProgramMario Marset, London School of EconomicsMachine Learning for Predicting CongressionalEnvironmental Voting RecordsThomas Chen, Academy for Mathematics, Science,and EngineeringMajor and Authoritarian Personality: Based on a Surveyof PKU UndergraduatesYongkang Tai, Peking UniversityYifan ZhangZixuan Liu, Peking UniversityMingsen Wang, Peking University••• •••, Peking UniversityPopularity Politics: Estimating the Value of the "SocialMedia Subsidy"Jasmine Cui, Emory UniversityThe Problem of Power in AmericaIvy Flessen, Duke University
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY162.1 TRANSNATIONAL POLITICAL THOUGHTRoom: VirtualChair: Begüm Adalet, Cornell UniversityDisc: Siba Grovogui, Cornell University
Papers: Revolution as a Mode of Study: The Radical Pedagogyof Thomas SankaraIsaac Kamola, Trinity CollegeA True Inter-Nation: W.E.B. Du Bois and the Problemof World DemocracyAdam J. Dahl, University of Massachusetts, AmherstJames Baldwin and Transnational Political TheoryBegüm Adalet, Cornell UniversityA Time to Kill: Third World Assassinations and theAnxiety of DominationAlina Sajed, Mc Master
Saturday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY162.2 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: ON CAMILA
VERGARA'S “SYSTEMIC CORRUPTION"Room: VirtualChair: Antonio Y. Vazquez Arroyo, Rutgers UniversityPart: John P. McCormick, University of Chicago
Helene E. Landemore, Yale UniversityMaxwell A. Cameron, University of British ColumbiaSonali Chakravarti, Wesleyan UniversityOnur Ulas Ince, Singapore Management UniversityCamila Vergara, Columbia University
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY162.3 COMPARATIVE POLITICAL THEORY:
PERSPECTIVES FROM CHINESE PHILOSOPHYRoom: VirtualDisc: Shao Fan Lin, The University of
Papers: A Confucian Version of Nationalism from Family to theWorldBinfan Wang, University of TorontoConfucianism and the Political Theory of the BusinessCorporationChi Kwok, Utrecht UniversityTeaching Comparative Political Theory: A Case Studyof Machiavelli and Han FeiziNicholas Tampio, Fordham University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY162.4 COORDINATION AND INFORMATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Scott Tyson, University of RochesterDisc: Jason Sanwalka Davis, University of California, San
Diego
Papers: Consolidation of Precise Media CoverageGreg Chih-Hsin Sheen, New York University AbuDhabiMyunghoon Kang, Bilkent UniversityFact-Checking, Media Competition and PoliticalAccountabilityAntoni-Italo de Moragas, CUNEFInspiring Regime ChangeMehdi Shadmehr, UNC-Chapel HillStephen Edward Morris, Princeton UniversityInternational Coordination and the InformationalRationale of DelegationEmiel Awad, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceNicolas Riquelme, Universidad de los Andes, Chile
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY162.5 THE ORIGINS AND CONSEQUENCES OF
IDEOLOGYRoom: VirtualChair: Alina Oxendine, Hamline UniversityDisc: Shannon McQueen, West Chester University
Hannah Nam, Stony Brook University
Papers: Affect and Ideology: Investigation of the Origins ofAffective PolarizationRongbo Jin, The University of ArizonaExperience vs Ideology: Race and Cynicism About theAmerican DreamEmily Ann Israelson, The Ohio State University
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Exposure and Aversion to Human TransmissibleDiseases Predict ConservatismJoseph Vitriol, Stony Brook University, HarvardUniversityStability and Change in Political Ideology: A Three-Wave Twin Study AnalysisAleksander Ksiazkiewicz, University of Illinois atUrbana-ChampaignRobert Klemmensen, University of SouthernDenmarkChristopher T. Dawes
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY162.6 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF VOTINGRoom: VirtualChair: Alberto Simpser, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de
MexicoDisc: Rabia Malik, University of Essex
Papers: Compromise Under Pressure: Political Competition andPublic SpendingFelix Hartmann, Humboldt-Universität zu BerlinCross-Cutting Cleavages and Electoral Stability in IndiaFrancesca R. Jensenius, University of OsloNeeraj Vimal Prasad, University of AmsterdamPavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins UniversityInfrastructure for Votes? Experimental & Quasi-Experimental Evidence from MexicoFrancisco Garfias, University of California, SanDiegoBruno Lopez-Videla, UC San DiegoWayne Aaron SandholtzUpwardly Mobile: Subnational Term Limits and PoliticalBudget Cycles in BrazilAllyson L. Benton, City, University of LondonLorena G. Barberia, University of São Paulo
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY162.7 HISTORICAL MEMORY AND REMEMBERING
IN DEMOCRATIC AND AUTHORITARIANPOLITICS
Room: VirtualChair: Sener Akturk, Koç UniversityDisc: Dovile Budryte, Georgia Gwinnett College
Papers: Collective Memory and the Populist Cause: The AnkaraUlucanlar Prison MuseumMeral Ugur Cinar, Bilkent UniversityBerat Uygar Altınok, Bilkent UniversityEducationalizing the War-dead: Affect and Possibilitiesof Feminist CritiqueAnna-Karin Eriksson, Linnaeus UniversityPainful Political Healing In America: Lessons fromSouth Africa TRCGuilherme A SilvaThe Democratic Archive and the Role of Rememberingin Democratic Decision-MakingAndreas Schaefer, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY162.8 IMAGES AS DATARoom: VirtualChair: Michelle Torres, Rice UniversityDisc: Marco Morucci, New York University
DailySchedule
Saturday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Co-Detecting Visuals and Texts: A Deep LearningModel for Image ClassificationXuan Luo, The University of TokyoSota Kato, International University of JapanBudrul Ahsan, Philips JapanTakafumi Nakanishi, Musashino UniversityImages with Texts: Multimodal Framing Analysis viaHypergraph LearningSeo Eun Yang, Ohio State UniversityRepublicans See Red, Democrats Feel Blue: LabelerIssues in Image AnalysisNora Webb Williams, University of Illinois atUrbana-ChampaignAndreu Casas, Vrije Universiteit AmsterdamKevin Aslett, New York UniversityJohn D. Wilkerson, University of Washington
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS162.9 PROTEST & POLITICAL VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Ian M. Hartshorn, University of Nevada, RenoDisc: Annette Iris Idler, Harvard University
Papers: Genocide and RevolutionMax Schaub, Berlin Social Science Center (WZB)Rustamdjan Hakimov, University of LausannePolitical Competition and Ethnic Group in Power ProtestBrandon Ives, Seoul National UniversityRevolution Fatigue? Support for Democracy FollowingMultiple Protest RevolutionsKonstantin Ash, University of Central FloridaForced Disappearance: Hiding Violence, Instilling Terroror Avoiding Blame?Angelica Duran-Martinez, University ofMassachusetts, LowellAngel Torres Guevara, University of Chicago
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES162.10 COMPARATIVE EFFECTS OF COVID-19 ON
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR IN DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES
Room: VirtualChair: Irina Soboleva, Duke Kunshan UniversityDisc: Frederico Batista Pereira, University of North Carolina
at CharlotteGiancarlo Visconti, Purdue University
Papers: What Is the Effect of COVID-19 Lockdown on ProtestReadiness? Data from UkraineOlga Onuch, University of ManchesterConspiracy Beliefs Predict Risky Health Behavior inUkraine, Turkey, and GermanyTymofii Brik, Kyiv School of EconomicsThe Effect of Descriptive Norms on Adherence toPhysical Distancing in BrazilJéssica Machado Farias, University of BrasíliaPersonality Predictors of Public Health Compliance:Panel Data from UkraineIrina Soboleva, Duke Kunshan UniversityTymofii Brik, Kyiv School of Economics
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DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES162.11 ACCOUNTABILITY IN HYBRID AND
AUTHORITARIAN REGIMESRoom: VirtualChair: Katherine Geneya Crofts-Gibbons, King's College
LondonDisc: Navid Mehrdad, Columbia University
Papers: Can Authoritarian Government Be Held Accountable?Causal Evidence from ChinaHui Zhou, University of HoustonMonitoring the Russian State: Grassroots Oversight ofthe Russian Legal SystemLauren McCarthy, University of Massachusetts,AmherstNew Socialist Men and Women? Communist Legacyand Political Engagement in ChinaJing XuTianguang Meng, Tsinghua UniversityFavoring Democracy, Voting for Authoritarians:The Polish Electorate Since 2015Hubert Tworzecki, Emory University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES162.12 PLURAL PATHWAYS: CHINESE INVESTMENT,
COMMUNIST & POST-COMMUNISTDEVELOPMENTALISM
Room: VirtualChair: William Hurst, University of CambridgeDisc: William Hurst, University of Cambridge
Papers: Post-Communism the Mekong Way: Sino-Investment inthe CLMV CountriesPon Souvannaseng, Bentley UniversityChina in Kazakhstan: Car Assembly, Hydropower andFood ProcessingLinda Yin-nor Tjia, City University of Hong KongChina-Cuba Relations & Challenges for the U.S.:Constructing a Strategic Triangle?Arturo Lopez-Levy, Holy Names UniversityThe Consequences of China's FDI for KyrgyzstanĀsLabor MarketPengshan Pan, Graduate School of Public andInternational Affairs
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY162.13 THE WANING OF EUROPEAN STUDIES IN THE
US: SHOULD WE WORRY? WHY? WHAT TODO?
Room: VirtualChair: Jane R. Gingrich, University of OxfordPart: Catherine Blanche Guisan, University of Minnesota
Erik Jones, Johns Hopkins UniversityR. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, New BrunswickJulia Lynch, University of PennsylvaniaCathie Jo Martin, Boston UniversityBrent F. Nelsen, Furman UniversityPeter J. Verovĥek, University of Sheffield
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY162.14 DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL
INSTITUTIONS AND FOREIGN INVESTMENTRoom: VirtualChair: Rachel Wellhausen, University of Texas at Austin
Saturday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Disc: Sarah Bauerle Danzman, Indiana University
Papers: Preserving FDI: Institutions, Crisis, and ExitColin BarryPerilous or Predictable? Foreign Investment inPersonalist RegimesJane Lawrence Sumner, University of Minnesota,Twin CitiesJennifer Gandhi, Emory UniversityInvestment Dispute Settlement Mechanism and DomesticInstitutionsYeon Kyung Park, Bogazici UniversityCan Independence Induce Compliance in InternationalOrganizations?Zoe Xincheng Ge, New York UniversityThe Effects of Chinese FDI on Political LeadersĀApproval in Host CountriesElena V. McLean, SUNY, University at BuffaloJeheung Ryu, Kookmin University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY162.15 GREAT POWER COMPETITIONRoom: VirtualChair: Christopher Michael Faulkner, United States Naval War
CollegeDisc: Jeff Kaplow, William & Mary
Papers: Does the United States Still Have Command of theCommons?Ron Gurantz, Air War CollegeCompetitive Intervention and Great Power WarAlex Weisiger, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY162.16 PUBLIC OPINION AND CONFLICT PROPENSITYRoom: VirtualChair: Stephen Herzog, ETH ZurichDisc: Bruce W. Jentleson, Duke University
Papers: Baptized by Fire: Combat Experience and Attitudes ofWorld War II VeteransChristopher William Blair, University ofPennsylvaniaMichael Horowitz, University of PennsylvaniaEvaluating Cyberattack Severity and AssessingRetaliationMarcelo Leal, University of Massachusetts AmherstPaul Musgrave, University of MassachusettsCosts, Benefits, and Public Support for WarRichard McAlexander, Columbia UniversityDoes Information Increase Opinion Quality on DefenceIssues?Cyrille Thiébaut, AGORA - Cergy ParisUniversity & LIEPP / Cevipof - Sciences PoFriederike Richter, Universität der BundeswehrMünchenLou Safra, CEVIPOF
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY162.17 PUBLIC AUDIENCES AS CONSTRAINTS ON
FOREIGN POLICYMAKINGRoom: VirtualChair: David T Burbach, Naval War CollegeDisc: Meena Bose, Hofstra University
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Papers: Gaining Hearts & Minds: Multi-country ConjointExperiments on Public DiplomacyInbok Rhee, KDI School of Public Policy andManagementJong Hee Park, Seoul National UniversitySung Eun Kim, Korea UniversityJoonseok Yang, Sungkyunkwan UniversityAudiences That Matter: Why States Publicly Admit toBreaking International LawYuan Yi Zhu, Oxford UniversityTuuli-Anna Huikuri, University of OxfordChina's Public and the Bomb: Evidence on Norms andthe Nuclear ThresholdLincoln Hines, US Air War CollegeNaomi Egel, Cornell UniversityRethinking Public Constraints on Unilateral Action inAmerican Foreign PolicyRachel Maureen Myrick, Duke University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES162.18 CAUSES AND CONDUCT OF PROXY WARFARERoom: VirtualChair: Melissa M. Lee, Princeton UniversityDisc: Barbara Elias, Bowdoin College
Joseph Harold Felter
Papers: External Meddling in Internal War: Tracking GlobalTrends, 1946-2009Noel Anderson, University of TorontoHow Nuclear, Chemical, and Biological WeaponsInfluence War and Proxy WarDavid Logan, Princeton UniversityKyle AtwellHow Do States Control Proxy Groups? Evidence fromthe U.S. in the Syrian Civil WarSara Plana, MITDeeds and Words Disconnect: United States ProxyWarfare in El SalvadorMeg Guliford, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES162.19 LONG-TERM SOCIAL AND POLITICAL
CONSEQUENCES OF WORLD WAR I AND IIRoom: VirtualChair: Yuri M. Zhukov, University of Michigan, Ann ArborDisc: Carlo Koos, CMI - Chr. Michelsen Institute
Papers: Trenches of Totalitarianism: World War I and the Riseof FascismFelix Haass, University of OsloAlexander De Juan, Osnabrück UniversityCarlo Koos, CMI - Chr. Michelsen InstituteThomas Tichelbaecker, Princeton UniversitySascha Riaz, Harvard UniversityExplaining Mass Rape in Post-War GermanyMona Morgan-Collins, King's College LondonUlrike Gisela Theuerkauf, University of East AngliaHanna Folsz, Stanford UniversityRefugees and the Radical Right - Evidence from Post-WWII Forced MigrationsAnil Menon, University of MichiganMigration and Social Change: Evidence from Post-WWII Displacement in GermanyVolha Charnysh, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology
DailySchedule
Saturday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES162.20 TERRITORY, BOUNDARIES, AND GOVERNANCERoom: VirtualChair: Christine Cheng, King's College LondonDisc: Christine Cheng, King's College London
Claire Greenstein, University of Alabama, Birmingham
Papers: Border Walls, Refugees, and TerrorismSergi Pardos-Prado, University of GlasgowSara Polo, University of EssexJulian Wucherpfennig, Hertie SchoolHow Territorial Boundaries Moderate the Effect ofAutonomy on Ethnic ConflictAndreas Juon, ETH ZurichRoving Rulers: How Armed Groups Govern in theAbsence of Territorial ControlHannah Early Bagdanov, University of Notre DameJoséphine Lechartre, University of Notre DameThe Rise and Fall of Islamic State: Strategic Change inTerritorial ControlScott Gates, PRIO and University of Oslo
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION162.21 WHY THEY DO WHAT THEY DO? INFLUENCES
ON BUREAUCRATIC LEADERSHIP ANDMANAGEMENT
Room: VirtualChair: Derek Epp, University of Texas at AustinDisc: Gordon Abner, Univeristy of Texas at Austin
Papers: Beyond the Skin: Authentic Leadership and AfricanAmerican Women LeadersOlivia Cook, Auburn UniversityBureau-Bashing and Employee Work Attitudes:The Case of the 2014 VA ScandalShinwoo Lee, Incheon National UniversityGordon Abner, Univeristy of Texas at AustinDo Public Goods Explain Why Bureaucrats Participatein Organizations?Nathalie Mendez, Texas A&M UniversityClaudia N. Avellaneda, Indiana UniversityWhy Are Some Civil Servants More Committed toProfessional Norms than Others?Kohei Suzuki, Leiden UniversityVictor Lapuente, Goteburg University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH162.22 REPRESENTATION AND GENDER IN
COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVERoom: VirtualChair: Rita B Groh, University of Tennessee at ChattanoogaDisc: Rachel O'Donnelll, University of Rochester
Papers: Does Gender Shape Oversight?: The Case of theColombian CongressBrenna Gail ArmstrongGendered Parliaments: Understanding the SelectiveDropout of PoliticiansZahra Runderkamp, University of AmsterdamWomen National Leaders and SubstantiveRepresentation: A Global AnalysisValeriya Mechkova, Varieties of Democracy,Gothenburg University
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WomenĀs Participation in Governments in Asian-PacificDemocraciesJinhyuk Jang, Pennsylvania State UniversitySona N. Golder, Penn State University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR162.23 INEQUALITY AND VOTING BEHAVIORRoom: VirtualChair: Michael D. Martinez, University of FloridaDisc: Sung Min Han, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies
Papers: Diversity, Segregation, and Support for BrexitJoel Suss, London School of EconomicsParticipation and Inequality in the U.S. StatesFilip Kostelka, University of EssexLorenzo Crippa, University of EssexPhilip James Swatton, Essex UniversityPerceptions of Local Economic Decline: Who PerceivesDecline, Why This MattersJane Green, Nuffield CollegeWill Jennings, University of SouthamptonLawrence McKay, University of SouthamptonGerry Stoker, University of SouthamptonSpatial Inequality and Populist Voting in Germany andthe U.S.Michael Bayerlein, University of Kiel
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION162.24 IMMIGRATION ATTITUDESRoom: VirtualDisc: Jonathan T. Hiskey, Vanderbilt University
Papers: Feedback Effect of Immigration Policy on AttitudesToward Skilled ImmigrantsSiu Yau Lee, The Education University of HongKongPublic Opinion and the Cultural Affinity HypothesisJessica Bussell Felder, Purdue UniversityEliza Osorio, Purdue UniversityYulong Hu, Purdue UniversityThe Will of the (Imagined) People: Nativism & Supportfor (Il)Liberal DemocracyAndrej Kokkonen, University of GothenburgJonas Linde, Department of Comparative Politics,University of BergenWhat Determines Colombian Policy Preferences onVenezuelan Forced Migration?William Allen, University of OxfordIsabel Ruiz, University of Oxford
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION162.25 ELECTION CAMPAIGN STRATEGIESRoom: VirtualChair: Shelley Boulianne, MacEwan UniversityPapers: Crafting the Message: The Data Science of Presidential
ElectionsBo Yun Park, Harvard UniversityĄLetĀs Talk About Iowaď: The Role of Geography inCandidates' Economic FramesDakota Park-Ozee, University of Texas at AustinThe Curse of the Iron Lady: The Gender Dynamics ofNegative CampaigningAlessandro Nai, University of AmsterdamChiara Valli, University of BernJuergen Maier, University of Koblenz-Landau
Saturday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
I Always Feel Like Somebody's Watching Me? U.S.Public Attitudes to MicrotargetingRachel K. Gibson, University of ManchesterKate Dommett, University of SheffieldEsmeralda V. Bon, University of Manchester
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS162.26 THE POLITICS OF MODERATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Jessica Baldwin-Philippi, Fordham UniversityPapers: Content Moderation in the Digital Democracy: What's
the Problem?Fabrizio Gilardi, University of ZurichEmma Hoes, European University InstituteJonathan Klüser, University of KonstanzMaël Dominique KubliNahema Marchal, University of ZurichHow African Countries Respond to Fake News and HateSpeechLisa GarbeLisa-Marie Måseidvåg Selvik, University of BergenPauline Lemaire, Chr. Michelsen InstituteSupport By Proxy? On the Acceptance of AlgorithmicSystems in a Public ContextPascal König, TU KaiserslauternJulia FelfeliThe Internet Content Regulation by the Government ofThailandYuttaporn Issarachai, Sukhothai Thammathirat OpenUniversity
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE162.27 RETHINKING SOVEREIGNTY, POWER AND
JUSTICE FROM A CRITICAL PERSPECTIVERoom: VirtualChair: Laura Sjoberg, Royal Holloway, University of LondonDisc: Bronwyn Anne Leebaw, University of California,
Riverside
Papers: Hype Power as Necropower: Questioning Death Makingin U.S. Victory CultureFrancois Debrix, Virginia TechPost-Genocide Transitional Justice: Grassroots SurvivorPerspectives from RwandaNoam Schimmel, Kellogg College, OxfordLand and Song: Indigenous Reflections on SovereignCommunityNancy Sue Love, Appalachian State UniversityRights Beyond Words: Mapping Human Rights Scholar-Organization PartnershipsZehra F. Kabasakal Arat, University of Connecticut-StorrsShareen Hertel, University of Connecticut
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS162.28 FACTORS AND CAUSES SHAPING GREAT
POWERSRoom: VirtualChair: Caroline Jeanmaire, UC BerkeleyDisc: Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Papers: Legal Statecraft in Global Refugee PolicyMegan Brand, Princeton UniversityThe Rise and Fall of Great Technologies and PowersJeffrey Ding, Oxford University
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Too Weak to Dominate: Why Hegemons Build Rules-Based Orders at SeaJan Stockbruegger, Brown UniversityThe United States in the Asia-Pacific, 1895-1905:The Limits of a Rising PowerJaehan Park, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY162.29 CENSORSHIP, DISSENT AND LEGITIMATION
UNDER AUTOCRACYRoom: VirtualChair: Ye Wang, New York UniversityDisc: Ziyi Wu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Papers: ĄCan a Dictator Make Peace? Text-Analysis of NorthKorean Propaganda on AmericaďEdward Goldring, York UniversityJi Yeon (Jean) Hong, Hong Kong University ofScience and TechnologyEvolution of Censorship and Surveillance TechnologiesYuree Noh, Rhode Island CollegeChristopher J. Fariss, University of MichiganNadiya Kostyuk, Georgia Institute of TechnologyReining in Public Dissent via Media Coverage onAdministrative Lawsuits in ChinaJongyoon Baik, The University of ChicagoShifting Regime Legitimation Strategies and theDeterioration of DemocracyChristian von Soest, German Institute for Global andArea Studies (GIGA)Lennart Joe Brunkert, Leuphana UniversityLüneburg
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY162.30 POLARIZATION, POPULISM AND THREATS TO
LIBERAL DEMOCRACYRoom: VirtualChair: Kelly M. McMann, Case Western Reserve UniversityDisc: Melisa Ross, WZB Berlin Social Science Center
Papers: Elites, Redistributive Threats, and DemocraticBreakdown in Latin AmericaVincent Mauro, Cornell UniversityMass Polarization and Democratic Decline: Evidence ofa Negligible RelationshipIsaac Mehlhaff, The University of North Carolina atChapel HillPopulist Leaders and the Threat to Liberal DemocracyBenjamin Garcia Garcia Holgado, University ofNotre DameJacob Turner, University of Notre DameThe Diffusion of Democratic BackslidingAlexander Schmotz, WZB Berlin Social ScienceCenter
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY & POLITICS162.31 COMPARING QUEER POLITICSRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 31: Women, Gender, and PoliticsResearchCo-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
Chair: Alison Gash, University of Oregon
DailySchedule
Saturday, 6:30 AM to 7:00 AM
Papers: Campaign Contexts and the Gendered Implications forLGBTQ CandidatesJoanna Everitt, University of New Brunswick SaintJohnManon Tremblay, University of OttawaRights and Radicalism: Framing Sexuality and GenderIdentity in News MediaAnne Louise Schotel, University of AmsterdamUnderstanding Domestic Politics in the US response toPoliticised HomophobiasEmma Paszat, University of Toronto Mississauga
DIVISION 50: POLITICAL NETWORKS162.32 NETWORKS AND POLICY ON A GLOBAL
SCALERoom: VirtualChair: Anand Edward Sokhey, University of Colorado, BoulderDisc: Bruce Desmarais, Pennsylvania State University
Papers: Binding Overhang and Wave-like Expansion of FreeTradeHsiang-Chuan Sha, National Taiwan UniversityHuan-Kai Tseng, National Taiwan UniversityHsuan-Wei Lee, University of North Carolina atChapel HillExplaining Country Positions on Carbon Markets inClimate NegotiationsPaula Castro, Zurich University of Applied SciencesRaphaela KotschIENGO Partnerships with Corporations: The Case ofGreenpeace and ForonLejla Dervesevic, Purdue UniversityThe Ties that (Un)Bind: A Network Analysis of TreatyExitTaylor Dalton, University of Southern California
Related Groups163.1 BRITISH POLITICS GROUP: BRITAIN BEYOND
BORIS AND BREXIT: THE FUTURETRAJECTORY OF POLITICS IN THE UK
Room: VirtualChair: Janet M. Laible, Lehigh UniversityPart: Holly Jarman, University of Michigan
Sarah PICKARD, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris3Mark I. Vail, Wake Forest UniversityIan P. McManus, Emerson College
163.2 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:THE TAIWAN VOTERS
Room: VirtualChair: Christopher H. Achen, Princeton UniversityDisc: Karl Ho, University of Texas, Dallas
Alexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury
Papers: Symbolic versus Pragmatic Politics in TaiwanTse-min Lin, University of Texas, AustinChun-Ying WuTheodore Charm, University of Texas at AustinUninvited Campaign Rally: Effects of HKĀs Anti-Extradition Movement on TaiwanChi Huang, National Chengchi UniversityAlexander C. Tan, University of Canterbury
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Weathering the 1992 Consensus? TaiwanĀs 2020Election and BeyondT.Y. Wang, Illinois State UniversitySu-Feng Cheng, National Chengchi University
163.3 CRITICAL POLICY STUDIES: CRITICALAPPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF THE CRISISIN POLITICS AND POLICYMAKING
Room: VirtualChair: Wendy Wright, William Paterson UniversityDisc: Genevieve Fuji Johnson, Simon Fraser University
Papers: The Swedish Corona Strategy ĉ Constitutional SecurityManagement?Oscar Leonard Larsson, The Swedish DefenceUniversityViolence Along Migration Routes: A Systematic ReviewAlexandria J. Innes, City, University of LondonDevising Effective Multilingual Education Policies inMigrant Hosting CountriesAnna Malandrino, University of BolognaDeliberating Like a State: Public Administration and theDeliberative SystemRikki Dean, Goethe University Frankfurt
163.4 PUBLIUS THE JOURNAL OF FEDERALISM:FEDERALISM IN A TIME OF PRESIDENTIALTRANSITION
Room: VirtualChair: John Dinan, Wake Forest UniversityPart: Jake Haselswerdt, University of Missouri
Matthew Joseph Uttermark, Binghamton University --SUNYMariely Lopez-Santana, George Mason UniversityMadeline Yozwiak, Indiana UniversityPaul Nolette, Marquette University
Saturday, 6:30 AM to 7:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS164.1 PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Yu Ouyang, Purdue University NorthwestDisc: Scott Spitzer, California State University, Fullerton
Saeed Ullah Khan, Higher Education Department, Govt.of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
Papers: Strategically Using the National MallMorgan Noel Smith, Georgia State UniversityThrough RealismĀs Lens: TrumpĀs Nationalist Rhetoricand the Space ForceRitu S. Lauer, Peninsula CollegeInspectors General in the News: Neutrality, Publicity,and Separation of PowersMatthew M. Dull, Virginia TechYousof Azizi, Virginia TechPatrick S. Roberts, RAND CorporationLegislative Calendar and Executive OrdersFred Gui, University of RochesterDeteriorating Democracy: Temporal Horizons in theU.S. PresidentsĀSpeechesOlesya Sheblo, Gakushuin University
Saturday, 6:30 AM to 7:00 AM
The Impact of Personality Traits of the U.S. Presidentson Cabinet AppointmentsAbbas Mammadov, Washington State UniversityPresidential Agenda Setting During RecessionsScott Newsome, University of California, Santa Cruz
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY164.2 PUBLIC POLICY VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Devin Judge-Lord, Harvard UniversityDisc: Clayton M. Nall, University of California, Santa Barbara
Papers: How Do Policy Makers Learn About Migration Policiesin Diffusion Processes?Lea Portmann, University of LucerneBureaucratic Polarization: Social Identities in Conflict inthe Public ServiceJoão V. Guedes-Neto, University of PittsburghHow Policy Experiments Catalyze Group Coalitions:The Charter School ChallengeSam Trachtman, University of California, Berkeley
Saturday, 7:00 AM to 7:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS165.1 STATE BEHAVIOR THROUGHOUT HISTORY:
DIVERSE FACTORS OF INFLUENCE VIRTUALPOSTER SESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Saad Ullah Khan, Georgia State UniversityDisc: Benedict Edward DeDominicis, Catholic University of
Korea
Papers: Primary vs Secondary States: Ancient States, StateFormation and State SystemsZachary Coleman Shirkey, CUNY, Hunter CollegeThe Fault in Our Stars? KoreaĀs Foreign Policy andGermanyĀs Rise, 1876ĉ1910Dylan Motin, Kangwon National UniversityLearning in Office? The Scope of Rigidity in MargaretThatcherĀs Foreign PolicySamuel Morgan, University of California, IrvinePiety and Politics: Electoral Consequences of ReligiousGatherings in IndiaSiddhartha BaralGareth Nellis, University of California, San DiegoMichael Weaver, The University of British Columbia
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS165.2 SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY VIRTUAL POSTERSESSION
Room: VirtualChair: Stephen Bird, Clarkson UniversityDisc: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Papers: Religiosity and Environmental Policy Attitudes in theUnited StatesAndrew Kirkpatrick, Christopher NewportUniversityScaling DMZ International Peace Park and its Routingto Ecological PeaceJiyoung Cho, The New School for Social Research
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Substitute or Compliment? American Views on ClimateMitigation and AdaptationChristopher P. Borick, Muhlenberg CollegeThe Politics of Low-Carbon Policy ExperimentationWeila Gong, Technical University of MunichLeaders and Laggards: Effect of Civil Society onEnvironmental TreatiesChristianna Marie Sirindah Parr, University ofWashingtonAssessing the Prospects for an Ecological Turn inPolitical ScienceRobert Darrow, UMass AmherstWho Supports 'Robot Tax' Proposal? - Identifying'Luddites preference'Jaewook Lee, Boston University
Saturday, 7:30 AM to 8:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS166.1 RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS VIRTUAL
POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualDisc: Armando Xavier Mejia, University of Wisconsin,
Madison
Papers: Political Geography: Class vs. Ethnicity in ContestedCitiesYael Shmaryahu Yeshurun, Faculty of Law, Bar IlanUniversity, IsraelEvaluating the Influence of Latinx Machismo onAttitudes Towards Donald TrumpFlavio R. Hickel, Washington CollegeMelissa Deckman, Washington CollegeA Socio-Political Exploration of Latinos' Political PartyAffiliationJuan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University-CorpusChristiPathways to Political Office in State Legislatures: TheEffect of ConstraintErik Grant Hanson, University of California, LosAngelesTurnout of FloridaĀs Growing Puerto Rican PopulationUsing New Data, 2012-2018Vanessa Perez, Queens College, CUNYTwitter as a Policy Feedback Loop? Immigration andLaw Enforcement AttitudesSamantha Chapa, University of HoustonJamie M. Wright, University of HoustonRace, Identity, and RadicalizationTiffiany O. Howard, University of Nevada Las VegasThe New White Visibility: Framing Whiteness in thePost-2016 EraLucy Britt, Gettysburg CollegeLeah Christiani, University of TennesseeTheoretical and Ideological Grounding of Black PoliticsBriana Hyman, Howard UniversityWhy the New Americans Join the Party? Polarizationand Partisanship in the U.S.Jongwoo Jeong, Texas A&M UniversityLatinx Political Participation and Socialization:Understanding the Turnout GapJose S Gomez, Columbia University
DailySchedule
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Creative Citizenship: Participation at the Intersection ofRace and ImmigrationStephanie Chan, Princeton University
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AMTheme Panels167.1 RACE, RACISM AND THE POLITICS OF
IDENTITYRoom: WSCC, 613Chair: Gwendoline M. Alphonso, Fairfield UniversityDisc: Joan Eleanor O'Bryan, Stanford University
Papers: AmericaĀs New Racial PoliticsRogers M. Smith, University of PennsylvaniaPopulism and IdentityAlberto Spektorowski, Tel Aviv UniversityWhatĀs Wrong with Cultural Imperialism? (Pre-Recorded)Alan Patten, Princeton UniversityShuk Ying Chan, Princeton University
167.2 RECLAIMING CAUSALITY IN POLITICALSCIENCE
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CChair: Tulia G. Falleti, University of PennsylvaniaDisc: James Mahoney, Northwestern University
Part: Sheri Berman, Barnard College, Columbia UniversityStephan Haggard, University of California, San DiegoAlan M. Jacobs, University of British ColumbiaRudra Sil, University of PennsylvaniaPrerna Singh, Brown University
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY168.1 PLURALIST COMMUNITIES AND THE
PROBLEM OF SHARED LIFERoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan AChair: Michelle A. Schwarze, University of Wisconsin,
MadisonDisc: Andrew Sabl, University of Toronto
Papers: Aristotelian Pluralism: How to Think About theCommon GoodMark Hoipkemier, University of VirginiaConfucianism and Neutrality-Why a LegitimateConfucian State Should Be Neutral (Pre-Recorded)Baldwin Bon-Wah Wong, Hang Seng University ofHong KongPluralism and Populism in the Democratic CityRussell Arben Fox, Friends UniversityPolitical Leadership and Feminist Epistemology:Contributions of Jane AddamsWynne Walker Moskop, Saint Louis University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY168.2 PRACTICAL REFORM DEBATES IN
SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY POLITICALPHILOSOPHY (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Boleslaw Z Kabala, Tarleton State UniversityDisc: Boleslaw Z Kabala, Tarleton State University
Papers: Obedience, Resistance, and Popular Reform in the Oathof Allegiance DebatesEvelyn Boyden, Harvard University
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The Role of Reform in DescartesĀs Discourse on MethodTyler Thomas, University of Notre DameReform as Unification: Hobbes in France & the Uses ofGallican HistoryAmy Chandran, Harvard UniversityEngendering Democratic Passions: Reform in SpinozaĀs"Political Treatise"Robert Wyllie, Ashland University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY168.3 RETHINKING NIHILISM: NEW
INTERPRETATIONS OF 20TH-CENTURYPOLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: Sheraton, Willow BDisc: Dirk Schuck, University of Erfurt
Papers: Beyond the Warring Gods: The Political WeberReconsidered (Pre-Recorded)Sophie Marcotte Chenard, Carleton UniversityHeideggerian Comparative Political Theory (Pre-Recorded)Timothy Berk, University of TorontoNihilism, Pluralism, and LossAlicia Steinmetz, Stanford UniversityHannah Arendt's Concept of TimeKatherine C. Bermingham, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY168.4 FROM CAPTIVITY TO ABOLITION:
INCARCERATION AND POLITICAL THEORYRoom: WSCC, 608Chair: Robert Nichols, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesDisc: Robert Nichols, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Renee Heberle, University of Toledo
Papers: Prisons in America: Tocqueville and Beaumont onDemocracyĀs Carceral BoundariesElliot Mamet, Duke UniversityPower to the Prisoner: Huey P. Newton, GeorgeJackson, and Prison AbolitionismRyan RussellCaptivity in America and Alexander BerkmanĀs PrisonMemoirs of an AnarchistNolan Bennett, University of Wisconsin - Green BayWas Foucault an Abolitionist? A TransatlanticReflection (Pre-Recorded)Anna M. Terwiel, Trinity College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY168.5 ON KEVIN DUONG'S "THE VIRTUES OF
VIOLENCE"Room: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Jennie Choi Ikuta, University of Missouri-ColumbiaPart: Nancy Luxon, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.
Ayten Gundogdu, Barnard College-Columbia UniversityMassimiliano Tomba, University of CaliforniaKevin Duong, University of Virginia
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY168.6 THE POSSIBILITIES AND LIMITS OF
ELECTIONSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Chair: Doug Thompson, University of South CarolinaPapers: Election Time, Again: Revisiting the Temporal
Properties of U.S. ElectionsEmilee Chapman, Stanford University
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Electoral Representation and the Epistemology of theBully PulpitJustin Pottle, Harvard UniversityJohn Stuart Mill and the Performance of DemocracyRobert Stone, The University of ChicagoDissociative Democracy: Lottocratic Representation andEpistemic ExclusionDaniel Hutton Ferris, University of Toronto
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY168.7 ALL ABOUT POPULISMRoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Rodolfo Sarsfield, Autonomous University of QueretaroDisc: Rodolfo Sarsfield, Autonomous University of Queretaro
Janel Jett, Purdue University
Papers: Populism, Efficacy, and the Charismatic BondMatthew Rhodes-Purdy, Clemson UniversityPopulism & Punishment: Anger, Anxiety and theConsequences of Populist MessagingJames Fahey, University of Florida--Dept. of PoliticalSciencePlaying Fair: Cooperative vs. Competitive Games andPopulism and PunitivismJames Fahey, University of Florida--Dept. of PoliticalScienceMatthew Rhodes-Purdy, Clemson UniversityStephen Michael Utych, Boise State University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY168.8 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF INEQUALITY:
FROM CAMPAIGN FINANCE TO RADICALVOTING (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Tomila Lankina, London School of Economics and
Political ScienceDisc: Giulia Leila Travaglini, columbia unviersity
Papers: Political Donations & Economic Inequality: Evidencefrom Campaign ContributionsAlberto Parmigiani, London School of EconomicsValentino Larcinese, London School of EConomicsIntergenerational Social Mobility and Anti-SystemVoting: The Journey MattersAndrew McNeil, London School of EconomicsPopulist Swing: How ItalyĀs Parties Exploit InequalityRhetoricGiovanni Francesco Angioni, London School ofEconomics and Political ScienceThe Stories We Tell Ourselves: Local Newspaper &Support for the Radical RightBeatriz Jambrina Canseco, LSE
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY168.9 APPETITIVE STATESRoom: WSCC, 617Chair: Jonathan Rodden, Stanford UniversityPapers: Crisis and Competition: Explaining the Global Waves of
Antitrust LegislationMichael O. Allen, Yale UniversityKenneth F. Scheve, Yale UniversityDavid Stasavage, New York UniversityInvesting in Fiscal Capacity - Legislative Debates andTaxation in the UKAgustin Alonso Goenaga Orrego, Lund UniversityOriol Sabaté, Lund University
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The Abolishment of Patronage: Meritocratic Reforms in19th Century BritainAgnes Cornell, University of GothenburgThe Empire Strikes Back: GermanyĀs EconomicExpansion in Eastern EuropeEmily Holland, United States Naval War CollegeHadas Aron, New York University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY168.10 ESTIMATION AND PREDICTION (PRE-
RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Zuhaib Sheikh Mahmood, Duke University
Papers: From Ideologies to Bargaining Spaces: An Alternative toParty Positions (Pre-Recorded)Hung Hoang Viet Nguyen, University of Bremen,SOCIUM Research Center on Inequality and SocialPolicyA Power-Law Approach to Occurrence Prediction ofPolitical Events (Pre-Recorded)HIROSHI OKAMOTO, The University of TokyoBudrul Ahsan, Philips JapanSota Kato, International University of JapanInference with Extremes: An Extreme Value and ZeroInflated Regression Model (Pre-Recorded)David Randahl, Department of Peace and ConflictResearch, Uppsala UniversityJohan Vegelius, Department of Statistics, UppsalaUniversity
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS168.11 GENDER IN COMPARATIVE POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: Martha C. Johnson, Mills CollegeDisc: Martha C. Johnson, Mills College
Papers: Explaining the Dearth of Women Among PopulistExecutives (Pre-Recorded)Stacey Leigh Hunt, Auburn UniversityGender and Inter-Ethnic Group Trust: Evidence fromRomaniaAmy H. Liu, University of Texas at AustinSarah Shair-Rosenfield, University of EssexKaty Smith, University of Texas at AustinGendering the Far-Right: A Comparative PerspectiveElif Savas, UMass Amherst
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS168.12 IN-GROUP/OUT-GROUP POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 401Chair: Serdar Kaya, Simon Fraser UniversityDisc: Serdar Kaya, Simon Fraser University
Papers: Ethnic Competition and State Capacity Under SettlerColonialismHarunobu Saijo, Duke Political ScienceThe Role of Traditional Chiefs vs. Local Leaders onDispute Resolution in NigeriaCatlan Erin Reardon, University of California,BerkeleyTurkey's Perilous Dilemma between Coopting andIntegrating Kurds, 1984-2015Ozgur Ozkan, University of Washington
DailySchedule
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Cosmopolitan Immigration Attitudes in Europe, theUnited States and East AsiaFan Lu, University of California, DavisGento Kato, Nazarbayev University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES168.13 DECENTRALIZATION AND SUB-NATIONAL
DEVELOPMENTRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Chair: Poulomi Chakrabarti, Queen's UniversityDisc: Tanu Kumar, College of William and Mary
Papers: Decentralization and Human Development Trends inSouth AsiaNisha Mukherjee Bellinger, Boise State UniversityPublic Goods and Public Trust in Government:Subnational Evidence from IndiaShagun Gupta, American University-SISThe Logic of Subnational Public Goods Allocation inthe Developing WorldSoo Min Oh, University of BirminghamWhy Are Some Indian states More Developed? Evidencefrom Existing TheoriesPoulomi Chakrabarti, Queen's University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES168.14 THE LOCAL POLITICS OF SERVICE
PROVISION IN THE MIDDLE EAST AND NORTHAFRICA (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Melani Cammett, Harvard UniversityDisc: Lama Mourad, Carleton University
Papers: Subnational Variations in Electoral Returns to LocalPublic GoodsTugba Bozcaga, Harvard UniversityRefugees, International Aid, and Local Service Provisionin JordanReva Dhingra, Harvard UniversityLocal Governance and Center-Periphery Relations inLebanonChristiana Moreira Parreira, Princeton UniversityPolitical Parties and Non-State Security Provision inLebanonKelly Stedem, Roanoke College
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES168.15 THE POLITICS OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMICRoom: WSCC, 615Chair: Adrienne LeBas, American UniversityDisc: Emily Rains, Duke University
Papers: When Does the Fear End? A Panel Study of Covid-19Precaution-TakingSeth Nathan Soderborg, Harvard UniversityAssessing the Role of Collaboration in Mitigating theImpacts of COVID-19Matías Bianchi, University of ArizonaJennifer Cyr, Universidad Torcuato di TellaLucas I. Gonzalez, CONICET/UCA-UNSAM
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Between Tax and Charity: Zakat in Times of COVID-19(Pre-Recorded)Vanessa van den Boogaard, University of TorontoUmair Javed, Lahore University of ManagementSciencesSoukayna Remmal, International Centre for Tax andDevelopmentEffects of COVID on Group Inequality and EthnicAttitudes: Evidence from LagosAdrienne LeBas, American UniversityJessica Gottlieb, University of HoustonJanica Magat, Texas A&M University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES168.16 CHINESE POLITICS MINI-CONFERENCE:
CHINA'S RESPONSE TO COVID-19:BUREAUCRACY, GOVERNANCE AND PUBLICOPINION
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Dali L. Yang, University of ChicagoDisc: Andrew Mertha, Johns Hopkins, SAIS
Jane Duckett, University of Glasgow
Papers: Explaining ChinaĀs Uneven Response to COVID-19:The Role of Hybrid BureaucracyJiwei Qian, National University of SingaporeYoel Kornreich, Tel Aviv UniversityVariations in Government Action: Policy InnovationDuring the COVID-19 CrisisJielu Yao, Wesleyan UniverityYuehong Tai, University of IowaElise Pizzi, University of IowaCasting Ancient Nets: Grid-Style Social ManagementDuring the Corona CrSabrina Habich-Sobiegalla, Freie Universität BerlinFranziska Plümmer, Max Planck Institute forComparative Public Law and International LawPublic Sentiment on Chinese Social Media during theEmergence of COVID-19Yingdan Lu, Stanford UniversityJennifer Pan, Stanford UniversityYiqing Xu, Stanford University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY168.17 LOBBYING AND FIRM INFLUENCERoom: WSCC, 607Chair: Pablo Martin Pinto, University HoustonDisc: Robert Gulotty, The University of Chicago
Papers: "Down with TPP! What's TTIP?" Explaining theDifferent Politics of Trade DealsMary Anne Madeira, Lehigh UniversityFirms, Dynamics, and Stumbling Blocks in TradeJason Sanwalka Davis, University of California, SanDiegoPersonal Networks, State Financial Backing and ForeignDirect InvestmentSeungjun Kim, University of California, MercedForeign Corporate Lobbying and WTO DisputesRandall W. Stone, University of RochesterGyu Sang Shim, University of Rochester
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION168.18 DYNAMIC EVOLUTION OF INTERNATIONAL
REGIME COMPLEXES (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded Presentations
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Chair: C. Randall Henning, American University-SISDisc: Lisa L. Martin, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Tyler Pratt, Yale University
Papers: Governing Cyberspace: Issue Frames, InstitutionalSpringboards & ConsolidationStephanie Claudia Hofmann, Graduate Institute ofInternational and Development StudiesPatryk Pawlak, EU Institute for Security StudiesThe Regime Complex for EducationPhillip Y. Lipscy, University of TorontoRie KijimaThe International Regime Complex for Nuclear Non-ProliferationMette Eilstrup-Sangiovanni, Cambridge UniversityHierarchy, Differentiation, and Cooperation in PrivateSecurity GovernanceOliver Westerwinter, University of St. Gallen
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY168.19 DISAGGREGATING THE CIVIL-MILITARY
DIVIDERoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Michael Kenwick, Rutgers UniversityDisc: Kristen A. Harkness, University of St. Andrews
Papers: Assessing the Civil-Military Divide in CongressionalSpeechMichael Kenwick, Rutgers UniversityBurcu Kolcak, Rutgers University, New BrunswickSumin Lee, Rutgers UniversityMapping Military Dissent: Insubordination in aComparative ContextďRisa A. Brooks, Marquette UniversityDavid Pion-Berlin, University of California, RiversideA Nod, a Nudge, a Push or a Putsch: Civil-militaryRelations in Popular UprisingChes Thurber, Northern Illinois UniversityMilitary Recruitment and Foreign Policy AcrossAmerican HistoryMax Zeldes Margulies, United States MilitaryAcademy
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY168.20 PROSPECTS FOR REBOOTING ARMS CONTROL
FOR TODAY'S GREAT POWER NUCLEARCOMPETITION (LIVESTREAMED)
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6BChair: James J. Wirtz, Naval Postgraduate SchoolPart: David A. Cooper, Naval War College
Nancy Gallagher, University of MarylandThomas G. Mahnken, Center for Strategic andBudgetary AssessmentsAmy J. Nelson, The Brookings InstitutionJeffrey A. Larsen, Naval Postgraduate School
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY168.21 DEMONSTRATIONS OF REPUTATION AND
COMMITMENT IN FOREIGN POLICYRoom: WSCC, 303Disc: Uriel Abulof, Cornell University
Papers: Importing Status: US Arms Sales, Military Aid, andImporter PrestigeAaron Shreve, Randolph CollegeRichard Johnson, University of Strathclyde
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Credible Commitments and Nuclear DisarmementDonald Casler, Columbia UniversityKeren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton UniversityDavid Ribar, Princeton UniversityCould a Woman Have Gone to China? Evidence of aGendered Peace PremiumJoshua Schwartz, University of PennsylvaniaChristopher William Blair, University ofPennsylvaniaDonor's Motivation with COVID-19: KoreanHumanitarian and Development AssistanceYoungwan Kim, Sogang UniversityYoung Jun Cho, Hankuk University of ForeignStudiesSang-Hwan Lee, Hankuk University of ForeignStudies
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES168.22 CRIMINAL POLITICS IN BRAZILRoom: WSCC, 4C2Chair: Stephanie Gimenez Stahlberg, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Enrique Desmond Arias, Baruch College, CUNY
Nicholas Barnes, University of st Andrews
Papers: Machine [Gun] Politics: Why Politician Cooperate withCriminal GroupsJessie Bullock, Harvard UniversityThe Political Economy of AssassinationsMariana Carvalho, University of California, SanDiegoCampaign Spending Limits and Criminal Violence inBrazilCamilo Nieto MatizNatan Skigin, University of Notre DameA Bite with No Teeth: How Repression and CorruptionMade RioĀs Gangs TougherAndrea Varsori, University of Huddersfield
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES168.23 GOVERNANCE, LAW, AND CONFLICT: LEGAL
PLURALISM IN POST-CONFLICT SETTINGSRoom: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Cyrus Samii, New York UniversityDisc: Cyrus Samii, New York University
Papers: Rebel and Incumbent Law: Incompatible GovernanceSystems and Civil War RecurrenceLiana Eustacia Reyes, Rice UniversityAfter Rebel Governance: A Field Experiment in Securityand Justice ProvisionRobert A. Blair, Brown UniversityManuel Moscoso, Brown UniversityAndres Vargas, Yale UniversityMichael Lee Weintraub, Universidad de los AndesThe Limits of Legitimacy: Legal Pluralism in IraqMara Revkin, Yale UniversityKristen Kao, University of GothenburgSoviet Legacies in the āThird WorldĀ: Law, Governance,and ConflictJennifer Brick Murtazashvili, University ofPittsburgh
DailySchedule
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES168.24 THE CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF
LAWMAKING EFFECTIVENESS IN CONGRESS(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Alan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt UniversityDisc: Laurel Harbridge-Yong, Northwestern University
Molly Reynolds, Brookings Institution
Papers: Fundraising and Legislating in the U.S. CongressDanielle Thomsen, University of California, IrvineDrawing Better Lawmakers: Redistricting Institutionsand Legislative PerformanceGeoffrey M. Lorenz, University of Nebraska, LincolnHow Policy Content Influences Effective LawmakingErinn K Lauterbach, University of VirginiaCraig Volden, University of VirginiaAlan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt UniversityCommunicating Effectiveness: Legislative Success asConstituent CommunicationNicholas Howard, Auburn University at MontgomeryAnnelise Russell, University of Kentucky
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION168.25 PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF BUREAUCRATIC
PROGRAMS AND AGENCIESRoom: Sheraton, BallardChair: Manny P. Teodoro, University of WisconsinDisc: Susan Webb Yackee, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Compliance with COVID-19 Guidelines: Trust,Representation, and ExpertiseKatelyn E. Stauffer, University of South CarolinaSusan Marie Miller, Arizona State UniversityLael R. Keiser, University of MissouriDisaster-Related Administrative Burden and Perceptionsof Recovery and EquityNatasha Malmin, Georgia State UniversityInternal Efficacy and Political Trust: Evidence from aMature DemocracyGissur Erlingsson, Lund UniversitySusanne Wallman Lundasen, Linköping universityAgency Oversight and Public Opinion: Representationand RealityJohn Andrew Sinclair, Claremont McKenna College
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY168.26 THE MANY ANGLES OF POLICY FEEDBACKRoom: WSCC, 2AChair: Wendy Hunter, University of Texas, AustinDisc: Ernesto F. Calvo, University of Maryland
Papers: Beyond Beneficiaries: Donors, the Electorate, and theReturns of PoliciesNatalia Salgado Bueno, Emory UniversityCesar Zucco, Getulio Vargas FoundationHow Policy Feedback from Educational OpportunityShapes Fairness PerceptionsDaniel McArthur, University of OxfordJane R. Gingrich, University of OxfordTidal-Waves and Trickle-Flows: PresidentsĀExpectationsand Policy DiffusionDiego Vega, The University of Texas at Austin
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Better Together? The Effect of Civic Education onResponsiveness and EngagementNina McMurry, WZB Berlin Social Science CenterLily L. Tsai, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS168.27 JUDICIAL INDEPENDENCE AND
JUDICIALIZATION: RETHINKING THE RULEOF LAW
Room: WSCC, 612Chair: Onur Bakiner, Seattle UniversityDisc: Lydia Brashear Tiede, University of Houston
Papers: A Court of Law or a Court of Judges (Pre-Recorded)Maoz Rosenthal, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)HerzliyaBrazilian Supreme Court and Social Policies: A JudicialReview AnalysisTassiana Moura de Oliveira, Centro Brasileiro deAnálises e Planejamento - CebrapMeasures of De Facto Judicial Independence: Within &Between-Case ValidityBrad Epperly, University of British ColumbiaOkanaganParchment Barriers and the State of JudicialIndependence in HungarySarah Sheets, University of Oxford
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS168.28 CITIZEN PARTICIPATION AND PARTNERSHIP
IN URBAN POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Ashley E. Nickels, Kent State UniversityDisc: Clayton M. Nall, University of California, Santa Barbara
Papers: Community Development, Civic Ecology, & UrbanDemocracyAshley E. Nickels, Kent State UniversityZachary David Wood, Seattle UniversityRedistribution in Two Cities: Social Policy in theShadow of ClientelismElin Bergman, Stanford UniversityConditions of Citizen Participation in AssemblyDemocracy: Experimental Evidence (Pre-Recorded)Daniel KueblerPhilippe Etienne Rochat, Liechtenstein-InstitutDo Collaborative Platforms for Citizen Input ImpactGovernment Service Delivery?Kaylyn Jackson Schiff, Emory University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH168.29 EXPLAINING WOMEN'S INCLUSION AND
EXCLUSIONRoom: Sheraton, IssaquahChair: Kimberly L. Shella, Southern Illinois University
CarbondaleDisc: Nicole Filler, Highline College
Kimberly L. Shella, Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondale
Papers: Contesting Pluralism in WomenĀs Political Inclusion inRwanda (Pre-Recorded)Xianan Jin, SOAS, University of London
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Electing Women in Ethnically Divided Societies: TheCase of Bihar, IndiaSayan Banerjee, University of EssexCharles R. Hankla, Georgia State UniversityAnjali Thomas, Georgia Institute of TechnologyPolitical Leaders' Background and Women's PoliticalRepresentation (Pre-Recorded)Kangwook Han, Jeonbuk National UniversitySung Min Han, Hankuk University of ForeignStudies
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS168.30 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF
CONTEMPORARY IMMIGRATION POLICYRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Sophia Jordan Wallace, University of Washington,
SeattleDisc: Roberto Carlos, University of Georgia
Papers: Accommodation to RetaliationRachel Torres, James Madison UniversityAbigail Fisher Williamson, Trinity CollegeMeasuring Risk: Heterogenous Perceptions of Risk byCitizenship StatusMaricruz Ariana Osorio, University of California,RiversideStunted Acculturation: How Deportation ThreatForestalls AssimilationMarcel Roman, University of California, Los AngelesSanctuary Policies and the Influence of LocalDemographics and PartisanshipBenjamin Fontaine Gonzalez O'Brien, San DiegoState UniversityLoren Collingwood, UC RiversideMichael Ahn Paarlberg, Virginia CommonwealthUniversityExamining the Effects of Exclusion Policies onImmigrant Assimilation EffortsJae Eun Kim, University of Rochester
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS168.31 IDENTITY AND DIVERSITY IN ANTI-
PLURALIST TIMESRoom: Sheraton, AspenPapers: An Intersectional Approach to Understanding American
Citizenship (Pre-Recorded)Adrienne Scott, Cornell UniversityExploring the Link Between American Identity andAnti-Muslim Policy PreferencesKassra AR Oskooii, University of DelawareNazita Lajevardi, Michigan State UniversitySource of Our Strength: Perceptions of Racial ResilienceAcross Race and GenderChristine Marie Slaughter, University of CaliforniaLos AngelesThe Influence of American Identity on Latinos' AttitudesToward ImmigrationRodolfo Solis, University of California, Los AngelesRace, Identity and Perceptions of Corruption in the U.S.Betina Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest UniversityJustin E. Esarey, Wake Forest University
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DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS168.32 RELIGION AND POLITICAL THEORYRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room AB
Co-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
Chair: Günes Murat Tezcur, University of Central FloridaDisc: Catherine R. Power, Glendon College, York University
Avshalom M Schwartz, Stanford University
Papers: Supplanting Habakkuk: Bruno Bauer Before and Afterthe MärzrevolutionAsher Wycoff, Graduate Center, CUNYReligion at the United Nations: Rights as WeaponsJeffrey Haynes, London Metropolitan UniversityReligious Freedom, Pluralism, and Individual RightsEmily R. Gill, Bradley University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR168.33 THE LEGACY OF 2020 FOR HOW AMERICA
VOTESRoom: WSCC, Ballroom 6AChair: Charles Stewart, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyPart: Lonna Rae Atkeson, Florida State University
Edward B. Foley, Ohio State UniversityPaul Gronke, Reed CollegeChristopher B Mann, Skidmore CollegeMindy Romero, USCDaron R. Shaw, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION168.34 NEWS ENGAGEMENTRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Sumitra Badrinathan, University of OxfordPapers: Is News to Blame? A Causal Test of (Un)Desirable
News Exposure EffectsS.E. Edith Leeuw, University of AmsterdamMagdalena Wojcieszak, UC Davis, U of AmsterdamAndreu Casas, Vrije Universiteit AmsterdamDo Indicators of Source Quality Affect News Diets?Evidence from an ExperimentKevin Aslett, New York UniversityAndrew Guess, Princeton UniversityJoshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityRichard Bonneau, NYUJonathan Nagler, New York UniversityDo Party Cues Matter in Real-World News? A NewExperimental ApproachMathias OsmundsenRasmus Skytte, Aarhus UniversityUndecided VotersĀMedia (Dis)Engagement DuringIsraelĀs April 2019 ElectionsTal Samuel-Azran, SKUKMoran Yarchi, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC)Herzliya, IsraelTsahi Hayat
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION168.35 POLITICS IN THE DIGITAL AGERoom: WSCC, 603
Co-sponsored by Division 40: Information Technology, &Politics
Chair: Shannon C McGregor, University of North CarolinaDisc: Lore Hayek, University of Innsbruck
DailySchedule
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Papers: Trump with and Without TwitterGeorge Robert Boynton, University of IowaGlenn W. Richardson Jr., Kutztown University ofPennsylvaniaRoses and Thorns: Political Engagement inEntertainment SubredditsAmanda Chen, Rutgers UniversityKatherine McCabe, Rutgers UniversityPolitical Discourse in Online EnclavesMarie Schenk, Brown University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS168.36 NEW DATA, NEW PLATFORMS: CUTTING EDGE
CAMPAIGNS, ADVOCACY, AND GOVERNANCERoom: WSCC, 3AChair: Ben Epstein, DePaul UniversityDisc: Ben Epstein, DePaul University
Papers: Data-Driven Campaigning: A New, Comparative AgendaKate Dommett, University of SheffieldGlenn Kefford, University of QueenslandExploring Campaign-Level Variation in the Adoption ofVoter DataLevi Bankston, University of Wisconsin - MadisonTransparency of Government from a CulturalPerspective: Open Data in SwedenMaxat Kassen, Nazarbayev UniversityTiktok and Civic Activity Among Young AdultsKen Moffett, Southern Illinois University,EdwardsvilleLaurie L. Rice, Southern Illinois University,Edwardsville
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM168.37 TROPES AND TOOLS OF TELLING TALES
ABOUT POLITICAL MOVEMENT(S)Room: WSCC, 619
Co-sponsored by Division 52: Migration & CitizenshipChair: Michelle M. Kundmueller, Old Dominion UniversityDisc: Kennan Ferguson, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee
Papers: Can Documentary Films Mitigate the Negative Effectsof Conspiratorial Thinking?Darin DeWitt, California State University, LongBeachMatthew AtkinsonInterpreting the Crusades: āJerusalem DeliveredĀin 440Years of Art & OperaJ.P. Singh, George Mason UniversityPerilous Night Sea Journeys: Graphic Tales of MigrationClaudia Franziska Bruehwiler Haeusermann,University of St. GallenTamil Film Culture and Political Attitudes: Descriptiveand Causal AnalysisDaniel Raoul Hirschel-Burns, Yale UniversityDeepika Padmanabhan, Yale University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY168.38 PUBLIC OPINION UNDER AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Jennifer Gandhi, Emory UniversityDisc: Bryn Rosenfeld, Cornell University
Quintin H. Beazer, Florida State University
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Papers: Word Association Tests for Political ScienceRory Truex, Princeton UniversityZe Han, Princeton UniversityNaijia Liu, Princeton UniversityPreference Falsification in Authoritarian Regimes:Evidence from RussiaOra John Reuter, University of Wisconsin,MilwaukeeKaterina Tertytchnaya, University College LondonNoah Buckley, Trinity College DublinKyle L. Marquardt, Higher School of EconomicsChoosing Propaganda: Understanding News Selection inRussiaAshley Blum, UCLAThe Autocratic Citizen: Political Socialization andPartisanship in AutocraciesNatalie Wenzell Letsa, University of Oklahoma
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY168.39 THREATS TO GLOBAL DEMOCRACYRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: Henry Thomson, Arizona State UniversityDisc: Benjamin Smith, University of Florida
Papers: How Real Is the Global Threat to Democracy? AnEmpirical InvestigationDaniel S. Treisman, University of California, LosAngelesStanding Up for Democracy? Explaining CitizensĀSupport for Checks and BalancesHonorata Mazepus, Leiden UniversityDimiter Toshkov, Leiden UniversityWhy Democratic Backsliding? Citizen-Party Dynamicsand Eroding Liberal DemocracyMarc S. Jacob
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH168.40 EXPERIMENTS IN METHODOLOGYRoom: WSCC, 620Chair: Tara L Slough, New York UniversityDisc: Molly Rachael Offer-Westort, University of Chicago
Papers: No Need for a Panel Study: Measuring ModeratorsDoesnĀt Alter Treatment EffectsGeoffrey Sheagley, University of GeorgiaScott Clifford, University of HoustonThe Necessity of Construct and External Validity forGeneralized Causal ClaimsKevin M. Esterling, University of California,RiversideDavid Brady
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP168.41 INTERROGATIONS OF CITIZENSHIP AND
NATIONALITY IN THE GLOBAL SOUTH (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Erin Aeran Chung, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Lahra Smith, Georgetown University
Papers: Citizenship Spectrums: Misalignments of Nationality andPassports in JordanLillian Frost, Virginia TechThe Transnational Social Contract in the Global SouthKamal Sadiq, University of California, IrvineGerasimos Tsourapas, University of Glasgow
Saturday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Mobility Diplomacy: How States in the Global SouthMaximize Passport PowerNoora Anwar Lori, Boston UniversityCitizenship, Constitutional Reform, and Diaspora VotingRights in AfricaElizabeth Iams Wellman, Williams College
DIVISION 56: AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT168.42 THE FEDERALIST AND AMERICAN
CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENTRoom: WSCC, 618
Co-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
Chair: George Thomas, Claremont McKenna CollegeDisc: Benjamin A. Kleinerman, Baylor University
Justin B. Dyer, University of Missouri, Columbia
Papers: Tocqueville's Jeffersonian Reading of the FederalConstitutionJeremy D. Bailey, University of OklahomaPublius in the Thirty-Ninth CongressKurt Lash, University of RichmondJames MadisonĀs Politics of Religious LibertyPhillip Munoz, University of Notre DameThe Proleptic Constitution: The Federalist andConstitutional DevelopmentConnor Ewing, University of Toronto
169.2ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: NATURAL LAW AND NATURAL RIGHTS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: James R. Stoner, Louisiana State UniversityDisc: James R. Stoner, Louisiana State University
Papers: Due Process of Classic Natural LawJoseph S. Devaney, Abraham Baldwin AgriculturalCollegeNatural Law and Natural Right in Hugo Grotius andGabriel VásquezSteven Waldorf, University of ChicagoEric Voegelin on LawThomas E. Lordan, Independent scholarRights of Native Peoples in the New World PostConquest: A Spanish PerspectiveDiego Alejandro Lopez, University of Houston
170.1 AROUND THE WORLD IN 80 CREDITSRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B
Co-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science EducationChair: TM Sell, Highline Community College
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Papers: Active and Experiential Learning in TeachingInternational Law to UndergraduatesSpyridon Kotsovilis, University of TorontoMississaugaEncouraging Local Community Engagement inInternational Relations CoursesSarah Kenyon Lischer, Wake Forest UniversityInformation Security: Alternative Reading Strategies forInternational Security (Pre-Recorded)Danielle Gilbert, U.S. Air Force AcademyPaul Bezerra, United States Air Force AcademyIncorporating Peer Review into Courses: Can ActiveLearning be Asynchronous?Michael P. A. Murphy, University of OttawaAndrew Heffernan, University of OttawaDoug Yearwood
170.2 BRIDGING THE PARTISAN DIVIDE:CULTIVATING THE NEXT GENERATION OFCITIZEN LEADERS
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CChair: Janet Tran, Ronald Reagan Presidential Foundation and
InstitutePart: Michelle Ashley Faggert, The Ronald Reagan Institute
Kimberly Lipina, The Reagan Institute170.3 ONLINE TEACHING: ADAPTING GAMES FOR
COMPARATIVE & INTERNATIONALRELATIONS
Room: VirtualChair: Joseph W. Roberts, Roger Williams UniversityPart: Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY170.4 PANDEMIC PROOF YOUR VOTER OUTREACH
STRATEGYRoom: VirtualChair: Elizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South BendPart: Elizabeth C. Matto, Rutgers University, New Brunswick
Leah A. Murray, Weber State UniversityAllison Rank, SUNY, Oswego StateCarah Ong Whaley, James Madison Center for CivicEngagement, James Madison UniversityAbraham Goldberg, James Madison UniversityEdie N. Goldenberg, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Saturday, 9:00 AM to 1:00 PMAPSA Events171.1 APSA GRADUATE SCHOOL INFORMATION
FAIRRoom: VirtualChair: Jasmine Scott, American Political Science Association
Saturday, 9:30 AM to 10:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION172.1 PUBLIC OPINION VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Clareta Treger, Tel Aviv UniversityDisc: Stephanie A. Nail, Stanford University
Clareta Treger, Tel Aviv University
Papers: An Empirical Analysis on Determinants of Soft PowerLami Kim, US Army War CollegeLingbo ZHAO, Penn State University
DailySchedule
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Competing Identities and Affective Polarization:A Cross-National AnalysisHyeonho Hahm, Hanyang UniversityDavid Dominik Hilpert, University of MannheimConservatives and LiberalsĀDiffering Attitudes on theRichMichelle Io-LowFrom Epidemic to Pandemic: How BenchmarkingEnhanced Trust in China during COVIDShuai Jin, University of Massachusetts BostonYingnan Joseph Zhou, University of Texas at El PasoPublic Support for U.S. AlliancesKyung Suk Lee, Texas A&M universityRobert Kirby Goidel, Texas A&MWhen are Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Citizens MoreLiberal and Participatory?Douglas Page, Gettysburg CollegeWhy Do Voters Prefer Local Candidates?Niels Nyholt, Aarhus UniversityYouth Consciousness, Intergenerational Conflict, andAmerican Political BehaviorNathan Kar Ming Chan, University of California,Irvine
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 10:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY173.1 POLITICS AND HISTORY VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: David Alexander Bateman, Cornell UniversityDisc: David Alexander Bateman, Cornell University
Papers: A Historical Approach to Case Selection: The All-German PeopleĀs PartyMatthias Dilling, University of OxfordAmerican Exceptionalism: The Economic Benefits ofUSA StatehoodRobbert Maseland, University of GroningenRok Spruk, University of LjubljanaFrom Feudalism to Populism: Evidence from PolandPawel Charasz, Duke UniversityHow Populistic Were the Populists in 19th CenturyAmerica?Masaru Nishikawa, Tsuda UniversityIs Political Science Becoming More Pluralistic?A Bibliometric HistoryMads Dagnis Jensen, Copenhagen Business SchoolSnorre Sylvester Frid-Nielsen, Copenhagen UniversityPeter Marcus Kristensen, University of CopenhagenReligious Rhetoric and Right-Wing Populism in CentralEuropeEmma Rosenberg, University of Notre DameState Actors and Bystander Intervention: DenmarkDuring the HolocaustZachary Paul Buchanan Agatstein, NortheasternUniversityFredric Agatstein, Rhode Island College"Swing" and a Miss?: The Surprising Effects of AndrewJohnson's CampaigningMichael Weaver, The University of British ColumbiaSarah Lachance, University of British Columbia
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The Legacies of Extractive Institutions: the Case ofMilitary ColonialismBogdan Gabriel Popescu, Bocconi University
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS173.2 MENA VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: James Harris Sunday, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: James Harris Sunday, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Media Ownership and Diversity: Representation in Post-Arab Spring Egyptian MediaZahraa Badr, Cairo University, Faculty of MassCommunicationElections of the 19th Jordanian House ofRepresentatives: An Analytical StudyAtallah Al Sarhan, The Hashemite UniversityReconsidering the Relation Between Natural Resourcesand Coup-proofingMarco Nicola Binetti
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AMTheme Panels174.1 PLURAL APPROACHES TO UNDERSTANDING
COVID-19 RESPONSERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 29: State Politics and PolicyChair: Christina A Boyes, Centro de Investigación y Docencia
EconómicasDisc: John D. Wilkerson, University of Washington
Anne Whitesell, Miami University
Papers: Understanding U.S. COVID-19 Policy Responses AcrossStates Over TimeDeserai Anderson Crow, University of ColoradoDenverManli Zhang, University of Colorado DenverRob A. DeLeo, Bentley UniversityKristin Taylor, Wayne State UniversityElizabeth Koebele, University of Nevada, RenoThomas A. Birkland, North Carolina State UniversityElizabeth Ann Albright, Duke UniversityNathan Jeschke, University of Colorado DenverHoney Minkowitz, North Carolina State UniversityState Capacity and Covid-19 Responses: Comparing theU.S. StatesKiran Rose Auerbach, University of BergenJoshua Yoshio Lerner, NORC at the University ofChicagoHannah Ridge, University of ChicagoState Adoption of Legal Immunity for Nursing HomesDuring the COVID-19 PandemicPamela Nadash, University of Massachusetts, BostonEdward Alan Miller, University of Massachusetts,BostonMichael K. Gusmano, Rutgers University
174.2 SUPPORT FOR REPRODUCIBILITY INPOLITICAL SCIENCE
Room: VirtualChair: Limor Peer, Yale UniversityPart: Florio Arguillas, Cornell University
Thu-Mai Lewis ChristianAlexander Coppock, Yale University
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Conor M. Dowling, University of MississippiSebastian Karcher, Syracuse University
APSA Events175.1 ADVANCING RACIAL JUSTICE IN POLITICAL
SCIENCERoom: VirtualChair: Bianca Freeman, University of California, San DiegoPart: Bhumi Purohit, University of California, Berkeley
Maricruz Ariana Osorio, University of California,RiversideKaneesha Johnson, Harvard UniversityAlison Boehmer, University of California, San DiegoFernando Arturo Tormos Aponte, University ofMaryland Baltimore CountyKelebogile Zvobgo, College of William & Mary
175.2 APSA COMMITTEE ON THE STATUS OF FIRSTGENERATION SCHOLARS ROUNDTABLE
Room: VirtualChair: Lorrie Frasure, UCLA
Davin Lanier Phoenix, University of California, IrvinePart: Justin Zimmerman, Northwestern University
Elizabeth Ila Dorssom, University of MissouriMuhammad Hassan Bin Afzal, Kent State UniversityBailey Rose-Marie Fairbanks, University of CentralArkansasMario Guerrero, California State Polytechnic University,PomonaJosue Alejandro Franco, Cuyamaca College
175.3 LIGHTNING ROUND: RESEARCH DESIGNRoom: VirtualChair: Ian M. Hartshorn, University of Nevada, RenoDisc: Joel R. Campbell, Troy University
Papers: Analysis of the Strength of Provincial Identity in ChinaJingyuan ChengArmed Non State Actors, Taxation, and Coercion andConsent in the PhilippinesTanya Bandula-Irwin, University of TorontoChinaĀs LGBTQ+ NGOs Go to Market: Striving forStructural OpportunitiesHuiru Wang, University of OxfordThe Quality of Citizenship: Identity Contestation & theReorganization of PowerSabrina MarasaThe Unsilent Majority: Labor Power in the IMF LoanConditionalityDancheng LiTo Listen or Not to Listen: Do Government DecisionsReflect Public Preferences?Madeline SchomburgWhen Citizens Demand More Censorship Ě Theory andEvidence from ChinaQitong Cao, Stanford Graduate School of BusinessYunpeng Bai, Yale University
Division PanelsDIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY176.1 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: EILEEN HUNT
BOTTING'S "ARTIFICIAL LIFE AFTERFRANKENSTEIN"
Room: VirtualChair: Alison McQueen, Stanford UniversityPart: Amy L. Atchison, Valparaiso University
Duncan Bell, Christ's College
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Davide Panagia, UCLAShauna L ShamesEileen M. Hunt, University of Notre DameMalka Older, Sciences Po Paris
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY176.2 POLITICAL THEOLOGIES AND NEW FORMS
OF CRITIQUERoom: VirtualChair: James R. Martel, San Francisco State UniversityPart: Diego Hernan Rossello, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez
Miguel Vatter, Deakin UniversityEly Orrego-Torres, Northwestern UniversityFacundo Vega, Universidad Adolfo Ibáñez / ICI Berlin
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY176.3 THEATRES OF TRUTH: AGAINST
INTERPRETIVE HEGEMONIESRoom: VirtualChair: Patrick Giamario, University of North Carolina,
GreensboroDisc: Lori Marso, Union College
Papers: The Janus-Faced Tendency of Authenticity ClaimsNina Hagel, Wesleyan UniversityReligious Discourse and Capital Punishment in LateLiberalismKathryn A. Heard, Dickinson CollegeActing Styles and Political RepresentationKatherine Goktepe, Yasar UniversityEighteenth-Century Figures in Twenty-First CenturyMedia TheoryNathan Gies, Towson University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY176.4 POLITICAL COMPETITION AND CONFLICTRoom: VirtualChair: Asya Magazinnik, MITDisc: Korhan Kocak, Princeton University
Papers: Does Electoral Volatility Beget Strong Allies? A Modelof Multiparty CompetitionGiovanna Invernizzi, Columbia UniversityPolicy Conflict and the Distribution of GovernmentCapacityThomas Choate, George Washington UniversityIdeological CompetitionFederica Izzo, UCSDGregory John Martin, Stanford UniversitySteven Callander, Stanford UniversityTo Fight or to Govern? Political Capital and ElectoralCompetitionCongyi Zhou, New York UniversityCatherine Hafer, New York UniversityScott Tyson, University of Rochester
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY176.5 IMPROVING SURVEY EXPERIMENTS AND
ANALYSISRoom: VirtualChair: Patrick Michael Kuhn, Durham UniversityDisc: Prabin Khadka, University of Essex
DailySchedule
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Avoiding Measurement Error Bias in Conjoint SurveysKatherine Patricia Clayton, Dartmouth CollegeYusaku Horiuchi, Dartmouth CollegeAaron Russell Kaufman, New York University AbuDhabiGary King, Harvard UniversityMayya Komisarchik, University of RochesterBayesian Analysis of List ExperimentsXiao Lu, University of MannheimRichard Traunmuller, Goethe University FrankfurtProblem of Identical Attribute Assignment in ConjointExperimentJong Hee Park, Seoul National UniversityJoonseok Yang, Sungkyunkwan UniversitySung Eun Kim, Korea UniversityInbok Rhee, KDI School of Public Policy andManagementVariable Selection and Sensitivity Analysis for SurveyWeightingErin Hartman, UC Berkeley
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS176.6 IMMIGRATION, DOCUMENTATION, AND
SOCIAL PROTECTION IN COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVE
Room: VirtualChair: Alice M. Jackson, Morgan State UniversityDisc: Imke Harbers, University of Amsterdam
Edward A. Koning, University of Guelph
Papers: Nationalism and the Unmaking of Citizens in the DR,Kenya and IndiaWendy Hunter, University of Texas, AustinSecuritizing and Politicizing Immigration: Spain, UK,and USAnthony M. Messina, Trinity CollegeImmigration and Social Policy in Latin AmericaSara Niedzwiecki, University of California, SantaCruzPutting Down (Social) Roots: Housing and LegalizationPolicy in SpainAndrea Pena-Vasquez, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES176.7 GENDER AND POLITICS IN THE GLOBAL
SOUTH 2Room: VirtualChair: Franziska Roscher, New York UniversityDisc: Francesca R. Jensenius, University of Oslo
Papers: More Than Words? Anti-Femicide Parties and Reductionof Gender-Based ViolenceDavid Dow, Duke UniversityThe Gender Turnout Gap Revisited: When Do WomenParticipate (Un)Equally?Franziska Roscher, New York UniversityWomen Role with Industrialization Among ThreeForces-Case on 50 Millionhaiying jiang, Women' Federation of ProvincialMigration of Nepali Women for Domestic Work to theGulf StatesSayam Moktan, University of Cincinnati
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DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES176.8 CHINESE POLITICS MINI-CONFERENCE:
DIMENSIONS OF DISSENT: PROTEST INCONTEMPORARY CHINA
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: John James Kennedy, University of KansasDisc: Kevin J. O'Brien, UC-Berkeley
Sara A. Newland, Smith College
Papers: Preventing Protests By Surveillance: The ChangingLandscape of Protests in ChinaHan Zhang, The Hong Kong University of Scienceand TechnologyWhere You Live Is Where You Stand: The Geographyof Protest Choice in ChinaJuan Wang, McGill UniversityPhoebe Mengxiao Tang, Drew UniversityActions Speak Louder Than Words: Participation AfterProtest and RepressionScott W. Desposato, UCSDGang Wang, Wuhan UniversityJason Yuyan Wu, Indiana UniversityReligion and (Public) Dissent: Evidence from ChinaBrett Logan Carter, University of SouthernCaliforniaErin Baggott Carter, University of SouthernCalifornia
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES176.9 POLITICAL IDEOLOGIES AND POLARIZATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Despina Alexiadou, University of StrathclydeDisc: David Fortunato, University of California, San Diego
Papers: Climate Change, Renewable Energy, and the PopulistRadical RightPauliina Patana, Harvard UniversityAlexander Held, Trinity College DublinEconomic Conditions, Party Polarization, andSatisfaction with DemocracyFlorence So, Lund UniversityAutomation and Populism: Evidence from SurveyExperiments in Four CountriesBart Bonikowski, Harvard UniversitySophie Borwein, University of TorontoBlake Lee-Whiting, University of TorontoPeter John Loewen, University of TorontoTemporary Disenfranchisement: Negative Side-Effects ofLowering the Voting AgeMarie-Lou Sohnius, University of MannheimArndt Leininger, Chemnitz University of TechnologyThorsten Faas, FU BerlinSigrid RossteutscherArmin Schäfer, Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY176.10 THE EU'S RESPONSE TO THE COVID-19
PANDEMIC: THE ISSUE OF DEMOCRATICLEGITIMACY
Room: VirtualChair: James A. Caporaso, University of WashingtonDisc: Craig A. Parsons, University of Oregon
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: The PandemicĀs Effects: Sectional Divides in theEuropean UnionSergio Fabbrini, Luiss Guido CarliDemocratic Accountability in a Post-COVID-19 WorldJohn Erik Fossum, University of OsloThe Legitimacy of EU Executives During EmergencyPandemic PoliticsVivien A. Schmidt, Boston UniversityCovid-19Ās Impact on Macro-Economic PolicyCoordination in EU Member StatesAmy Verdun, University of Victoria
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY176.11 PRODUCTION NETWORKS AND MARKET
PROTECTIONRoom: VirtualChair: Soo Yeon Kim, National University of SingaporeDisc: Ka Zeng, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
Papers: Explaining Chinese Deep ProtectionismJohn David Minnich, Massachussetts Institute ofTechnologyFirms, Contract Enforcement, and the InstitutionalSources of Trade OpennessYoo Sun Jung, University of California, San DiegoTimm Betz, Technical University of MunichRe-shoring Global Supply ChainsRyan M. Weldzius, Villanova UniversityAbigail Vaughn, Georgia TechThe World Trade Organization and U.S. DomesticPoliticsRenee Bowen, University of California, San DiegoJ. Lawrence Broz, University of California, SanDiegoMarc-Andreas Muendler, University of California,San Diego
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY176.12 SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY AND
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Tabitha Marie Benney, University of UtahDisc: Anton Strezhnev, New York University
Papers: Green Global Assemblages: The Evolution of CBNRMin Response to Climate ChangeAndrew Heffernan, University of OttawaHow Do Social Provisions in Trade Agreements AffectGlobal Value Chains?Ida Bastiaens, Fordham UniversityEvgeny Postnikov, University of MelbourneLisa Lechner, University of InnsbruckObfuscating Social Responsibility in Global ProductionNetworksSoohyun Cho, Ohio State University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION176.13 INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION AND
RESISTANCE IN HUMAN RIGHTS PROMOTIONCAMPAIGNS
Room: VirtualChair: Jack L. Snyder, Columbia UniversityDisc: Jack L. Snyder, Columbia University
Amanda Murdie, University of Georgia
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Papers: Choosing Who Intervenes: Regional Organizations andHuman RightsKatherine M Beall, University of California, BerkeleyAvoiding Backlash and Backsliding: Human RightsReporting Strategies and AbuseSara Kahn-Nisser, The Open University of IsraelPunishment and Politicization in the InternationalHuman Rights RegimeRochelle Layla Terman, University of ChicagoSocial Influence and Human Rights Policy ChangeGino Pauselli, University of Pennsylvania
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY176.14 CROSS-DOMAIN OPPORTUNITIES AND
THREATSRoom: VirtualDisc: Shao Fan Lin, The University of
Papers: The Digital Revolution and the Changing Face ofInternational RevisionismErik Wisniewski, The Ohio State UniversityNCOĀs in the ĄNew LookďRussian Military and theLimits of Military Diffusion.Jack Porter, The Citadel
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY176.15 SECURITY COOPERATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Christine Cheng, King's College LondonDisc: Christopher Michael Faulkner, United States Naval War
College
Papers: The Political Effects of Foreign Military AssistanceNicholas John Lotito, Yale UniversityRe-examining Security Cooperation ThroughMultinational Military ExercisesKevin Galambos, University of Texas at AustinWhich Militants Receive Missiles? Explaining ExternalProvision of SupportMelissa Anne Carlson, University of California,BerkeleyBurden Sharing in Defense Cooperation NetworksStephanie Kang, University of Southern CaliforniaBrandon J. Kinne, University of California, Davis
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY176.16 MANAGING INTERNATIONAL ALLIANCESRoom: VirtualChair: Ryan Burke, US Air Force AcademyDisc: Ryan Burke, US Air Force Academy
Papers: Prospect Theory, Domestic Politics, and the Breakdownof An AllianceLori Helene Gronich, George Washington UniversityGrace Headinger, Harvard Business SchoolAn Ambivalent Offshore Balancer, At BestJohn Schuessler, Bush School of Government andPublic ServiceBetween Allegiance and Autonomy: How ClientsManage Patrons During PeacetimeJeehye Kim, University of British ColumbiaJiyoung Ko, Bates College
DailySchedule
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES176.17 A ROUNDTABLE IN HONOR OF LEE ANN
FUJJI'S "SHOW TIME"Room: VirtualChair: Martha Finnemore, George Washington UniversityPart: Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University
Scott Straus, University of California, BerkeleyJulia S. Jordan-Zachery, Wake Forest UniversityLahoma Thomas, Ryerson UniversityNicholas Rush Smith, CUNY-City College
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES176.18 CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCES OF CIVILIAN
VICTIMIZATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Gary Uzonyi, University of TennesseeDisc: Jessica Stanton, Temple University
Papers: Impact of U.S. Military Aid on Mass Killing Occurrenceand SeverityPetra Hendrickson, Northern Michigan UniversityCoups and the End of Mass Killing EpisodesGary Uzonyi, University of TennesseeMatthew Wells, Wabash CollegeTrials and Errors: Transitional Justice in Post-WarGermanySascha Riaz, Harvard UniversityAdvances in Remote Detection of Attacks AgainstCiviliansSebastian Schutte
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY176.19 NEW APPROACHES TO ENVIRONMENTAL
POLICY RESEARCHRoom: VirtualChair: Mark Buntaine, University of California, Santa BarbaraPapers: Developing Air Pollution Control in Ohio and New
JerseyAnn-Marie E. Szymanski, University of OklahomaDomestic Regulatory Institutions and Their Role in theGlobal Diffusion of LEEDQianhui Li, University of ArizonaLeading or Lagging? Transnational Lobbying andDomestic Climate Policy ChangeMarcel HanegraaffKai Schulze, Technical University of Darmstadt
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS176.20 NEW MEASURES IN JUDICIAL POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Jongyoon Baik, The University of ChicagoDisc: Jongyoon Baik, The University of Chicago
John J. Szmer, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Papers: Case Salience in the State Supreme Courts: An UpdateTeena WilhelmRichard L. Vining, University of GeorgiaMeasuring Agenda Change at the Supreme CourtBen Johnson, Penn State LawLogan Strother, Purdue UniversityMeasuring Judicial Policy Preferences Using Case FactsJBrandon Duck-Mayr, Washington University in St.LouisWinning and Losing at the Federal District CourtsMadison Shanks, University of South Carolina
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DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH176.21 POLITICAL RESOURCES AND GENDERRoom: VirtualChair: Jennifer E. Cryer, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Jennifer E. Cryer, University of Southern California
Terrell Carver, University of Bristol
Papers: One of Us: Gender, Power and Informal NetworksMeryl Kenny, University of EdinburghElin Bjarnegard, Uppsala UniversityTània Verge, Universitat Pompeu FabraParliamentary Politics Polarize Around Gender: TheCase of European ParliamentJohanna Kantola, Tampere UniversityParty Leadership Contests: Ambition, Glass Cliffs, andStrategic CandidaciesKaren Beckwith, Case Western Reserve UniversityThe Effects of Women Candidates on AdolescentsĀPolitical AttitudesChristina Wolbrecht, University of Notre DameDavid E. Campbell, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS176.22 CLAIRE JEAN KIM'S RACIAL TRIANGULATION
THEORY: A TWO DECADE RETROSPECTIVERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 42: New Political ScienceChair: Claire Jean KimPart: Cristina Beltran, New York University
Niambi M. Carter, Howard UniversityCalvin Cheung-Miaw, Stanford UniversityDaniel HoSang, University of OregonNadia Kim, Loyola Marymount UniversityDiane Wong, Rutgers University-Newark
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES176.23 CONTEMPORARY MOVEMENTS AND ISSUESRoom: VirtualChair: Isaac Hale, University of California, Santa BarbaraDisc: Isaac Hale, University of California, Santa Barbara
Fernando Bizzarro Neto, Harvard University
Papers: Does Border Wall Favor Nationalist Parties in PoliticalCompetition?Md Mujahedul Islam, University of TorontoMd Muhibbur Rahman, University of Texas atAustinFired Up or Falling Flat: TrumpĀs Effect on WomenĀsOrganizationsShannon McQueen, West Chester UniversityShock and Mobilization: Activist Paths in the Anti-Trump Resistance MovementRachel Meade, Boston University
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES176.24 PARTIES AND REPRESENTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt UniversityDisc: Daniel Max Kselman, IE University
Georgia Kernell, UCLA
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Auction for Votes: Political Parties and Private Brokersin Local ElectionsSergiu Gherghina, University of GlasgowAurelian Giugal, University of BucharestDan Niculae Podaru, University of BucharestBuilding Roots: Electoral Systems, Intra-partyDemocracy and Social LinkagesLuis Gustavo Locatelli, Getulio Vargas Fundation(FGV)Priscilla Leine Cassotta, University of São CarlosIgnore, Confuse, or Defuse? Avoidance Strategies inParty CompetitionTom Hunter, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceSara Hagemann, London School of EconomicsSara B Hobolt, London School of EconomicsParties Under a Nonparty Presidency: The 2020Brazilian Municipal Election CaseAna Lucia Henrique Teixeira Gomes, BrazilianChamber of Deputies
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR176.25 A RESEARCH DESIGN FOR STUDYING THE
IMPACT OF FACEBOOK ON THE 2020ELECTION
Room: VirtualChair: Natalie Jomini Stroud, University of Texas, AustinDisc: Joshua A. Tucker, New York University
Part: Emily Thorson, Syracuse UniversityMatthew Gentzkow, Stanford UniversityMagdalena Wojcieszak, UC Davis, U of AmsterdamAndrew Guess, Princeton UniversityAnnie Franco, FacebookWinter Mason, FacebookPablo Barbera, University of Southern California
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS176.26 THE POLITICAL EFFECTS OF SOCIAL MEDIARoom: VirtualChair: Michael Bossetta, Lund University, SwedenDisc: Michael Bossetta, Lund University, Sweden
Papers: Platforms for Politics: A Comparison of Six SocialMedia PlatformsShelley Boulianne, MacEwan UniversityChristian Pieter Hoffmann, University of LeipzigDigital Activism, Social Networks, and ProtestParticipationSamuel Bestvater, The Pennsylvania State UniversityThe Effect of Internet Access on Political KnowledgeMona S. Kleinberg, University of Massachusetts,LowellWho Was Microtargeted in the 2020 PresidentialElections?Rohan Grover, University of Southern California
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS176.27 QUALITATIVE RESEARCH: RETHINKING
BOUNDARIES AND EXPANDING FRONTIERSRoom: VirtualChair: Andrew Bennett, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Evelyne Huber, University of North Carolina, Chapel
HillCassandra V. Emmons, Harvard University
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Papers: Large-N Qualitative AnalysisStephan Haggard, University of California, San DiegoGary GoertzUnifying Process-Tracing and Comparative Analysis:A Bayesian FrameworkTasha A. Fairfield, London School of EconomicsAndrew Charman, University of California, BerkeleySelecting Units of Analysis in Qualitative ResearchHillel David Soifer, Temple UniversityMapping Methods in Contemporary Political ScienceResearchTranae Hardy, Georgetown UniversityDiana Kapiszewski, Georgetown UniversityDaniel Solomon, Georgetown University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP176.28 CONTEMPLATING THE OPENNESS AND
CLOSURE OF CITIZENSHIP AND BORDERS IIRoom: VirtualChair: Holly Weaver, UC IrvineDisc: Serdar Kaya, Simon Fraser University
Papers: Open Borders versus Inclusive Citizenship? A NewExplanatory FrameworkSamuel David Schmid, Max Planck InstituteThe Argument from Cost and Learning from History:A Right to Open BordersHolly Weaver, UC IrvineSupporting the Most Vulnerable? Drivers of RefugeeProtection in the U.S. CongressStefanie Neumeier, University of Southern CaliforniaJoseph Saraceno, University of Southern CaliforniaThe Boundary Problem in Democratic Theory:A Mobility PerspectiveUgur Altundal, Syracuse University
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS176.29 CONFLICT AND CONSTRAINTS: NEW
INSIGHTS FROM AFRICAN POLITICSRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 21: Conflict ProcessesChair: Anne Meng, University of VirginiaDisc: Anne Meng, University of Virginia
Michael Wahman, Michigan State University
Papers: Civil Conflict Onset in Africa: Evidence from a NewDatasetJanet I. Lewis, George Washington UniversityMilitarized Policing and Regime SurvivalErica Susanne De Bruin, Hamilton CollegeCoalitions of Constraint: The Formation of Fronts inResistance CampaignsMargaret H. Ariotti, University of GeorgiaJessica Maves Braithwaite, University of ArizonaThe Politics of Legislative Oversight: CommitteeAssignment and Output in KenyaKen Ochieng' Opalo, Georgetown University
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE, AND POLITICS176.30 POLITICAL THEORY AND POLITICAL IDEASRoom: VirtualChair: Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State UniversityDisc: Eric MacGilvray, Ohio State University
DailySchedule
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: The Politics of Wicked Problems: Complex Systems andDemocratic GovernanceAnke GruendelPaternalism, Respect, and Disagreement (Pre-Recorded)Suzie Kim, New York University - Abu DhabiRe-Engaging Normative and Empirical DemocraticTheoryQuinlan Bowman, Duke Kunshan UniversityLegitimacy, Interests, and Knowledge: Rousseau'sElective AristocracyAntonia Alksnis, UC Berkeley
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY176.31 INTERSECTIONAL RESEARCH ON CLASS AND
INEQUALITYRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 37: Public OpinionChair: Jake M Grumbach, Princeton UniversityDisc: Jake M Grumbach, Princeton University
Amber Wichowsky, Marquette University
Papers: (Mis)Perceptions of Race and Gender Wealth Gaps:Correlates and ConsequencesNicole Yadon, Ohio State UniversityLauren ValentinoPerception of Essential Workers, Racial Prejudice, andWelfare PreferencesJohn Seungmin Kuk, University of OklahomaJeong Hyun Kim, Louisiana State UniversityYesola Kweon, Utah State UniversityPreK Politics: Divergent Experiences & CrosscuttingPolitical ConsequencesSophie Jacobson, Yale UniversityPrioritizing Justice? Citizen Policy Demands AmidstCOVID-19 and BLMElizabeth Pfeffer, University of OxfordWhose Recovery?: Power & Inequality After the GreatRecession in the US StatesTrevor Brown, Cornell UniversityJamila D. Michener, Cornell University
DIVISION 56: AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT176.32 LENSES ON WHITE NATIONALISM AND
POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN THE U.S.Room: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Alan Ray Gibson, California State University, ChicoDisc: Mary K Ryan, Washington & Jefferson College
A.R. Pashayan, Howard University
Papers: The Constitutional Significance of Violent PoliticalProtest in the U.S.Wayne D. Moore, Virginia TechTheir Souls Were Marching onMax Smith, Notre Dame"This Is Wrong and Not Who We Are" - AmericanExceptionalism as DenialEmma Ann Hall, University of WarwickWhite Nationalism & the Klan's "ConstitutionalPatriotism" in APDElizabeth Beaumont, University of California, SantaCruz
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Related Groups177.1 CONFERENCE GROUP ON TAIWAN STUDIES:
CROSS-STRAIT CONFLICT AND PUBLICPERCEPTION
Room: VirtualChair: Shelley Rigger, Davidson CollegeDisc: Charles Chong-Han Wu, National Chengchi University
Nick Lin, Academia Sinica
Papers: COVID-19 and Cognitive Warfare in the Taiwan StraitCrisisTsung-chi Yu, University of North texasKarl Ho, University of Texas, DallasGenerations, Life-Cycle, and War Support in TaiwanKuan-Sheng Wu, Purdue UniversityYao-Yuan Yeh, University of St. ThomasIn the Shadow of China's Rise: Signaling, Trade, andTaiwan's Military SpendingWei-hao Huang, National sun-yat sen universityJun Xiang, Rutgers UniversityYao-Yuan Yeh, University of St. Thomas
178.1 BEYOND OBSERVABILITY: INNOVATIONS INMEASURING 'INVISIBLE' POLITICALVIOLENCE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 8: Political Methodology
Chair: Anita R. Gohdes, Hertie SchoolDisc: Kanisha Bond, Binghamton University
Courtenay R. Conrad, University of California, MercedChristopher J. Fariss, University of MichiganEmily Hencken Ritter, Vanderbilt UniversityLivia Isabella Schubiger, Duke UniversityYael Zeira, Syracuse University
Part: Agnes Yu, London School of Economics178.2 ORGANIZING & SUPPORTING JUNIOR
SCHOLAR VIRTUAL WORKSHOPSRoom: VirtualChair: Cleo Marie O'Brien-Udry, Yale UniversityPart: Aidan Milliff, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Angie Torres-Beltran, Cornell UniversityChristina Ladam, University of Nevada, RenoRachel PorterSyeda ShahBano Ijaz, UC San DiegoAustin Bussing, Sam Houston State UniversityJosh McCrain, University of UtahAlexander Charles Furnas, University of MichiganJ Andres Gannon, University of California, San DiegoElizabeth L Brannon, Michigan State UniversityNina Obermeier, Cornell University
178.3 SHARING PEDAGOGY: INTERNATIONALSERVICE-LEARNING NETWORK DURINGCOVID
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
Chair: Katherine M. Robiadek, Hood CollegePapers: The Special Relationship: Lessons Learned from a UK/
US Service-Learning NetworkMark Charlton, De Montfort UniversityThe Effect of Virtual Service-Learning on CommunityPartnersMary A. McHugh, Merrimack College
Saturday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Converting a Large Service-Learning Event Online inCovid: Surviving and ThrivingAlison Rios Millett McCartney, Towson UniversityMichele Calderon, Towson UniversityConnor Cameron, Towson UniversityMadeleine Meyer, Towson University
178.4 TEACHING IR THEORY FOR FUTURE FOREIGNPOLICY PRACTITIONERS (LIVESTREAMED)
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CChair: David A. Cooper, Naval War CollegePart: Nikolas K. Gvosdev, Naval War College
Jessica D Blankshain, Naval War College
Saturday, 10:30 AM to 11:00 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS179.1 REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORAL SYSTEMS
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Daniel M. Smith, Columbia UniversityDisc: Jack Santucci, Drexel University
Magda Hinojosa, Arizona State University
Papers: A Two-Stage Theory of WomenĀs Representation:Evidence from Mayoral ElectionsKarel Kouba, University of Hradec KraloveTomas DosekAre Voter Identification Laws an Electoral Strategy?Tye Rush, UCLASpeaking for the Voiceless? The Political Representationof Future GenerationsDaan Vermassen, Vrije Universiteit BrusselDidier Caluwaerts, Vrije Universiteit BrusselSilvia Erzeel, Vrije Universiteit BrusselThe Conditional Effects of Same-Day Registration andDescriptive RepresentationJoseph Coll, University of Iowa
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY179.2 NORMATIVE THEORY VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSIONRoom: VirtualPapers: Asexuality, Judgment, and Deliberation: Novel Self-
Concepts Under PluralismAberdeen BerryDisembodied Deliberation: Algorithmic Curation andCensorship in Virtual PublicsJanet Marie Lawler, University of VirginiaLearning vs. Knowing Regimes: Knowledge Productionin Epistocracy and DemocracyMatthew Lucky, Indiana University Bloomington
Saturday, 11:00 AM to 11:30 AMDivision PanelsDIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY180.1 NEW DIRECTIONS IN POLITICAL ECONOMY
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Graeme Blair, UCLADisc: Gareth Nellis, University of California, San Diego
Alicia Dailey Cooperman, Texas A&M UniversityMichael Weaver, The University of British ColumbiaNathan J. Canen, University of Houston
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Papers: Carbon Bonds: Identity and the Politics of IndustrialChangeNoah Zucker, Columbia UniversityCorporate and Mass Preferences Over Immigration:Experimental EvidenceRieko Kage, University of TokyoFrances McCall Rosenbluth, Yale UniversitySeiki Tanaka, University of GroningenFirms' Lobbying Decisions and Legislators' InvestmentPortfoliosCaleb Ziolkowski, UCLAThe Grapes of Path: The Long-Run Political Impact ofthe Dust Bowl MigratiAdam Ramey, New York University Abu DhabiBlood Avocados: Trade Liberalization and CartelViolence in MexicoMegan Erickson, University of WashingtonLucas OwenAsset Mobility and Political Risk RevisitedHaosen Ge, Princeton UniversityClimatic Influences on Collective Action: Evidence fromDrought in NamibiaGarrett Michael Albistegui Adler, StanfordUniversityDylan Groves, Columbia UniversityRegionalism and Tribal Insecurity in IndiaArvind Magesan
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY180.2 VIRTUAL POSTER SESSION: STATE POLITICS
AND POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Joshua Jansa, Oklahoma State UniversityDisc: Joshua Jansa, Oklahoma State University
Papers: How State Legislators Frame It: Transportation Fundsand Energy TransitionGian-Claudia Sciara, The University of Texas atAustinRoss Buchanan, University of Texas, AustinAndrew Waxman, University of Texas at AustinLegislative Professionalism and Influence onLawmaking.Elizabeth Ila Dorssom, University of MissouriThe Political Determinants of Administrative BurdenAcross the StatesMeredith Dost, Harvard UniversityDirect Decentralization: Ballot Measures as aCentralization FoilMatthew Joseph Uttermark, Binghamton University-- SUNY
Saturday, 11:30 AM to 12:00 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY181.1 INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY
VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualChair: Gary Winslett, Middlebury CollegeDisc: Gaye Güngör, Centre Michel de l'Hospital, Ecole de
Droit, Université Clermont Auvergne.Joseph J. St. Marie, University of Southern MississippiRok Spruk, University of Ljubljana
DailySchedule
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Papers: Regulatory Chill on Minimum Wages: Effects ofVeoliaĀs Arbitration Against EgyptYoungchae LeeHe Who Sets a Trap for Others: WeaponizedInterdependence and Second-Order EffectsDavid M. F. Hageboelling, University of Oxford, St.Antony's CollegeMalignant Health Diplomacy: The Global Gag Rule andGendered Impacts of COVIDKelly HunterNavigating Asymmetric Exchanges: PeruĀs Negotiationof an FTA with ChinaVictoria Chonn-Ching, University of SouthernCaliforniaSources of IO Knowledge: A Citation Analysis of WorldBank PublicationsBurcu Ucaray-Mangitli, Georg August UniversityGoettingenTransnational Learning Capacity and Foreign InvestmentPromotion in MexicoJonas Gamso, Arizona State UniversityRoy C. NelsonIvan JiletaGlobal Supply Chains, Asymmetrical Dependence, andInternational ConflictNazim Uras Demir, University of California, IrvineThe Future of the Dollar: The Dragon in the RoomSarah Sklar, Boston UniversityWilliam N KringA "Western Advantage"? How Ties to the West ShapeState Access to CapitalBrendan J. Connell, University of Colorado BoulderPublic-Private Interactions in the Governance ofSustainable FinanceStefan Renckens, University of TorontoChristian Elliott, University of TorontoStrategy and Volatility in Foreign Aid Allocation by theEuropean UnionAlice Iannantuoni, University of GenevaSelective Ties? A Multilevel-Network Model of TradeAgreementsKenneth Stiller
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PMTheme Panels182.1 PLENARY ADDRESS: APPRECIATING AND
LEVERAGING THE DIVERSITY OF POLITICALSCIENCE
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6CPart: Scott E Page, University of Michigan
Laura Moses, The Ohio State UniversityDivision PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY183.1 MONSTERS, AMAZONS, AND BODIES POLITIC:
NEW WORK ON HOBBESRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan AChair: Boris Litvin, Stetson UniversityDisc: Boris Litvin, Stetson University
Papers: Hobbes and the Possibility of a ZoopolisGonzalo Bustamante Kuschel
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Hobbes's Theory of Peace: Discord, Disagreeableness, &Constitutive Social RulesRoy Thomas TsaoHobbes and Cavendish on EqualityMary Jo MacDonald, University of Toronto
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY183.2 QUEERING NATURE, ECO-AFFECTS, AND
DECENTERING THE HUMAN IN THEANTHROPOCENE
Room: WSCC, 604Co-sponsored by Environmental Politics and Theory
Chair: Alexandra Catherine Neame, Stanford UniversityDisc: Bronwyn Anne Leebaw, University of California,
Riverside
Papers: Feeling Like a Liberal, Feeling Like Noah: TheAffective Roots of Climate CrisisCallum Ingram, University of Nevada RenoInfinite Ecologies, Formless Habitats: Ecofeminism andthe Trouble with NatureChelsea Welker, University of Northern ColoradoNatural History as Political ThoughtMauro J. Caraccioli, Virginia Tech
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY183.3 WHERE IS SETTLER COLONIALISM IN AN
ABOLITION DEMOCRACY?Room: WSCC, 607Chair: Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson CollegePart: Cristina Beltran, New York University
Michael Lerma, Diné CollegeGeorge M. Shulman, New York UniversityHeidi Kiiwetinepinesiik Stark, University of VictoriaDeva Woodly, New School for Social Research
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY183.4 ECONOMIC ATTITUDES AND PERCEPTIONSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Benjamin A.T. Graham, University of Southern
CaliforniaDisc: Xiaojun Li, University of British Columbia
Papers: Does Chinese FDI Improve Views of China amongCitizens in Africa? (Pre-Recorded)Margaret M. Pearson, University of MarylandXiaonan Wang, University of Maryland-College ParkRisk Perception and Electoral Choice During theCOVID PandemicPablo Martin Pinto, University HoustonAgustin Vallejo, University of HoustonTaxes in the Time of Revolution: A Survey ExperimentDuring AlgeriaĀs HirakRobert Kubinec, Princeton UniversityHelen V. Milner, Princeton UniversityToo Fragile to Succeed? Electoral Fragility, Austerityand Economic Confidence (Pre-Recorded)Chendi Wang, European University InstituteFederico Maria Ferrara, London School ofEconomics and Political ScienceThomas Sattler, University of Geneva
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY183.5 THE LONG CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT:
LESSONS AND LEGACIESRoom: WSCC, 3AChair: Daniel Tichenor, University of Oregon
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Disc: Sidney Tarrow, Cornell University
Papers: The March on Washington Movement and the LongQuest for Racial JusticeSidney M. Milkis, University of VirginiaKatherine Rader, University of PennsylvaniaThe Civil Rights Legislative Agenda, 1945-1964Shamira M. Gelbman, Wabash CollegeThe DemocratIc Party and Origins of Racial LiberalismKumar Ramanathan, Northwestern UniversityMaking Black Lives Matter in White DemocracyMegan Ming Francis, University of Washington
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY183.6 GEOGRAPHY AND SPATIAL ANALYSISRoom: WSCC, 612Chair: Navid Mehrdad, Columbia UniversityDisc: Zachary Steinert-Threlkeld, University of California -
Los Angeles
Papers: Algorithmic Geolocation of Brazilian Polling PlacesUsing GIS Census DataFabricio Vasselai, University of MichiganEducational DistrictingĀs Impact on Racial Integration:A Statewide AnalysisCara Mae NixResidential Segregation, Political Representation andLocal Public GoodsJanne Tukiainen, University of TurkuUsing Cell-Phone Mobility Data to Study Voter TurnoutMasataka Harada, Fukuoka UniversityGaku Ito, Hiroshima UniversityDaniel M. Smith, Columbia University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS183.7 CRIMINAL GOVERNANCE IN SOUTH AMERICARoom: WSCC, 611Chair: Juan Albarracin Dierolf, Universidad IcesiDisc: Eduardo Moncada, Barnard College, Columbia
University
Papers: The Effect of Rents on Behavior: Evidence from IllegalMining in PeruAntonella Bandiera, ITAMStruggling Democracies & Anemic Development? LatinAmerican Criminal GovernanceAndreas E. Feldmann, University of Illinois atChicagoJuan Pablo Luna, Instituto de Ciencia Política, PUC-ChileContestation, Governance, and the Production ofViolence: Evidence from ColombiaAndres Uribe, University of ChicagoDaniel Raoul Hirschel-Burns, Yale UniversityAndrés Felipe Aponte, Universidad del RosarioGang Rule: Understanding and Countering CriminalGovernanceSantiago Tobon, Universidad EAFITChristopher Blattman, Harris School of Public PolicyGustavo Duncan, Northwestern UniversityBenjamin Lessing, University of Chicago
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS183.8 POPULISMRoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Günes Murat Tezcur, University of Central Florida
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Disc: Orçun Selçuk, Luther College
Papers: Can Populist Partisanship Drive Conspiratorial Beliefs?Courtney Blackington, University of North Carolinaat Chapel HillThe Globalization of Populism: Patterns of Diffusion,1970-2019Nils Duepont, University of GreifswaldNina Wiesehomeier, FUNDACIÓN IE G81711459Saskia Pauline Ruth, German Institute of Global andArea StudiesHidden Virtues of the Italian Democracy During thePopulist Peak 2018-2019Matteo Laruffa, LUISS University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES183.9 CASH TRANSFERS AND SUBSIDIES IN
DEVELOPING DEMOCRACIES ANDINDIGENOUS STATES (RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Cesar Zucco, Getulio Vargas FoundationDisc: Cesar Zucco, Getulio Vargas Foundation
Alesha Porisky, Northern Illinois University
Papers: Competing interests: Subsidized Housing and LocalService Delivery in Urban IndiaTanu Kumar, College of William and MaryProgrammatic Policies, Bureaucratic Performance andParty Building in BrazilAnderson Frey, University of RochesterBeing Seen by the State: Cash Transfers and WomenĀsParticipation in PakistanRehan Rafay Jamil, Brown UniversityRentier Individuals: Political Consequences of AlaskaNative Cash TransfersPaasha Mahdavi, University of California, SantaBarbara
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES183.10 CHINESE POLITICS MINI-CONFERENCE:
CHANGING MODES AND MEASURES OF STATECAPACITY IN CHINA
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Melanie Frances Manion, Duke UniversityDisc: Daniel Mattingly, Yale University
Mary E. Gallagher, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Papers: Measuring State Infrastructural Power Using Points-of-Interest DataCharles ChangYuhua Wang, Harvard UniversityTerritorial Politics in Time: Trajectory of ChinaĀsSeparately-Planned CitiesXiao Ma, Peking UniversityWenzhi LU, The Hong Kong University of Scienceand TechnologyRating Like a State: ChinaĀs Social Credit SystemDiana Fu, University of TorontoRui Hou, University of TorontoDecoding Slogans in China: Reading Between the LinesUsing Word EmbeddingYin Yuan
DailySchedule
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES183.11 POLITICAL INFORMATION AND POLITICAL
ENGAGEMENTRoom: Sheraton, IssaquahChair: Christine A Sylvester, University of StrathclydeDisc: Daniel Stegmueller, Duke University
Papers: Explaining Engagement with Political Knowledge:The Problem with Counterfactuals (Pre-Recorded)Javier Sajuria, Queen Mary, University of LondonMaarja Luhiste, Newcastle UniversityThe Consequences of Banning Political Ideologies:Evidence from Germany (Pre-Recorded)Daniel Bischof, University of ZurichVicente Valentim
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY183.12 CITIZENSHIP AND SOCIETYRoom: WSCC, 617Chair: Besir Ceka, Davidson CollegeDisc: Tereza Novotna, Free University Berlin
Papers: Political Tolerance in Europe: The Role of Conspiraciesand CosmopolitanismBesir Ceka, Davidson CollegeFlorian Stoeckel, University of ExeterEthnic Diversity and Well-being: Evidence from aHundred-Thousand-Person PanelMathias Kruse, Aarhus UniversityThorbjørn Sejr Guul, Aarhus UniversityKristian Kriegbaum Jensen, Aalborg UniversityHow Ethnic Empowerment Works: Assessing Its EffectsDragana Svraka, American Political ScienceAssociationThe Empire Strikes Back: An Experiment on Slaveryand Imperial NostalgiaJoe Kendall, European University Institute
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY183.13 INSTITUTIONS AND EUROPEAN POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 2AChair: Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State UniversityDisc: Charles R. Hankla, Georgia State University
Papers: Parliamentary Speech and Polarization: Evidence from aNew Finnish DatasetAlexander Kerchner, Princeton UniversitySeeking Gatekeeping: An Exploratory Analysis ofEuropean Commission BehaviorAmie Kreppel, University of FloridaMichael William Webb, University of Florida
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY183.14 MIGRATION: CAUSES AND CONSEQUENCESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3Chair: Albana Shehaj, Harvard UniversityPapers: Democracy, Autocracy, and Cross-Border Flows of
International StudentsMingsi Song, Texas A&M UniversityQuan Li, Texas A&M UniversityItĀs All About the Tasks! How Automation CanIncreases Firm-Immigration LobbyingEric Stein, University of California, Santa Barbara
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Are Refugees Welcome? Experiments on InternationalCooperation in Migrant CrisesAlessandro Del Ponte, Yale UniversityPeter DeScioli, Stony Brook UniversityAttitudes Towards Emigration (Pre-Recorded)Salif Jaiteh, Columbia UniversityOnce Hated Now Loved? Attitudes Towards AsianImmigrants: The U.S. and AustraliaJieun Park, University of California Los Angeles
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION183.15 INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION FOR
SECURITY AND STABILITYRoom: Sheraton, AspenChair: Stacy Bondanella Taninchev, Gonzaga UniversityDisc: Jane Eugenia Vaynman, Temple University
Stacy Bondanella Taninchev, Gonzaga University
Papers: Protection For Hire: Authoritarian Cooperation ThroughRegional OrganizationsChristina Cottiero, University of California Instituteon Global Conflict and CooperationThe Responsiveness of the United Nations SecurityCouncil to Armed Conflict (Pre-Recorded)Magnus Lundgren, University of GothenburgMark Klamberg, Stockholm UniversityThe Politics of Legitimation at the UN Security Council(Pre-Recorded)Clayton J. Cleveland, College of the Holy CrossMotives Behind Authoritarian InternationalOrganizationsJihyeon Bae, University of Washington
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY183.16 DISRUPTION DEFERRED? — HYPE,
COMPLEXITY, AND BUREAUCRACY INMILITARY INNOVATION
Room: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Frank L. Smith, US Naval War CollegeDisc: Julie George, Cornell University
Elsa Babette Kania, Harvard University
Papers: Technology Hype and Security DilemmasFrank L. Smith, US Naval War CollegeArtificial Intelligence, General-Purpose Technologies,and Global PowerAndrea Gilli, NATO Defense CollegeOrganizational Challenges to AI Adoption in NationalDefenseRaymond Wang, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology"War Design" and Technological Enthusiasm in China'sMilitary InnovationElsa Babette Kania, Harvard University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY183.17 TIME IN INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSRoom: WSCC, 608Chair: David H. Bearce, University of Colorado, BoulderDisc: Brett V. Benson, Vanderbilt University
Kyle Haynes, Purdue University
Papers: A Temporal Theory of Great Power PoliticsDaniel W. Drezner, Tufts University
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Temporality and Threats: How Great Powers WeighPresent and Future ThreatsDavid M. Edelstein, Georgetown UniversityIs Patience in the Eye of the Beholder? Time Horizons,Signaling, and ConflictMax Kuhelj Bugaric, Harvard UniversityWhat Explains Volatility in International Politics?Eleonora Mattiacci, Amherst College
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES183.18 DIPLOMACY IN CONFLICT RESOLUTIONRoom: WSCC, 4C2Chair: Elizabeth J. Menninga, University of IowaDisc: Kyle Beardsley, Duke University
Papers: Risk, Civil-Diplomatic Relations, and U.S. Involvementin Peace ProcessesRebecca Ellen Dudley, Duke UniversityMNCs & Peacemaking: The Role of Private Firms inCivil War NegotiationsMolly M. Melin, Loyola University, ChicagoCooperation in Civil War Dataset: Tracking CooperativeEvents in Civil ConflictsElizabeth J. Menninga, University of IowaAlyssa Prorok
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES183.19 POLITICAL VIOLENCE IN DEMOCRACIESRoom: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Aila M. Matanock, University of California-BerkeleyDisc: Danielle F. Jung, Emory University
Deniz Aksoy, Washington University in St. Louis
Papers: Outsourcing RepressionCourtenay R. Conrad, University of California,MercedEmily Hencken Ritter, Vanderbilt UniversityJessica Luce Trounstine, University of California,MercedMitigating the Past, Securing the Future: HowBloodstained Parties Win ElectionsSarah Zukerman Daly, Columbia UniversityEx-Combatant Demobilization and Support for Peace:Quasi-Experiment in ColombiaMichael Findley, University of Texas, AustinJoseph K. Young, American UniversityOliver Kaplan, University of DenverPolitical Assassinations and Voter Participation:Evidence from South AfricaPatrick Pierson, Emory
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES183.20 THE ROLE OF PUBLIC OPINION IN
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Quin Monson, Brigham Young UniversityDisc: Mateo Vasquez Cortes, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo
de Mexico
Papers: Do Minor Jihadist Terrorist Attacks Affect PublicOpinion?Amélie Godefroidt, NTNUFernando Mendez
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Long-term Change in Conflict Attitudes: A DynamicPerspectiveAlon Yakter, Tel Aviv UniversityLiran Harsgor, University of HaifaThucydides' Curse: Economic Sanctions and TargetPublic OpinionOmer Zarpli, University of Pittsburgh
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS183.21 THE PRESIDENCY AND ELECTORAL
CONNECTIONSRoom: WSCC, 303
Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and VotingBehavior
Chair: Matthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, IdahoDisc: John J. Pitney, Claremont McKenna College
Matthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, Idaho
Papers: AmericaĀs Got Talent? Measuring CandidateCompetence in Presidential PrimariesEvan Haglund, US Coast Guard AcademyVeepstakes and Party Government: How VicePresidential Selections Impact PartiesWilliam D. Adler, Northeastern Illinois UniversityJulia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette UniversityExplaining Trump's Loss and Biden's Victory: A LexicalAnalysisRoderick P. Hart, University of Texas, Austin
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY183.22 PUBLIC POLICY AND THE RESPONSE TO
COVID-19Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 1Chair: Clayton M. Nall, University of California, Santa BarbaraPapers: Assessing Public Policies to Facilitate COVID-19
Vaccination in Partisan AmericaDaniel J. Simmons, Saint Michael's CollegeCarlos Algara, Claremont Graduate UniversitySurvey on Rule Compliance in the Mass PublicMichael Johnston, Bowling Green State University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS183.23 GENDER AND JUDGING: COURT DECISION-
MAKING IN NEW CONTEXTSRoom: WSCC, 401Chair: Tassiana Moura de Oliveira, Centro Brasileiro de
Análises e Planejamento - CebrapDisc: Tassiana Moura de Oliveira, Centro Brasileiro de
Análises e Planejamento - CebrapTao L. Dumas, The College of New Jersey
Papers: Gender Matters in the Judiciary: Adjudicating SexualAssault in KoreaSeo Nyeong Jo, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesĄNevertheless, She Persistedď: The Role of Gender onthe Swedish Supreme CourtJohan Lindholm, University of UmeaMattias Derlén, University of UmeaDaniel Naurin, Oslo UniversityThe Fairer Sex? Evidence from Administrative CourtsLuzmarina Garcia, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
DailySchedule
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 27: CONSTITUTIONAL LAW ANDJURISPRUDENCE183.24 WOMEN'S LIVES AND CONSTITUTIONAL
RIGHTSRoom: WSCC, 2BChair: Wendy Wright, William Paterson UniversityDisc: Eileen McDonagh, Northeastern University
Kirsten Widner, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Papers: Abortion Rights in State Constitutions: A Case ofConstitutional PluralismRebecca Anderson, University of Wisconsin, MadisonConstitutions and Gender Equality: A Cross-nationalAnalysisPriscilla A. Lambert, Western Michigan UniversityDruscilla L. Scribner, University of Wisconsin,OshkoshThe Clash of Constitutional Rights and Liberties andLegal Pluralism in AbortionSusanna Southworth, Pacific Lutheran UniversityLeslie Pickering Francis, University of UtahJohn G. Francis, University of UtahWhat Lives Matter Under the Constitution?Sonu Bedi, Dartmouth College
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY183.25 PARTIES, INSTITUTIONS, AND POLARIZATION
IN AMERICAN STATE POLITICSRoom: Sheraton, BallardChair: Michael P. Olson, Washington University in St. LouisDisc: Jesse M. Crosson, Trinity University
Justin Kirkland, University of Virginia
Papers: Unequal Pathways to Power: How Caucus FundraisingSystems Shape RepresentationMichael Kistner, University of HoustonLegislature Size and Party Unity (Pre-Recorded)Jaclyn Kaslovsky, Rice UniversityMichael P. Olson, Washington University in St. LouisState Political Context and State Legislative PolarizationConnor Halloran Phillips, Harvard UniversityPolicymaking in the States: An Examination of RulesGoverning Policy ProgressionTessa Provins, University of PittsburghNicholas Howard, Auburn University at Montgomery
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS183.26 SECURING THE CITY?: POLICING, EQUITY,
AND ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: WSCC, 620Chair: Natalie Chwalisz, American UniversityPapers: Beating the Gun: One Conversation a Time
Natalie Chwalisz, American UniversityThomas E. Houston, Medici RoadPolicing in Covid Times: Challenges to Improve Policeand Citizens RelationsArturo Alvarado, El Colegio de México
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH183.27 GENDER QUOTAS, WOMEN'S POLITICAL
PARTICIPATION, AND LEADERSHIPRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Mala Htun, University of New MexicoDisc: Soledad Artiz Prillaman, Stanford University
Rachel E. Brule, Boston University
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Papers: Electoral Reforms and the Gender Gap: Evidence fromPost-Suffrage ChileAnna Firestone Callis, University of California,BerkeleyGuadalupe Tuñón, Princeton UniversityDawn L. Teele, Johns Hopkins UniversityElectoral Gender Quotas and Democratic LegitimacyAmanda Clayton, Vanderbilt UniversityDiana Z. O'Brien, Rice UniversityJennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental CollegeReservation Policy Design & Evaluation of WomenCandidates: Evidence from PakistanAli Cheema, Lahore University of ManagementSciencesShandana Khan Mohmand, Institute of DevelopmentStudiesSarah Khan, Yale UniversityCan Gender Quotas Improve Public Service Provision?Evidence from IndiaAlexander Lee, University of RochesterVarun Karekurve-Ramachandra, University ofRochester
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS183.28 HARD WHITE: THE MAINSTREAMING OF
RACISM IN AMERICAN POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 613Chair: Sanford F. Schram, Hunter College, CUNY
Richard C. Fording, University of AlabamaPart: Christopher S. Parker, University of Washington
Kim M. Williams, Portland State UniversityMichael W. McCann, University of Washington, SeattleTodd Donovan, Western Washington University
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS183.29 RACE, PARTY, AND GEOGRAPHYRoom: Sheraton, Willow A
Co-sponsored by Division 36: Elections and VotingBehavior
Chair: Christopher T. Stout, Oregon State UniversityDisc: Loren Collingwood, UC Riverside
Papers: Black Voters and Candidate Electability in PrimaryElectionsJasmine Smith, Duke UniversityElections at the Discontinuity: Black Candidates inWhite DistrictsBernard L. Fraga, Emory UniversityEric Gonzalez Juenke, Michigan State UniversityParu ShahAriel Rebecca White, MITRacialized Partisan Sorting in the States: New Measures,Causes and ConsequencesRobert R. Preuhs, Metropolitan State University ofDenverRodney E. Hero, Arizona State UniversityPablo Alberto Ortega Poveda, Arizona StateUniversityRacial Prejudice and Split-Ticket Voting: How RacialPriming Undercuts Party IDCarrie Levan, Colby CollegeStacey Ann Greene, Rutgers University, NewBrunswickVote Your Aspirations: Statewide Black Candidates andRacial Campaign StrategiesRichard Johnson, Queen Mary, University of London
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS183.30 RELIGION AND MOBILIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 618Chair: Mohammed M. Hafez, Naval Postgraduate SchoolDisc: Rebecca A. Glazier, University of Arkansas, Little Rock
Christopher Hale, University of Alabama
Papers: Faithful Resistance: The Role of Religion in NonviolentAction CampaignsJason A. Klocek, University of Notre DameCultural Values, Religious Denominations, and PartisanMobilizationByron E. Shafer, University of WisconsinRegina Wagner, University of AlabamaElite Control of Religious Institutions: Evidence fromDenmarkJonathan Doucette, University of CopenhagenLasse Aaskoven, University of EssexIslamic Activism and Citizenship: The Cases of UnitedStates and United KingdomNukhet Ahu Sandal, Ohio UniversityAhmet Erdi Ozturk, London Metropolitan University
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS183.31 INSTITUTIONS AND INCLUSIONRoom: WSCC, 211
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Jamil Shatema Scott, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Zeynep Somer-Topcu, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Analyzing the Effects of a Switch to By-DistrictElections in CaliforniaZachary Lorico Hertz, University of ChicagoEthnic Preference Seats and Descriptive Representationin National LegislaturesStephanie S. Holmsten, University of Texas, AustinRobert G. Moser, University of Texas at AustinRachel Rosenberg, University of Texas at AustinMeasuring and Explaining Minority InclusionComparativelyDavid Lublin, American UniversityUnderstanding Disadvantaged CitizensĀEvaluation of thePolitical SystemDavid Talukder, Université libre de Bruxelles
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES183.32 STATE & LOCAL PARTIES IN TRANSITION:
NEW STRUCTURES, TECHNOLOGIES, ANDCOALITIONS
Room: WSCC, 603Chair: Daniel Bowen, College of New JerseyDisc: Douglas D. Roscoe
Anne Whitesell, Miami University
Papers: Grassroots Reboot: Revitalized Democratic Party andPara-Party OrganizationsJoseph Anthony, Oklahoma State UniversityLara Putnam, University of Pittsburgh
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State Party Organizations, Independent Expenditures,and Spending StrategiesJaclyn J. Kettler, Boise State UniversityCharles Hunt, Boise State UniversityMichael J. Malbin, University at Albany, SUNYBrendan Glavin, Campaign Finance InstituteKeith E. Hamm, Rice UniversityExplaining Loss and Victory: How Local Parties ExplainElection OutcomesLee Hannah, Wright State UniversityKevin Reuning, Miami UniversityAnne Whitesell, Miami University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR183.33 MAKING IT EASIER TO VOTERoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4
Co-sponsored by Division 58: Civic EngagementChair: Todd Makse, Florida International UniversityDisc: Richard Jankowski, SUNY, Fredonia
Papers: Estimating the Electoral Effects of Easing Ballot AccessScott J Basinger, University of HoustonMichael J. Ensley, Kent State UniversityRegistration and Turnout Effects of Automatic VoterRegistrationEric McGhee, Public Policy Institute of CaliforniaMindy Romero, USCWho Voted How? Examining the Determinants ofTurnout in 2020Kim L. Fridkin, Arizona State UniversityPatrick Kenney, Arizona State University"Let Them Take a Bus Instead": How IntimidationAffects Turnout and Vote Choice?Emre Toros, Hacettepe UniversityMert Moral, Sabancı UniversityMelike Ayse Kocacik Senolyasemin tosun
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION183.34 RECONSIDERING POLARIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 615Chair: Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University-Corpus
ChristiDisc: Jennifer Wolak, Michigan State University
Papers: Selecting In and Out of Politics (Pre-Recorded)Eric Groenendyk, University of MemphisYanna Krupnikov, Stony Brook UniversityThe Effects of Voter-Party Incongruence on AffectivePolarization (Pre-Recorded)Nahema Marchal, University of ZurichThe Unpolarized: Why African-Americans Are anException to PolarizationEric P. Kaufmann, Birkbeck College, University ofLondonThe Divided (But Not More Predictable) Electorate:A Machine Learning AnalysisJan Zilinsky, New York UniversitySeo-young Silvia Kim, American University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION183.35 ELECTION CAMPAIGNS: ADVERTISING,
PROPAGANDA, AND MEDIARoom: Sheraton, Willow BDisc: Michael Bossetta, Lund University, Sweden
DailySchedule
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Papers: Facebook Ads: What Are They Good For?Shannon C McGregor, University of North CarolinaBridget BarrettSelective Exposure to Political Advertisement viaPhysiological ResponseDenis Wu, Boston UniversityMina Tsay-Vogel, Boston UniversityNyetwork News: Trump, Fox News, and theAuthoritarian Model of the Media (Pre-Recorded)Sarah A. Oates, University of MarylandGordon Ramsay, University of AkureyriĄLiarsďand ĄFraudsď- Negative Advertising in AustrianElections, 1945-2019Lore Hayek, University of Innsbruck
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS183.36 SUBNATIONAL ISSUES IN ENVIRONMENTAL
POLICYRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Deserai Anderson Crow, University of Colorado DenverDisc: Janel Jett, Purdue University
Papers: Technical and Institutional Capacity for DecarbonizingUrban Transport SystemsMark Purdon, Université du Québec à Montréal(UQAM)Integrating Food Waste and Food Security Strategies inCommunity Food SystemsNikki Nadeau, University of Nevada-RenoElizabeth Koebele, University of Nevada, RenoThe Politics of Local Industrial Policy: Evidence fromMexicoSteven Samford, University of MichiganUnderstanding Residential Rooftop Solar Adoption forPolicymakersStephen Bird, Clarkson University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS183.37 DIGITAL ACTIVISM AND COLLECTIVE
ACTIONRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: George Robert Boynton, University of IowaDisc: George Robert Boynton, University of Iowa
Papers: Below the Radar: Youth and Digital Activism in aSurveillance SocietyAshley LeeCollective Intelligence as a Response to COVID-19Pandemic in Latin America (Pre-Recorded)Thamy Pogrebinschi, WZB Berlin Social ScienceCenterOnline COVID-19 Mutual Aid Groups: Differences inLocation and EngagementIulia Cioroianu, University of BathJulie C Barnett, University of BathNadeen Khaleel, University of BathReframing Political Margins in the Digital EraBen Epstein, DePaul University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY183.38 AUTHOR MEETS CRITIC: "CONSTRAINING
DICTATORSHIP" BY ANNE MENGRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Edmund J. Malesky, Duke University
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Part: Daniel N. Posner, University of California, Los AngelesArturas Rozenas, New York UniversityJessica L. P. Weeks, University of Wisconsin-Madison
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS183.39 HUMAN RIGHTS, MIGRANTS, AND THE LAWRoom: WSCC, 3BPapers: The African Court on Human and PeoplesĀRights:
A New Jurisdictional FrontierMaria Sanchez, University of MinnesotaThe Application of IHL on IsraeliĀs Cyber StrategiesAgainst the PalestiniansAnwar Mhajne, Stonehill CollegeThe Banality of Human Rights (Pre-Recorded)Hiroki Osada, Graduate Institute GenevaThe Human Right to a Judicial Remedy ĉ AComparative AnalysisJeffrey Davis, University of Maryland, BaltimoreCounty
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP183.40 REFUGEES AND LOCAL POLITICS (PRE-
RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Noora Anwar Lori, Boston UniversityDisc: Ala Alrababah, ETH Zurich
Papers: Service Protectiveness and Refugee-Host CommunityRelations in Developing StatesShelby Carvalho, Harvard UniversityReva Dhingra, Harvard UniversityOlivia Asmara Woldemikael, Harvard UniversityStretching the Limits of Authority: Why Do LocalGovernments Cater for Refugees?Zeynep Balcioglu, Northeastern UniversityExplaining Tolerance: Local Governance and CitizenAttitudes Towards MigrantsOlivia Asmara Woldemikael, Harvard UniversityThe Price of Prejudice: Evidence from Citizens andLocal Government in GreeceKristin E. Fabbe, Harvard Business SchoolKonstantinos Matakos, King's College London
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS183.41 LINKAGES OF THE STATE: BROKERS, CITIZEN
OBSERVERS, AND POLITICAL CONNECTIONSRoom: WSCC, 619
Co-sponsored by Division 12: Comparative Politics ofDeveloping Countries
Chair: James D. LongDisc: Joan Ricart-Huguet, Loyola University Maryland
James D. Long
Papers: Citizens at the Council: A Field Experiment on CitizenObservers in Burkina FasoMalte Lierl, German Institute of Global and AreaStudiesMarcus Holmlund, The World BankFrom Union of Leaders to Union of Peoples: Role ofAfrican NGOs in Regional IOsAlfred Oduro, University of TorontoTakumi Shibaike, European University InstitutePolitical Connections and State Access: ExperimentalEvidence from SenegalAbhit Bhandari, Temple University
Saturday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
The Role of Broker Variation in Explaining Patterns ofProtest (Pre-Recorded)Sarah Jane Lockwood, University of Cambridge
184.2ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: POLITICAL THEORY AS A RESOURCE FOR POLITICAL CHALLENGES
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: Carol B Cooper, University of HoustonDisc: Philip Bunn, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Papers: George Santayana and the Psyche as Aesthetic Arbiterof PoliticsNayeli Leandra Riano, Georgetown UniversityThomas More on Religious Toleration and the CommonGood (Pre-Recorded)Mary Clare Imparato, Belmont Abbey CollegeTocqueville's Relevance for Modern Democracy (Pre-Recorded)Hans-Martien ten Napel, Leiden UniversityāThe PeopleĀof the Tenth Amendment: Social AuthorityLuke C Sheahan, Duquesne University
185.1 TLC KEYNOTE (LIVESTREAMED)Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CPart: John Ishiyama, University of North Texas
Saturday, 1:30 PM to 2:00 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS186.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS: VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSION IRoom: VirtualChair: Javier Corrales, Amherst CollegeDisc: Shane J Barter, Soka University of America
Papers: An Economic Voting?: Political Participation inMainland ChinaDiqing Lou, Wuhan UniversityCommunist Legacies and Labor Politics in SoutheastAsiaZheng Wang, University at Albany, NYCOVID-19 and Public Attitudes toward Universal BasicIncomeTaesim Kim, Sogang UniversityDoes Transparency Increase Trust in Governments?Haeyong Lim, Jeju Peace InstituteDressing Like a State: Civil Society and Nation-Buildingin Aspiring StatesKimberly D Tower, American University
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The Role of Property Rights in Ensuring CivilianSupremacy over the MilitaryKedar P Badu, Southern Illinois UniversityCarbondale (SIUC)Welfare State Trajectories in the Context of Fiscal Crisisand FinancializationKathleen Michael Annarelli, Rutgers UniversityEnvironmental Politics in East Asia: A Pro-BusinessPath towards Net ZeroMary Alice Haddad, Wesleyan UniversityDelayed Justice: The Effects of Land Restitution inSouth AfricaAlex Dyzenhaus, Cornell UniversityProtest and PolarizationNils W. Metternich, University College LondonEU Cohesion in Times of a European Union inPermanent CrisesDaniela Braun, LMU MunichAnn-Kathrin Reinl, Ludwig-Maximilians-UniversitätMunich (LMU)
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 2:30 PMDivision PanelsDIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS187.1 COMPARATIVE POLITICS: VIRTUAL POSTER
SESSION IIRoom: VirtualChair: Milos Rastovic, Duquesne UniversityDisc: Young-Im Lee, California State University-Sacramento
Papers: Centralized Politics, Promotability, and the Resilience ofSingle-Party RegimesNgoc Phan, Duke UniversityDeliberative Democracy Explanatory Leverage in EthnicMobilization StudiesAnastasiya Salnykova, University of British ColumbiaDistinguishing Right and Left Populism: Hungary,Venezuela, and the U.S.Tracy L. R. Lightcap, LaGrange CollegeFrom Parties to Leaders, and Back: Voting BehaviorPatterns 1960s-2020sAlessio Albarello, University of RochesterInformal Succession Institutions and Autocratic SurvivalXin Nong, University of Texas at AustinPartisan Distribution of Ministerial Portfolios in Asian-Pacific DemocraciesJinhyuk Jang, Pennsylvania State UniversityScottish Independence: Brexit, Trump and the Evolutionof British DevolutionKim Nicole Dixon, Abraham Baldwin AgriculturalCollegeMaking "Big Government" Popular: A ComparativeAnalysis of Health Care PolicyMark McKibbinTraditional Politics Revival for the Upcoming ChileanConstitutional ConventionJaime Baeza Freer, Universidad de ChileMaría Cristina Escudero illanes, Universidad deChileRussiaĀs Energy Sector: Evolution or Stagnation?Mikhail A. Strokan, University of Pennsylvania
DailySchedule
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Social Remittances, Satisfaction, and ActionSarah Prince, UC Davis
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PMTheme Panels188.1 EQUITY IN CAMPAIGNSRoom: VirtualChair: Amy Gould, Evergreen State CollegePart: Teresa Mosqueda, City of SeattleAPSA Events189.1 IN MEMORY OF LYN RAGSDALERoom: VirtualChair: Daniel E. Ponder, Drury UniversityPart: Karen M. Hult, Virginia Tech
Gary King, Harvard UniversityRobert X. Browning, Purdue UniversityMartha Joynt Kumar, White House Transition ProjectLara Michelle Brown, The George WashingtonUniversityPaul R. Brace, Rice University
189.2 MCCLAIN TASKFORCE PANEL ON SYSTEMICINEQUALITY IN THE DISCIPLINE
Room: VirtualChair: Kimberly Mealy, American Political Science Association
Paula D. McClain, Duke UniversityPart: Carol A. Mershon, University of Virginia
Niambi M. Carter, Howard UniversityJohn Armando Garcia, University of MichiganCathy J. Cohen, University of Chicago
189.3 PANDEMIC POLITICS: AMERICANPERSPECTIVES
Room: VirtualChair: Michael Bernhard, University of FloridaPapers: Who Do You Trust? The Consequences of Partisanship
and Trust for Public Responsiveness to COVID-19OrdersJohannes Wiedemann, Yale UniversityDaniel A N Goldstein, Yale UniversityI Hope to Hell Nothing Goes Back to the Way It WasBefore": COVID-19, Marginalization, and NativeNationsRaymond Foxworth, First Nations DevelopmentInstituteLaura E. Evans, University of WashingtonGabriel Sanchez, University of New MexicoCheryl Ellenwood, University of ArizonaPolitics, Markets, and Pandemics: Public EducationĀsResponse to COVID-19Leslie K. Finger, University of North TexasMichael T. Hartney, Boston CollegeStill Not Important Enough? COVID-19 Policy Viewsand Vote ChoiceEric Guntermann, University of California, BerkeleyGabriel Lenz, UC BerkeleyCOVID-19 and the Paradox of Scientific AdviceZeynep Pamuk, University of California, San Diego
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY190.1 LOGICS OF COLONIALISM AND PRACTICES
OF EMANCIPATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Alena Wolflink, University of DenverDisc: Lucas G. Pinheiro, University of Chicago
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Alena Wolflink, University of Denver
Papers: War-Resistance as DecolonizationPınar Kemerli, Bard CollegeInterpretive Narratives of Settler Colonialism andIndigenous MarginalizationSophie Major, UC BerkeleyFrom Gramsci to Fanon - The Emancipatory Project ofLimited PluralismVolker Schmitz, Indiana UniversityRest, Beloved: Biopower, Narrative, and HealingPyar Seth, Johns Hopkins University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY190.2 TAE-YEOUN KEUM'S "PLATO AND THE
MYTHIC TRADITION IN POLITICALTHOUGHT"
Room: VirtualChair: Jennie Choi Ikuta, University of Missouri-ColumbiaPart: Bryan Garsten, Yale University
Kinch Hoekstra, University of California, BerkeleyMelissa Lane, Princeton UniversitySophie Smith, University of OxfordTae-Yeoun Keum, University of California, SantaBarbara
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY190.3 INDIGENOUS POLITICAL THOUGHT AND
PLURALISMRoom: VirtualChair: Didier Zúñiga, McGill UniversityDisc: Kevin M. Bruyneel, Babson College
Papers: Disjunction: Indigenous Resistance Beyond Oppositionand DialecticsYann Allard-Tremblay, McGill UniversityIndigenous Political Thought: Critical, Romantic andExistential ApproachesElaine Coburn, York UniversityRed Ticket WomenGina Starblanket, University of CalgaryCounter-Ableist and Neurodivergent Challenges forIndigenous Decolonial PoliticsKelly Aguirre, University of Victoria
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY190.4 REINVIGORATING DEMOCRATIC LEGITIMACY
THROUGH DEMOCRATIC INNOVATION ANDPROTEST
Room: VirtualChair: James S. Fishkin, Stanford UniversityDisc: Azucena Moran Tobar, Institute for Advanced
Sustainability Studies
Papers: Why Might Elected Political Elites Reach forDemocratic Innovations?Mark E. Warren, University of British ColumbiaEdana Beauvais, Simon Fraser UniversitySule Yaylaci, University of PennsylvaniaCan Deliberative Processes Improve Low-IncomeMinority Parent Engagement?Jonathan Collins, Brown UniversitySituating the Police in the Deliberative SystemBrian M. Milstein, Goethe University FrankfurtAfsoun Afsahi, University of British Columbia
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY190.5 PLURALISM AND INTERSECTIONAL POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Tamar Malloy, University of Colorado BoulderDisc: Bronwyn Anne Leebaw, University of California,
Riverside
Papers: An Ode to My Non-Native Latinx MotherGeidy Soraida Mendez, University of California-IrvineIntersectionality, Masculine Domination, & BlackFeminist AmbivalenceRhiannon Love Auriemma, Northwestern UniversitySexy, Sapphire, Psycho: Disciplining Black WomenThrough Mental Illness RhetoricAnna Daily, Mount Holyoke College
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY190.6 NEW APPROACHES FOR PREJUDICE
REDUCTION AND DEPOLARIZATIONRoom: VirtualChair: James N. Druckman, Northwestern UniversityDisc: Kimuli Kasara, Columbia University
Yphtach Lelkes, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: A Text-Based Assessment of the Mechanisms of ContactErin RossiterDesegregating Virtual Spaces: A Facebook FieldExperiment in JerusalemChagai Weiss, University of Wisconsin - MadisonAlexandra Scacco, WZB Berlin Social Science CenterAlexandra Arons Siegel, University of ColoardoBoulderA Machine Learning Approach to Detecting Polarizationin Social Media DiscourseLaura Jakli, Harvard UniversityPaul GillSegregation & Intergroup Relations: A NaturalExperiment with U.S. College StudentsDavid Alexander Romney, Brigham Young UniversityRyan D. Enos, Harvard UniversityRichard Nielsen, MIT
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY190.7 COVID AND THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
PANDEMIC RESILIENCERoom: VirtualChair: Scott L. Greer, University of MichiganDisc: John Marshall, Columbia University
Papers: Follow the Connections: Social Connectivity as Key toUrban Economic ResiliencyMaureen Heffern Ponicki, University of Illinois atChicagoGovernment Capacity, Economic Loss andMisinformation: Support for COVID PolicyYueyi Li, Duke UniversityTian Chen, Department of Political Science, DukeUniversityBokai QiHow To Pay for COVID? The Pandemic andPreferences for Taxes and SpendingSergi Pardos-Prado, University of GlasgowAnja Neundorf, University of Glasgow
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Informal Workers' Compliance and Social CapitalDuring COVID-19 in IndonesiaYing Gao, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY190.8 COALITIONAL POLITICS AND DISABILITY
RIGHTSRoom: VirtualChair: Ari NeemanDisc: Ann Kathleen Heffernan, University of Michigan
Claire C. McKinney, William & Mary
Papers: The Coalition Politics of ADAPT in the DisabilityRights Movement of the 80s-90sKarolyn Campbell, University of UtahPension Politics and PossibilitiesJennifer Leonor Erkulwater, University of RichmondIt's Interesting How History Gets Written: DisabilityRights from the Top-DownAndrew Jenks, University of DelawareThe Politics of Prenatal Genetic ScreeningAmber Knight, University of North Carolina -CharlotteJoshua Preston Miller, University of North Carolinaat Charlotte
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY190.9 INTERPRETING RACIAL POLITICS IN THE USA
TODAYRoom: VirtualChair: Rogers M. Smith, University of PennsylvaniaPart: Michael G. Hanchard, University of Pennsylvania
Ange-Marie Hancock, University of Southern CaliforniaMegan Ming Francis, University of WashingtonDesmond King, University of OxfordRonald J Schmidt, California State University, LongBeach
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES190.10 NEW FRONTIERS IN THE STUDY OF CRIME
AND VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Abby B. Cordova, University of Notre DameDisc: Angelica Duran-Martinez, University of Massachusetts,
LowellNicholas Rush Smith, CUNY-City College
Papers: Vigilantes and State Control of Violence: A SecurityAssemblages ApproachRebecca TapscottRethinking Lynching and the State: Evidence from Post-Revolutionary MexicoGema Santamaria, Loyola University ChicagoThe Effects of Criminal Organization Presence onCitizen-State InteractionsKaitlyn Chriswell, Harvard UniversityState Responses to Vigilante Groups: A ComparativeUrban AnalysisEduardo Moncada, Barnard College, ColumbiaUniversity
DailySchedule
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES190.11 CHINESE POLITICS MINI-CONFERENCE: THE
POLITICAL ECONOMY OF STATE-BUSINESSRELATIONS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Susan Whiting, University of WashingtonDisc: Iza Ding, University of Pittsburgh
Yuen Yuen Ang, University of Michigan
Papers: Capital Mobility & Taxation in Non-OECD Countries:Evidence from ChinLing Chen, Johns Hopkins UniversityFlorian Hollenbach, Copenhagen Business SchoolLocal Leadership Turnover and Firm Subsidies in ChinaYue Hou, University of PennsylvaniaSiyao Li, University of PennsylvaniaThe Authoritarian Rule of Law Through Centralization:Evidence from ChinaYishuang Li, New York UniversityZhenhuan Lei, New York UniversityResisting Public Monitoring in Autocracies: Evidencefrom ChinaDongshu Liu, City University of Hong Kong
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY190.12 TALKING ABOUT MARKETSRoom: VirtualChair: Nicole Rae Baerg, Bank of EnglandDisc: Krzysztof J. Pelc, McGill University
Papers: How International Organizations Frame GlobalInequalityErin Lockwood, University of California, IrvineMedia Coverage, Blame Attribution, and Trade-RelatedPolicy ResponsesAlexandra Guisinger, Temple UniversityRyan Brutger, University of California, BerkeleyPapal Dividends: Do PopesĀPolitical CommunicationsMove Economic Markets?Lorenzo Crippa, University of EssexFederica Genovese, University of EssexTop-Down Identity Politics: Theory and Its Effect onTrade PolicyCarlos Felipe Balcazar, New York University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY190.13 SHIFTING NUCLEAR BALANCERoom: VirtualChair: Reid Pauly, Brown UniversityDisc: Matthew Fuhrmann, Texas A&M University
Papers: Who Recognizes? U.S. Nuclear Diplomacy and theConferral of LegitimacySidra Hamidi, Stetson UniversityBargaining with the Bomb: Militarized Nuclear Signalsand Coercive BargainingKyungwon Suh, Syracuse UniversityAtomic Bonds: Elite Networks in the Global NuclearTradeSelim Can Sazak, Brown University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY190.14 RACE AND RACISM IN FOREIGN POLICYRoom: Virtual
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Chair: Randolph B. PersaudDisc: Zoltan I. Buzas, University of Notre Dame
D.G. Kim, University of California, San Diego
Papers: Race and Racism in PresidentĀs Daily Briefs (1961-1977)Maya Van Nuys, University of ChicagoAustin Carson, University of ChicagoEric Min, UCLARacial Discrimination and Jurisdiction in Status ofForces AgreementsBianca Freeman, University of California, San DiegoIntervening Variables: Race and Preferences Towardsthe Use of ForceAndrew Leber, Harvard UniversityNaima Green-Riley, Harvard UniversityTurning the Tables? Status Stability and Race in theInternational SystemCleo Marie O'Brien-Udry, Yale UniversityLauren Elizabeth Ferry, University of Mississippi
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES190.15 SECURING STATE REFORM IN FRAGILE
STATESRoom: VirtualChair: Susanna Campbell, American UniversityDisc: Dipali Mukhopadhyay, Columbia University
Matthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Papers: Public Service Provision and the Virtuous Circle:Evidence from MalawiNuole ChenBoniface Madalitso DulaniMatthew S. Winters, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignAgents of Aid: Who Believes Aid Influences Post-Conflict States and Why?Susanna Campbell, American UniversityGabriele S. Spilker, University of SalzburgInviting Intervention: Statebuilding by DelegatingSecurityAila M. Matanock, University of California-BerkeleyThe Local Statebuilding Effect of UN Peace OperationsCaroline Brandt, University of Southern California
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS190.16 VACANCIES, DELAYS, AND LEGISLATIVE
CONSTRAINTS IN PRESIDENTIALAPPOINTMENT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 24: Public Administration
Chair: Jennifer L. Selin, University of Missouri, ColumbiaDisc: William G. Resh, University of Southern California
Jennifer L. Selin, University of Missouri, Columbia
Papers: Do Vacancies Hurt Federal Agency Performance?David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt UniversityChristopher Mark Piper, Vanderbilt UniversityPresidential Centralization and the Vacancies ProblemChristopher Mark Piper, Vanderbilt UniversityThe Prospects for Executive Branch Coordination andLegislative Budget AuthorityGary E. Hollibaugh, University of PittsburghGeorge A. Krause, University of Georgia
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Relinquishing Consent: Senate Confirmation Delay andthe President's ActingsChristina M. Kinane, Yale University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS190.17 JUDICIAL BEHAVIOR AND POLICY:
INSTITUTIONAL RULES, LAW, AND GROUPDYNAMICS
Room: VirtualChair: Jennifer Bowie, University of RichmondDisc: Jennifer Bowie, University of Richmond
Eileen Braman
Papers: Institutional Foundations of Recusal Behavior in StateSupreme CourtsIsaac Unah, University of North Carolina, ChapelHillLeadership in Judicial Decision-MakingAndrew H. Sidman, CUNY-John Jay CollegeMaxwell H.H. Mak, John Jay College of CriminalJusticeLinguistic Evidence for the Existence and Effect ofJurisprudential RegimesMatthew Dahl, University of Notre DameMatthew E.K. Hall, University of Notre DameThe Effect of Informal En Bancs on Process andPrecedentBethany Blackstone, University of North TexasMicheal W. Giles, Emory UniversitySusan Navarro Smelcer, Georgia State University
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY190.18 LABORATORIES OF DEMOCRACY: ADVANCES
IN POLICY DIFFUSION RESEARCHRoom: VirtualChair: Joshua Jansa, Oklahoma State UniversityDisc: Daniel J Mallinson, Penn State, Harrisburg
Caroline J. Tolbert, University of Iowa
Papers: Diffusion Mechanisms of State Voter Identification in aPost-Shelby EnvironmentIsaac Pollert, University of Illinois at chicagoLeaders or Laggards? A New Dataset on State andFederal Policy AdoptionsScott James LaCombe, Smith CollegeFrederick J. Boehmke, University of IowaJeffrey J. Harden, University of Notre DameBruce Desmarais, Pennsylvania State UniversityJason H. Windett, University of North Carolina,CharlotteRobert J. McGrath, George Mason UniversityWilliam W. Franko, West Virginia UniversityYu-Ru Lin, University of PittsburghOrganized Elite Power versus Environmental Activistson Anti-protest LawsSojin Jang, University of North Carolina, PembrokeThe Politics of School Finance ReformKENNETH A SHORES
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH190.19 MODES OF REPRESENTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of MiamiDisc: Louise K. Davidson-Schmich, University of Miami
Amber N Lusvardi, Purdue University
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Papers: Centering the Symbolic in Models of Representation:Critical ReconceptualizationMichael FitzGerald, Rutgers University, NewBrunswickFrom Get Out the Vote to Running Candidates: SistahsAre Doing It for ThemselvesChristina Elizabeth Bejarano, Texas Woman'sUniversityWendy G. Smooth, The Ohio State UniversityStrong and Caring? The Stereotypic Traits of Women ofColor in PoliticsNichole Bauer, Louisiana State UniversitySylvia Gonzalez, Louisiana State UniversityWhatĀs Happened to the Gender Gap in Participation?Can We Explain the Changes?Sara Morell, University of MichiganKay Lehman Schlozman, Boston CollegeNancy Burns, University of Michigan, Ann ArborAshley E. Jardina, Duke UniversityShauna L. Shames, Rutgers University, Camden
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH190.20 THE LOGIC AND MEANING OF GENDERRoom: VirtualChair: Carissa Ann Cunningham, Rutgers UniversityDisc: Carissa Ann Cunningham, Rutgers University
Lara-Zuzan Golesorkhi, University of Portland
Papers: Rethinking āMeToo with Sex Workers' CritiquesSudeshna Chatterjee, University of MassachusettsBostonSexist Politicians and Social Pressure: The Impact ofLaughing at a ĄRape JokeďHirofumi Miwa, Gakushuin UniversityYuko Kasuya, Keio UniversityCleo Anne Calimbahin, De La Salle University-ManilaStrange Case of Gender Quotas Symbolic Effect: MoralValues Can Explain VariationMyriam Shiran, University of HoustonTransmisogyny & Cis-Stemic Bans: Logics inExclusionary Sports Policy & Title IXElizabeth A. Sharrow, University of MassachusettsAmherst
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS190.21 PRISONS, PUNISHMENT AND POLITICAL
PARTICIPATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Farah Godrej, University of California, RiversidePart: Farah Godrej, University of California, Riverside
Sally Nuamah, Northwestern UniversityAllison P. Harris, Yale UniversityTraci Burch, Northwestern UniversityHannah Walker, University of Texas at Austin
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS190.22 CHRISTIANITY AND POLITICS IN LATIN
AMERICA AND AFRICA: CROSS-REGIONALDIALOGUE
Room: VirtualChair: Consuelo Amat, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Consuelo Amat, Johns Hopkins University
Guadalupe Tuñón, Princeton University
DailySchedule
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Papers: How Restricting Money in Politics StrengthensReligious InfluenceMelani Cammett, Harvard UniversityLucas M. Novaes, Insper - Institute of Education andResearchGuadalupe Tuñón, Princeton UniversityOrtega vs. Church? Catholic Protest Mobilization inNicaraguaĀs 2018 ĄUprisingďSergio Miguel Cabrales DomínguezComparing RenewalistsĀPolitical Orientations in LatinAmerica and AfricaElizabeth S. Sperber, University of DenverErin Accampo Hern, Syracuse UniversityServing Saints: Contextual Variation of ReligiousInfluence on the EnvironmentAmy Erica Smith, Iowa State UniversityPaul A. Djupe, Denison University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION190.23 POLITICS AND PUBLIC OPINION IN THE
AMERICAN WESTRoom: VirtualChair: Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young UniversityDisc: Samara Klar, University of Arizona
Rebecca D. Gill, University of Nevada, Las VegasJeremy C. Pope, Brigham Young University
Papers: Winner Effects on the Contestation of ElectoralOutcomesJuliet Carlisle, University of UtahFabian Guy Neuner, Arizona State UniversityMark Daniel Ramirez, Arizona State UniversityChristopher R. WeberRepresentational Congruence, Constituency Groups, andEnvironmental PolicyJuliet Carlisle, University of UtahJames M. Curry, University of UtahJerry Michael Stott, University of UtahWestern Identity as a Salient Political IdentityFabian Guy Neuner, Arizona State UniversityChristopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young UniversityJeremy C. Pope, Brigham Young University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION190.24 COVID COMMUNICATION AND POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Mujtaba Isani, University of MannheimDisc: Sara K Guenther, Montana State University
Papers: Agendamelding and COVID-19: Political Polarization inCOVID CoverageJames Benjamin Taylor, Kennesaw State UniversityHow News Media Coverage Influences COVID VaccineCoverageDominik Andrzej Stecula, Colorado State UniversityMatthew P. Motta, Oklahoma State UniversityWho Shares COVID Conspiracies Online? Evidencefrom Five CountriesMark A. Pickup, Simon Fraser UniversityDominik Andrzej Stecula, Colorado State UniversityClifton van der Linden, McMaster UniversityThe Moral Imperatives of Self-QuarantiningAndrew Rojecki, University of Illinois, ChicagoElena Zheleva, UICLauren Levine, UIC
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DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS190.25 THE POLITICS OF ADAPTATION
GOVERNANCE: EMERGING SUB-NATIONALCHALLENGES
Room: VirtualChair: Lauren M. MacLean, Indiana University, BloomingtonDisc: Karleen West, SUNY Geneseo
Papers: Building Resiliency: U.S. Local Governments andNatural DisastersCarley Weted, American UniversityPublic Opinion, Levels of Government and ClimateChange in BangladeshTodd A. Eisenstadt, American UniversityMatthew Wright, University of British ColumbiaThe Municipal Bond Market and Climate AdaptationAseem Prakash, University of WashingtonInhwan Ko, University of WashingtonResilience Imaginaries: Politics of Coastal Engineeringand Design in New YorkKatinka Wijsman
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE190.26 CRITICAL, RADICAL AND UTOPIAN
PEDAGOGYRoom: VirtualChair: William W. Sokoloff, University of Texas, Rio Grande
ValleyDisc: William W. Sokoloff, University of Texas, Rio Grande
Valley
Part: Nancy Sue Love, Appalachian State UniversityJocelyn M. Boryczka, Fairfield UniversityJessica L. Lavariega Monforti, California LutheranUniversityMichaele L. Ferguson, University of Colorado, BoulderEvelyn M. Simien, University of ConnecticutCary Fraser, Appalachian State UniversityBradley J. Macdonald, Colorado State University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY190.27 CREEPING AUTHORITARIANISM: HOW
WOULD-BE AUTOCRATS SUBVERTDEMOCRACY
Room: VirtualChair: Dan Slater, University of MichiganDisc: Steven Levitsky, Harvard University
Georg Vanberg, Duke University
Papers: Democracy and Its Vulnerabilities: Dynamics ofDemocratic BackslidingZhaotian Luo, University of ChicagoAdam Przeworski, New York UniversityDemocracy by Deterrence: Modeling MutualForbearance in U.S. Electoral PoliticsGretchen Helmke, University of RochesterJack Paine, University of RochesterMary Kroeger, University of North Carolina, ChapelHillRhetorical Stratagems of Democratic BackslidersIpek Cinar, University of ChicagoAndres Uribe, University of ChicagoSusan C. Stokes, University of Chicago
Saturday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
PutinĀs Prosecutors: How Judiciaries Enable CreepingAuthoritarianismEvgenia Olimpieva, University of Chicago
DIVISION 47: SEXUALITY & POLITICS190.28 QUEER(ING) CANDIDATESRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and TransgenderCaucus
Disc: Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo CollegeAlison Gash, University of Oregon
Papers: District Competitiveness and the Nomination of LGBTQCandidatesElizabeth Baisley, Queen's UniversityQuinn Albaugh, University of TorontoLGBTQ Candidates and Identity Framing in Elections:Meet Mayor Pete ButtigiegGabriele Magni, Loyola Marymount UniversityAndrew S. Reynolds, Princeton UniversitySexual Orientation and Stereotyping: Cues AboutLesbian and Gay PoliticiansJoanna Everitt, University of New Brunswick SaintJohnLaszlo HorvathLGBT Representation in Congress: Ideology, Identity,and Constituent InterestsJoseph Saraceno, University of Southern California
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH190.29 EXPERIMENTS IN REPRESENTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Laura Stoker, University of California, BerkeleyDisc: Laura Stoker, University of California, Berkeley
Donald P. Green, Columbia University
Papers: Digital Home StyleAlessandro Vecchiato, Stanford UniversityKevin Munger, Pennsylvania State UniversityFunding Elections & Opening Polls Increases Turnout:A Field ExperimentChristian R. Grose, University of Southern CaliforniaNot Fit for Office: Does Weight Bias ImpactEvaluations of Political Candidates?Claire Gothreau, Rutgers UniversityAmanda Friesen, Western UniversitySurvey, Field, and Ad Campaign-Level ExperimentalTests of Political PersuasionMinali Aggarwal, Yale UniversityJennifer N Allen, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyJames BarnesAlexander Coppock, Yale UniversityDan FrankowskiTara McGowan, ACRONYMSolomon Messing, TwitterKelly Zhang, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP190.30 NATIVISM AND NATIONALISMRoom: VirtualChair: Willem Maas, York UniversityDisc: Allan Colbern, Arizona State University
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Papers: The Anti-Immigrant Roots of Voter Suppression Laws:Case Study KansasMonica W Varsanyi, CUNY Graduate CenterVoted In, Standing Out: Elite Response to Immigrants'Political AccessionGuy Grossman, University of PennsylvaniaStephanie Zonszein, University of PennsylvaniaThe Individual and Contextual Determinants of Anti-Immigrant Attitudes in EuropeSumeyye Mine Iltekin, University of DelawareAmbivalent Pluralism and Populist Discourses onRefugees in Ecuador and TurkeyJeffrey Daniel Pugh, University of Massachusetts-BostonUluc Karakas, University of Massachusetts Boston
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE, AND POLITICS190.31 THE IDEA OF JUSTICE IN DEMOCRACY: THE
50TH ANNIVERSARY OF JOHN RAWLS'THEORY OF JUSTICE
Room: VirtualChair: Katrina Forrester, Harvard UniversityPart: Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
Minh V Ly, Stanford UniversityDavid M. Estlund, Brown UniversitySamuel Freeman, University of PennsylvaniaMichael Blake, University of Washington
Related Groups191.1 CIVIC STUDIES: THE CRISES OF THE
REPUBLIC: COMPARING FOUR THREATS ANDTHE UPSWING
Room: VirtualChair: Peter Levine, Tufts UniversityDisc: Dianne M. Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame
Part: Robert M. Putnam, Department of DefenseRobert C. Lieberman, Johns Hopkins UniversitySuzanne Mettler, Cornell University
191.2 ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS AND THEORY:POSSIBILITIES FOR CLIMATE JUSTICE IN ANON-IDEAL WORLD
Room: VirtualChair: Gregory Koutnik, Hamilton CollegeDisc: Reed Kurtz, The Ohio State University
Papers: Co-Opting Co-Optation: Beyond the ĄHumanď in HumanRights in Climate JusticeTomas Hatala, Concordia UniversityĄLeave No One Behind in a Zero Carbon Future:ďTheorizing a Just TransitionMichael Christopher Sardo, Occidental CollegeClimate Resistance and the Far FutureAlex McLaughlin, University of CambridgeJustice, Power, and Climate ChangeRoss Mittiga, Pontificia Universidad Católica deChile
192.1 DIVERSIFIED APPROACHES TO SIMULATIONAND GAMES IN THE CLASSROOM I
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
Chair: Renee B. Van Vechten, University of RedlandsPapers: Can Simulations Promote an Inclusive Classroom?
Nayma Qayum, Manhattanville College
DailySchedule
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Teaching Theory: A Mini-Simulation on the Theory ofHuman TerritorialityHalit M Tagma, Northern Arizona UniversityThe Impact of Gender on Student Learning: Lessonsfrom a Model UN CourseMert Kartal, St. Lawrence UniversityUsing ĄFantasyďPolitics to Increase Knowledge ofInternational PoliticsPetra Hendrickson, Northern Michigan University
192.2 MAKING IT REAL: TAKING ACTION INTEACHING
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
Chair: Julio F. Carrion, University of DelawarePapers: Homelessness and Project Based Learning
Bobbi Gentry, Bridgewater CollegeIncorporating Inquiry in an Introductory AmericanPolitics Course (Pre-Recorded)Sean Q Kelly, California State University, ChannelIslandsOnline Deliberation: Bridging Divides and Navigating"Niceness"Kara N Dillard, James Madison UniversityKara L. Lindaman, Winona State University
192.3 NEW STRATEGIES FOR INCREASED TEACHINGEFFECTIVENESS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
Chair: Chiedo Nwankwor, Johns Hopkins School of AdvancedInnterntional Studies
Disc: Kenneth A. Betsalel, University of North Carolina,Asheville
Papers: Doing Intersectional Feminist Community-EngagedLearning in the Neo-Liberal UMichael J. Illuzzi, Lesley UniversityNafisa Tanjeem, Lesley UniversityStudents as Teachers for Political DiscourseLynne M Chandler-Garcia, US Air Force AcademyStacy G. Ulbig, Sam Houston State UniversityTeaching Comparative Politics: A Guide to MakingChoicesNandini Deo, Lehigh UniversityJulie George, CUNY, Queens CollegeMeg Guliford, University of PennsylvaniaMary Anne Mendoza, California State PolytechnicUniversity, PomonaThe Biopolitics of EdTechStefan Kehlenbach, University of California,Riverside
192.4 OUT OF YOUR CHAIR AND INTO THESTREETS: ACTIVE APPROACHES TO CIVICENGAGEMENT
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
Chair: TM Sell, Highline Community CollegePapers: Service Learning at a Hispanic-Serving Institution
Andrew Hewitt Smith, Univ of Texas Rio GrandeValleyThatĀs Our House! LetĀs Take It Over!: AntiracistPedagogy in Advocacy CoursesKathleen Cole, Metropolitan State University
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Saturday, 2:30 PM to 3:30 PMAPSA Events193.1 RBSI SCHOLARS VIRTUAL POSTER SESSIONRoom: VirtualPapers: Stabilizing Force? Incumbent PresidentsĀEffect on
Opposing PartiesĀHarmony During PresidentialNominationsNicolas Hernandez FlorezHow Race and Gender Shape Anti-Drug Law Policing:Applying Intersectionality to Traffic StopsJanae Lynn JacksonThe āIdeological Presentation of Self: DramaturgicalAnalysis Through Twitter Ideal Point EstimationChristian Caballero, New York UniversityDecreasing Human Trafficking: An Analysis ofAdolescent Girls Within the Foster Care SystemsShanequewa LovePolice as Government? An Empirical Investigation ofState and Local Policing ExpendituresDarius Cozart, George Washington UniversityCan Economic and Social Marginalization ExplainMexicoĀs Drug War Violence? An Assessment of theRole that Poverty Plays in Predicting IncreasedHomicide RatesDiego FloresIndigenous Liberation: The Key to DemocraticConsolidation in Guatemala?Yamilet Velez
Saturday, 3:30 PM to 4:30 PMAPSA Events194.1 JOINT STATUS COMMITTEE CHAIRS MEETING
(INVITE ONLY)Room: Virtual Off-Platform Event
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PMTheme Panels195.1 THE U.S. CAMPAIGN FINANCE SYSTEM AND
CONSEQUENCES FOR REPRESENTATIONRoom: WSCC, Ballroom 6C
Co-sponsored by Division 35: Political Organizations andParties
Chair: Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young UniversityDisc: Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young University
Eitan D. Hersh, Tufts University
Papers: How Early Fundraising Keeps Candidates of Color Outof OfficeJake M Grumbach, Princeton UniversityAdam Bonica, Stanford UniversityKeep Winning with WinRed? Online FundraisingPlatform as the PartyĀs Public GoodSeo-young Silvia Kim, American UniversityZhao Li, Princeton UniversityThe Impact of Structural Factors on Small DollarDonors in American PoliticsZachary Albert, Brandeis UniversityRaymond J. La Raja, University of Massachusetts,AmherstLemons in the Political Marketplace: A Big-DataApproach to Detect āScam PACsĀZhao Li, Princeton University
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
APSA Events196.1 COFFEE & LIGHTNING ROUND: RESEARCH IN
FIVE: GRADUATE STUDENTS IIRoom: WSCC, 620Chair: Kumar Ramanathan, Northwestern UniversityDisc: Kumar Ramanathan, Northwestern University
Papers: An Analysis of the Strength of Provincial Identity inChinaJingyuan ChengInformal Housing and Good Citizens in Development(Pre-Recorded)Ying Gao, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyLocal Governments' Accountability and Public Trust inNepalNarayan Aryal, Public Service Commission, NepalThe Electoral Consequences of Rural Prison BuildingJacob Harris, Cornell UniversityThe Liberal Paradox of Suicide in PrisonShirley Le Penne, Cornell UniversityThe Urban-Rural Political Trust Gap: Rurality, Trust,and Partisan SupportJames Kirk, University of Notre DameWhy Did the United States Facilitate China's Rise?Zoltan Feher, The Fletcher School of Law andDiplomacy, Tufts University
Division PanelsDIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY197.1 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: HAGAR KOTEF'S
"THE COLONIZING SELF"Room: WSCC, 604Chair: James R. Martel, San Francisco State UniversityPart: Cristina Beltran, New York University
Nancy Luxon, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities.Robyn Marasco, CUNY, Hunter CollegeGeorge M. Shulman, New York UniversityMassimiliano Tomba, University of CaliforniaHagar Kotef, SOAS, University of London
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY197.2 EMOTIONSRoom: WSCC, 603Chair: Alexa Bankert, University of GeorgiaDisc: Alexa Bankert, University of Georgia
Papers: Emotions and Political Information Gathering: A Meta-Analytic AssessmentAmy Funck, Rutgers University, New BrunswickRichard R. Lau, Rutgers University, New BrunswickThe Emotional Landscape of American PoliticsScott Clifford, University of HoustonRyan P. Kennedy, University of HoustonReinforcing Worry: Long-Run Dynamics of Anxietyabout Political IssuesMichael B. Henderson, Louisiana State UniversityAyla Oden, Louisiana State University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY197.3 UNDERSTANDING VOTE CHOICERoom: Sheraton, AspenChair: Christopher Hare, University of California, DavisDisc: Moritz Marbach, Texas A&M University
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Papers: Elicitation of VotersĀDecision Rules: A Design-BasedSolutionKai Ou, Florida State UniversityScott Tyson, University of RochesterLet Them Eat Pie: Addressing the Partial ContestationProblemGuy D. Whitten, Texas A&M UniversityThiago de Miranda Queiroz Moreira, Texas A&MUniversityAli KagalwalaMeasuring Swing Voters Using Supervised MachineLearningChristopher Hare, University of California, DavisThe "Electability" Trap: Bias in Beliefs on the Qualityof Minority CandidatesJennifer E. Cryer, University of Southern California
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS197.4 AGRICULTURE, THE ENVIRONMENT, AND
RURAL CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 3AChair: David J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesDisc: Aditya Dasgupta, University of California, Merced
Papers: The Seasonality of ConflictJenny Guardado, Georgetown UniversityAgricultural Mechanization and Rural Unrest: Evidencefrom BrazilDavid J. Samuels, University of Minnesota, TwinCitiesHenry Thomson, Arizona State University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS197.5 GRASSROOTS POLITICS: COLLECTIVE
ACTION, ELITES, AND LOCAL POLITICALBEHAVIOR
Room: WSCC, 607Chair: F. Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute of
TechnologyDisc: Mathias Poertner, London School of Economics and
Political ScienceTaylor C. Boas, Boston University
Papers: Competitive Oligarchies? Long Term Effects of LocalDevelopment Policy in BrazilYuri Kasahara, Oslo Metropolitan UniversityMarcus Andre Melo, University of PernambucoF. Daniel Hidalgo, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyCommunity Organizing and Local Political Behavior inBrazilAlicia Dailey Cooperman, Texas A&M UniversityCommunity Leaders, Politicians, and the Public Good inColombian Neighborhoods (Pre-Recorded)Deanna Kolberg, University of MichiganCollective Action Infrastructure: DownstreamConsequences of Urban Organizing (Pre-Recorded)Alyssa Huberts, Harvard UniversityKaitlyn Chriswell, Harvard University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES197.6 CLIENTELISM AND FORMAL POLITICAL
INSTITUTIONS IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIESRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Chair: Dominika Koter, Colgate University
DailySchedule
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Disc: Adam Michael Auerbach, American University-SIS
Papers: Informal Inequalities: Gender, Machine Politics, andRepresentation in ArgentinaMariela Szwarcberg Daby, Reed CollegeMason Wallace Moseley, West Virginia UniversitySignal of Strength? Clientelism and Expectations ofPoliticiansĀPerformance (Pre-Recorded)Kristen Kao, University of GothenburgEllen M. Lust, University of GothenburgDistributive Politics in Competitive Vote Markets:Evidence from UgandaHoracio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard UniversityAnders Woller, University of CopenhagenInformation and ClientelismMogens K. Justesen, Copenhagen Business SchoolJacob Gerner Hariri, Department of Political Science,University of Copenhagen
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES197.7 IDENTITY AND INEQUALITY IN SOUTHEAST
ASIARoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 1
Co-sponsored by Southeast Asian PoliticsChair: Amy H. Liu, University of Texas at AustinDisc: Allen D. Hicken, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Jacob Isaac Ricks, Singapore Management University
Papers: Raising Representation? Inclusive Participation inIndonesian Village BudgetingEitan Paul, University of MichiganCan Encounters with the State Improve Minority-StateRelations in Myanmar?Jangai Jap, George Washington UniversityTrickle-Up Democracy: How Elite PhilanthropyEntrenches Inequality in MyanmarGerard McCarthy, National University of SingaporeWoman vs. Church: How Female Mayors ApplyReproductive Policy in the PhilippinesNina McMurry, WZB Berlin Social Science CenterNico Ravanilla, University of California San Diego
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES197.8 CHINESE POLITICS MINI-CONFERENCE:
CHINA ON THE GLOBAL STAGE: POLICIESAND REACTIONS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 4Chair: Xiaoyu Pu, University of Nevada, RenoDisc: Thomas J. Christensen, Columbia University
Robert S. Ross, Boston College
Papers: Just Do It: Characteristics and Effectiveness of ChineseEconomic SanctionsKetian Zhang, George Mason UniversityChinaĀs Training of African Officials as a Soft PowerMechanismMaria Repnikova, Georgia State UniversityPosing Problems without Shacking Up: Sino-RussianRelations & Regional Security?Oriana Skylar Mastro, Stanford UniversityTriumphalism and Inconvenient Truth: National Self-Image in a Rising PowerHaifeng Huang, University of California, Merced
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DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY197.9 LIBERAL DEMOCRACY IN EUROPE: THREATS
AND RESPONSES (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Giovanni Capoccia, University of OxfordDisc: Kurt Weyland, University of Texas, Austin
Jan Rovny, Sciences Po
Papers: Shaping Competition: Allies' Party Licensing and theExtreme Right in GermanyGiovanni Capoccia, University of OxfordGrigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton UniversityAttitudes About Cooperation with Extremist, Anti-Democratic PartiesR. Daniel Kelemen, Rutgers University, NewBrunswickJonathan B. Slapin, University of ZurichMichele Fenzl, University of ZurichOppositions Assemble: Ethnopopulists in Power and theParties that Oppose ThemCourtney Blackington, University of North Carolinaat Chapel HillMilada Anna Vachudova, University of NorthCarolina, Chapel HillSocietal and Institutional Responses to Extremism:The Case of Golden DawnAntonis A. Ellinas, University of Cyprus
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY197.10 ENGLAND'S CROSS OF GOLD: KEYNES,
CHURCHILL, & THE GOVERNANCE OFECONOMIC BELIEFS
Room: WSCC, Ballroom 6AChair: James Ashley Morrison, London School of
Economics & Political ScienceDuncan Snidal, Nuffield College, Oxford
Part: Jeffry A. Frieden, Harvard UniversityAyse Zarakol, University of CambridgeKathleen R. McNamara, Georgetown UniversityMark Copelovitch, University of Wisconsin, Madison
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY197.11 LABOR AND TRADERoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Joe Weinberg, University of Southern MississippiDisc: Yoo Sun Jung, University of California, San Diego
Papers: How Bureaucrats Represent Economic Interests: PartisanControl over TAAMinju Kim, University of California San DiegoThe Politics of Automation and Special Interest GroupsNicole Wu, Princeton UniversityAfter the China Shocks: Understanding NegativeAttitudes Toward China in the U.S.Mary E. Gallagher, University of Michigan, AnnArborDaniela Stockmann, Hertie SchoolYujeong Yang, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaignCurbing the Collective Voices of Workers in Late-Industrializing EthiopiaMOHAMMED Seid ALI, Bahir Dar UniverstyGlobalization and Public Perceptions in DevelopingCountriesEunyoung Ha, Yonsei University
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION197.12 NETWORKS AND COERCION IN
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSRoom: WSCC, 613Chair: Henry Farrell, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Brandon J. Kinne, University of California, Davis
Henry Farrell, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: How Hierarchy in Public and Private Networks ShapesWeaponized InterdependenceKaija E. Schilde, Boston UniversityFlorian Bodamer, Boston UniversityConstraining the Sanction Buster: State Network Tiesand Sanction EffectivenessGargi Vyas, University of KentuckyHow the U.S. Builds International Coalitions: Evidencefrom Economic SanctionsTyson Chatagnier, University of HoustonKerim Can Kavakli, Bocconi UniversitySecurity Cooperation Pattern in Asia-Pacific & China inJoint Military ExerciseKyuri Park, University of Southern California
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY197.13 DYNAMICS OF REBEL CONSOLIDATION IN
FRAGMENTED CIVIL CONFLICTSRoom: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Michael Gabbay, University of WashingtonDisc: Emily Kalah Gade, University of Washington
Papers: Rising to the Top: Three Pathways to MilitantConsolidation in Civil ConflictsMohammed M. Hafez, Naval Postgraduate SchoolMichael Gabbay, University of WashingtonStrategies of Armed Group Consolidation in the AfghanCivil War, 1989-2001Megan Erickson, University of WashingtonMichael Gabbay, University of WashingtonSide-Switching As State Consolidation: Getting TheIncentives Right in UkraineJesse Driscoll, University of California, San DiegoAlexandra Chinchilla, Dartmouth College
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY197.14 RADICAL EXTREMISMRoom: WSCC, 608Chair: Morgan L. Kaplan, Harvard Kennedy SchoolDisc: Paul E. Lenze, Northern Arizona University
Papers: In the Name of the Race: Exploring the Ideologies ofWhite Supremacist AttacksAlon Burstein, University of California, IrvineLeaders & Leverage: How Organization Design &Leader Transition Shape TerrorismStephen C. Nemeth, Oklahoma State UniversityBrian Lai, University of IowaSelecting Support: How Dissident Groups ChooseExternal SupportersJaime Jackson, California State University,SacramentoBelgin San-Akca, Koç UniversityThis is How You Lose It: The Fall of ISIS in SyriaLuis De la Calle, Centro de Investigación y DocenciaEconómicas (CIDE)
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DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY197.15 LEADERS, DOMESTIC CONSTRAINTS, AND
FOREIGN POLICY PRIORITIESRoom: Sheraton, Willow BDisc: Eleonora Mattiacci, Amherst College
Papers: Inherited Interventions: Deference to Military AdviceAmong New PresidentsTheo Milonopoulos, Columbia UniversityLeader Strategy and Domestic Constraints in StateContributions of PeacekeepersJared Oestman, Rice UniversityTimothy Passmore, Virginia Military InstitutePresidential Promise-Keeping and National SecurityMelissa Willard-Foster, University of VermontThe Impacts of Presidential Personality on DecisionMaking Models (Pre-Recorded)Hsiao-chuan Liao, National Taiwan UniversityUlrich Y.-C. Lin, National Taiwan University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES197.16 DOMESTIC AND INTERNATIONAL
REVERBERATIONS OF PROLIFERATIONRoom: WSCC, 3BDisc: Dana El Kurd, University of Richmond
Papers: Internal Security Threat Perception and WMDProliferation ChoicesMiriam Barnum, University of Southern CaliforniaLong Live the (Nuclear) RevolutionWilliam L. d'Ambruoso, Harvard Kennedy SchoolRisky Business: An Ideological Basis for Variance inNuclear Bargaining OutcomesRupal Mehta, University of Nebraska-LincolnNoelle Troutman, University of Nebraska-LincolnTaking Heads but Losing Hearts? LeadershipDecapitation and Government EfficacyAmira Jadoon, U.S. Military Academy at West PointCaleb Lucas, Michigan State UniversityDuncan Gregory Walker, US Army
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES197.17 MEDIA, CONTENTION, AND CONFLICT IN THE
MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Elizabeth Parker-Magyar, Massachusetts Institute of
TechnologyDisc: Zachary Steinert-Threlkeld, University of California -
Los Angeles
Papers: Diversionary Discourse: Media and AuthoritarianSurvival in the Middle East (Pre-Recorded)Ala Alrababah, ETH ZurichA Supervised Learning Approach to Counting ConflictEvents: Evidence from EgyptThoraya El-Rayyes, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceAla Alrababah, ETH ZurichNeil Ketchley, University of OsloGlobal Civil Society in Wartime: Text Analyses ofSyrian Facebook PagesRana B. Khoury, Princeton UniversityAlexandra Arons Siegel, University of ColoardoBoulder
DailySchedule
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Social Media Narratives on Conflict from northern Syria(Pre-Recorded)Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyAhmet AkbiyikErin Elizabeth Walk, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyElizabeth Parker-Magyar, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyKiran Kiran Garimella
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES197.18 STRATEGIES TO PREVENT VIOLENCE AND
EXTREMISM: LATEST EVIDENCE AND NEWFRONTIERS
Room: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Eric N. MvukiyeheDisc: Bilal Murtaza Siddiqi, University of California, Berkeley
Rebecca Littman, MIT
Papers: A Way Out? Vocational Training, Employment &Religious Extremism in NigeriaOeindrila DubeMarcus Holmlund, The World BankEric N. MvukiyeheCan Vocational Training Programs Reduce BiasBetween Hosts and Refugees?Rebecca Wolfe, University of ChicagoClimates Against Violent Extremism: RCT withUniversity Students in BangladeshPeter B. Vining, New York UniversityMichael J. Gilligan, New York UniversityCyrus Samii, New York UniversityJobs and Political Participation ĉ Evidence from a FieldExperiment in EthiopiaAndreas Kotsadam, The Frisch Centre
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES197.19 CLASS, GENDER AND LEGISLATIVE BEHAVIOR
IN COMPARATIVE ENVIRONMENTSRoom: WSCC, 615Chair: Tiffany D. Barnes, University of KentuckyDisc: Eduardo Aleman, University of Houston
Mirya R. Holman, Tulane University
Papers: Party-Centered Politics and WomenĀs Access toCommittee AppointmentsTiffany D. Barnes, University of KentuckyMirya R. Holman, Tulane UniversityThe Legislative Effectiveness of Women in TurkeyĀsParliamentSaadet Konak Unal, University of HoustonEduardo Aleman, University of HoustonConstituents Ask Female Legislators to Do MoreDaniel M. Butler, WUSTLElin Naurin, University of GothenburgPatrik Ohberg, The Department of Political Scienceat the University of GothenburgClass in Session? Legislator Economic Background &Policy Content in CongressBenjamin Bishin, University of California, RiversideThomas J. Hayes, University of ConnecticutErinn K Lauterbach, University of Virginia
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DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS197.20 THE IMPACT OF POLITICIZATION AND THE
BUDGET ON FEDERAL AGENCIESRoom: Sheraton, Ballard
Co-sponsored by Division 24: Public AdministrationChair: Hye Young You, New York UniversityDisc: Hye Young You, New York University
Christina M. Kinane, Yale University
Papers: Centralization, Politicization, and the TrumpAdministrationNathan Gibson, Princeton UniversityThe Consequences of Politicization and AgencyStructure for Federal EmploymentScott Limbocker, United States Military AcademyMark D. Richardson, Georgetown UniversityJennifer L. Selin, University of Missouri, ColumbiaThe Distributive Benefits of Senate-ConfirmedAppointee VacanciesWilliam G. Resh, University of Southern CaliforniaNicholas G. Napolio, University of SouthernCaliforniaKeunyoung Lee, University of Southern CaliforniaThe Importance of Position: Agency Budgets andExecutive AppointmentsPeng Gui, University of RochesterLawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester
DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION197.21 LOCAL GOVERNMENT AGENCIESRoom: Sheraton, IssaquahChair: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State UniversityDisc: Aaron Deslatte, Indiana University Bloomington
Papers: County Sheriffs and ICE: The Will of the People or aLack of Accountability? (Pre-Recorded)Kara Newby, Auburn UniversityShaniqua Williams, Auburn UniversityModeling Policy Diffusion Across Local Bureaucracies(Pre-Recorded)Laura Schenker, Graduate Institute of Internationaland Development StudiesThe Relationship Between Criminal Justice Reform andRevenue GenerationPatrick John Gauding, University of KansasGovernment Type and the Spatial Diffusion of LocalGovernment PolicyDavid Switzer, University of MissouriRobin Rose Saywitz
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS197.22 EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH ABOUT
ATTITUDES TOWARD PLURALISM ANDDISCRIMINATION
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 3Co-sponsored by Division 51: Experimental Research
Chair: John Holbein, University of VirginiaDisc: Hakeem Jerome Jefferson, Stanford University
Papers: Political Violence and Public Attitudes Toward JusticeJamil Shatema Scott, Georgetown UniversityDaniel Solomon, Georgetown UniversityKelebogile Zvobgo, College of William & Mary
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
What Do Canadian Teens Know About the Holocaustand Antisemitism?Alexis Monique Lerner, Western UniversityMemories in Conflict: Persuasion in Transitional JusticeMuseumsElsa Voytas, Princeton UniversityLaia Balcells, Georgetown UniversityCan Immigrants Be Good Citizens? A ConjointExperiment in Three DemocraciesSara Wallace Goodman, University of California,Irvine
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES197.23 COMPARATIVE PARTY POLARIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 612Chair: Quinn Mecham, Brigham Young UniversityDisc: James Harris Sunday, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Party Polarization on Environmental Voting in the U.S.CongressDean L Lueck, Indiana UniversityJulio A. Ramos Pastrana, The Pennsylvania StateUniversityGustavo F Torrens, Indiana UniversityParty (System) Institutionalization and the Quality ofDemocracy in AsiaFernando Casal Bertoa, University of NottinghamDon S. Lee, University of NottinghamPerception and Visions of Europe in HungaryKrisztina Arató, Eötvös Loránd University Faculty ofLawPoliticizing Pluralism: Interest Groups, Party Programsand Issue PolarizationJesse M. Crosson, Trinity University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR197.24 COVID-19 AND VOTING BEHAVIORRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Chair: Bang Quan Zheng, UCLADisc: David Dreyer, Lenoir-Rhyne University
Papers: Dying to Vote: Covid-19 and Its Impact on the 2020Presidential ElectionGiancarlo A Gonzalez, University of TennesseeWas It COVID-19? Pandemic Considerations and 2020Presidential Candidate SupportLewis Alexander Luartz, University of California,RiversideStefano Camatarri, Université catholique de LouvainMarta GallinaGrief and Anger: Disentangling the Turnout Effects ofCOVID-19Kevin Thomas Morris, Brennan Center for JusticeCOVID-19, Mental Health and Political Participation:Evidence from Indian StatesSubhasish Ray, Jindal School of Government andPublic Policy, O. P. Jindal Global University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION197.25 ATTITUDES TOWARD POLITICAL PROTEST
AND VIOLENCERoom: WSCC, 617Chair: Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of KansasDisc: Donald P. Haider-Markel, University of Kansas
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Papers: Alt-Right? System Justification and Political ProtestKatherine M. Sawyer, Stony Brook UniversityHannah Nam, Stony Brook UniversityKanisha Bond, Binghamton UniversityDeterminants of Public Support for Protest MovementsPavielle Haines, Rollins CollegeAddie Perez, Rollins CollegeRumors of Boogaloo: Measuring Militant Right-WingExtremism in the United States (Pre-Recorded)Layla Picard, University of VirginiaPhilip B. K. Potter, University of VirginiaUnderstanding the Gap Between Public & ScholarlyConcepts of Political ViolenceM.P. Broache, University of North Carolina atGreensboroMelissa Baker, University of TorontoPeter Carey, University of California, MercedThe Tea Party Movement and the Co-optation of theWhite Nationalist MovementRichard C. Fording, University of AlabamaSanford F. Schram, Hunter College, CUNY
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION197.26 MISINFORMED? WHO, HOW, AND WHYRoom: WSCC, 303Chair: Matthew Jenkins, Gyeongsang National UniversityDisc: Daniel M Gomez, University of California Santa
Barbara
Papers: Who Believes Misinformation? A Profile ofVulnerability to False News in IndiaSimon Chauchard, Leiden UniversitySumitra Badrinathan, University of OxfordFringe Sources Are for Losers: How Election OutcomesAffect Media Choice (Pre-Recorded)Jenna Pedersen, Washington University in St. LouisTaylor Nicole Carlson, Washington University in St.LouisA Corrective Methodology to ClassifyingMisinformation on Social MediaNicklas Johansen, University of CopenhagenRebecca Adler-Nissen, University of CopenhagenMeasuring Belief in Misinformation Across InformationEcosystemsRichard Bonneau, NYUJonathan Nagler, New York UniversityJoshua A. Tucker, New York UniversityKevin Aslett, New York UniversityAaron S. Erlich, McGill University
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS197.27 ADVOCACY, VOTING, AND MOBILIZATIONRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Elizabeth Ann Shanahan, Montana State UniversityPapers: Expanding Skepticism: Populism in Climate Change
DiscourseJanel Jett, Purdue UniversityEnvironmental Voting Record: Consequences onIncumbentsĀVote Share in 2020Meagan Carmack, University of WashingtonAseem Prakash, University of WashingtonNives Dolsak, University of Washington
DailySchedule
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Political Connections and the Environmental Impacts ofForeign InvestmentsMeir Alkon, Harvard UniversityLegislators Do Not Harness Voter Support for DisasterPreparednessSarah Anderson, University of California, SantaBarbaraRob A. DeLeo, Bentley UniversityKristin Taylor, Wayne State University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS197.28 POPULISM GOES DIGITALRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: Jason Gainous, University of LouisvilleDisc: Jason Gainous, University of Louisville
Papers: Populism as Communication: Political Campaigning onFacebookKarolina Koc Michalska, Audencia Business SchoolUlrike Klinger, European University ViadrinaSocial Media, Polarization, Populism and DemocraticMovements: A Case Study on IranVahid Abedini, Florida International UniversityMohammad Rahbari, Allameh Tabataba'i UniversityA Novel Conceptual Framework for Measuring OnlineExtremismUgur Kursuncu, University of South CarolinaDilshod Achilov, University of Massachusetts -DartmouthJ.M. Berger, Multifaceted Media Group
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE197.29 NORMALIZING FASCISM IN THE FACE OF
PLURALISMRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: Kevin Duong, University of VirginiaDisc: Lars Toender, University of Copenhagen
Sean Parson, Northern Arizona University
Papers: āPussy Grabs BackĀ: Between Fascism, Feminism, andAbolitionism (Pre-Recorded)Jasmine Noelle Yarish, University of the District ofColumbiaReturning to MarcuseĀs'Repressive Tolerance'Megan Unden, Rutgers UniversityBringing Fascism Back In (Pre-Recorded)David Ost, Hobart and William Smith CollegesThe March on Washington: Parallels Between ItalianFascism and the MAGA MovementBrian J Griffith, University of California, LosAngeles
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS197.30 AGENCY AND MARGINALIZATION IN
CONSTRUCTIONS OF GOVERNANCERoom: WSCC, 618Chair: Nathalia Justo, Northwestern UniversityDisc: Nancy E. Wright, Pace University
Papers: Between Morality and Responsibility: The Limits of"Human" RightsNathalia Justo, Northwestern UniversityReassessing the Imperial Federation Debate in BritainĀsSettler ColoniesTheophile Deslauriers, Princeton UniversityEsther Robinson, Princeton University
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The Tension Within Norms: Agency and Risks inPursuit of Global Climate JusticeSwapna Pathak, Oberlin CollegeCarlotta Maria Minnella, Harvard UniversityMarcos Sebastian Scauso, Quinnipiac University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY197.31 ELECTIONS UNDER AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Manuel Cabal, University of ChicagoDisc: Cole J Harvey, Oklahoma State University
Manuel Cabal, University of Chicago
Papers: The Authoritarian Turnout Gap: Pro-RegimeMobilization in RussiaOra John Reuter, University of Wisconsin,MilwaukeeKeeping Authoritarians Competitive: Peripheries andSupport for IncumbentsLaura Garcia Montoya, Princeton UniversityRodrigo Barrenechea, Pontificia Universidad Católicadel Perú
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS197.32 TEXT ANALYSIS TECHNIQUES AND RHETORICRoom: WSCC, 619Chair: Amber Wichowsky, Marquette UniversityDisc: Jonathan Hassid, Iowa State University
Papers: China & USA through Italian Eyes: A Multi-methodsStudy on Twitter Communication (Pre-Recorded)Claudia Roberta Combei, University of BolognaFrank Maracchione, University of SheffieldFraming Inequality: Campaign Rhetoric in the NewGilded Age (Pre-Recorded)Meghan Condon, Loyola University ChicagoAmber Wichowsky, Marquette UniversityLaws in Translations: Translating Legal Text forResearch PurposesElizabeth Bloodgood, Concordia UniversityAnthony James DeMattee, Emory UniversityTakumi Shibaike, European University Institute
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP197.33 IMMIGRANT INCORPORATION IN THE EU AND
USRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Chair: Natalie Chwalisz, American UniversityDisc: Tom K. Wong, University of California, San Diego
Papers: Incorporation Through Disruption: State Mobilizations ofUndocumented YouthsFanny Lauby, William Paterson UniversityThe Economic Integration of Migrants in the EU: theImpact of MainstreamingSalta Zhumatova, University of British ColumbiaThe Politics of Place: Evidence from Refugees to theU.S.Mayya Komisarchik, University of RochesterBrian Daniel Libgober, Yale UniversityValentin Bolotnyy, Hoover InstitutionA Good Lawyer is Hard to Find: Effective Counsel inAsylum ProceedingsDaniel Bruce Braaten, Texas Lutheran UniversityClaire Angelique Nolasco Braaten, Texas A&M-SanAntonio
Saturday, 4:00 PM to 5:30 PM
Related Groups198.1 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: THINKING WITH
VOEGELIN TODAYRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: Steven McGuire, Villanova UniversityDisc: Richard Avramenko, University of Wisconsin
Steven McGuire, Villanova University
Papers: Comparing ĄEcumeneďand ĄTianxiaď: A Case StudyMuen Liu, Institute for Political Science, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-NürnbergScience or Scientism? COVID 19 and the United StatesDavid N. Whitney, Nicholls State UniversityThe Notion of Home: Politics and PrimordialityJames Greenaway, St. Mary's UniversityEric Voegelin's Relation with (and Critique of) ArnoldToynbeeHarald Bergbauer, University of Applied SciencesMunich
198.2 FEDERALIST SOCIETY FOR LAW AND PUBLICPOLICY STUDIES: METHODOLOGICALPLURALISM, LIBERTY, AND THE RULE OFLAW
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Anthony Deardurff, The Federalist Society for Law &
Public Policy StudiesNicholas W Garfinkel, The Federalist Society
Part: Ben Johnson, Penn State LawLaura Erika Jenkins, Syracuse UniversityMitch PickerillBarbara A. McGraw, Saint Mary's College of California
198.3 SOCIETY FOR GREEK POLITICAL THOUGHT:PLATO ON PHILOSOPHY AND LAW
Room: WSCC, 2BChair: Ariel Helfer, Wayne State UniversityDisc: Ariel Helfer, Wayne State University
John R. Wallach
Papers: Nomos Basileus: Customary Authority and SocraticRhetoric in Plato's SymposiumIvy Flessen, Duke UniversityThe LawsĀArgument in the Crito and MigrantObligations to Nondemocratic StatesGuillaume Bogiaris, University of West AlabamaThe Rule of Law and the Imitation of God in PlatoĀsLawsRobert A Ballingall, University of MaineRhetoric and Democracy in PlatoĀs Phaedrus andStatesmanAnn Ward, Baylor University
199.1 CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON TEACHINGRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom B
Co-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science EducationChair: Chiedo Nwankwor, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
Innterntional Studies
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Papers: Addressing Antiracism Through a Study of PoliticalScience SyllabiStephanie R. Golob, CUNY-Baruch CollegeViviana Rivera-Burgos, Baruch College, CUNYDavid R. Jones, Baruch College, City University ofNew YorkMarcus Johnson, UMD College ParkEls de Graauw, Baruch College, CUNYHow Trauma-Informed Pedagogy Helps Us TeachReligion in Political ScienceMisbah Hyder, University of California, IrvineRigor Mortis: An Engagement with Rigor in PoliticalScience Education (Pre-Recorded)Wendy Wright, William Paterson UniversityThe Case for a āPedagogy of KindnessĀ: Now and in thePost-Pandemic UniversitySimone R. Bohn, York University
199.2 DIVERSIFIED APPROACHES TO SIMULATIONSAND GAMES IN THE CLASSROOM II(LIVESTREAMED)
Room: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
Chair: Renee B. Van Vechten, University of RedlandsPapers: Choose Your Own Adventure: A Virtual Alternative to
Model UNJohn A. Tures, Lagrange CollegeProfessor, Lawyer, Long Haul Trucker in the 2020ElectionCourtney Chenette, Hollins UniversityThe Governing Dead: How a Game about Zombies CanDemonstrate FederalismEdmond Hally, Ferrum CollegeWords Matter! Infusing International Relations withForeign Language & DiplomacyDalia Fikry Fahmy, Long Island University, Brooklyn
199.3 MULTIPLE METHODS FOR CIVICENGAGEMENT
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
Chair: TM Sell, Highline Community CollegeDisc: Kenneth A. Betsalel, University of North Carolina,
Asheville
Papers: Bring a Chair: Getting Methods Students out of theClassroom and into the FieldDouglas M. Cantor, Loyola Marymount UniversityFacilitating Impactful Civic Engagement withMetacognitive QuestionsShannon McQueen, West Chester UniversityBuilding Community to Promote Civic Engagement inan American Government CourseScott Spitzer, California State University, FullertonLori M Weber, California State University, Chico
199.4 OPENING UP THE PLAYBOOK: BROADENINGAPPROACHES TO TEACHING POLITICALSCIENCE
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 10: Political Science Education
Chair: Julio F. Carrion, University of Delaware
DailySchedule
Sunday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Civic Engagement Scholarship: What We Can Learnfrom the ResearchDavid J Hurley, Indiana University South BendElizabeth A. Bennion, Indiana University South BendKayla Christine IsenbletterPersonalized Screencast Feedback: Rethinking How WeRespond to Student WritingLevente Szentkirályi, University of Colorado atBoulderPromoting Pluralism in Unexpected Places: The Valueof Experiential EducationMark David Hamilton, Inter-American DefenseCollegeSamuel R. Greene, Shepherd UniversityRoberto Pereyra Bordon, Inter-American DefenseCollege
Saturday, 4:30 PM to 5:30 PMAPSA Events200.1 APSA CENTENNIAL CENTER GRANTEE
SOCIAL RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual200.2 APSA DIVERSITY FELLOWSHIP PROGRAM &
RBSI ALUMNI RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual200.3 MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual200.4 NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTIONRoom: Virtual
Saturday, 5:30 PM to 7:00 PMAPSA Events201.1 TLC AT APSA RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom A
Saturday, 6:30 PM to 7:30 PMAPSA Events202.1 APSA GRADUATE STUDENT HAPPY HOURRoom: Sheraton, Cirrus Ballroom202.2 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY BUSINESS MEETINGRoom: Sheraton, Willow A
Saturday, 7:30 PM to 9:00 PMAPSA Events203.1 ERIC VOEGELIN SOCIETY RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Aspen203.2 SPSA MEET AND GREETRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan B203.3 STANFORD INTERNET OBSERVATORY HAPPY
HOURRoom: Sheraton, Ballard203.4 UCLA POLITICAL SCIENCE RECEPTIONRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan A
Sunday, October 3, 2021VirtualSunday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AMAPSA Events204.1 LIGHTNING ROUND: RESEARCH IN FIVE:
GRADUATE STUDENTS IIIRoom: Virtual
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Chair: Biko Koenig, Franklin & Marshall CollegeDisc: Biko Koenig, Franklin & Marshall College
Papers: Community Organizing for Affordable Housing andAnti-Displacement PolicyMarisa K Westbrook, University of Colorado DenverImmigration Attitudes in the U.S.: Economic Outlookand Cultural Threat PerceptionReha Atakan Cetin, University of FloridaSebastian Tobon Palma, University of Illinois atChicagoThe Effect of Partisan Competition on Tolerance ofElection CheatingErik Clarke, Ohio State UniversityThe Four Faces of Partisan AffectJoseph Phillips, Pennsylvania State UniversityThe Knowledge Within: Conceptualizing AfricanAmerican Political KnowledgeJasmine Jackson, Purdue UniversityWe Are Watching: Explaining the US MediaĀs SelectiveAttention on World LeadersRuilin Lai, The Hong Kong University of Science andTechnology
Division PanelsDIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY205.1 BETWEEN TRUST AND CONTESTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Nadia Urbinati, Columbia UniversityDisc: Paul W. Ludwig, St. John's College
Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
Papers: The Two Faces of Democracy: Between Agonism andDeliberationMolly Scudder, Purdue UniversityStephen K. White, University of VirginiaTrust, Enmity, and the Necessity of AtonementEric Cheng, Waseda UniversityWhy Democratic Trust Needs MistrustStephanie Ahrens, Princeton UniversityWhat Is It Like to be a Partisan? MeasuringPartisanship & Its Democratic ValueKevin J. Elliott, Murray State University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY205.2 RACIAL CAPITALISM, DECOLONIZATION, AND
TRANSNATIONAL WHITE SUPREMACYRoom: VirtualChair: Mark Golub, Scripps CollegeDisc: Scott Benjamin Ritner, SUNY Potsdam
Papers: Deprovincializing Racial Capitalism: J Crawfurd andSettler Colonialism in IndiaOnur Ulas Ince, Singapore Management UniversityEdmund Burke, the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade, and theTwo Faces of AbolitionRoss Carroll, University of ExeterProblems of Plural Societies: Debates in the PoliticalEconomy of DecolonizationJoy Wang, Yale UniversityRace War: A Political Theology of Transnational WhiteSupremacyJacob Kripp, Johns Hopkins University
Sunday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY205.3 GLOBALIZATION, COSMOPOLITANISM, AND
NON-WESTERN THEORYRoom: VirtualPapers: Between Pluralism and Normativity: Urban Political
Theory for a Globalised WorldMarta Wojciechowska, King's College LondonCommunal-Cosmopolitanism, Non-Domination andPluralismJoshua Anderson, Virginia State UniversityThe Authenticity Problem of Non-Western LiberalPracticesYujin Choi, Columbia University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY205.4 INTERGROUP CONTACT AND CONFLICTRoom: VirtualChair: Chagai Weiss, University of Wisconsin - MadisonPapers: Can Deliberative Minipublics Tackle Polarization
Among the Wider Public?Lisa van Dijk, KU LeuvenEmma Turkenburg, KU LeuvenJames Timothy Pow, Queen's University BelfastHow Exposure to Foreign Cultures Affects OneĀsOpinion of Foreign Countries?Gong Chen, Georgia State UniversityInter-Group Contact and Collective Action in MixedIsraeli NeighborhoodsStephanie Dornschneider, University College DublinMiles Hewstone, Oxford UniversityOliver ChristSarina J. SchäferIfat Maoz, University of PennsylvaniaSamer Halabi, The Acedemic College of Tel AvivYaffoDanit Sobol-Sarag, Interdisciplinary Center HerzliyaRethinking EthnocentrismJames Newburg, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY205.5 FORMAL MODELING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:
EPISTEMOLOGY AND METHOD(S) MINI-CONFERENCE: EPISTEMOLOGICAL PLACE OFFORMAL MODELS
Room: VirtualChair: James E. Alt, Harvard UniversityPart: Robert H. Bates, Harvard University
Gary W. Cox, Stanford UniversityCarol A. Mershon, University of VirginiaJames D. Morrow, University of Michigan, Ann ArborKenneth A. Shepsle, Harvard University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY205.6 METHODS TO STUDY ACCOUNTABILITY AND
CRIMINAL JUSTICERoom: VirtualChair: Kevin A. Clarke, University of RochesterDisc: Wahideh Achbari, University of Amsterdam
Papers: A Generalized Sensitivity Analysis for ObservationalDesignsThomas Leavitt, Columbia UniversityLuke MiratrixJacob Bowers, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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Experimental Evaluation of Algorithm-Assisted HumanDecision-MakingKosuke Imai, Harvard UniversitySooahn Shin, Harvard UniversityRyan Halen, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesProsecutor Elections and Police AccountabilityAllison Stashko, University of UtahHaritz Garro, Stanford University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS205.7 AUTHORITARIAN DURABILITY &
ADAPTABILITYRoom: VirtualChair: Barry Maydom, Birkbeck College, University of LondonDisc: Gretchen G. Casper, Pennsylvania State University
Papers: Authoritarian Politics and Constraints: Ideology,Populism, and Civil SocietyTom Hanna, University of HoustonFrom Hu to Xi: A Corpus-Based Approach toDescribing Policy Diffusion in ChinaWeiyi Shi, University of California, San DiegoXueYing Hu, University of California, San DiegoYang Yang, UC San DiegoGood Czars and Bad Boyars: Power-Sharing and Blamein Authoritarian RegimesScott Williamson, Bocconi UniversityThe Political Economy of Party Recruitment in ChinaTianguang Meng, Tsinghua UniversityZesen Yang, Tsinghua University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS205.8 REPRESSION AND CENSORSHIPRoom: VirtualChair: Austin Michael Mitchell, Tohoku UniversityDisc: Scott Gates, PRIO and University of Oslo
Papers: Hollowed Out: The Impact and Mechanism of theTargeted RepressionYuequan Guo, University of MichiganThe Signaling Effect of Censorship in AutocraciesShuyuan Shen, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignWhen Citizens Demand More CensorshipQitong Cao, Stanford Graduate School of BusinessYunpeng Bai, Yale UniversityDivide and Rule: Permits, Protest, and the Opposition inAutocraciesKaterina Tertytchnaya, University College London
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES205.9 VIOLENT DEMOCRACY IN THE GLOBAL
SOUTH: EVIDENCE FROM MEXICORoom: VirtualChair: Rebecca V. Bell-Martin, Tecnologico de MonterreyDisc: Michael Lee Weintraub, Universidad de los Andes
Gema Santamaria, Loyola University Chicago
Papers: The Shadow Police: Crime, Impunity, & MexicoĀsHybrid Police ForcesLogan Puck, Bates CollegePerceptions and Normalization of Violence in MexicoĀsDrug WarIsabel Laterzo, UNC Chapel HillOmar Garcia-Ponce, George Washington University
DailySchedule
Sunday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Militarizing Law Enforcement and Organized CriminalViolence in MexicoJavier Osorio, University of ArizonaFueling Organized Crime: Oil Theft and the MexicanDrug WarGianmarco DanieleGiacomo Battiston, Bocconi UniversityMarco Le Moglie, Bocconi UniversityPaolo Pinotti, Bocconi University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES205.10 INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE AND POLITICAL
CONTROL IN CHINARoom: VirtualChair: Victor C. Shih, UCSDDisc: Victor C. Shih, UCSD
Daniel Mattingly, Yale University
Papers: The Widening Use of Inspections in XiĀs ChinaChristopher Carothers, University of PennsylvaniaZhu Zhang, Tulane UniversityA Comparison of Covid-19 and Other Emergencies inChinese GovernanceHuan GaoReturn of the Princelings: Analyzing DynasticSuccession in Contemporary ChinaTao Li, University of MacauBalance of Power and Changes to Political SelectionMechanisms in ChinaJerome DoyonRevolutionaries for Railways: Informal Lobbying andLocal Development in ChinaChengyuan Ji, Shanghai Jiao Tong UniversityXiao Ma, Peking University
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES205.11 SUPPORT FOR DEMOCRACY AND
DISTRIBUTIVE POLICIESRoom: VirtualChair: Pauliina Patana, Harvard UniversityPapers: COVID-19, Political Accountability, and Democracy
Michael Becher, IE School of Global and PublicAffairsNicolas Longuet Marx, Columbia UniversityVincent Pons, Harvard Business SchoolDeservingness, Economic Anxiety, and Support for theElderly in Aging SocietiesTimothy Hellwig, Indiana University, BloomingtonYesola Kweon, Utah State UniversityGeographies of Discontent: Manufacturing Decline andDemocratic SatisfactionAnne Jeannet, University of MilanChiara Allegri, Bocconi UniversityUrban-rural Differences in Attitudes TowardsDistributive PoliciesMichael Pinggera, University of Zurich
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY205.12 EUROPEAN POLITICAL ECONOMYRoom: VirtualChair: Ben William Ansell, University of OxfordDisc: Jeremy Ferwerda, Dartmouth College
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Papers: Do Changes in Constituency House Prices Change HowMPs Speak About Housing?Ben William Ansell, University of OxfordJacob Nyrup, University of OsloLaure Sarah Bokobza, Nuffield College, University ofOxfordThe Salience of Immigration and Its Effects on WelfarePrioritiesMatthias Enggist, University of ZurichPopulist Right Success and Mainstream PartyAdaptation: The Case of Free TradeAlex Honeker, University of PittsburghExternal Enablers of the EurozoneĀs Austerity BiasPalma Polyak, Scuola Normale Superiore
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY205.13 DESIGNING ECONOMIC COERCIONRoom: VirtualDisc: Byungwon Woo, Yonsei University
Papers: Conflicted Aid? How Donor Goals Shape Foreign AidEfficacyAllison Carnegie, Columbia UniversityAdam G. Lichtenheld, Yale UniversityPriyanka Sethy, Columbia UniversityEconomic Sanctions, Hostility, and Consumer Behaviorin Target StatesRena Sung, University of PittsburghLanguage in Congress: Domestic Constituent Influencein Foreign Aid DecisionsEsol Cho, SUNY at BinghamtonThe Economic Coercion TrilemmaMichael-David Mangini, Harvard University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY205.14 TRANSNATIONAL PRIVATE GOVERNANCE
UNDER STRESS: THE CASE OFSTANDARDIZATION
Room: VirtualChair: Genia Kostka, Freie Universität BerlinDisc: Tim Buthe, Technical University of Munich (TUM)
Alanna Krolikowski, Missouri University of Science andTechnology
Papers: The ISO Under Stress: Will It Bend or Break?Stepan Wood, University of British ColumbiaDiffusion of Practice: The Sino-German TechnicalStandardization PartnershipDaniel Fuchs, Humboldt University of BerlinSarah Eaton, Humboldt University BerlinICANNĀs Governmental Advisory Committee: HybridInstitutions & Global GovernanceMark Raymond, University of OklahomaGeopolitics of Standards Wars: A Perspective ofInternational Political EconomyHeejin Lee, Yonsei University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION205.15 COMPLEXITIES OF INTERNATIONAL
COOPERATION AND LAWRoom: VirtualChair: Soo Yeon Kim, National University of SingaporeDisc: Soo Yeon Kim, National University of Singapore
Terrence Chapman, University of Texas, Austin
Sunday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: Et Tu, Brute? Reputations, FDI, and Contract BreachEkrem T. Baser, New York University Abu DhabiWho Gets Scapegoated? Regime Complexes and BlameAttribution to the EU and IMFAyse Kaya, Swarthmore CollegeSamuel Handlin, Swarthmore CollegeThe Capacity for Bypass: State Capacity and ForeignAid Delivery TacticsSusan H. Allen, University of MississippiLauren Elizabeth Ferry, University of MississippiObaida Shammama, University of MississippiThe Effects of UN Covid-19 Aid on its Reputation inthe MENA RegionEyal Rubinson, Truman Institute for theAdvancement of Peace, Hebrew UniversityGadi Hitman
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY205.16 ECONOMIC SANCTIONS AND ECONOMIC
COSTSRoom: VirtualChair: Erin Baggott Carter, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Benedict Edward DeDominicis, Catholic University of
Korea
Papers: Domestic Support for Economic Sanctions: Legitimacyvs. EfficacySo Jin Lee, Duke UniversityPei-Yu Wei, Duke UniversityFactor Endowment, Electoral System and EconomicSanctionsChaeEun ChoRevisiting the Coercive Effect of Economic SanctionsCaitlin Scuderi, Rutgers UniversityJemilah PagatpatanWhy Do Some Rebel Groups Target CommunicationInfrastructure and Others Do Not?Mehmet Erdem Arslan, University of Essex
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY205.17 POSSIBILITIES AND LIMITATIONS OF PUBLIC
AND FACE-TO-FACE DIPLOMACYRoom: VirtualChair: Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Robert F. Trager, UCLA
Eric Min, UCLA
Papers: Echo Chambers and American and Chinese PublicDiplomacy during the COVID-19 EraShuhei Kurizaki, Waseda UniversityShohei Doi, Hokkaido UniversityTakayuki Mizuno, National Institute of InformaticsPublic Diplomacy Through Confucius Classrooms andImplicationsNaima Green-Riley, Harvard University(Mis)Understandings in Face-to-Face DiplomacySeanon Wong, Chinese University of Hong KongFramed National Images Change Policy AttitudesAmong Targeted ForeignCitizensKasey RheeCharles David Crabtree, Dartmouth College
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES205.18 CHOICES AND CONSEQUENCES IN ALLIANCE
DYNAMICSRoom: Virtual
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Chair: Clara H. Suong, Virginia TechDisc: Clara H. Suong, Virginia Tech
Papers: Adjusting Extended Deterrence: Managing an Ally Closeto an AdversarySuon Choi, Georgia Institute of TechnologyExploring RebelsĀChoice over Alliance and Infightingin Multi-party ConflictsYasutaka Tominaga, Hosei UniversityChia-yi Lee, National Chengchi UniversityMilitary Intervention, Credible Reassurance, andAlliance FormationMichael Cohen, Australian National UniversityBrandon Yoder, Australian National UniversityServing the Two Ends: The Influence of MilitaryAlliances on Civil WarsLeo Tamamizu, Graduate Center, CUNYMakito Takei, University of North Texas
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES205.19 CONFLICT, GENDER AND POLITICAL
REPRESENTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Kristen Kao, University of GothenburgDisc: Dino Hadzic, Trinity College, Dublin
Papers: WomenĀs Postwar Empowerment: Rights Reforms andHistorical Legacies of ConflictMilli Lake, London School of EconomicsSexual Violence, Disclosure and Social Resilience:Survey Evidence from DRCCarlo Koos, CMI - Chr. Michelsen InstituteSummer Lindsey, Rutgers University, New BrunswickExposure to Female Fighters and WomenĀsRepresentation: Evidence from UgandaLaura Huber, University of MississippiInsecurity and Preferences for Female Leadership:Evidence from AfghanistanSteve Monroe, Yale-NUS CollegeJasmine Bhatia, Nuffield College
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH205.20 GENDERED PUBLIC POLICY AND ATTITUDESRoom: VirtualChair: Irina Soboleva, Duke Kunshan UniversityDisc: Irina Soboleva, Duke Kunshan University
Papers: Can all Feminists be Friends? The Limits of Loyalty inFeminist FriendshipPinar Dokumaci, Queen's UniversityDeterminants of Including Gender-Related Provisions inTrade AgreementsSeungbin Park, University of AlabamaMi Jeong Shin, Shanghai University of Finance andEconomicsSister Citizen Soldier: Toward a Feminist Ideal ofMilitary ProfessionalismLayla Picard, University of Virginia
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS205.21 SURVEYS AND MEASUREMENT OF RELIGIONRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 37: Public OpinionChair: Tristan Hightower, University of Maryland, College Park
DailySchedule
Sunday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Disc: Amanda Friesen, Western UniversityPaul A. Djupe, Denison University
Papers: Measuring ĄWho is a Jew?ďand Why It MattersKenneth D. Wald, University of FloridaMichael D. Martinez, University of FloridaThe Partisan Dimensions of Civil Religion in the UnitedStatesAndrew R. Lewis, University of CincinnatiAbigail Vegter, University of KansasCammie Jo Bolin, Georgetown UniversityReligion and Electoral Predictions: The Case of the2019-2020 Israeli ElectionsMaximilian Overbeck, The Hebrew University ofJerusalemTali Aharoni, The Hebrew University of JerusalemChristian Baden, The Hebrew University ofJerusalemMichael Freedman, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnologyKeren Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Hebrew University ofJerusalemReligious Pluralism and Religion-State Relations:A Comparison of 183 CountriesShaheen Mozaffar, Bridgewater State University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION205.22 METHODS TO BETTER REPRESENT THE
PUBLICRoom: VirtualChair: Seo-young Silvia Kim, American UniversityDisc: Elizabeth J. Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University
Papers: Estimating Historical Public Opinion in the States withClustered MRPMichael Auslen, Columbia UniversityLexicographic Preferences in Candidate ChoiceSimon Calmar Andersen, Aarhus UniversityMorten Hjortskov, VIVESix-Point Response Scales: A New Standard for(Multinational) Survey Research?Farsan Ghassim, Lund UniversityEver Considered (Not)Voting for a Party? ComparingPTV and Vote Choice QuestionsAndrei Zhirnov, University of ExeterMert Moral, Sabancı University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION205.23 FACT-CHECKING AND MISINFORMATION
CORRECTIONRoom: VirtualChair: Nicolò Fraccaroli, Brown UniversityDisc: Daniel E. Bergan, Michigan State University
Papers: Effects of Fact-Checking: How Fake News CoverageCan Influence CampaigningMona Krewel, Victoria University of WellingtonJulius LagodnyNudging News Consumption: Evidence from a SurveyExperiment in the UKSimge Andi, University of OxfordRichard Fletcher, University of Oxford
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Perceiving Fact-Checks as Biased but NeverthelessPersuaded?Je Hoon Chae, Yonsei UniversityHyunjin Song, University of Vienna, AustriaSang Yup Lee, Yonsei UniversityMedia Coverage of Fact-Checking and Elite Spread ofMisinformationDaniel E. Bergan, Michigan State UniversityDustin Carnahan, Michigan State UniversitySuhwoo Ahn, Michigan State University, School ofCommunication Arts and SciencesSiyuan MaNate GimbyIsabel Claire Virtue, Michigan State UniversityJohnny McGraw, Michigan State University
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS205.24 CIVIC MEDIA: LOCAL GOVERNMENT AND
ELECTED OFFICIALS' USE OF DIGITAL TOOLSRoom: VirtualChair: Maxat Kassen, Nazarbayev UniversityDisc: Charles L. Mitchell, Grambling State University
Papers: Evaluating Topic Models: Puerto Rican Legislators TalkStatehood on TwitterMayra Velez-Serrano, University of Puerto Rico, RioPiedras CampusJason Gainous, University of LouisvilleKevin Wagner, Florida Atlantic UniversityPoliticians' Complaint Response: E-Governance andPersonal RelationshipsWilliam O'Brochta, Washington University in St.LouisState Capacity, Information, and Digital TechnologiesMaria Federica Carugati, King's College LondonCyanne E. Loyle, Pennsylvania State UniversityJessica Steinberg, Indiana University- InternationalStudiesVariations in Urban E-participationSveinung Legard
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS205.25 PATHS OF LEGITIMIZATION AND DE-
LEGITIMIZATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Lori Helene Gronich, George Washington UniversityDisc: Ayse Zarakol, University of Cambridge
Papers: Diplomacy as Domestic Authority: Ming and QingTribute Exchanges, 1369ĉ1891Austin Strange, University of Hong KongFeeling Right(s)?: The ECtHRĀs Construction ofReligious OffenseGina Giliberti, Northwestern UniversityThe āMantle of Multilateral AnonymityĀ: the US, theIMF and Brazil, 1956-1959Fernanda OliveiraZhou Enlai: A Life of Loyalty and MeditationGrace C. Huang, St. Lawrence University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY205.26 BUREAUCRACY, INSTITUTIONS, AND
AUTHORITARIAN RULERoom: VirtualChair: Fernando Bizzarro Neto, Harvard UniversityDisc: Stefan Wurster, Technical University Munich
Sunday, 6:00 AM to 7:30 AM
Papers: A Thorn in the Side: Populist Government PressuresAgainst Local AdministrationsEliska Drapalova, University of GoteborgDecentralized Networks and Bureaucratic Careers inAutocraciesAlexander De Juan, Osnabrück UniversityFelix Haass, University of OsloJan Henryk Pierskalla, Ohio State UniversityEthnic Minority Legibility in ChinaMartin Dimitrov, Tulane University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS205.27 HUMAN RIGHTS AND PLURALISMRoom: VirtualChair: Sosamma Samuel-Burnett, G.L.O.B.A.L. JusticePapers: Implications of Partisanship & Political Extremism on
Pluralism & Human RightsSosamma Samuel-Burnett, G.L.O.B.A.L. JusticeProblems with ToleranceZehra F. Kabasakal Arat, University of Connecticut-StorrsSpecialized Justice in Plural Societies: NGOs andViolence Against Women LawsShannon Drysdale Walsh, University of MinnesotaDuluthVeronica Michel-Luviano, John Jay College-CUNY
Part: Weiting Wu, Shih Hsin UniversityShannon Drysdale Walsh, University of MinnesotaDuluthVeronica Michel-Luviano, John Jay College-CUNY
DIVISION 46: QUALITATIVE METHODS205.28 PROCESS TRACING AND CAUSAL
MECHANISMSRoom: VirtualChair: Ingo Rohlfing, Universität zu KölnDisc: Ezequiel Alejo Gonzalez Ocantos, University of Oxford
Papers: Bayesian Nested AnalysisLion Behrens, University of MannheimIngo Rohlfing, Universität zu KölnProcess Tracing ĉ Towards a New Research AgendaJeffrey T. Checkel, European University InstituteWhat Is Distinctive About Process Tracing?Christopher Clarke, University of Cambridge
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH205.29 EXPERIMENTS IN INEQUALITY, FAIRNESS,
AND REDISTRIBUTIONRoom: VirtualChair: Isabela Mares, Yale UniversityDisc: Charlotte Cavaille, University of Michigan, Ford School
of Public PolicyElias Dinas, European University Institute
Papers: How Exposure to Local Inequality Shapes PoliticalEfficacy and Participation?Kris-Stella Trump, University of MemphisMelissa Sands, London School of EconomicsFairness Across the World: Preferences and BeliefsAlexander Cappelen, Norwegian School of EconomicsFairness, Risk and the Welfare StateVerena Rebecca Fetscher, University of HamburgDavid Rueda, University of Oxford
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Does Support for Redistribution Mean What We ThinkIt Means?Shir Raviv, Tel Aviv UniversityYotam Margalit, Tel Aviv University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP205.30 MIGRATION AND CITIZENSHIP IN EAST ASIARoom: VirtualChair: Angela Ju, St. Edward's UniversityDisc: Erin Aeran Chung, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Between Communitarian & Grassroot Citizenship:Historiography of "Min" in KoreaBoyun Kim, University of California, IrvineCare Citizenship: Comparing Migrant Care WorkerPolicies in East AsiaYi-Chun Chien, National Chengchi UniversityTaiwanĀs Lack of Policies for Mainland ChineseMigrants and RefugeesAngela Ju, St. Edward's UniversityPublic Perception of Migrants: Impact of MulticulturalPolicy in Japan and KoreaYu Jin Woo, Waseda UniversityJaehyun Song, Kansai University
DIVISION 54: IDEAS, KNOWLEDGE, AND POLITICS205.31 POPULISM: COMPLEX CONCEPTS AND
INNOVATIVE METHODSRoom: VirtualChair: Carlos de la Torre, University of FloridaDisc: Carlo Invernizzi Accetti, City University of New York -
City College
Papers: For a Complex Definition of PopulismPaula Diehl, Christian Albrechts University of KielQuantitative Populism: Of Shapes and ShadesTill Weber, Baruch College & The Graduate Center,CUNYEthnographic Methods in Populism Research: Towards aMultidimensional ApproachGiorgia Bulli, University of FlorenceA Politolinguistic Approach to PopulismMartin Reisigl, University of Vienna
Related Groups206.1 BRITISH POLITICS GROUP: REPRESENTATION,
WELFARE, AND THE STATE IN THE UNITEDKINGDOM
Room: VirtualChair: Janet M. Laible, Lehigh UniversityDisc: Sarah PICKARD, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle - Paris
3
Papers: G.I. Joe vs Tommy Atkins: Comparison of VeteransĀBenefits in the U.S. and U.K.Melissa Keller, University of OregonDiagnosing the Health of British DemocracyRichard Rose, University of StrathclydeTory Welfare in the Age of Brexit: From Cameron toJohnsonDaniel Pitt, University of Hull
206.2 ERIC VOEGLIN SOCIETY: THE INFLUENCEAND RECEPTION OF ERIC VOEGELIN'SPHILOSOPHY IN BRAZIL
Room: Virtual
DailySchedule
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Chair: Gustavo A. Santos, National Ministry of Women,Family, and Human Rights
Disc: Eduardo Schmidt Passos, Texas State University, SanMarcosGustavo A. Santos, National Ministry of Women,Family, and Human Rights
Papers: Lima Vaz and Eric Voegelin: Roots and Meanings ofModernityAlvaro Pimentel, Faculdade Jesuita de Filosofia eTeologiaThe Reception of Voegelin and Arendt in Brazil: MeiraPenna and Celso LaferDaiane Eccel, UFSC - Universidade Federal de SantaCatarinaNihilism in Gustavo Corção and Eric VoegelinRodrigo Coppe Caldeira, Pontifícia UniversidadeCatólica de Minas GeraisRodrigo de Abreu OliveiraNational Personality and International TradeScott Robinson, University of Houston, Downtown
206.3 INTELLIGENCE STUDIES GROUP: TOPICS ANDAPPROACHES IN STUDYING INTELLIGENCE
Room: VirtualChair: Glenn P. Hastedt, James Madison UniversityDisc: Igor Kovac, University of Cincinnati
Papers: Beyond Borders: Sharing Intelligence in TransnationalPublic-Private NetworksMaria Robson, Northeastern UniversityQuantifying IntelligenceAndrew Macpherson, University of New HampshireGlenn P. Hastedt, James Madison UniversityStrategic Restraint in Economic Intelligence PolicyUnder TrumpMichael Kunz, University of TorontoIntelligence-Sharing with the IAEA: BalancingCapabilities and LegitimacyRobert Reardon, North Carolina State University
206.4 POLITICAL FORECASTING GROUP:FORECASTING THE 2021 GERMAN FEDERALELECTION
Room: VirtualChair: Andreas Graefe, Macromedia University of Applied
SciencesDisc: Debra Lynn Leiter, University of Missouri-Kansas City
Papers: Forecasting the 2021 Federal German election : A SURPolitical Economy ModelBruno Jerome, University of Paris II Pantheon AssasVeronique Jerome, University of Paris XI-Sud OrsayMichael S. Lewis-Beck, University of IowaForecasting German Parliamentary ElectionsMary Stegmaier, University of MissouriCitizen Forecasting of the 2021 German ElectionAndreas Erwin Murr, University of WarwickThe PollyVote Forecast for the 2021 German ElectionAndreas Graefe, Macromedia University of AppliedSciences
206.5 SOUTHEAST ASIAN POLITICS: NEWDIRECTIONS IN THE STUDY OF CONFLICTAND PLURALISM IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
Room: Virtual
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Chair: Amy H. Liu, University of Texas at AustinDisc: Johanna Kristin Birnir, University of Maryland, College
ParkAmy H. Liu, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Internet Controls and Ethno-Religious Conflict inSoutheast AsiaIrene PoetrantoWinning by Process? How the State Manipulates aStalled Conflict in MyanmarJacques Bertrand, University of TorontoAlexandre Pelletier, Cornell UniversityInsurgent Cohesion and Fragmentation in Indonesia andthe PhilippinesYuhki Tajima, Georgetown UniversityIndonesian Autonomies: Explaining Divergent Self-Government Outcomes in Aceh and PapuaShane J Barter, Soka University of AmericaHipolitus Wangge
207.1 NATIONALISM, POPULISM, AND COVID-19Room: VirtualChair: Zsuzsa Csergo, Queen's UniversityPart: Paul Goode, Carleton University
Florian Bieber, University of GrazDavid R. Stroup, University of ManchesterSinisa Malesevic, University College, DublinPrerna Singh, Brown UniversityJakub Wondreys, University of GeorgiaElizaveta Gaufman, University of Groningen
207.2 CROSS-DISCIPLINARY APPROACHES TOCONTEMPORARY CHINESE POLITICS
Room: VirtualChair: Maren Eilika Nele Noesselt, University of Duisburg-
EssenPart: He Li, Merrimack College
Fan YangWei Liang, Middlebury Institute of International StudiesRamnath Reghunadhan, Indian Institute of TechnologyMadrasYoel Kornreich, Tel Aviv University
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AMTheme Panels208.1 CHALLENGING PARADIGMS IN THE STUDY OF
BUREAUCRACYRoom: WSCC, 614Chair: Jan Henryk Pierskalla, Ohio State UniversityDisc: Ian R. Turner, Yale University
Rikhil R Bhavnani, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Papers: Failing the TestNicholas Kuipers, UC BerkeleyThe Limit of Decentralized Data Collection:Experimental Evidence from ColombiaNatalia Garbiras Diaz, University of CaliforniaBerkeleyTara L Slough, New York UniversityThe Political Economy of Oversight: Prosecutors andCorruption in BrazilGuillermo Toral, Vanderbilt University
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
208.2 EMOTIONS, BELIEFS, AND POLITICALBEHAVIOR IN PLURALISTIC SOCIETIES
Room: WSCC, 609Chair: Ryan Hubert, University of California, DavisDisc: Andrew Little, University of California-Berkeley
Papers: Anger and Political Conflict DynamicsKeith E. Schnakenberg, Washington UniversityCarly Nicole Wayne, Washington University in St.LouisHow To Keep Citizens Disengaged: Propaganda andCausal Misperceptions (Pre-Recorded)Korhan Kocak, Princeton UniversityCarlo Matthias Horz, Texas A&M UniversitySincere vs Strategic Voting: Is Irrationality Contagious?Gilles Serra, CIDE (Centro de Investigacion yDocencia Economicas)How Data Comes to BeChristopher J. Fariss, University of MichiganScott Tyson, University of Rochester
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY209.1 ECONOMIES OF VIOLENCE IN MODERN
STATECRAFTRoom: Sheraton, Willow AChair: Gianna Englert, Southern Methodist UniversityDisc: John R. Wallach
Papers: Representation and Punishment in the Political Theoryof Thomas HobbesSigny Thora Gutnick Allen, London School ofEconomicsThe Blind Spot in Biopolitics: Michel Foucault and thePower to Kill Life ItselfDaniel Zimmer, Cornell UniversityMontesquieuĀs Concern for the Inherent Danger of aStateĀs Despotism and His View on the CountervailingForces Against State Violence and the Outbreak ofViolent ConflictDirk Schuck, University of Erfurt
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY209.2 THE POLITICAL THEORY OF SENTIMENTS
AND PASSIONSRoom: Sheraton, Willow BChair: Alexandra Oprea, Australian National UniversityDisc: Michael C. Hawley, Duke University
Papers: PlatoĀs Theaetetus on the Love of Truth andTruthfulnessLorraine Pangle, University of Texas, AustinMachiavellian Honor and Political Ethics in an ImperfectRepublicAntong Liu, University of MarylandMontesquieuĀs Moderation: Honor and Public Virtue inan Age of Modern CommerceConstantine Vassiliou, University of HoustonNarrowing the Scope of Resentment in Adam Smith'sTheory of Moral SentimentsJohn T. Scott, University of California, DavisMichelle A. Schwarze, University of Wisconsin,Madison
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DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY209.3 INSURGENT IMAGINARIESRoom: WSCC, 608Chair: Jason Frank, Cornell UniversityDisc: Kevin Duong, University of Virginia
Papers: The Postcolonial Body: Injury, Repair, RecompositionBanu Bargu, University of California, Santa CruzAssembly, Affect and the Disorders of DesireStacey Liou, University of FloridaStench of Law: How Law Makes Itself "Real" byTransfer of Material Properties (Pre-Recorded)James R. Martel, San Francisco State UniversityThe Force of Farce: Emperor Soulouque and the Art ofRacial CaricatureKevin Olson, University of California, Irvine
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY209.4 RESPONSIBILITY IN A TIME OF
DISINFORMATIONRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: Doug Thompson, University of South CarolinaPapers: Thinking Responsibility Politically
Rachel Nusbaum, Brown UniversityThe Politics of Delusion: Reading Adorno on Right-Wing Extremism Today (Pre-Recorded)Lars Rensmann, University of Groningen'Gramscianism of the Right': On the Use and Abuse ofMetapolitics (Pre-Recorded)Michael Feola, Lafayette College
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY209.5 JUSTICE, INSTITUTIONS, AND DEMOCRATIC
ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: WSCC, 616Papers: Justice and Comnpensation
Julia MaskivkerJustifying Institutional Change in Non-Ideal CasesMohammad Shafiqur Rahman, University of OregonThe Most-Affected PrincipleDavid Froomkin, Yale University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY209.6 ACCOUNTABILITY, CRISIS AND EXCUSE-
MAKINGRoom: Sheraton, BallardChair: Gregory Sasso, Emory UniversityDisc: Gleason Judd, Princeton University
Papers: Electoral Systems, Competition, and Incentives forCorruptionUmberto Mignozzetti, Emory UniversityExternal Shocks and Anticipatory PanderingSaba Devdariani, California Institute of TechnologyPolicy Making in Times of CrisisPeter BilsFederica Izzo, UCSDUnder the Cover of Crisis: Electoral Accountability andPolicy LicenseDaniel A N Goldstein, Yale University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY209.7 BUYING INFLUENCE: POLITICAL ECONOMY
OF LOBBYING AND CAMPAIGNCONTRIBUTIONS
Room: Conference Center, Tahoma 1
DailySchedule
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Chair: In Song Kim, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDisc: Andrew Kerner, Michigan State University
Papers: Economic Concentration and Political Advocacy, 1999-2017Sepehr Shahshahani, Fordham Law SchoolNolan McCartyThe Firm-Level Effects of Access to the EUCommissionJohannes Wiedemann, Yale UniversityThe Political Consequences of Private Equity: Evidencefrom U.S. Leveraged BuyoutsFlorian Hollenbach, Copenhagen Business SchoolDavid Szakonyi, Higher School of EconomicsThe Political Consequences of Trade & TechnologicalChange in the UK and GermanyAchim AhrensDominik Hangartner, London School of EconomicsYotam Margalit, Tel Aviv University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY209.8 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF DEMOCRATIC
BACKSLIDING AND MALAPPORTIONMENTRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CDisc: Aditya Dasgupta, University of California, Merced
Dawn L. Teele, Johns Hopkins University
Papers: Democracy Distorted: The Role of MalapportionmentPablo Beramendi, Duke UniversityCarles Boix, Princeton UniversityMarc Guinjoan, Universitat Autònoma de BarcelonaMelissa Ziegler Rogers, Claremont GraduateUniversityDo American Voters Really Not Punish OvertAuthoritarian Behavior at the Polls? NaturalExperimental Evidence from the 2021 Insurrection of theUS CapitolSam van Noort, University of CambridgeSelf-Government Interrupted: Legacies of External Rulein Brazil and PolandDaniel W. Gingerich, University of VirginiaJan P. Vogler, University of Virginia
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY209.9 CAUSAL INFERENCERoom: WSCC, 2AChair: Verena Rebecca Fetscher, University of HamburgDisc: Robert Kubinec, Princeton University
Papers: Balancing Covariates in Randomized Experiments Usingthe Gram-Schmidt WalkFredrik Savje, Yale UniversityCausal Inference Under Temporal and SpatialInterferenceYe Wang, New York UniversityRegularized Regression for Covariate Adjustment withComplex Functional FormsApoorva Lal, Stanford UniversitySpillovers in COVID-19José Ramón Enríquez, Harvard UniversityHoracio Alejandro Larreguy, Harvard UniversityAlberto Simpser, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo deMexico
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DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS209.10 BUILDING AUTOCRACY: NEW THEORETICAL
INSIGHTS AND EMPIRICAL FINDINGSRoom: WSCC, 603Chair: Milan Svolik, Yale UniversityDisc: Jennifer Gandhi, Emory University
Papers: AutocratizationAnne Meng, University of VirginiaJack Paine, University of RochesterIndoctrination, Citizen Support and Political Regimes(Pre-Recorded)Anja Neundorf, University of GlasgowEugenia Nazrullaeva, Higher School of EconomicsK Northmore-BallKaterina Tertytchnaya, University College LondonOn the Move: Dictators, Security and CapitalRelocationsCarl Henrik Knutsen, Department of PoliticalScience, University of OsloLee Morgenbesser, Griffith UniversityInvestments in Fiscal Capacity Under Dictatorship andDemocracy, 1815-2015Jan Teorell, Stockholm UniversityPer Fredrik Andersson, Stockholm UniversityOriol Sabaté, Lund University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS209.11 PANDEMIC EFFECTSRoom: WSCC, 612Chair: John Taden, Pepperdine UniversityPapers: COVID-19, Climate Change, Norm Crisis, and Size:
Examining RelationshipsNancy E. Wright, Pace UniversityParty in Pandemic: Political Organizations and COVID-19 Response in ChinaJunyan Jiang, Columbia UniversityTianguang Meng, Tsinghua UniversityZesen Yang, Tsinghua UniversityUnderstanding the Global Patrimonial WaveStephen E. Hanson, College of William and MaryJeffrey Kopstein, University of California, IrvineAn Analysis of Government Policy Responses to thePandemic on Foreign InvestmentKyu Young Lee, Prairie View A&M University
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES209.12 CLIENTELISM AND DISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS 2Room: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Seth Nathan Soderborg, Harvard UniversityDisc: Adrienne LeBas, American University
Papers: Buying Better Brokers: Measuring the Relative Influenceof Broker TypesSeth Nathan Soderborg, Harvard University"Many People Like Me Got a House": Material Benefitsand Sociotropic VotingShikhar Singh, Yale UniversityNaming and Claiming: The Effects of PoliticiansLabeling Government BenefitsVirginia Oliveros, Tulane University
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES209.13 CONTRASTING EXPECTED AND ACTUAL
POLITICAL BEHAVIOR IN AFRICA AND THEMIDDLE EAST
Room: WSCC, 606Chair: Jennifer N. Brass, Indiana University, BloomingtonDisc: Jaimie Bleck, University of Notre Dame
Nicole E. Wilson, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Papers: Gender, Land Rights and Social Institutions in Malawi,Zambia, and KenyaAdam Harris, University College LondonLauren Honig, Boston CollegeEllen M. Lust, University of GothenburgCivil Society, Service Provision & PoliticalParticipation: What Relationship?Jennifer N. Brass, Indiana University, BloomingtonChristopher Gore, Ryerson UniversityAlesha Porisky, Northern Illinois UniversityLauren M. MacLean, Indiana University,BloomingtonElizabeth Baldwin, Indiana UniversityBeliefs About Democracy & Patterns of PoliticalBehavior in Africa & Middle EastErin Accampo Hern, Syracuse UniversityYael Zeira, Syracuse UniversityPuzzling Out Genuine Political Party Support in Sub-Saharan AfricaPaul Friesen, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES209.14 PARTIES, PLURALISM, AND ELECTORAL
POLITICS IN POST-COMMUNIST SETTINGSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Chair: Allison D. Evans, University of Nevada, RenoDisc: Allison D. Evans, University of Nevada, Reno
Olga A. Avdeyeva
Papers: Does Ethnicity Trump the Party? Experimental Evidencefrom RussiaOlga A. AvdeyevaSocial-Democratic Liberalization and ElectoralOutcomes in Post-Communist EuropeBinio S. Binev, Virginia TechLegitimacy from Electoral Manipulation: The MassCulture of Consensus Elections in Chinese VillageElections (Pre-Recorded)Jingping LIU, Pennsylvania State UniversityDeliberation in the Russian Duma: Legislative Speechesin a Hybrid-RegimeNicholas James, Oxford University
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY209.15 POPULISM, POWER, ACCOUNTABILITY, AND
OPPOSITION (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston UniversityDisc: Sheri Berman, Barnard College, Columbia University
Papers: Populism in Power and as a RegimeCarlos de la Torre, University of Florida
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Changing Dynamics of Government-OppositionRelations in Italy and TurkeySilvia Fuselli, Johns Hopkins University (SAIS)Erik Jones, Johns Hopkins UniversityExplaining the FN/RNĀs Electoral Performance in Francesince 2017Gabriel Goodliffe, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo deMexicoHow Populist Parties Use Accountability Claims Againstthe EUEugenia M. da Conceicao-Heldt, Technical UniversityMunichRobert Csehi, Bavarian School of Public Policy at theTechnical University Munich
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY209.16 POLICYMAKERS AS INDIVIDUALSRoom: WSCC, 3AChair: Mary Anne Madeira, Lehigh UniversityDisc: Philip B. K. Potter, University of Virginia
Papers: Bilateral Investment Treaties, Leadership Turnover, andEconomic ExpropriationsStefano Jud, Emory UniversityDan Reiter, Emory UniversityBanking Crises and the Selection and Survival ofWomen Finance MinistersTiffany D. Barnes, University of KentuckyBrenna Gail ArmstrongDiana Z. O'Brien, Rice UniversityDaina Chiba, University of EssexWomen Leaders and the Double Bind of InternationalTradeCourtney Burns, Bucknell UniversityJamie Elizabeth Scalera, Georgia SouthernUniversity
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY209.17 TRADE AGREEMENTS, NEGOTIATIONS, AND
INSTITUTIONAL DESIGN (PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded Presentations
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International CollaborationChair: Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford UniversityDisc: Judith Lynn Goldstein, Stanford University
Papers: Trade Agreements: What Do Governments Maximize?Francesco Amodio, McGill UniversityLeonardo Baccini, McGill UniversityWhat Can We Learn from Failed EconomicNegotiations?: Lessons from BITs and PTAsLauren C. Konken, Princeton UniversityHaillie Na-Kyung Lee, Seoul National UniversityA Deepening/Widening Tradeoff? Evidence from theGATT and WTODavid H. Bearce, University of Colorado, BoulderCody D. Eldredge, Oakland UniversityPTA Negotiations, Institutional Design, and UncertaintyEdward D. Mansfield, University of PennsylvaniaHelen V. Milner, Princeton UniversityJon C. W. Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin,Madison
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION209.18 COMPLIANCE AND DEFIANCE WITH
INTERNATIONAL COMMITMENTSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 3
DailySchedule
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Chair: Michael R. Tomz, Stanford UniversityDisc: Emily Hencken Ritter, Vanderbilt University
Papers: (For Whom) Is Context Pretext? Domestic AudienceReactions to Non-ComplianceRyan M. Powers, University of GeorgiaCompliance and Institutional Flexibility in ClimateChange CooperationJulia C. Morse, University of California, SantaBarbaraLea M. Toubian, University of Santa Barbara,CaliforniaInternational Disorganization: Anarchy, Compliance, andIncoherence in Global GovernanceTyler Pratt, Yale UniversityDo Americans Support War Crimes Prosecutions?Kelebogile Zvobgo, College of William & MaryAlan Simmons, Arizona State University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION209.19 NAVIGATING INSTITUTIONAL COMPLEXITY IN
WORLD POLITICSRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: Richard Clark, Princeton UniversityDisc: David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Richard Clark, Princeton University
Papers: Navigating Complexity: New Actors and Institutions inRegime Complexes (Pre-Recorded)Stephanie Claudia Hofmann, Graduate Institute ofInternational and Development StudiesOliver Westerwinter, University of St. GallenThe Global Regime for Digital GovernanceNiccolo BonifaiAbraham Newman, Georgetown UniversityQi Zhang, Georgetown UniversityInstitutional Interaction in Sovereign Debt RestructuringC. Randall Henning, American University-SISRegime Complexity and a Galvanizing Idea:Development Goals and IGO CoordinationMelanie H. Ram, California State University, Fresno
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY209.20 ESCALATION AND MEDIATIONRoom: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Holley E. Hansen, Oklahoma State UniversityPapers: Intervention at Your Own Peril: Patterns of War
Expansion and RetaliationHans-Inge Langø, University of Texas, AustinRevisiting Relationship Between Nuclear Weapons andInterstate Conflict BehaviorRizwan Asghar, University of California, DavisThe Prodoxical Effects of Mediators in InternationalDisputesLesley G. Terris, Interdisciplinary Center HerzliyaOrit E. Tykocinski, Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya(IDC)
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY209.21 SECURITY INSTITUTIONSRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: Ron Gurantz, Air War CollegePapers: Conflict Capital
Christine Cheng, King's College London
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Experimental Evidence on Status Attribution inInternational RelationsFilip Viskupic, South Dakota State UniversityPerceiving Institutional Performance: The LeagueĀsĄFailureďvs. UN ĄSuccessďKyle M. Lascurettes, Lewis & Clark College
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY209.22 USE OF FORCE IN THE FOREIGN POLICY
TOOLKITRoom: WSCC, 617Chair: Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State UniversityDisc: Mahmood Monshipouri, San Francisco State University
Papers: Shields, Swords, or Spears? Roles and Missions inMilitary AlliancesSameer Prem Lalwani, Henry L. Stimson CenterEvan B. Montgomery, Center for Strategic andBudgetary AssessmentsThe Carrot or the Stick? U.S. Presidents andCounterterrorism ToolsRichard M. Yon, United States Military AcademyAmira Jadoon, U.S. Military Academy at West PointUnderstanding the Trump Administration's Approach toState-buildingGeoffrey Swenson, City University of LondonVictim State Response Calibration to State-SponsoredTerrorismArjun Banerjee, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES209.23 THE CHANGING NATURE OF INTERSTATE
TERRITORIAL CONFLICT AND ITSMANAGEMENT
Room: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford UniversityDisc: Kenneth A. Schultz, Stanford University
Henk Erich Goemans, University of Rochester
Papers: Interstate Identity Claims Under the Territorial IntegrityNormPaul R. Hensel, University of North TexasChristopher Cody Macaulay, West Texas A&MUniversitySara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of IowaAndrew Owsiak, University of GeorgiaKrista E. Wiegand, University of TennesseeThe Causes of Modern ConquestDan Altman, Georgia State UniversityMelissa M. Lee, Princeton UniversityThe Shadow of Institutional Bias and TerritorialDisputesSongying Fang, Rice UniversityXiaojun Li, University of British ColumbiaNon-Intervention, Territorial Integrity, and Peace in theAmericasLuis Schenoni, University of Notre DameGary GoertzAndrew Owsiak, University of GeorgiaPaul F. Diehl, Independent Scholar
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES209.24 THE IMPLICATIONS OF REBEL GOVERNANCERoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Jori Breslawski, Tel Aviv UniversityDisc: Cyanne E. Loyle, Pennsylvania State University
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Megan A. Stewart, American University-SIS
Papers: The Myth of Rebel Governance and Its Implication forState BuildingSukanya Podder, King's College LondonUnlikely Allies: Collaboration Between Armed Groupsand Humanitarians (Pre-Recorded)Jori Breslawski, Tel Aviv UniversityResistance and Control: State Building Through Rebel-Civilian RelationsShelley Liu, UC BerkeleyJustice Provision and Legitimacy: Evidence fromTaliban Courts in AfghanistanAustin L. Wright, University of ChicagoRenard J Sexton, Emory University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES209.25 IMPLICATIONS OF PARTISANSHIP IN THE U.S.
CONGRESSRoom: WSCC, 618Chair: Craig Volden, University of VirginiaDisc: Gregory Koger, University of Miami
Sean M. Theriault, University of Texas, AustinJesse M. Crosson, Trinity University
Papers: Asymmetries in Optimized Partisan GerrymanderingNicholas Goedert, Virginia TechPredicting Intraparty Faction Membership Decisions inthe U.S. HouseZachary McGee, University of Texas, AustinShow Me the Evidence: Committee Reports &Congressional Lawmaking (Pre-Recorded)Rachel Augustine Potter, University of VirginiaJacob Michael Lollis, University of VirginiaUnification of Powers: When Effective LawmakersSponsor Presidential ProposalsSamuel Kernell, University of California, San DiegoRoger Larocca, Oakland UniversityCraig Volden, University of VirginiaAlan E. Wiseman, Vanderbilt University
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS209.26 POLITICS OF THE UNILATERAL PRESIDENCYRoom: WSCC, 303Chair: Brandon Rottinghaus, University of HoustonDisc: Lawrence S. Rothenberg, University of Rochester
Brandon Rottinghaus, University of Houston
Papers: Behavioral Foundations of Presidential AccountabilityKenneth Lowande, University of MichiganBenjamin Goehring, University of MichiganMaking Public ĄPolicyď: Executive Orders as Outreachin the Trump YearsAndrew C. Rudalevige, Bowdoin CollegeVictoria E. Yu, UnaffiliatedCongressional Responses to Presidents' UnilateralActions in Defense PolicyScott H. Ainsworth, University of GeorgiaBrian M. Harward, Allegheny CollegeKen Moffett, Southern Illinois University,EdwardsvilleThe Politics Precedents Make: Executive OrderPersistenceDavid Robert Foster, University of California,Berkeley
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DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION209.27 ACCOUNTABILITY AND PERFORMANCERoom: WSCC, 619Chair: Ricardo Andres Bello-Gomez, Texas Tech UniversityDisc: Claudia N. Avellaneda, Indiana University
Papers: Accounting for Corruption: Evaluating Audit Institutionsin MexicoAlejandro Beltran, University of ArizonaAutonomous Public Agencies and Their CivicDefenders: Mexico's INAISharon F. Lean, Wayne State UniversityDrivers and Performance Effects of Public PersonnelĀsAllocation and StabilityRicardo Andres Bello-Gomez, Texas Tech University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS209.28 COURTS IN TRANSITION, COURTS IN CRISISRoom: WSCC, 3BDisc: Anthony James DeMattee, Emory University
Papers: Judicial Backsliding: A Guide to Collapsing theSeparation of PowersLydia Brashear Tiede, University of HoustonStephan Haggard, University of California, San DiegoJudicial Decision-Making During Violence Conflict:A New Global DatasetOnur Bakiner, Seattle UniversityMadame Justice Will Save Our Democracy: Women andBias in Transitional RegimesChristopher ShortellMelody E. Valdini, Portland State UniversityMaking Militant Democracy Democratic: The Case forLegislaturesAustin Nelson, The University of Texas at Austin
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY209.29 STATE-LEVEL POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT:
CHANGING VOTERS, PARTIES, AND ACTIVISTSRoom: WSCC, 611Chair: Steven M. Sylvester, Utah Valley UniversityDisc: Zoe Nemerever, University of California San Diego
Andrew Hewitt Smith, Univ of Texas Rio GrandeValley
Papers: Electoral Patterns in Alabama: Local Change andContinuity Amid National TrendsRegina Wagner, University of AlabamaHas Mass Higher Education Affected DemocraticPolitics? A View from the StatesEric Hansen, Loyola University, ChicagoPartisan Politics in the 21st Century South: The FadingShadow of SlaveryIrwin L. Morris, North Carolina State UniversityFragmented Inclusion: Does Federalism Also InfluenceUnequal Advocacy?Elizabeth Wiener, The University of the SouthAshley Stewart, The University of the South
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS209.30 DYNAMICS OF RACIAL SEPARATION AND
SOLIDARITYRoom: WSCC, 401Chair: Paige Bollen, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyDisc: Jaime Dominguez, Northwestern University
DailySchedule
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Papers: Democracy Vouchers and Democratic RepresentationPatrick L Schoettmer, Seattle UniversityA Tale of Two Communities: The Ones That Organizedand Those Left BehindLuisa Godinez Puig, Boston UniversityPermeating Segregated Spaces: A Measure of DynamicSegregationPaige Bollen, Massachusetts Institute of TechnologyRacial Capitalism IsnĀt Enough: Mutual Aid asSolidarity in the Wake of COVID-19Christian Hosam, New AmericaDiane Wong, Rutgers University-Newark
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH209.31 GENDER, VIOLENCE, AND POLITICAL CRISESRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan AChair: Amanda Wintersieck, Virginia Commonwealth
UniversityDisc: Amanda Wintersieck, Virginia Commonwealth
University
Papers: Are the Democratic Implications of Political HarassmentGendered?Karina Kosiara-Pedersen, University of CopenhagenEthnic Violence, Gender Quotas and IndigenousWomenĀs Political LeadershipGopika Solanki, Carleton UniversityA Case Study of Human Trafficking in Southeast AsiaShao Fan Lin, The University of
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS209.32 PUTTING WHITE RACIAL ATTITUDES IN
CONTEXTRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Loren Collingwood, UC RiversideDisc: Allan Colbern, Arizona State University
Papers: Mapping White Racial Attitudes from Sea to ShiningSeaCamille Danielle Burge, Villanova UniversityPrincess Hope Williams, University of Michigan, AnnArborLong-Run Effects of School Segregation on Whites'PartisanshipTaylor Mattia, New York UniversityRace and White Rural ConsciousnessMatthew D. Nelsen, The University of ChicagoRacial Threat and the Construction of the New SouthMichael Greenberger, University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS209.33 PIPELINES AND PERCEPTIONS: GENDER
REPRESENTATION IN COMPARATIVEPERSPECTIVE
Room: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: David Lublin, American UniversityDisc: Stephanie S. Holmsten, University of Texas, Austin
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Papers: Do Elected Women Spearhead Gender Equality AmongPoliticians?Benjamin Egerod, Copenhagen Business SchoolLene Holm Pedersen, University of CopenhagenJens Olav Dahlgaard, Copenhagen Business SchoolThe Gendered Assessment of Public Opinion (Pre-Recorded)Stefanie Bailer, University of BaselChristian Breunig, University of KonstanzDaniel Hohmann, University of Basel
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR209.34 CANDIDATES' PERSONAL CHARACTERISTICS
AND THEIR PERFORMANCERoom: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Kimberly L. Shella, Southern Illinois University
CarbondaleDisc: Jeffrey W. Koch, SUNY-Geneseo
Papers: Do Voters Care About the Age of Their ElectedRepresentatives?Damon Charles Roberts, University of ColoradoBoulderJennifer Wolak, Michigan State UniversityPhysical Attractiveness and Candidate Success: Evidencefrom EcuadorVanessa Del Rocio Carrion Yaguana, Universidad delas AmericasRoyce A. Carroll, University of EssexThe Fairer but Less Electable Sex?: Perceptions of aCandidate's Ability to WinElizabeth N. SimasThe Masculine/Feminine Double Bind: A SurveyExperiment of Gendered ElectionsSierra Davis Thomander, Stanford University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR209.35 DIMENSIONS OF ELECTORAL COMPETITIONRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3Chair: Robert N. Lupton, University of ConnecticutDisc: Nathan Henceroth, Albright College
Papers: European Social Democracy and the Trade-Offs of PartyCompetitionTarik Abou-Chadi, University of ZurichFabrizio Gilardi, University of ZurichReto Mitteregger, Institut für PolitikwissenschaftenZürichNadja Mosimann, University of GenevaMarkus Wagner, University of ViennaPopulist Shocks: The Effect of Populist Victories onAttitudes of the OppositionJames Fahey, University of Florida--Dept. of PoliticalScienceHannah Marie Alarian, University of FloridaTrevor J Allen, Central Connecticut State UniversityThe Importance of Issue Domains in AmericanPresidential ElectionsMarcos Menchaca, University of Texas at El Paso
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION209.36 INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO
UNDERSTANDING VOTER PREFERENCESRoom: WSCC, 615Chair: James Adams, University of California, DavisDisc: James Adams, University of California, Davis
Sunday, 8:00 AM to 9:30 AM
Randolph T. Stevenson, Rice University
Papers: Snap ElectionsĀDiverse Effects on VotersZeynep Somer-Topcu, University of Texas at AustinKendall Curtis, University of Texas at AustinVotersĀPreferences for Parties' Moral RhetoricJae-Hee Jung, University of HoustonHow Election Outcomes Influence Voter EmotionsChristopher Lucas, Washington University in St.LouisJacob M. Montgomery, Washington University in St.LouisTaishi Muraoka, Washington University in St. LouisMargit Tavits, Washington University in St. LouisThe Economic Roots of Cross-National Similarity inVoter PreferencesDavid Fortunato, University of California, San DiegoSebastian Juhl, University of MannheimLaron K. Williams, University of Missouri, Columbia
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION209.37 RECONSIDERING IDEOLOGY IN MASS
PUBLICSRoom: WSCC, 310Chair: Steven Greene, North Carolina State UniversityDisc: Steven Greene, North Carolina State University
Elizabeth Suhay, Government, American University
Papers: Democratic Competence Amid Scientific Advance:Public Views on Genetic BiobanksMeredith Dost, Harvard UniversityJennifer L. Hochschild, Harvard UniversityElizabeth Suhay, Government, American UniversityIdeology Among the Mass PublicJoseph Warren, University of California, BerkeleyAlan Nigel Yan, University of California, BerkeleyIdeology Matters: The Substantive Basis of IdeologicalIdentificationLucas de Abreu maia, University of California, SanDiegoInferring Belief Systems in Mass Publics: A PragmaticApproachJon Green, Northeastern UniversityNic FishmanNicholas Thomas Davis, University of Alabama
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION209.38 CUES THAT MATTERRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BChair: Kevin Aslett, New York UniversityDisc: Nikki Usher, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Papers: Political Cue Taking on Social Media Among TeensKevin Arceneaux, Sciences PoJohanna Dunaway, Texas A&M UniversityDavid W. Nickerson, Temple UniversityJaime E. Settle, College of William & MaryViewers like You: How Elite Co-Identity ReinforcementFacilitates PersuasionTyler Thomas Reny, Claremont Graduate UniversityJustin Gest, George Mason University
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Masking Concern: Congressional Social Media Imagesand Concern About COVID-19Mirya R. Holman, Tulane UniversityConstantine Boussalis, Trinity College DublinTravis Coan
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS209.39 WATER POLITICS AND GOVERNANCERoom: Sheraton, AspenChair: Kristin Taylor, Wayne State UniversityDisc: Kathryn Baragwanath
Papers: Making the Local, Global: Subnational Actor Roles inBinational Water GovernanceGemma Smith, Stanford UniversityHosed? Inequality, Redistribution, and the PoliticalEconomy of Water PricesDavid Switzer, University of MissouriManny P. Teodoro, University of WisconsinDisparities in Access to and Allocation of DrinkingWater State Revolving Funds (Pre-Recorded)Sara Hughes, University of MichiganKaty Hansen, Duke UniversityWater Markets as Governance Innovations:A Comparative Institutional AnalysisElizabeth Koebele, University of Nevada, RenoShelby Hockaday, University of Nevada RenoAbigail M. York, Arizona State UniversityLoretta Singletary, University of Nevada Reno
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS209.40 CRUSHING DIGITAL PLURALISM: THE
EVOLVING DIGITAL PRACTICES OFAUTHORITARIANISM (PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Marc Owen Jones, Hamad bin Khalifa UniversityDisc: Lisa Garbe
Papers: The Cybersecurity of Online Political News: Evidencefrom a World-Wide Web ScanAlexei Sisulu Abrahams, Harvard Kennedy SchoolUnpacking the Effect of Regime Types on Responses toMisinformationSamantha Bradshaw, Stanford UniversityGabrielle Lim, Harvard UniversityCarly Maya Miller, Stanford Internet ObservatoryThe Digital Tactical Innovation of the Syrian ArabSpring Movement (Pre-Recorded)Mona Elswah, University of Oxford
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY209.41 AUTHORITARIAN PROPAGANDA &
CENSORSHIPRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Chair: Ora John Reuter, University of Wisconsin, MilwaukeeDisc: Brett Logan Carter, University of Southern California
Papers: Media Responses to Government Repression: MachineLearning Evidence from TanzaniaFatih Serkant Adiguzel, Duke UniversityDiego José Romero, Duke UniversityErik M. Wibbels, Duke UniversityWhen Propaganda Sells: Private Production ofPropaganda Movies in ChinaLinan Yao, Columbia University
DailySchedule
Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Why Are Some Chinese Nationals SupportingGovernment Censorship?Ziyi Wu, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 51: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH209.42 EXPERIMENTS IN INFORMATION AND
ACCOUNTABILITYRoom: Virtual Platform, Zoom RoomChair: Guy Grossman, University of PennsylvaniaDisc: Guy Grossman, University of Pennsylvania
Miguel M. Pereira, University of Southern California
Papers: Choice Architecture for Messaging CorruptionRaymond Duch, CESS NuffieldFelipe Torres, University of OxfordCorrupt International Exchanges: Who Expects What ofWhom?Elizabeth David-Barrett, University of SussexInferences from Corrected Facts to NowhereAsmus Leth Olsen, University of CopenhagenClothes Make the Man: First Impressions andInformation SearchAnna Bassi, University of North Carolina, ChapelHillTyler Steelman, University of North Carolina, ChapelHill
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP209.43 DIASPORIC ENGAGEMENTSRoom: WSCC, 607Chair: Nikola Mirilovic, University of Central FloridaDisc: Elizabeth Iams Wellman, Williams College
Papers: Political Crises & Diaspora Enfranchisement: Egypt &TunisiaĀs Emigrant-CitizensAhmed Khattab, Georgetown UniversitySocial Protection Policies Towards Non-ResidentKeralites (Pre-Recorded)Mira Eileen Burmeister-Rudolph, University ofAmsterdamThe Long Reach of Campaigns: Americans in CanadaRespond to the 2020 US Election (Pre-Recorded)James A. McCann, Purdue UniversityRonald B. Rapoport, College of William & MaryRepression Through Time: Legacies of TransnationalRepression in the Diaspora (Pre-Recorded)Gözde Böcü, University of Toronto
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Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AMTheme Panels211.1 ENHANCING PLURALISM BY UNDERSTANDING
SYSTEMIC BIASESRoom: WSCC, 211Chair: Sonja M. Amadae, University of HelsinkiDisc: Jared Clemons, Duke University
Papers: Race and Judgment in Choice of RepresentativesCorrine M. McConnaughy, Princeton UniversityTina Tucker, Duke UniversityIsmail K. White, Princeton UniversityRace, Representation, and Mundane Anti-BlackDiscrimination in the United StatesRay Block, Penn State UniversityCharles David Crabtree, Dartmouth CollegeJohn Holbein, University of VirginiaQuin Monson, Brigham Young UniversityCoordination Causes Coarse ConceptsMichael Chwe, UCLAHow Pressures to Coordinate Can Foster SystemicDiscriminationSonja M. Amadae, University of Helsinki
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY212.1 DEMOCRATIC REPRESENTATION: ITS
ADVOCATES AND CRITICS IN MODERNPOLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: Sheraton, Willow APapers: Hannah Arendt and Representative Democracy:
Revaluating the Notion of ConsentLelde Luik, University of TartuMajority as Compromise: An Alternative Account ofMajoritarianism by Hans KelsenRyosuke Amiya-Nakada, Tsuda UniversityPolitical Vanguardism and Democratic Representation:From Saint-Simon to BlanquiWilliam Cameron, Cornell University
DIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY212.2 MODES OF RESISTANCE: DISSIDENCE,
REBELLION, AND REVOLUTIONARYSTRUGGLE
Room: Sheraton, Willow BChair: Benjamin McKean, Ohio State UniversityDisc: Camila Vergara, Columbia University
Papers: Jan Patocęka and Political Theory: Four Concepts ofDissidence (Pre-Recorded)Aspen Elizabeth Brinton, Virginia CommonwealthUniversityShaysĀRebellion as a Clash of Republican VisionsMark Stephen Jendrysik, University of North DakotaThe Right of Resistance: from the Monarchomacs toModern RepublicanismGonzalo Bustamante KuschelThe Modern Prince: Consent, Coercion, and Fidel CastroGabriel Vergara, University of MassachusettsAmherst
Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY212.3 POLITICAL THEORIES OF REPRODUCTIONRoom: WSCC, 608Chair: Jennifer DenbowDisc: Tamara Metz, Reed College
Annie Menzel, University of Wisconsin
Papers: Necessary Freedom: The Contradictions of Abortion inQuarantine (Pre-Recorded)Claire C. McKinney, William & MaryReproductive Labor as Space-Making: The SettlerColonial Home (Pre-Recorded)Rachel Brown, Washington University in St. LouisReproducing Racial Domination: Expropriation, theGreat Recession, and Covid-19 (Pre-Recorded)Siddhant Issar, University of VirginiaInnovation and the Crisis of Reproductive Labor (Pre-Recorded)Jennifer Denbow
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY212.4 TECHNOLOGY BETWEEN LIBERATION AND
DOMINATIONRoom: WSCC, 603Chair: Jennifer Forestal, Loyola University, ChicagoDisc: Jennifer Forestal, Loyola University, Chicago
Papers: Computer Modeling, Climate Prophecy, and Public Faithin ScienceAlexandra Catherine Neame, Stanford UniversityMatter, History, Critique: Engels After FrankfurtMatthew Shafer, Andrea Mitchell Center for theStudy of Democracy, University of PennsylvaniaAccomodationist or Socialist Institutions? Trade Unionsand Machine ProductionPeter Giraudo, Princeton University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY212.5 THE SCALE AND SCOPE OF DEMOCRACYRoom: WSCC, 607Chair: Doug Thompson, University of South CarolinaDisc: Doug Thompson, University of South Carolina
Papers: All the SovereignĀs Agents: Representative Democracyand the Administrative StateKatharine Jackson, University of DaytonSplitsville USA: A Democratic Argument for Breakingup the United StatesChristopher F. Zurn, University of MassachusettsBostonLeaving Workers Out: Exclusion in the Name ofWorkplace DemocracyKi Young Kim, Columbia University
DIVISION 4: FORMAL POLITICAL THEORY212.6 FORMAL MODELS OF DIPLOMACY AND
CONFLICTRoom: WSCC, 609Disc: Robert F. Trager, UCLA
Scott Abramson, University of Rochester
Papers: Conflict and Conservation (Pre-Recorded)Kristopher W. Ramsay, Princeton UniversityNoam Reich, Princeton University
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Uncertainty in Crisis Bargaining with Multiple PolicyOptionsPeter SchramBrenton Kenkel, Vanderbilt UniversityStability, Attribution, and Third Parties in CyberspaceRichard Pell Jordan, Baylor UniversityRobert F. Trager, UCLANegotiations as a Dynamic Screening ProcessNoam Reich, Princeton University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY212.7 GEOGRAPHIC DIVISIONSRoom: WSCC, 3BChair: Serdar Kaya, Simon Fraser UniversityDisc: Alessandro Del Ponte, Yale University
Wayde ZC Marsh, University of Notre Dame
Papers: The Psychology of Separation: Border Walls andInternational Neighborliness (Pre-Recorded)Beth A. Simmons, University of PennsylvaniaDiana C. Mutz, University of PennsylvaniaEvidence on the Political Psychological Potency of theUrban-Rural DivideKal MunisMeasuring the Strength of Provincial Identity in ChinaJingyuan ChengIs Geographic Polarization Self-Reinforcing?Jacob Brown, Harvard University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY212.8 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF POPULISMRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 3Chair: Sheri Berman, Barnard College, Columbia UniversityDisc: Erica Owen, University of Pittsburgh
Marko Klasnja, Georgetown University
Papers: Toxic Loans and the Rise of Populist CandidaciesEmilie Sartre, CREST - Ecole Polytechnique -ENSAEGianmarco DanielePaul Vertier, Sciences PoEconomic Upheaval & Radical-Right Voting: Evidencefrom a Regression Kink DesignHanno Hilbig, Harvard UniversitySascha Riaz, Harvard UniversityThe Effect of Economic Busts on Turning to the Right:Evidence from BrazilPaula Rettl, Bocconi UniversityNationalism or Economy? A Survey Experiment onPopulist Mobilization in ItalyNavid Mehrdad, Columbia University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY212.9 STATEBUILDING AND CONSOLIDATIONRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 1Chair: Mark Dincecco, University of MichiganDisc: Jan Henryk Pierskalla, Ohio State University
Papers: How Cities Made States (and Vice Versa)Emily VanMeter, University of RochesterImperial Rule and Long-Run Development: HumanCapital in the Ottoman Europe (Pre-Recorded)Bogdan Gabriel Popescu, Bocconi UniversityMircea Popa, University of Bristol
DailySchedule
Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Integrating Migrants, Winning Votes: Evidence from anAnti-Exploitation CampaignGemma Dipoppa, StanfordLaw or Environment? The Historical Origins of theAmerican Bureaucracy (Pre-Recorded)Rachel Augustine Potter, University of VirginiaJan P. Vogler, University of Virginia
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY212.10 DISCURSIVE INSTITUTIONALIST APPROACHES
TO APD: IDEAS, IDENTITIES, INSTITUTIONSRoom: WSCC, 2AChair: Jennifer Leonor Erkulwater, University of RichmondDisc: Vivien A. Schmidt, Boston University
Papers: The Production of Religious Right Discourses, 1965-1985Chelsea Ebin, Centre CollegeNew York's Invasive Cultures: From the SullivanCampaign to Harmful Algae BloomsJ. Ricky Price, St. John Fisher CollegeLicensing Terror and Illegality: DriverĀs LicenseDiscourseĚ 1903 to REAL IDJackie Vimo, New School for Social ResearchThe Discursive Production of Fatherhood in PublicPolicyH. Howell Williams, Western Connecticut StateUniversity
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY212.11 SOCIAL MEDIA AND POLARIZATIONRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom CChair: Pablo Barbera, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Jennifer E. Cryer, University of Southern California
Papers: Do Online Video Recommendation Algorithms IncreasePolarization?Naijia Liu, Princeton UniversityMatthew A. Baum, Harvard UniversityAdam J. BerinskyJustin de Benedictis-Kessner, Harvard UniversityAndrew Guess, Princeton UniversityDean Knox, University of PennsylvaniaChristopher Lucas, Washington University in St.LouisBrandon Michael Stewart, Princeton UniversityJason Anastasopoulos, University of GeorgiaEcho Chambers vs Filter Bubbles: a Political Audit ofTwitter Recommender System (Pre-Recorded)Benjamin GuinaudeauSimon RothPolitical Polarization on Social MediaKellin PelrineReihaneh Rabbany, McGill UniversityAndré Blais, University of MontrealJean-Francois Godbout, Universite de MontrealWhy Do Twitter Birds of a Feather Flock Together? -An ABM ApproachQian Zhang, Purdue University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS212.12 CLIENTELISMRoom: WSCC, 606Chair: Nisha Mukherjee Bellinger, Boise State UniversityDisc: Cristina Corduneanu-Huci, Central European University
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Papers: Government Contacting and Lower-Class PoliticalRepresentation in Latin AmericaClaudio A Holzner, University of UtahParty Strategy and Public Opinion: How PatronageUndermines DemocratizationErin York, Vanderbilt UniversityThreats and Promises to Voters: A Typology ofClientelist Methods Across RegionsGilles Serra, CIDE (Centro de Investigacion yDocencia Economicas)Who Grants Favours? A Survey of Public Servants inGreeceIoannis Choulis, University of EssexAlexandra Hennessy, University of Essex
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS212.13 PARTIES & LEGISLATURESRoom: WSCC, 612Chair: Elisabetta De Giorgi, University of TriesteDisc: Elisabetta De Giorgi, University of Trieste
Papers: Latin American Legislative Database: AnalyzingPolitical Speech Across Countries (Pre-Recorded)Sebastian Vallejo Vera, University of HoustonJennifer L Tobin, Georgetown UniversityWhen Does Electoral Volatility Occur? Evidence fromElections around the WorldAndy Baker, University of Colorado, BoulderDalton Cunha DorrTrenton Gregory Marlar, University of ColoradoBoulderSamantha Moya, University of Colorado, BoulderRachel O'NealPersonalized Campaign Behavior in New Democracies:The Case of South Korea (Pre-Recorded)Leeann H Youn, University of Kansas
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES212.14 CRIME, POLICING AND MILITARIZATION
STRATEGIESRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 4Disc: Lucia Tiscornia, Centro de Investigacion y Docencia
EconomicasJessie Bullock, Harvard University
Papers: Captain Mayor? Military Politicization in BrazilianMunicipal ElectionsKelly Senters Piazza, United States Air ForceAcademyKylie Stronko, United States Air Force AcademyJamie M LandyCrime, Politics and Policing: Evidence from IndiaAlexander Lee, University of RochesterJae Eun Kim, University of Rochester
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES212.15 THE CONSEQUENCES OF CREDIT CLAIMING
(PRE-RECORDED)Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Katherine Marie McKiernan, Tulane UniversityDisc: Robin Harding, University of Oxford
Ken Ochieng' Opalo, Georgetown University
Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Papers: Petitioning Patrons: Community Claims and PoliticalResponsiveness in Urban IndiaAdam Michael Auerbach, American University-SISTariq Thachil, University of PennsylvaniaCan We Work Together? Evidence from an Experimentin Slum Settlements in BrazilNatalia Salgado Bueno, Emory UniversityGeorge Avelino, FGV-SPCiro BidermanVoter Preferences and Foreign Aid: ExperimentalEvidence from PakistanSyeda ShahBano Ijaz, UC San DiegoWho Gets Credit? Citizen Responses to Local PublicGoodsKatherine Marie McKiernan, Tulane University
DIVISION 13: POLITICS OF COMMUNIST AND FORMERCOMMUNIST COUNTRIES212.16 THE IMPACT OF COVID ON AUTHORITARIAN
POLITICS: EVIDENCE FROM RUSSIARoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 2Disc: Paul Chaisty, University of Oxford
Papers: The Political Impact of the Pandemic in Russia andUkraineGrigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton UniversityGraeme RobertsonBryn Rosenfeld, Cornell UniversityElectronic Voting in AutocraciesAlexei V Zakharov, Higher School of EconomicsAuthoritarian Crisis Narratives: Learning from COVID-19 Coverage on Russian TVQuintin H. Beazer, Florida State UniversityHolger Lutz Kern, Florida State UniversityCOVID-19 Scepticism in Russia and Its PotentialPolitical EffectsBoris Sokolov, Higher School of EconomicsMargarita Zavadskaya, European University Institute
DIVISION 14: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF ADVANCEDINDUSTRIAL DEMOCRACIES212.17 WELFARE STATE SUPPORT IN TIMES OF
CRISISRoom: Sheraton, Cedar Room ABChair: Moritz Marbach, Texas A&M UniversityDisc: Zachary David Greene, University of Strathclyde
Papers: Inequality and Support for Taxing the Rich in Times ofCrisisDaniel Stegmueller, Duke UniversityPolitical Coalitions and Willingness to Pay TaxesOlivier Jacques, Queen's UniversityPublic vs. Policy Responsiveness: The Case of PublicSalience in Health ReformsDiana Elena Burlacu, Newcastle UniversityEllen M. Immergut, European University Institute
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY212.18 RULE OF LAW AND INTERNATIONAL FINANCERoom: WSCC, 3AChair: Andrey Tomashevskiy, Rutgers UniversityPapers: Authoritarian Judiciaries in the Shadow of Interstate
TensionsFrederick R. Chen, University of Wisconsin-Madison & Stanford UniversityJian Xu, Emory University
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How Does Corruption Boost Financial Integration of theDeveloping Countries?Busra Soylemez, University of DelawareTransnational Deterrence Effects of the FCPA onChinaĀs State-Dominated SectorsJian Xu, Emory UniversityUnbundling the State: Legal Development in an Era ofGlobal, Private GovernanceMichael O. Allen, Yale University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY212.19 STRATEGIC MULTINATIONALS AND
DOMESTIC POLITICSRoom: WSCC, 611Chair: Edmund J. Malesky, Duke UniversityDisc: Rachel Wellhausen, University of Texas at Austin
Papers: Curses or Blessings: How Low Asset Mobility HelpsFirms Gain Government SupportHaosen Ge, Princeton UniversityThe Multinational Origins of the National MarketRobert Gulotty, The University of ChicagoInvesting with Mitigated Fear of Failure: FirmNationality & Political RiskAnne Jamison, Princeton UniversityForeign Direct Investment, Political Contestation, andGovernment (In)StabilityPablo Martin Pinto, University HoustonBoliang Zhu, Pennsylvania State University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION212.20 COOPERATION AND INFLUENCE IN
LNTERNATIONAL REGIME COMPLEXESRoom: Conference Center, Tahoma 5Chair: David A. Lake, University of California, San DiegoDisc: Laura Gomez-Mera, University of Miami
David A. Lake, University of California, San Diego
Papers: How UN Organizations Intervene in Rule-making at theWTOMatias E. Margulis, University of British ColumbiaThe Organizational Ecology of Justice Groups at the UNClimate Change SummitsBi Zhao, Whitworth UniversityFalse Promise? Non-State Access and Participation inGlobal GovernanceCarl Vikberg, Stockholm UniversityThomas Sommerer, University of PotsdamJonas Tallberg, Stockholm UniversityOrganizational Ecology and the Power of SpecialistOrganizationsTakumi Shibaike, European University Institute
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY212.21 INTERNATIONAL POLITICS AND THE ROLE OF
IDEOLOGY IN REVOLUTIONSRoom: WSCC, 4C1Chair: Luyang Zhou, Zhejiang UniversityDisc: Luyang Zhou, Zhejiang University
Papers: "Things Fall Apart; the Centre Cannot Hold" (Yeats)Daniel Chirot, University of Washingtonb, SeattleRevolutionary Contagion and Communist and FascistRevolutions in EuropeChad Nelson, Brigham Young University
DailySchedule
Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Challenges of Post-Revolutionary Reintegration: NorthKorea and the Global OrderTuong Vu, University of OregonHostility Is Not Destiny: The Iranian Revolution and theUnited StatesParichehr Kazemi, University of Oregon
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY212.22 TEXT-AS-DATA AND HISTORICAL FOREIGN
POLICY DECISION MAKINGRoom: WSCC, 4C4Chair: Justin Grimmer, Stanford UniversityDisc: Rochelle Layla Terman, University of Chicago
Abby M Fanlo, Stanford University
Papers: Keeping it Professional: Lexical Diversity andBureaucratizing National SecurityEric Min, UCLAAustin Carson, University of ChicagoThe Organizational Semantics of Credibility inInternational RelationsDonald Casler, Columbia UniversityEstimating State Preferences from United NationsSecurity Council SpeechesErik Voeten, Georgetown UniversityMichael A. Bailey, Georgetown UniversityCathy Sona Lee, Georgetown UniversityTroubles in Text: Finetuning NLP to AnalyzeRationalization of Rights ViolationsSarah K. Dreier, University of New MexicoSofia SerranoEmily K. Gade, Emory UniversityNoah A. Smith, Carnegie Mellon University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY212.23 US RETRENCHMENT IN THE MIDDLE EAST:
PROSPECTS AND IMPLICATIONSRoom: WSCC, 604Chair: William D James, University of OxfordPapers: Disengaging from the Middle East: U.S. Retrenchment
After the PandemicJoseph M. Parent, University of Notre DamePaul K. MacDonald, Wellesley CollegeRetrenchment Begins at Home: Barack Obama and thePolitics of Restraint (Pre-Recorded)Andrew Payne, University of OxfordWilliam D James, University of OxfordReoccurring Retrenchment: U.S. Efforts to Disengage inHistorical ContextEmily Ingrid Whalen, The University of Texas -AustinRussia, the United States, and Regional Order in theMiddle EastNicole Bayat Grajewski, University of Oxford
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY212.24 NEW APPROACHES TO STUDYING CHINESE
FOREIGN POLICYRoom: WSCC, 615Chair: Erin Baggott Carter, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Erin Baggott Carter, University of Southern California
Papers: Conceptualizing Pluralism in Chinese Foreign PolicyMrittika MI guha, JNU
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ChinaĀs Major Country Diplomacy: Decrypting theConcept of Great Power (Pre-Recorded)Elizaveta Priupolina, University of Duisburg-EssenMaren Eilika Nele Noesselt, University of Duisburg-EssenTanja Eckstein, University of Duisburg EssenChoice of Binding: ChinaĀs Binding Strategies TowardNorth Korea, 1965-1971Chengzhi YinThe Strategic Logic of ChinaĀs Counter-TerrorismForeign PolicyChen Wang, Duke UniversityPhilip B. K. Potter, University of Virginia
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES212.25 FEMALE FIGHTERS IN COMBAT AND ON THE
BALLOTRoom: WSCC, 4C2Chair: Caroline Brandt, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Anna O. Pechenkina, Utah State University
Caroline Brandt, University of Southern California
Papers: Sex-Ratios Imbalances and ViolenceClara Neupert-Wentz, Aarhus UniversityThe Election of Former Female Fighters (Pre-Recorded)Elizabeth L Brannon, Michigan State UniversityFemale Suicide Bombers: Victims or Perpetrators?Patricia C. Agupusi, American University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES212.26 ORIGINS AND LEGACIES OF VIOLENCERoom: WSCC, 4C3Chair: Gary Uzonyi, University of TennesseeDisc: Mateo Vasquez Cortes, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo
de MexicoGary Uzonyi, University of Tennessee
Papers: How Atrocities Affect Conflict Participation: EvidenceFrom the Great FamineConnor Huff, Rice UniversitySoeren Jannik Henn, IPA & University of ChicagoHutu Killing Groups: Social Origins of GenocideJared Falkenberg Edgerton, Ohio State UniversityThe Effects of Armed Conflict on Inequality: The Caseof PeruLaura Michelle Saavedra-Lux, University of EssexThe Gendered Legacies of Wartime TraumaBrandon Merrell, Yale University
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES212.27 STRATEGIC CHOICES IN CHANGING
ENVIRONMENTSRoom: WSCC, 617Chair: Miguel M. Pereira, University of Southern CaliforniaDisc: Adrian Lucardi, ITAM
Juan Pablo Micozzi, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo deMexico
Papers: Electoral Proximity and Legislative ResponsivenessMichael Pomirchy, Princeton UniversityResignation as Promotion? Assessing Patterns of EarlyDeparture in ArgentinaJuan Pablo Micozzi, Instituto Tecnologico Autonomode MexicoAdrian Lucardi, ITAMNatan Skigin, University of Notre Dame
Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
The Cost of Ruling and Incumbent Party LegislatorDissentTroels BøggildHelene Helboe Pedersen, Department of PoliticalScience, Aarhus UniversityWho Speaks for the Economically Disadvantaged?A Text Analysis on German MPsThomas Zittel, Goethe-University FrankfurtMarkus Baumann, Department of Social Sciences
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS212.28 MANAGING THE WHITE HOUSE AND
FEDERAL AGENCIESRoom: Sheraton, Issaquah
Co-sponsored by Division 24: Public AdministrationChair: Andrew C. Rudalevige, Bowdoin CollegeDisc: John Koehler, Texas A&M University, Central Texas
Andrew C. Rudalevige, Bowdoin College
Papers: Who Serves? Competence and Loyalty in the TrumpWhite House StaffMatthew J. DickinsonKate Reinmuth, Stanford UniversityThe Short but Indelible Tenure of Mark Meadows asTrumpĀs Last Chief of StaffDavid B. Cohen, The University of AkronKaren M. Hult, Virginia TechDo White House Chiefs of Staff Manage Up?Matthew N. Beckmann, University of California,IrvineOrganizing the Biden Presidency (Pre-Recorded)James P. Pfiffner
DIVISION 25: PUBLIC POLICY212.29 IMPLEMENTATION IS POLITICS: EFFECTS OF
VARIATION IN STATE CANNABIS POLICYRoom: WSCC, 619Chair: Lee Hannah, Wright State UniversityDisc: Aaron Wachhaus
Papers: Race Neutral: Social Equity and Disparities in StateCannabis PolicyDaniel J Mallinson, Penn State, HarrisburgLauren Azevedo, Penn State HarrisburgLee Hannah, Wright State UniversityThe Impact of Cannabis Policy Reform on Referrals toTreatment for Cannabis UseKatharine Harris, Rice UniversityChristopher Kulesza, Rice UniversityPublic Health Effects of Medical and RecreationalMarijuanaMitchell Dylan Sellers, Tulane University
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS212.30 PROMOTING HUMAN RIGHTS: THE ROLE OF
LAW AND COURTSRoom: WSCC, 2B
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International CollaborationChair: Jeffrey Davis, University of Maryland, Baltimore CountyDisc: Jeffrey Davis, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Lisa McIntosh Sundstrom, University of BritishColumbia
Papers: Egypt's Criminalization of Human Rights AdvocacyCarol J. Gray, University of Connecticut
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Governing by Ambiguity: Evidence from the ChineseJudicial SystemQingyan WANG, University of GeorgiaYifeng Wan, Johns Hopkins UniversityNanxi Zeng, Johns Hopkins UniversityThe Political Sources of Rights Consciousness andClaiming: Insights from ChileLisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesValentina Salas, University of Minnesota, Twin CitiesThe Three R's of CEDAW Commitment: Ratification,Reservation, and RejectionWillow Kreutzer, University of IowaSara McLaughlin Mitchell, University of Iowa
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS212.31 CROSS-RACIAL SOLIDARITY AND LINKED
FATERoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan AChair: Luis Ricardo Fraga, University of Notre DameDisc: Christopher T. Stout, Oregon State University
Papers: Empathy or Resentment? Predicting Cross-Racial LinkedFateLisa May Sanchez, University of ArizonaMaria Livaudais, California State University EastBayStacey Ann Greene, Rutgers University, NewBrunswickHow Party Cues Shape AmericansĀUnderstanding ofInstitutional Racism (Pre-Recorded)Antoine J. Banks, University of MarylandEric Groenendyk, University of MemphisAlauna Safarpour, Harvard UniversityĄIf They Only Knewď: Informing Blacks & WhitesAbout the Racial Wealth Gap (Pre-Recorded)Vincent L. Hutchings, University of Michigan, AnnArborSydney Carr, University of Michigan, Ann ArborKamri Hudgins, University of MichiganZoe Walker, University of Michigan
DIVISION 33: RELIGION AND POLITICS212.32 RELIGION AND VIOLENCERoom: Sheraton, Aspen
Co-sponsored by Division 21: Conflict ProcessesChair: David Curtis Bates, University of Wisconsin-MadisonDisc: Dilshod Achilov, University of Massachusetts -
DartmouthAbigail Vegter, University of Kansas
Papers: How Terrorist Attacks Affect the Religiosity ofSurvivors: Evidence from AfricaTrey Billing, The Ohio State UniversityJohn F. McCauley, University of Maryland, CollegeParkEthno-Religious Conflict and the Duration of PeaceNathan Tarr, Arizona State UniversityReligious Pluralism and Mass Violence: A GlobalAnalysisGünes Murat Tezcur, University of Central FloridaJoshua Lambert, University of Central FloridaUnderstanding the Nexus of Religion, Secularism &WomenĀs Mandatory Un/CoveringSarah Fischer, American University
DailySchedule
Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES212.33 MOVEMENTS AND DEMOCRACY IN
CONTEMPORARY CONTEXTRoom: WSCC, 616Chair: Michael T. Heaney, University of GlasgowDisc: Michael T. Heaney, University of Glasgow
Geoffrey M. Lorenz, University of Nebraska, Lincoln
Papers: Cleavage Articulation Failures and Electoral VolatilityMariana Giusti-Rodriguez, Naval PostgraduateSchoolResistance Mobilization and U.S. DemocracyJoseph E. Luders, Yeshiva UniversityMatthew Incantalupo, Yeshiva UniversityThe Evolution of the Black Lives Matter Movement:The U.S. and AbroadRoudabeh Kishi, Armed Conflict Location & EventData Project (ACLED)Melissa Jane Pavlik, Yale University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR212.34 CONSTITUENCY-LEVEL POLITICSRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 3Chair: Christopher Hare, University of California, DavisDisc: Charles Hunt, Boise State University
Papers: Campaign Volunteers as Representative AgentsTaylor Kinsley Chewning, Florida State UniversityJon Green, Northeastern UniversityHans J.G. Hassell, Florida State UniversityMatthew R Miles, Brigham Young University, IdahoThe Electoral Challenge of Balancing Primary andGeneral Electorates (Pre-Recorded)Sarah Anderson, University of California, SantaBarbaraDaniel M. Butler, WUSTLLaurel Harbridge-Yong, Northwestern University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION212.35 GOVERNMENT RESPONSIVENESS: REAL AND
PERCEIVEDRoom: WSCC, 303Chair: Elizabeth N. SimasDisc: Carlos Algara, Claremont Graduate University
Papers: Naïve Majoritarianism? Understanding Beliefs About theChance of Policy AdoptionRyan Bell, Princeton UniversityMarkus Prior, Princeton UniversityThe Evaluation of Legislators' Performance andSatisfaction with DemocracyZsófia Papp, Centre for Social SciencesThe Politics of Self-Interest: A Field ExperimentMartin Bisgaard, Aarhus UniversityMartin Vinæs Larsen, Aarhus UniversityRune Slothuus, Aarhus University
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION212.36 IMMIGRATION AND NATIONAL IDENTITYRoom: Sheraton, Metropolitan BChair: Walter Wilson, University of Texas, San AntonioDisc: Benjamin Fontaine Gonzalez O'Brien, San Diego State
University
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Papers: Nativist Parties in the News Reduce NationalIdentification of Excluded Citizens (Pre-Recorded)Ming M. Boyer, University of ViennaPerceiving Immigrants as a Threat: A MotivationalApproach to False Consensus (Pre-Recorded)Hyungjin Gill, University of Wisconsin - MadisonHernando Rojas, University of Wisconsin, MadisonRefugee Rhetoric Experience and AttitudesIsabel Williams, University of Arizona
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION212.37 JOURNALISTIC NORMS AND PRACTICESRoom: Sheraton, Grand Ballroom BChair: Camila Mont'Alverne, University of OxfordDisc: Matthew Jenkins, Gyeongsang National University
Papers: Five Challenges to ObjectivityWilliam G. Mayer, Northeastern UniversityThe Effect of False Balance Reporting onMisperceptions of Voter FraudMatthew Jenkins, Gyeongsang National UniversityDaniel M Gomez, University of California SantaBarbaraUnderstanding How Images and Text Are Used toFrame Cable News ContentBryce Dietrich, University of IowaHyein Ko, University of Iowa
DIVISION 39: SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ANDENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS212.38 REGULATORY POLITICS AND EXECUTIVE
LEADERSHIPRoom: WSCC, 618Chair: Barry G. Rabe, University of Michigan, Ann ArborDisc: David T Burbach, Naval War College
Papers: Multidimensional Preferences for Regulating Self-Driving CarsMarkus Stephan Tepe, Carl von OssietzkyUniversität OldenburgSebastian Hemesath, University of OldenburgRecombinant Pasts & CRISPR Futures: US & EU GERegulation Beneficial ConstraintsKonrad Posch, University of California, BerkeleyChanges in the Tide: Analyzing NDCs Inclusion ofSubnational Climate ActorsDevon Kyla Cantwell, University of Ottawa
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS212.39 SURVEILLANCE AND SECURITY IN A
NETWORKED AGERoom: WSCC, 310
Co-sponsored by Division 17: International CollaborationChair: Shao Fan Lin, The University ofPapers: AsiaĀs AI-Assisted Surveillance Industry: ĄHello, How
May I Spy for You Today?ďYung AuInternational Technopolitics of Computer EmergencyResponse TeamsRebecca Slayton, Cornell UniversityFrank L. Smith, US Naval War CollegeResponses to the Huawei 5G Controversy: Policy inGermany, Japan, and the UK (Pre-Recorded)Todd H. Hall, University of OxfordAlanna Krolikowski, Missouri University of Scienceand Technology
Sunday, 10:00 AM to 11:30 AM
Risk Analysis and Mobility: Border Control ThroughBiometricsSamah Rafiq, Jawaharlal Nehru University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY212.40 ELITES & SUCCESSION UNDER
DEMOCRACY & AUTOCRACYRoom: Conference Center, Skagit 5Chair: Sanghoon Kim-Leffingwell, University of Illinois at
Urbana-ChampaignDisc: Paul E. Lenze, Northern Arizona University
Papers: The Power to Purge: Violent Origins and AuthoritarianPower ConsolidationSean Paul AshleyThe PresidentĀs Men: Authoritarian Coalition Buildingvia Executive AppointmentsDean Schafer, CUNY The Graduate CenterWho Succeeds?: Explaining the Politics of Succession inHybrid RegimesMasha Hedberg, Colgate University
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY212.41 THE POLITICAL ECONOMY OF
DEMOCRATIZATION: A QUANTITATIVE-HISTORICAL APPROACH
Room: WSCC, 614Chair: Carles Boix, Princeton UniversityDisc: Milan Svolik, Yale University
Michael Albertus, University of Chicago
Papers: We Are All Democrats Now: The IdeationalDevelopment of Democracy in BritainAditya Dasgupta, University of California, MercedDaniel F. Ziblatt, Harvard UniversityCompeting for New Votes: Mobilization of Women inthe Wake of DemocratizationMona Morgan-Collins, King's College LondonDoes Industrialization Cause Democratization? Evidencefrom NorwaySam van Noort, University of CambridgeMagnus Bergli Rasmussen, University of OsloThe Modern Origins of Political ContestationAdriane Fresh, Duke University
DIVISION 45: HUMAN RIGHTS212.42 HUMAN RIGHTS AROUND THE WORLDRoom: WSCC, 613Chair: Turan Kayaoglu, University of Washington, TacomaPapers: Entrenched Legal Conservatism & Postwar ItalyĀs
Failure of Transitional JusticeLucia Manzi, SUNY PlattsburghGuarantees of Non-Repetition in the Inter-American andEuropean ContextsTracy H. Slagter, University of Wisconsin, OshkoshDruscilla L. Scribner, University of Wisconsin,OshkoshMaking the Impossible Possible?: Gaps and Barriers toAchieve SDGs in N. Korea (Pre-Recorded)Jinah Kwon, Korea UniversityNational Human Rights Institutions in MENA: A Reasonfor Hope?Turan Kayaoglu, University of Washington, Tacoma
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DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY212.43 THE POPULIST RADICAL RIGHT: NATIONAL
HEALTH POLICIES AND GLOBAL TRENDS(PRE-RECORDED)
Room: Virtual Platform, Full Panel Pre-Recorded PresentationsChair: Michelle Falkenbach, University of MichiganDisc: Scott L. Greer, University of Michigan
Alexandre Afonso, Leiden UniversityAshley M Fox, SUNY at Albany
Papers: Populist Radical Right Influence on Health Policy in theNetherlandsChiara Rinaldi, London School of Hygiene andTropical MedicineMarleen Bekker, Wageningen University andResearchThe Populist Radical Right and Health in HungaryGabor Scheiring, Bocconi UniversityAlexandru Daniel Moise, European UniversityInstituteOlga Loblova, University of CambridgeIs the Polish āLaw and JusticeĀ(PiS) a Typical PopulistRadical Right Party?Michał Zabdyr-Jamróz, Jagiellonian UniversityMedical CollegeOlga Loblova, University of CambridgeAlexandru Daniel Moise, European UniversityInstituteThe Case of the United Kingdom Independence Party(UKIP)Ian P. McManus, Emerson College
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP212.44 REBECCA HAMLIN'S "CROSSING: HOW WE
LABEL AND REACT TO PEOPLE ON THEMOVE"
Room: Conference Center, Skagit 2Chair: Lamis Abdelaaty, Syracuse UniversityPart: Rebecca Hamlin, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Sarah Song, University of California, BerkeleyTom K. Wong, University of California, San DiegoRawan Arar
DIVISION 53: AFRICAN POLITICS212.45 LAND AND POLITICS IN AFRICARoom: WSCC, 401
Co-sponsored by Division 11: Comparative PoliticsChair: Lauren Honig, Boston CollegeDisc: Catherine Boone, London School of Economics and
Political Science (LSE)Sara Berry
Papers: Sweetening the Deal: Sectoral Determinants of LandRedistribution in South AfricaAlex Dyzenhaus, Cornell UniversityExplaining the Gender Gap: Women and Land Titling inKenyaMai Omer Hassan, University of Michigan, AnnArborKathleen Klaus, University of San FranciscoThe Politics of Urban Expansion: Evidence from LagosNicole E. Wilson, Massachusetts Institute ofTechnology
DailySchedule
Sunday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY212.46 INFORMATION AND POLITICAL ENGAGEMENTRoom: Sheraton, Ballard
Co-sponsored by Labor PoliticsDisc: Emily Thorson, Syracuse University
Papers: Free Donations and Unequal Participation: SeattleĀsDemocracy VouchersChenoa Yorgason, Stanford UniversityHow Competing Fairness Primes Shape Preferences toAddress InequalityPaul Lendway, Yale UniversityGregory Huber, Yale UniversityPrivate Solutions to Public Problems? Labor Demands ofTech ProfessionalsClaire Ma, University of Pennsylvania
Sunday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PMTheme Panels213.1 INTERPRETIVIST POLITICAL SCIENCE:
CONVERSATIONS ON METHODS ANDMETHODOLOGIES
Room: VirtualChair: Jessica Soedirgo, University of AmsterdamPart: April Renee Biccum, Australian National University
Rachel George, University of AlbertaAarie Glas, Northern Illinois UniversityLisa Wedeen, University of ChicagoErica S. Simmons, University of Wisconsin, MadisonNicholas Rush Smith, CUNY-City College
APSA Events214.1 GET THE GRANT: FINDING FUNDING,
WRITING PROPOSALS, AND ADVANCING YOURRESEARCH AT EVERY CAREER STAGE
Room: VirtualChair: Elizabeth Super, American Political Science AssociationPart: James A. Wilson, Russell Sage Foundation
Julie E. Taylor, IIEClaudia Kinkela, National Endowment for theHumanitiesCheryl Gibbs, US Department of Education
214.2 GETTING IT PUBLISHED: A PANELDISCUSSION ON WRITING AND PUBLISHINGBOOKS IN REP
Room: VirtualChair: Ismail K. White, Princeton UniversityPart: Ray Block, Penn State University
Jamila D. Michener, Cornell University214.3 PANDEMIC POLITICS: INTERNATIONAL
PERSPECTIVESRoom: VirtualChair: Michael Bernhard, University of FloridaPapers: Exploiting a Crisis: Abortion Activism and the COVID-
19 PandemicKate Hunt, Indiana University-BloomingtonCrisis and Complementarities: A Comparative PoliticalEconomy of Economic Policies After COVID-19Bob M. Hancke, London School of EconomicsDustin Voss, London School of Economics andPolitical ScienceToon Van Overbeke
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Government Targeting of Refugees in the Midst ofEpidemicsAlex Braithwaite, University of ArizonaMichael James Frith, UCLBurcu Savun, University of PittsburghFaten Ghosn, University of ArizonaThe Racialized Pandemic: Wave One of Covid-19 andthe Reproduction of Global North Racial-EthnicInequalitiesGerda Hooijer, University College LondonDesmond King, University of OxfordLegitimacy and Policy During Crises: SubnationalCOVID-19 Responses in BoliviaV. Ximena Velasco Guachalla, University of ColoradoBoulderCalla Hummel, University of MiamiJami Nelson-Nunez, The University of New MexicoCarew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, Boulder
214.4 SECURITIZATION AND INSECURITY IN THEMIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
Room: VirtualChair: Samer Abboud, Arcadia UniversityDivision PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY215.1 PLURALIZING EURIPIDES: GREEK TRAGEDY
AND POLITICAL THEORYRoom: VirtualChair: Elizabeth Markovits, Mount Holyoke CollegeDisc: Joel Alden Schlosser, Bryn Mawr College
Papers: Finding the Choral VoiceDanielle Hanley, Clark UniversityEuripidesĀCritique of Luck and Courage in TrojanWomenDaniel Schillinger, Yale UniversityTo See, Understand, Twist Things Around: CultivatingJudgment in the TheatreElla Street, Cornell University
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY215.2 DANGEROUS DESIRES: DREAMS OF
OTHERNESSRoom: VirtualChair: Michelle Rose, Brown UniversityDisc: Davide Panagia, UCLA
Papers: Fear and Curiosity in Hobbes's LeviathanNoga Rotem, University of WashingtonThe Politics of Repair: Making Ready for ReparationsAli Aslam, Mount Holyoke CollegeCraving Freedom: Lessons from Black FugitivityThinkersMichelle Rose, Brown UniversityRace/Riot/Rebellion: Rethinking ĄRule of LawďinTimes of Mass ProtestMark Golub, Scripps College
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY215.3 SAFE SPACE BEYOND SECURITY STATES: HOW
BLACK FREEDOM MOVEMENTS MESSAGESMATTER
Room: VirtualChair: Jasmine Syedullah, Vassar CollegePart: Jenn M. Jackson, Syracuse University
Malkia Devich-Cyril, Media Justice
Sunday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Deva Woodly, New School for Social ResearchLisa Beard, Western Washington University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY215.4 FORMAL MODELING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:
EPISTEMOLOGY AND METHOD(S) MINI-CONFERENCE: THIN VERSUS THICKNARRATIVES, GENERALIZABILITY VERSUSBEST EXPLANATIONS, CONNECTIONS TOPROCESS TRACING
Room: VirtualChair: Monika Nalepa, University of Chicago
Timothy P. Nokken, Texas Tech UniversityPart: Derek Beach, University of Aarhus
Jenna Bednar, University of Michigan, Ann ArborMaoz Rosenthal, Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) HerzliyaBarbara Sgouraki Kinsey, University of Central FloridaBarry R. Weingast, Stanford University
DIVISION 7: POLITICS AND HISTORY215.5 DOWN WITH THE CROWNRoom: VirtualChair: Scott Abramson, University of RochesterDisc: Lotem Halevy, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Land Reform and Political Change in Rural TaiwanKevin Wei Luo, University of TorontoOrigins of Religious Rebellions: Fiscal Capacity,Dissent, and State BuildingSabri Ciftci, Kansas State UniversityPalace Coup Dilemma: How Land Grants ImprovedStatebuilding in Medieval EuropeDan Gamarnik, University of California-SantaBarbaraParty Development and Election Violence in 19th-Century England and WalesGidon Cohen, Durham UniversityPatrick Michael Kuhn, Durham UniversityNick Vivyan, Durham University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY215.6 COVID-19 POLICY AND BEHAVIORRoom: VirtualChair: Arndt Leininger, Chemnitz University of TechnologyDisc: P. M. Aronow, Yale University
Papers: Building Longitudinal Google Trends to MeasureDynamic Issue AttentionTaeyong Park, Carnegie Mellon University in QatarPredicting COVID-19 Stay-at-Home Orders in AfricaUsing Machine LearningJordan Michael Mansell, Western UniversityGregg R. Murray, Augusta UniversityCarter RheaProtesting During the Covid: When EconomicDeprivation Trumps Contagion RiskBasak Taraktas, Bogazici UniversitySina Sajjadi
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS215.7 STATE STRENGTHRoom: VirtualChair: Matthew J Reichert, Harvard UniversityDisc: Navid Mehrdad, Columbia University
Papers: The Double-Edged Legacy of Weak StatesAnders Gammelholm Wieland, Aarhus University
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The State First Argument: New Evidence with a NewIndex of State CapacityAndrea Vaccaro, Sapienza University of RomePolitical Economy of Defense Industries and State-buildingFlorian Bodamer, Boston UniversityFighting the Deep State? Political Appointments andGovernment CapacityKatherine Bersch, Davidson College
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS215.8 THE COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF THE POLICERoom: VirtualChair: Ellen M. Lust, University of GothenburgDisc: Graeme Blair, UCLA
Papers: How Local Religious Institutions Influence PoliceViolence Against CiviliansDavid T. Buckley, University of LouisvilleSteven Brooke, University of Wisconsin- MadisonDo Messengers Matter for Increasing Knowledge aboutthe Law?Sabrina Karim, Cornell UniversityPreferences for Policing Practices and Attitudes Towardsthe PoliceAbby B. Cordova, University of Notre DameLucia Tiscornia, Centro de Investigacion y DocenciaEconomicasTorture, Terrorism, and the PoliceSharan Grewal, College of William & Mary
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES215.9 AGENTS OF ACCOUNTABILITY: MONITORS
AND CLAIMANTS IN ACCOUNTABILITYPROCESSES
Room: VirtualChair: Jennifer L. Bussell, University of California, BerkeleyDisc: Jennifer L. Bussell, University of California, Berkeley
Ana Lorena De La O Torres, Yale University
Papers: Citizen Journalism, Social Brokers, and AccountabilityChallenges in Rural IndiaGabrielle Kruks-Wisner, University of VirginiaAccountability in Time: Evolution in Access toInformation InstitutionsBrian Palmer-Rubin, Marquette UniversityDan Berliner, London School of EconomicsBenjamin E. Bagozzi, University of DelawareAaron S. Erlich, McGill UniversityWhen Will Civil Society Monitor the State? Evidencefrom MaliJaimie Bleck, University of Notre DameJessica Gottlieb, University of HoustonKatrina Kosec, IFPRIPro-social Incentives and Medicine Theft DuringCOVID: Evidence from MalawiRyan Steele Jablonski, London School of Economicsand Political ScienceBrigitte Seim, University of North Carolina-ChapelHillMariana Carvalho, University of California, SanDiegoClark C. Gibson, University of California, San Diego
DailySchedule
Sunday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES215.10 EXAMINING THE STATE OF INDIA'S
DEMOCRACYRoom: VirtualChair: Larry Diamond, Stanford UniversityDisc: Sumit Ganguly, Indiana University, Bloomington
Papers: Federalism and Center-State RelationsKanta Murali, University of TorontoA Redefined Indian-ness and the Decline of IndiaĀsDemocracyMaya Jessica Tudor, Oxford UniversityYes, Prime Minister! Bureaucracy, Political Regimes andReform in IndiaYamini Aiyar, Centre for Policy ResearchThe State of India's DemocracyDinsha Farrokh Allen Mistree, Stanford
DIVISION 15: EUROPEAN POLITICS AND SOCIETY215.11 SOCIO-ECONOMIC CONFLICTS AND
POLITICAL BEHAVIORRoom: VirtualChair: Tarik Abou-Chadi, University of ZurichDisc: Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill
Papers: Rural Isolation and Political Dissatisfaction in ItalySimone Cremaschi, Bocconi UniversityPaula Rettl, Bocconi UniversityCatherine E. De Vries, Bocconi UniversityAffective Polarization and WomenĀs DescriptiveRepresentationJames Adams, University of California, DavisDavid Bracken, UC DavisNoam Gidron, Hebrew UniversityWill Horne, Princeton UniversityDiana Z. O'Brien, Rice UniversityKaitlin Senk, Rice UniversityPolitical Orientation of the Self-Employed in thePostindustrial EconomySophie Hill, Harvard UniversityThe Political Economy of Rental HousingTarik Abou-Chadi, University of ZurichDenis Cohen, University of MannheimThomas Kurer, University of Zurich
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY215.12 COMPETITION AND ANTITRUST POLICY IN
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Ryan Brutger, University of California, BerkeleyDisc: Stephen Weymouth, Georgetown University
Abraham Newman, Georgetown University
Papers: Adam Smith Meets George Orwell: Markets, Antitrust,and the Politics of LanguageErik Peinert, Brown UniversityU.S. Antitrust Enforcement in Global Markets:Regulatory Protectionism or a ...Tim Buthe, Technical University of Munich (TUM)Cindy Cheng, Technical University of MunichCompetition Law and Cross-Border Mergers andAcquisitionsHyeon-Young Ro, Princeton University
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Individual Preferences for Antitrust PolicyRyan Brutger, University of California, BerkeleyAmy Pond, Technical University of Munich
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY215.13 THE GLOBAL ECONOMY AND THE WELFARE
STATERoom: VirtualChair: Alexandra Guisinger, Temple UniversityDisc: Sarah M. Brooks, Ohio State University
Papers: Financial Globalization and Firms' PoliticalContributions: Evidence from BrazilRaphael Cunha, Florida State UniversityNew Stripes or Same Tiger? IMF Frames of ProgressiveTaxation and Its EffectsMark Hibben, Saint Joseph's College of MaineBig Banks, Big Tech, and Big Data: Explaining PublicSupport for Open BankingTyler Girard, University of Western Ontario
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY215.14 NEW RESEARCH ON LEADERS IN
INTERNATIONAL POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Keren Yarhi-Milo, Princeton UniversityDisc: Elizabeth Nathan Saunders, Georgetown University
Michael Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania
Papers: Leaders, Corruption, and Gender: Are Female LeadersPenalized More Heavily?Madison V. Schramm, U.S. Army War CollegeAlexandra Stark, Georgetown UniversityLoriana Crasnic, Georgetown UniversityPerception and Misperception of Aging Leaders inInternational PoliticsJoshua Byun, The University of ChicagoAustin Carson, University of ChicagoFour Faces of Firm Power: Corporate Titans and theFirst Image of World PoliticsSwati Srivastava, Purdue UniversityErin Lockwood, University of California, IrvineWhen Do Leader Attributes Matter? Evidence from thePresident's Daily BriefMichael Goldfien, Yale UniversityMichael Frederick Joseph, George WashingtonUniversityDaniel Krcmaric, Northwestern University
DIVISION 20: FOREIGN POLICY215.15 PUBLIC OPINION AND FOREIGN POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Tereza Novotna, Free University BerlinPapers: Dimensions of U.S. Public Opinion on Border Security
Lauren Pinson, University of Texas at DallasBeth A. Simmons, University of PennsylvaniaIO Funding Knowledge and Donor Public Preferencesfor Multilateral Foreign AidA. Burcu Bayram, University of ArkansasErin R. Graham, University of Notre DamePublic Opinion and Foreign Intervention in Democraciesand AutocraciesYao-Yuan Yeh, University of St. ThomasHsuan-Yu Lin, Harvard UniversityKuan-Sheng Wu, Purdue University
Sunday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES215.16 CLIMATE AND HEALTH CHALLENGES TO
CONFLICT PREVENTIONRoom: VirtualDisc: Lars-Erik Cederman, ETH Zurich
Papers: Can Social Safety Nets Prevent Climate-RelatedConflict? Evidence from EthiopiaGarrett Michael Albistegui Adler, StanfordUniversityDe-escalating Conflict in a Pandemic: A FieldExperiment in the PhilippinesRenard J Sexton, Emory UniversityDotan A Haim, Florida State UniversityNico Ravanilla, University of California San DiegoHow Pandemics Affect Levels of Violence in CivilConflictsBrittney Danielle Koehnlein, Indiana UniversityMalaria Prevalence and Civil Conflict Locations in Sub-Saharan AfricaHaohan Chen, New York UniversityEnze Han, The University of Hong Kong
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES215.17 EVALUATING ELECTORAL VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Stephen Michael Bagwell, University of Missouri, St.
LouisDisc: Megan Turnbull, University of Georgia
Papers: Documenting Electoral Violence Assessing Tradeoffs inData Collection MethodsLeonardo R. Arriola, University of California,BerkeleyArsene Brice Bado, Centre de Recherche et d'Actionpour la Paix (CERAP)Justine Davis, University of MichiganAllison Namias Grossman, University of California,BerkeleyAila M. Matanock, University of California-BerkeleyFear of Electoral Violence, Urban Geography, andDemocratic ParticipationInken von Borzyskowski, University College London(UCL)Michael Wahman, Michigan State UniversityElection Violence, Source Credibility, and VoteChoice:A Survey Experiment in NigeriaMegan Turnbull, University of GeorgiaExplaining Success: Improving Electoral Quality in Post-Conflict CountriesZi En Kimberly Peh, University of Notre Dame
DIVISION 23: PRESIDENTS AND EXECUTIVE POLITICS215.18 THE UNITARY EXECUTIVE THEORY: A
DANGER TO CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENTRoom: VirtualChair: Katy J. Harriger, Wake Forest UniversityPart: Jeffrey Crouch, American University
Mark J. Rozell, George Mason UniversityMitchel A. Sollenberger, University of Michigan,DearbornChris Edelson, American UniversityAdam L. Warber, Clemson UniversityMark E. Rush, Washington and Lee University
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DIVISION 24: PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION215.19 INTERNATIONAL BUREAUCRATS:
REPRESENTATION, AGENCY AND POWER INGLOBAL GOVERNANCE
Room: VirtualChair: Jonas Tallberg, Stockholm UniversityDisc: Dan Honig, University College London
Catherine Weaver, University of Texas, Austin
Papers: Representative Bureaucracy in the IMF and World BankMirko Noa HeinzelCatherine Weaver, University of Texas, AustinHow Global Boardrooms Shape the World PolityAlexander Kentikelenis, Bocconi UniversityLeonard Seabrooke, Copenhagen Business SchoolA QCA Analysis of International Public AdministrationInfluence StrategiesMichael W. Bauer, European University InstituteJoern Ege, German Research Institute for PublicAdministration SpeyerCovert Participation: How Populists Engage withInternational OrganizationsAllison Carnegie, Columbia UniversityRichard Clark, Princeton UniversityAyse Kaya, Swarthmore College
DIVISION 28: FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTALRELATIONS215.20 SOCIETIES BEHIND SECESSIONIST CONFLICTSRoom: VirtualChair: Ryan D. Griffiths, Syracuse University, Maxwell School
of Citizenship and Public AffairsDisc: David S. Siroky, Arizona State University
Papers: The Weight of Territorial Issues in Catalonia, Scotlandand Norther IrelandLaia Balcells, Georgetown UniversityLesley-Ann Daniels, Institut Barcelona d'EstudisInternacionalsAlexander Kuo, University of OxfordThe Social Power of Private Business in SecessionReferendaKarlo Basta, University of EdinburghLet it go. Attitudes Towards the Self-Determination ofPeripheral RegionsMaria Jose Hierro, Yale UniversityDidac Queralt, Yale UniversityMigration, the Collapse of Local Ethnic Self-Rule, andSeparatist MovementsBethany Lacina, University of Rochester
DIVISION 29: STATE POLITICS AND POLICY215.21 RACE, PLACE, AND IDENTITY IN STATE
POLITICS AND POLICYRoom: VirtualChair: Justin Phillips, Columbia UniversityDisc: Amber N Lusvardi, Purdue University
Rebecca J. Kreitzer, University of North Carolina atChapel Hill
Papers: Queery-ing State Legislatures: Creating an Index ofQueer-Friendly DistrictsKellen A. Kane, The University of North Carolina atChapel Hill
DailySchedule
Sunday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Rural Representation Gaps in the American StatesZoe Nemerever, University of California San DiegoWho Deserves Mercy? State Pardons, Commutations,and Determinants of ClemencyAnna M Gunderson, Louisiana State UniversitySubjective and Objective: Racial Attitudes, Inequality,and Public PolicyAaron Rosenthal, Simmons UniversitySarah Bruch, University of DelawareJennifer Renee Daniels, University of Delaware
DIVISION 30: URBAN POLITICS215.22 WHO GETS TO CONTEST LOCAL ELECTIONS?:
GATEKEEPERS AND REPRESENTATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Rebecca Goldstein, University of California, BerkeleyDisc: Eunju Kang, SUNY Geneseo
Papers: Buying the Big Apple: Evaluating the Donor Class inNew York City ElectionsJen Heerwig, SUNY-Stony BrookW. Rafferty Thompson, Stony Brook UniversityElecting Punishment: Interest Group Capture in DistrictAttorney ElectionsRebecca Goldstein, University of California, BerkeleyKatarina Jensen, University of California, BerkeleyIsraelĀs Young Adults Lists: Robust Participation inMunicipal PoliticsZvi Hadar, Ben Gurion University in the NegevFany Yuval, Ben-Gurion UniversityRebecca Kook, Ben-Gurion UniversityTurnout and Local Representation in North CarolinaJason Douglas Todd, Duke Kunshan UniversityArvind Ram Krishnamurthy, Duke UniversityCurtis Bram, Duke University
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH215.23 GENDERED STRATEGIES AND POLITICAL
OUTCOMESRoom: VirtualChair: Shaheen Naseer, Lahore School of EconomicsDisc: Shaheen Naseer, Lahore School of Economics
Yesola Kweon, Utah State University
Papers: Double Edged Sword: Women Politicians and theStrategic Employment of FashionCandice D. Ortbals, Abilene Christian UniversityJ. Cherie Strachan, Virginia CommonwealthUniversityKaren M. Kedrowski, Iowa State UniversityLori Poloni-Staudinger, Northern Arizona UniversityDo Voters (Dis)Like Dynastic Politicians? ExperimentalEvidence from PakistanSergio J Ascencio, University of New MexicoRabia Malik, University of EssexFemale Political Empowerment and PoliticalParticipation Across Time and SpaceCyrill OtteniWhat Are They Doing Right? Tweeting RightwingIntersectionality in Latin AmericaMarcela Schenck, Universidad de la RepúblicaPaulo Daniel Ravecca, Universidad de la República
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DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS215.24 RACIAL ATTITUDES FROM POLICY TO
PROTESTRoom: VirtualChair: Candis Watts Smith, Duke UniversityDisc: Angela Ximena Ocampo, University of Michigan
Candis Watts Smith, Duke University
Papers: Think Structurally, Act Individually?: The Limits ofRacial SympathyJennifer Chudy, Wellesley CollegeHow White Identification Shapes Support for RacialJustice Protest and PolicyGeneva Cole, University of ChicagoThe Effects of Race, Anger and Pride on PoliticalActivity and Protest SupportDavin Lanier Phoenix, University of California,Irvine
DIVISION 34: REPRESENTATION AND ELECTORALSYSTEMS215.25 INSTITUTIONS AND INCLUSION (VIRTUAL)Room: VirtualChair: G. Bingham Powell, University of RochesterDisc: Tine N Paulsen, New York University
Papers: Candidate Selection Strategies and Diversification of theNew Zealand ParliamentFiona C. Barker, Victoria University of WellingtonSam Crawley, Victoria University of WellingtonIndigenous Participation, Representation, Policy, andElectoral SystemsClemente Quinones, Georgia Gwinnett CollegeA Peril to Pluralism? How Political Crimes UndermineDescriptive Representation.Jeyhun Alizade, Princeton UniversityFabio Ellger, Humboldt University BerlinMarius Kilian GrünewaldThomas Tichelbaecker, Princeton UniversityDoes It Matter Who Is In Power? The Political Efficacyof Voting, 1996-2016Jennifer Oser, Ben-Gurion UniversityMartin Okolikj, University of BergenMarc Hooghe, University Leuven
DIVISION 35: POLITICAL ORGANIZATIONS ANDPARTIES215.26 LOBBYISTS AND LOBBYING, STRATEGIES AND
GOALSRoom: VirtualChair: Beth L. Leech, Rutgers University, New BrunswickDisc: Brian Daniel Libgober, Yale University
Thomas T. Holyoke, California State University, Fresno
Papers: Congressional Capacity and the Revolving DoorScott H. Ainsworth, University of GeorgiaIs It All About Timing? First Mover Advantages andInterest Group InfluenceMarcel HanegraaffWiebke Marie Junk, University of Copenhagen (KU)Michele Crepaz, Trinity College DublinLobbying for Tax Breaks: Congressional Considerationof Miscellaneous Tax BillsJeffrey Lazarus, Georgia State UniversityAmy Melissa McKay, University of Exeter
Sunday, 12:00 PM to 1:30 PM
Trading Legislators for Lobbyists: District Magnitudeand LobbyingJames Manning Strickland, Arizona State University
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR215.27 THE CAUSES OF VOTE SWITCHINGRoom: VirtualChair: Stephanie A. Nail, Stanford UniversityDisc: Debra Lynn Leiter, University of Missouri-Kansas City
Papers: A Conjoint Experiment on Hong Kong AmericanVotersĀTurn to Trump in 2020Maggie Shum, University of Notre DameVictoria Tin-bor Hui, University of Notre DameDeindustrialization and Party System Volatility inAppalachian OH and PAErik J. Davis, Purdue UniversityGroup-appeals, Cross-pressures, and the Rise of VolatileVotersRuth Dassonneville, Universite de MontrealLong Gone Swing Voters: Party and Citizen PolarizationEffects' on VolatilityMert Moral, Sabancı University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION215.28 MISINFORMATION AND CONSPIRACY
THEORIESRoom: VirtualChair: Fangjing Tu, University of Wisconsin-Madison,
Department of Communication ArtsDisc: Benjamin Toff, University of Oxford
Papers: Estimating the Effects of Believing Conspiracy TheoriesScott J Basinger, University of HoustonYongkwang Kim, University of HoustonResolving the Micro-Macro Disconnect for the Role ofFacts in American AttitudesBrendan Nyhan, Dartmouth CollegeEthan Porter, George Washington UniversityThomas Wood, The Ohio State UniversityWhat Is the Government Hiding? Transparency, Trust,and False BeliefsMathieu Lavigne, McGill UniversityEric Belanger, McGill UniversityJean-François Daoust, University of EdinburghErick Lachapelle, Universite de MontrealRichard Nadeau, University of MontrealPolitical Elites and the Appeal of Fake News in BrazilNara Pavão, UFPEFelipe Nunes, UFMGFrederico Batista Pereira, University of NorthCarolina at CharlottePartisanship or Personal Experience?: ExplainingAttitudes about COVID in MexicoRebecca V. Bell-Martin, Tecnologico de MonterreyAlejandro Diaz-Dominguez, Tecnologico deMonterrey
DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION215.29 ELITES, MEDIA, AND PUBLIC OPINIONRoom: VirtualChair: Eran Amsalem, The Hebrew University of JerusalemDisc: Tyler Thomas Reny, Claremont Graduate University
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Papers: Discursive Dominance by Tweet: How the GOP Becamethe Party of TrumpJoseph Cerrone, George Washington UniversityIntra-Party Division and News Media EngagementAmong Republican LegislatorsMike Cowburn, Freie Universität BerlinCurd Benjamin Knüpfer, Freie Universität BerlinUnderstanding Elite Level Republican Support forInsurrection at the CapitolLorcan Neill, George Washington UniversitySteven L. Livingston, George Washington UniversityYunkang YangWhat Congress Talks About When TheyĀre Not TalkingPolicyAngela M. Schöpke-Gonzalez, University of MichiganLibby Hemphill, University of Michigan
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY215.30 AUTOCRACIES AND INTERNATIONAL
ORGANIZATIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Stephan Haggard, University of California, San DiegoDisc: Stephan Haggard, University of California, San Diego
Papers: How UN Peacekeepers Respond to Host StateDemocratic Norm ViolationsSarah von Billerbeck, University of ReadingBirte Julia Gippert, University of LiverpoolKseniya Oksamytna, King's College LondonTransnational Authoritarian Networks and Human RightsProtectionMaria Josepha Debre, Potsdam UniversitySocial Media, Self-Legitimation and RegionalInternational OrganizationsAnastassia V. Obydenkova, IBEI - Institut BarcelonaD'Estudis InternacionalsRegional Organisations as Learning Support Clubs forAutocraciesStephen Hall, University of Bath
DIVISION 55: CLASS AND INEQUALITY215.31 NEW DIRECTIONS IN COMPARATIVE
POLITICAL INEQUALITY RESEARCHRoom: VirtualChair: Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins UniversityDisc: Pavithra Suryanarayan, Johns Hopkins University
Pablo Beramendi, Duke University
Papers: Political (In)EqualityPablo Beramendi, Duke UniversityTimothy Besley, London School of EconomicsMargaret Levi, Stanford UniversityAre There Social Class Gaps in Nascent PoliticalAmbition?Nicholas Carnes, Duke UniversityNoam Lupu, Vanderbilt UniversityPoliticiansĀNeighborhoods: Where Do They Live andDoes It Matter?Olle Folke, Uppsala UniversityMatz Dahlberg, Uppsala UniversityLinna Marten, Uppsala UniversityJohanna Rickne, Stockholm University
DailySchedule
Sunday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Do Poor and Rich Vote Differently?Jan RossetNathalie Giger, University of GenevaAnna Sophie Kurella, Universität Mannheim
DIVISION 56: AMERICAN POLITICAL THOUGHT215.32 STRUGGLES OVER RACIAL EQUALITY AND
MULTIRACIAL DEMOCRACY IN AMERICARoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of PoliticalTheory
Chair: Susan McWilliams, Pomona CollegeDisc: Lucy Britt, Gettysburg College
Michelle D. Deardorff, University of Tennessee atChattanooga
Papers: Antebellum Virginian Pro-Slavery Thought as ReactionSimon Gilhooley, Bard CollegeFrederick Douglass and the Spirit of CasteLucien Maxwell Ferguson, Northwestern UniversityThe Esoteric Teachings in Political Thought of AnnaJulia CooperLisa Pace Vetter, University of Maryland, BaltimoreCountySeizing Citizenship: Frederick Douglass's AbolitionistRepublicanismPhilip Yaure, Virginia Tech
216.2MCCONNELL CENTER FOR POLITICAL LEADERSHIP: VIRTUE & LEADERSHIP IN THE HISTORY OF POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: VirtualChair: Michael Promisel, Coastal Carolina UniversityDisc: Michael Promisel, Coastal Carolina University
Noah Stengl, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Papers: Bad Company: MachiavelliĀs Politics of Acquiescence inĄThe Mandrake RootďNoah Stengl, University of Wisconsin-MadisonConsidering the Possibility (and Desirability) of LiberalVirtuesChristina Bambrick, University of Notre DamePlato on Bad Faith and the End of DiscourseThomas David Bunting, Shawnee State UniversityUnity of Contradictions: José Ortega y Gasset and thePractice of PoliticsBrendon Westler, St. Olaf College
216.3 VICTIMS OF COMMUNISM MEMORIALFOUNDATION: SITUATION IN XINJIANG:FORCED LABOR, SEXUAL VIOLENCE, ANDORGAN HARVESTING
Room: Virtual
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Papers: Forced Labor and Forcible Human DisplacementAdrian Zenz, Victims of Communism MemorialFoundationFieldwork Among the Uyghur and Kazakh RefugeesEthan Gutmann, Victims of Communism MemorialFoundationEstablishing What We Think We 'Know' About OrganTransplantation in ChinaMatthew P Robertson, Victims of CommunismMemorial Foundation
Sunday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PMAPSA Events217.1 ASIANS AND PACIFIC ISLANDERS IN THE
PROFESSION: OPPORTUNITIES ANDCHALLENGES FOR JOB SEEKERS IN A TIMEOF MULTIPLE CRISES
Room: VirtualChair: Maneesh Arora, Wellesley College
Kim Geron, California State University, East BayPart: Nicole Filler, Highline College
Hannah June Kim, University of Nebraska, OmahaCara Wong, University of Illinois at Urbana-ChampaignCharles T. Lee, Arizona State UniversityPei-te Lien, University of California Santa Barbara
217.2 COMMUNITY COLLEGES: THE POTENTIALSAND PERILS FOR CREATING ENGAGEMENT &EQUITY
Room: VirtualChair: Christina MI Sciabarra, Bellevue CollegePart: Andrew Parker Teas, Houston Community College
Ron Hayduk, San Francisco State UnversityJulie L. Mueller, Southern Maine Community CollegeRebecca J Lubbers, St. Clair County CommunityCollegeIfe Williams, Delaware County Community College
Division PanelsDIVISION 1: POLITICAL THOUGHT AND PHILOSOPHY218.1 LIBERALISM AS TRADITION: EDUCATION,
ECONOMY, EMPIRERoom: VirtualChair: Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth CollegeDisc: Teddy Harrison, Harvard University
Lucas Swaine, Dartmouth College
Papers: The Limits of a Liberal Education for AutonomyMichelle A. Schwarze, University of Wisconsin,MadisonTimothy Tyler Tennyson, UW-MadisonLiberal Pluralism in John Stuart Mill's Stationary StateLee Ward, Baylor UniversityThe Liberal TraditionEric MacGilvray, Ohio State UniversityPauperism and ColonialismBarbara Arneil, University of British Columbia
DIVISION 2: FOUNDATIONS OF POLITICAL THEORY218.2 AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS: KATRINA
FORRESTER'S "IN THE SHADOW OF JUSTICE"Room: VirtualChair: Alyssa Battistoni, Barnard CollegePart: Melissa Lane, Princeton University
Jacob T. Levy, McGill UniversityMurad Idris, University of Michigan
Sunday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Katrina Forrester, Harvard UniversityErin Pineda, Smith College
DIVISION 3: NORMATIVE THEORY218.3 THE ENVIRONMENT, THE PLANET, AND
CLIMATE CRISISRoom: VirtualChair: Juman Kim, Towson UniversityDisc: Levente Szentkirályi, University of Colorado at Boulder
Papers: Collective Implications of Isolated EnvironmentalDecisions: Theory & PracticeElisabeth H. Ellis, University of OtagoDemocratic Emergency Claim-Making About ClimateChangeJennifer C. Rubenstein, University of VirginiaFear of a Blank Planet: A Planetary Turn in PoliticalTheoryKamran Moshref, CUNY Graduate CenterSovereignty, Solidarity, and Democratic Equality in theFace of Climate CrisisBenjamin McKean, Ohio State University
DIVISION 5: POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY218.4 ELITE RHETORICRoom: VirtualChair: C. Daniel Myers, University of MinnesotaDisc: C. Daniel Myers, University of Minnesota
Papers: Testing the Effect and Causal Pathway of Elite Cues onGlobal Warming AttitudesJared McDonald, Stanford UniversityJon A. Krosnick, Stanford UniversityRhetoric and Political Violence: Considering the Role ofNeighborhood ContextBryan Gervais, University of Texas at San AntonioIrwin L. Morris, North Carolina State University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY218.5 FORMAL MODELING IN POLITICAL SCIENCE:
EPISTEMOLOGY AND METHOD(S) MINI-CONFERENCE: CHOOSING METHOD(S) OFFORMAL MODELING
Room: VirtualChair: Scott H. Ainsworth, University of GeorgiaPart: Olga V. Shvetsova, SUNY, Binghamton University
Michael J. Laver, New York UniversityKatri K. SiebergElizabeth Maggie Penn, Emory University
DIVISION 6: POLITICAL ECONOMY218.6 STATE CAPACITY IN HISTORICAL
PERSPECTIVES: CHINA AND BEYONDRoom: VirtualChair: Lisa Blaydes, Stanford UniversityDisc: Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University
Scott Gehlbach, University of Chicago
Papers: A Theory of Power Structure and InstitutionalCompatibility: China vs. EuropeRuixue Jia, ucsdGerard Roland, University of California, BerkeleyYang Xie, University of California, RiversideSocial Embeddedness and State Durability in ImperialChinaYuhua Wang, Harvard University
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Fiscal Extraction During Wartime: The CCP vs. TheKMTXiaobo Lu, University of Texas at AustinA Coercive Theory of Autocratic Regime Transitions:Evidence from ChinaDaniel Mattingly, Yale University
DIVISION 8: POLITICAL METHODOLOGY218.7 MODELS FOR TSCS, TIME, AND DURATION
DATARoom: VirtualChair: Lorena G. Barberia, University of São PauloDisc: Robert J. Franzese, University of Michigan
Papers: Dynamic Inferences in Political Science with VectorAutoregressive (VAR) ModelsLorena G. Barberia, University of São PauloMaria Leticia Claro de Faria Oliveira, University ofSao PauloNatalia MoreiraOut of Order: Specification Check Sequencing in CoxModelsBenjamin Thomas Jones, The University ofMississippiShawna K. Metzger, Michigan State UniversityRegression Discontinuity Designs for High-frequencyTSCS DataYe Wang, New York UniversityYiqing Xu, Stanford UniversityJunlong Aaron Zhou, New York University
DIVISION 11: COMPARATIVE POLITICS218.8 REVOLUTIONS AND STATEBUILDING:
TRANSFORMING POLITICAL AND SOCIALINSTITUTIONS
Room: VirtualChair: Jack A. Goldstone, George Mason UniversityDisc: Steven Levitsky, Harvard University
Andrea Ruggeri, University of Oxford
Papers: State Building and War in the French Colonial EmpireMelissa M. Lee, Princeton UniversityGabriel Koehler-Derrick, Brown UniversityRevolution in Flawed Democracies: The LebaneseThawra & IraqĀs Tishreen UprisingChantal Berman, Georgetown UniversityKillian Clarke, Georgetown UniversityRima Majed, American University of BeirutRebel Regimes and Military PowersharingJack Paine, University of RochesterAnne Meng, University of VirginiaLegacies of Social Transformation in U.S. "Contraband"CampsMegan A. Stewart, American University-SISKarin Kitchens, Virginia Tech
DIVISION 12: COMPARATIVE POLITICS OF DEVELOPINGCOUNTRIES218.9 COMPARATIVE ETHNIC POLITICS 2Room: VirtualChair: Thibaud Marcesse, Boston CollegeDisc: Carew E. Boulding, University of Colorado, Boulder
DailySchedule
Sunday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
Papers: Building Indigenous Citizens: The Effects of PriorConsultations in PeruMariana Teresa Alvarado Chavez, New YorkUniversityRighting Wrongs Through Public Employment: HowSocial Policies Help SC in IndiaThibaud MarcesseThe Effects of Presidential Vulnerability on EthnicPolicy InnovationSarah Chartock, College of New JerseyWhen Does Descriptive Representation Backfire?Feyaad Allie, Stanford University
DIVISION 16: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY218.10 CONSEQUENCES OF ECONOMIC CRISISRoom: VirtualChair: Andreas Kern, Georgetown UniversityDisc: Andrew Kerner, Michigan State University
Papers: Can the Empire Strike Back? Why Efforts to RestrainSovereign Ratings FailZsofia Barta, SUNY, University at AlbanyCorrelates of Learning from Banking Crisis: IMF andCentral Bank IndependencePuspa D Amri, Sonoma State UniversityThomas D. Willett, Claremont Graduate UniversityEconomic Insecurity and Voter Attitudes AboutCurrency CrisesDavid A. Steinberg, Johns Hopkins UniversityS. Erdem Aytaç, Koç UniversityTax Aid, Foreign-Induced Fiscal Capacity, and CapitalFlightJing Qian, Princeton University
DIVISION 17: INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATION218.11 POLITICAL ECONOMY OF ECONOMIC
STATECRAFTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 16: International PoliticalEconomy
Chair: Paul Poast, University of ChicagoDisc: Marina Elisabeth Henke, Northwestern University
Dan Honig, University College London
Papers: Foreign Policy or Industrial Policy? The Design ofTrade BureaucracyChristina Davis, Harvard UniversityYon Soo Park, Harvard UniversityDiana Stanescu, Princeton UniversityDynamic Lobbying: How to Persuade CongressHye Young You, New York UniversityInternational Institutions and Spillover EffectsJulia C. Morse, University of California, SantaBarbaraWhen the Hegemon Barks and Markets DonĀt BiteNikhil Kalyanpur, Georgetown UniversityAbraham Newman, Georgetown UniversityQi Zhang, Georgetown University
DIVISION 19: INTERNATIONAL SECURITY218.12 NEGOTIATIONS WITH STATE AND NON-STATE
ACTORSRoom: VirtualChair: Hongyu Zhang, University of North Carolina at
Wilmington
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Papers: Evaluating the Effects of UN Counterterrorism TreatiesAlmira Sadykova, Binghamton UniversityPolarization and Foreign PolicyMael van Beek, Ohio State University
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES218.13 POLITICAL CAUSES AND PERSONAL
CONSEQUENCES OF VIOLENCE: RESEARCHFROM SOUTH ASIA
Room: VirtualChair: Saumitra Jha, Stanford UniversityDisc: Mashail Aman Malik, Harvard University
Papers: Center-Periphery Partisan Alignment and RebelViolence: Evidence from IndiaDrew Stommes, Yale UniversityPolitical Parties and Violence Specialists: ExplainingViolence in KarachiNiloufer Siddiqui, SUNY, University at AlbanySeeking Safety: Civilian Decision-Making in the 1984Pogroms and Punjab CrisisAidan Milliff, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
DIVISION 21: CONFLICT PROCESSES218.14 THE POLITICS OF ILLICIT MARKETSRoom: VirtualChair: Layla M Hashemi, GMUDisc: Danielle F. Jung, Emory University
Rebecca V. Bell-Martin, Tecnologico de Monterrey
Papers: From Cocaine to Avocados: Criminal Market Expansionand ViolenceLucia Tiscornia, Centro de Investigacion y DocenciaEconomicasChelsea L Estancona, University of South CarolinaOpium Poppy Cultivation: Between Legal and IllegalEconomies in SinaloaCecilia Farfan Mendez, University of California, SanDiegoThe Politics of Drug Market RegulationHernan Flom, Trinity CollegeEveryday Criminality: The Informal Water Providers ofMetro ManilaNazia Hussain
DIVISION 22: LEGISLATIVE STUDIES218.15 STRATEGIC AND TACTICAL LEGISLATIVE
COALITIONSRoom: VirtualChair: C. Lawrence Evans, College of William & MaryDisc: Christian Fong, University of Michigan
Jeremy Gelman, University of Nevada, RenoC. Lawrence Evans, College of William & Mary
Papers: The Congressional Leadership TournamentChristian Fong, University of MichiganJosh McCrain, University of UtahThe Electoral and Legislative Consequences ofCongressional PartisanshipJeremy Gelman, University of Nevada, RenoSteven Lloyd Wilson, University of Nevada, RenoThe Preference for Reciprocity in LegislaturesChristian Fong, University of MichiganWaffling, Ambiguity, and Coalition BuildingC. Lawrence Evans, College of William & Mary
Sunday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS218.16 COMPARATIVE LEGAL MOBILIZATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Michael W. McCann, University of Washington, SeattleDisc: Lisa Hilbink, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities
Papers: Gaining Voice & Grappling with the LawJanice Kreinick Gallagher, Rutgers-NewarkLegal Mobilization and the Embedding of ConstitutionalLawWhitney K Taylor, Cornell UniversityDecentered Construction of Global Rights: Lessons fromthe Human Right to WaterDaniel M. Brinks, University of Texas at AustinBruce M. Wilson, University of Central FloridaEffect of High vs Low Stakes on Legal Mobilization:A Survey Experiment in ChinaSusan Whiting, University of WashingtonZhaowen Guo, University of Washington
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS218.17 RACE, GENDER, AND THE JUDICIARYRoom: VirtualChair: Nancy Bays Arrington, California Polytechnic State
UniversityDisc: Melody E. Valdini, Portland State University
Rebecca D. Gill, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Papers: Raising the Bar: WomenĀs Appointments to High CourtsWorldwideMaria C. Escobar-Lemmon, Texas A&M UniversityValerie J. Hoekstra, Arizona State UniversityAlice Kang, University of Nebraska-LincolnMiki Caul Kittilson, Arizona State UniversityBlack Judges and the Representation of Black LegalInterestsTaneisha Nicole Means, Vassar CollegePerceptions of Judicial Representation: How Race andGender Condition BeliefsMatthew J. Moore, California Polytechnic StateUniversity, San Luis ObispoNancy Bays Arrington, California Polytechnic StateUniversityTrial ĄBetter than Menď: Gender Variation in Courts ofChinaErico Yu, University of IowaYuehong Tai, University of Iowa
DIVISION 26: LAW AND COURTS218.18 THE POLITICS OF AMBIGUITY: CONSISTENCY
AND DISPARITY ACROSS THE SUBFIELDDIVIDE
Room: VirtualChair: Rachel VanSickle-Ward, Pitzer CollegeDisc: Jeffrey Staton, Emory University
Part: Justin K. Canfil, Columbia UniversityZoltan I. Buzas, University of Notre DamePamela Clouser McCann, University of SouthernCaliforniaJieun Kim, University of PennsylvaniaJoseph L. Smith, University of Alabama
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DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH218.19 GENDER, RELATIONAL HARM, AND JUSTICE:
LEGACIES OF POLITICAL VIOLENCERoom: VirtualChair: Helen KinsellaDisc: Helen Kinsella
Papers: Violations of the Heart: Parental Harm in Contexts ofMass ViolenceRebekka C. Friedman, King's College LondonHanna Ketola, King's College LondonMaternal Harm in Conflict and Post-Conflict Context:Northern IrelandFionnuala Ni Aolain, The University of MinnesotaSocial Repair, Belonging and Patriarchy After Conflict-Related Sexual ViolenceErin Baines, Liu Insitute for Global IssuesCamile OliveiraFunding Transitional Justice to Achieve TransformativeImpactsKirsten Ainley, Australian National UniversityEric Wiebelhaus-Brahm, University of Arkansas,Little RockClaire Wilmot, London School of Economics
DIVISION 31: WOMEN, GENDER, AND POLITICSRESEARCH218.20 MOTHERHOOD AND POLITICSRoom: VirtualChair: Amy Gould, Evergreen State CollegeDisc: Amy Gould, Evergreen State College
Quinn Albaugh, University of Toronto
Papers: Galvanizing Grief: Gun Violence, Maternal Politics andPathways to PowerAidan Smith, Tulane UniversityHaving It All? Reconciling Parliamentary Careers andMotherhoodSusan Franceschet, University of CalgaryMalliga Och, Idaho State UniversityMaternal Framing and Social Movement LongevityCrystal Whetstone, Sam Houston State UniversityPathways to Political Participation: Gender Differencesand InequalitiesQin Huang
DIVISION 32: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND POLITICS218.21 MORE THAN LEISURE AND PLAY: RACE AND
GENDER POLITICS IN AMERICAN SPORTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 37: Public OpinionChair: Dara Z. Strolovitch, Princeton UniversityDisc: Tasha S. Philpot, University of Texas, Austin
Jennifer M. Piscopo, Occidental College
Papers: Speak Up and Dribble: How the WNBA Changed the2020 Senate Race in GeorgiaAngele DelevoyeThe Influence and Interpretation of NFL Sports ActivismBetina Cutaia Wilkinson, Wake Forest UniversityLisa Kiang
DailySchedule
Sunday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
For My People? Linked Fate & African AmericanOpinion on Paying College AthletesTatishe Mavovosi Nteta, University of Massachusetts,AmherstLauren McCarthy, University of Massachusetts,AmherstKevin Jay Wallsten, California State University, LongBeachHow Inter-Group Contact Can Change Policy Views:The Case of College SportJames N. Druckman, Northwestern UniversityElizabeth A. Sharrow, University of MassachusettsAmherst
DIVISION 36: ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR218.22 ELECTIONS DURING THE COVID-19 PANDEMICRoom: VirtualChair: Aleksander Ksiazkiewicz, University of Illinois at
Urbana-ChampaignDisc: Khalilah L. Brown-Dean, QUINNIPIAC UNIVERSITY
April A. Johnson, Kennesaw State University
Papers: After the COVID-19 Crisis: The New Zealand GeneralElection of 2020Jack Vowles, Victoria University of WellingtonSam Bigwood, Victoria University of WellingtonA Statistical Study of Swing State Behavior in the 2020U.S. Presidential ElectionMason Chen, Stanford OHSMobilizing or Demobilizing?: Measuring the Impact ofSocial Media in ElectionsRachel K. Gibson, University of ManchesterJonathan Nagler, New York UniversityEsmeralda V. Bon, University of ManchesterPeter Smyth, University of ManchesterJahandar Musayev, The University of ManchesterPartisan Selectivity in Blame Attribution: Evidence fromthe COVID-19 PandemicShikhar Singh, Yale UniversityMatthew H Graham, George Washington University
DIVISION 37: PUBLIC OPINION218.23 ELITE CUES & MOTIVATED REASONINGRoom: VirtualChair: Amanda Wintersieck, Virginia Commonwealth
UniversityDisc: Gabriel Borelli, Princeton University
Papers: How Covid-Related Cues & Policies Affect Beliefs,Preferences, and EvaluationsJames Hodgdon Bisbee, NYUNo More Sticking to Sports: The Political Impact ofBlack Athlete ActivismSebastian Mayer, University of WashingtonPartisan Signaling and Asymmetric Support forDemocratic InstitutionsAli Shiraz Masood, Rhodes CollegeRyan Strickler, Colorado State University, PuebloMichael Zilis, University of KentuckyThe Politics of Intellect and Epistemic Hubris in theUnited StatesDavid C. Barker, American UniversityMorgan Marietta, University of Massachusetts Lowell
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DIVISION 38: POLITICAL COMMUNICATION218.24 RACIAL JUSTICERoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 32: Race, Ethnicity, and PoliticsChair: Sydney Carr, University of Michigan, Ann ArborDisc: Rachel Lee Wahl, University of Virginia
Papers: Incivility is Good for Democracy: Incivility in thePursuit of Racial JusticeSam Gubitz, Kent Denver SchoolFraming Black Lives Matter: The Impact of PartisanNews on Reader AttitudesMarisa A. Smith, Michigan State UniversityKatherine Haenschen, Northeastern UniversitySequential Sympathy in Pandemic and ProtestJoshua P. Darr, Louisiana State UniversityThe Perception of Law and Order Propaganda inDemocracies: Evidence from the USPhilipp Lutscher, University of OsloKarsten Donnay, University of Zurich
DIVISION 40: INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY, & POLITICS218.25 DIGITAL ADVOCACY STRATEGIESRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 38: Political CommunicationChair: Terri L. Towner, Oakland UniversityDisc: George Robert Boynton, University of Iowa
Papers: Coordinating Violence in Decentralized Protests:Evidence from Hong Kong in 2019Alison Sile Chen, University of California, San DiegoEthnic Minorities Social Media Collective Strategies andPolitical ParticipationAlcides Velasquez, University of KansasAshley Muddiman, University of KansasSreerupa Sanyal, University of KansasShare Your Story: Technology, Power, andRepresentation in Crowdsourced AdvocacyFilippo Trevisan, American UniversityAriadne Vromen, University of SydneyMichael VaughanThe āDefundthePolice Movement in ReimaginingPolicing in AmericaSharon Meraz, University of Illinois at Chicago
DIVISION 41: POLITICS, LITERATURE, AND FILM218.26 DUTY AND CARE IN HUMAN DEVELOPMENTRoom: Virtual
Co-sponsored by Division 1: Political Thought andPhilosophy
Chair: Susan McWilliams, Pomona CollegeDisc: Rob Goodman, Ryerson University
Papers: American Augustinianism: Pilgrim Mercy in Luisa MayAlcott's "Little Women"Mary M. Keys, University of Notre DameModerating the Democracy: Attic Rhetoric andCountering the DemagogueMichelle M. Kundmueller, Old Dominion UniversitySophoclesĀPhiloctetes: Disease and Needs in the BodyPoliticMarlene K. Sokolon, Concordia UniversityWollstonecraftĀs Gothic ViolenceMegan Gallagher, University of Alabama
Sunday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
DIVISION 42: NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE218.27 SHORTCOMINGS OF DEMOCRACY AND THE
PATH FORWARDRoom: VirtualChair: Callum Ingram, University of Nevada RenoDisc: Mary K Ryan, Washington & Jefferson College
Papers: American Restoration: The Battle for the Soul ofAmericaMichael K. Stein, University of Massachusetts,AmherstAt the Table or In the Streets? Collaboration andCooptation in Public HousingAlison Gash, University of OregonAlex K Farrington, University of OregonFailures of PunishmentWendy Wright, William Paterson UniversityProblematizing Political Nostalgia: Conspiracy Theorismand White NationalismCandice K Travis, University of Massachusetts,Amherst
DIVISION 43: INTERNATIONAL HISTORY AND POLITICS218.28 THE EMERGENCE AND CONTINUITY OF
COLONIALISMS: AGENCY AND DOMINATIONRoom: VirtualChair: Rina Verma Williams, University of CincinnatiDisc: Rina Verma Williams, University of Cincinnati
Papers: Chartering Empire: Private Authority and the Birth ofthe International SystemMiles Evers, University of ConnecticutJevons, Marshall and Late-Victorian ColonialImaginaries of International TradeDavid L. Blaney, Macalester CollegeManeuvering Empire: (Post)Colonial Order AmongMarginalized SubjectsOwen Rhys Brown, Northwestern UniversityArturo Chang, University of TorontoThe U.S. and The Philippines: Ethics of War andTensions of American EmpireMary Anne Mendoza, California State PolytechnicUniversity, PomonaJohn R Emery, University of Oklahoma
DIVISION 44: DEMOCRACY AND AUTOCRACY218.29 CONCEPTUALIZING AND MEASURING
DEMOCRACY AND DEMOCRATICBACKSLIDING
Room: VirtualChair: Hillel David Soifer, Temple UniversityDisc: Michael K. Miller, George Washington University
John Gerring, University of Texas, Austin
Papers: Laboratories of Democratic BackslidingJake M Grumbach, Princeton UniversityAssessing Regime Transformation as Episodes ofDemocratization & AutocratizationAmanda B. Edgell, University of Alabama,TuscaloosaDemocratic Backsliding: Linking Globalization &Democratic Institutional StrengthAnna M. Meyerrose, Princeton University
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Who Rates? Identity, Bias, and Democracy RatingsSarah S. Bush, Yale UniversityMelina Raquel Platas Izama, NYU Abu Dhabi
DIVISION 48: HEALTH POLITICS & HEALTH POLICY218.30 WHO USES PUBLIC HEALTH RESOURCES AND
WHO IS SEEN AS DESERVING OF DOING SORoom: VirtualChair: Frank J. Thompson, Rutgers UniversityDisc: Taleed El-Sabawi, Elon University
Andrew S. Kelly, California State University, East Bay
Papers: Investigating the Impact of COVID-19 onUndocumented ImmigrantsCesar Daniel Vargas Nunez, Stanford UniversityMedicaid, Race, and Local Discretion: How SegregationAffects Benefit AllocationTracee Morgan Saunders, University of IowaWhat Government Teaches: Lessons from Drug PolicyPatricia Strach, University at Albany, SUNYElizabeth Perez Chiques, Centro de Investigación yDocencia EconómicasKatie Zuber, John Jay College of Criminal Justice,City University of New YorkWhose Health Deserves Investment? A CrowdfundingConjoint ExperimentAbigail Fisher Williamson, Trinity CollegeKristin Kay Lunz Trujillo, Northeastern Universityand Harvard UniversitySarah S. Willen, University of ConnecticutColleen C. Walsh, Cleveland State University
DIVISION 52: MIGRATION & CITIZENSHIP218.31 GOVERNANCE OF IMMIGRATION AND
EMIGRATION IN INSTITUTIONSRoom: VirtualChair: Sudeshna Chatterjee, University of Massachusetts
BostonDisc: Mneesha Gellman, Emerson College
Papers: Emigration Opportunities and Effective GovernanceAlexander Kustov, Yale UniversityRethinking Non-immigrant Precarity in U.S. CorporateUniversitiesSudeshna Chatterjee, University of MassachusettsBostonWhy Refugee Employment Declines: Shortcomings inFederal Resettlement SupportEls de Graauw, Baruch College, CUNYAnna Kreisberg, Brown UniversityShannon Gleeson, Cornell University/ILRHow Mobility-Stability Capital Stratifies InternationalLegal MovementJacob Richard Thomas, Princeton University
DIVISION 57: MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICANPOLITICS218.32 POLITICAL BEHAVIOR IN THE MIDDLE EASTRoom: VirtualChair: Elizabeth R. Nugent, Yale UniversityPapers: Conspiracy Belief and Democratic Skepticism in the
Middle EastHannah Ridge, University of ChicagoHow Do Protests Work for Democratization? Evidencefrom Arab Spring in EgyptWenting Xu, University of Chicago
DailySchedule
Sunday, 2:00 PM to 3:30 PM
How Remittance Receipt Affects Attitudes and Actionsin the MENA RegionNadia Eldemerdash, University of Nevada Las VegasIs Protest a Luxury? Evidence from IraqKarl C. Kaltenthaler, University of AkronMujtaba Isani, University of MannheimDaniel Silverman, Carnegie Mellon University
219.2 DISASTERS AND CRISES: FRONTIERS IN DISASTER AND CRISES RESEARCH: BEYOND COVID-19
Room: VirtualChair: Daniel P. Aldrich, Northeastern UniversityDisc: Rob A. DeLeo, Bentley University
Papers: Nowhere to Run to, Nowhere to Hide: Disasters,Preparedness, and the Shadow of State Failure on U.S.IslandsChris Ellis, CornellWhen it Rains, it Pours: Social CapitalĀs Role inFacebook Evacuation NetworksTimothy Fraser, Northeastern UniversityEpidemic Prevention in China: The Politics ofRegulating Live Poultry SalesAnnemieke van den Dool, Duke Kunshan UniversityDisaster by Design: Submersed Stakeholders & theEconomy of Dam FailurePon Souvannaseng, Bentley UniversityAdnan Naseemullah, King's College London
219.3 ENVIRONMENTAL POLITICS AND THEORY:UNTANGLING THE MESS: THE PROMISE ANDPERIL OF ECO-PROGRESSIVE POLITICS
Room: VirtualCo-sponsored by Division 2: Foundations of PoliticalTheory
Chair: Mary WitlacilDisc: Ross Mittiga, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Papers: Extinction or Socialism: Theorizing a Just Necropoliticsin the AnthropoceneSean Parson, Northern Arizona UniversityDemocratic Republicanism and the Greening ofCitizenshipAndy Scerri, Virginia TechClimate Politics, Populism, and the Meaning ofCosmopolitanismJohn M. Meyer, Humboldt State UniversityPromoting Pluralism: Big Green Groups asAnthropocene ArchitectsTimothy W. Luke, Virginia Tech
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219.4 INTERNATIONAL CHURCHILL SOCIETY(FORMERLY THE CHURCHILL CENTRE):CHURCHILL ON WAR ON LAND AND AT SEA
Room: VirtualChair: James W. Muller, University of Alaska, AnchorageDisc: Will Morrisey, Hillsdale College
Papers: To Conquer Without Forgetting Chivalry and Mercy:Churchill on the River WarDaniel J. Mahoney, Assumption CollegeSea Power in Churchill and Mahan: Pioneering Work ofBarbon and MontesquieuPaul A. Rahe, Hillsdale CollegeThe Gathering Storm in Asia: Churchill and War withJapanJohn Maurer, U.S. Naval War College
219.5 LAW AND POLITICAL PROCESS STUDYGROUP: NEW VOICES IN ELECTION LAW
Room: VirtualChair: Scott Lemieux, University of WashingtonDisc: Julia Rezazadeh Azari, Marquette University
Tabatha Arianne Abu El-Haj, Drexel University, ThomasR. Kline School of Law
Papers: Youth Voting Rights & Youth Power on the 50thAnniversary of the 26th AmendmentYael Bromberg, Bromberg Law LLCHow Compulsory Voting Emerged (and Might Re-Emerge) in an American CityNate Ela, University of CincinnatiReexamining Anti-Coordination Campaign FinanceRules Through an Equity LensAdam R Lioz, NAACP Legal Defense andEducational FundChecking Ballot Return Signatures Results in ManyErrors: Theory and EvidenceAlex Street, Carroll College
219.6 POLITICA: LAWYERS, GUNS, & MONEY:CONSENT, PATRIOTISM, & MONEY INMEDIEVAL POLITICAL THOUGHT
Room: VirtualChair: Catherine R. Power, Glendon College, York UniversityDisc: Mary Elizabeth Sullivan, University of Central Arkansas
Papers: Quod Omnes Tangit: Constitutional Principle orMalleable Authority?Cary J. Nederman, Texas A&M UniversityA Natural Law Account of Patriotism: Aquinas on theFourth CommandmentAndrew Kyle Bobo, University of DallasThe Invention of Currency in Medieval Islamic PoliticalThoughtVasileios Syros, University of Chicago
INDEX OF PARTICIPANTSKEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
A
A, Anna ..........................199 (38.17)A. McGraw, Barbara ......362 (198.2)Aall, Pamela R. ..............199 (38.17)Aanstoos, Kristen............244 (80.1)Aars, Jacob.................. 311 (152.21)Aaskoven, Lasse ........ 281 (117.32),
346 (183.30)Abatsis, Kristen ...............243 (79.1)Abazov, Rafis.................262 (99.19)Abbassi, Jennifer ..........224 (63.13)Abbott, Jared ...........243 (79.1), 252
(88.1)Abboud, Samer..............385 (214.4)Abdelaaty, Lamis ........ 306 (143.31),
384 (212.44)Abdelgadir, Aala .... 202 (38.32), 228
(67.1)Abdul Reda, Amir ........ 289 (122.24)Abedini, Vahid .............361 (197.28)Abernathy, Claire......... 304 (143.16)Abers, Rebecca Neaera.............240
(77.7)Abi-Hassan, Sahar...........229 (70.1)Abner, Gordon ............. 321 (162.21)Abou-Chadi, Tarik....... 375 (209.35),
387 (215.11)AbouAssi, Khaldoun .....187 (26.21)Abrahams, Alexei Sisulu ...........376
(209.40)Abramowitz, Alan I. .......219 (57.21)Abrams, Cameron Micah...........304
(143.18)Abramson, Scott...... 259 (98.2), 293
(134.8), 378 (212.6), 386(215.5)
Abu El-Haj, Tabatha Arianne.....397(219.5)
Abulof, Uriel......... 273 (109.28), 328(168.21)
Achbari, Wahideh ..........364 (205.6)Achen, Christopher H.....203 (42.2),
298 (134.36), 323 (163.2)Achilov, Dilshod ......223 (63.9), 281
(117.30), 361 (197.28), 382(212.32)
Achury, Susan Vivian ....218 (57.16)Ackah-Arthur, Jemima...............275
(114.1)Ackrén, Maria Helena ....262 (99.19)Adalet, Begüm ......... 222 (63.2), 317
(162.1)Adam, Abdul-jabiru .......187 (26.21)Adams, James ..... 375 (209.36), 387
(215.11)Adams, Karen Ruth .......205 (43.13)Adamson, Fiona B.......272 (109.26)Adebo, Bodunrin Joseph ..........289
(122.25)Adida, Claire Leslie ......201 (38.30),
253 (90.2), 289 (122.26), 306(143.31)
Adiguzel, Fatih Serkant .............223(63.7), 307 (147.1), 376
(209.41)Adler, William D. ..........344 (183.21)Adler-Nissen, Rebecca ..............360
(197.26)Adly, Amr Ismail ............251 (85.40)Adya, Meera...................268 (108.2)Affigne, Tony ......... 256 (91.23), 289
(123.1)Afonso, Alexandre....... 384 (212.43)Afsahi, Afsoun...............349 (190.4)Afzal, Muhammad HassanBin...............................334 (175.2)
Agatstein, Fredric ..........333 (173.1)Agatstein, Zachary PaulBuchanan....................333 (173.1)
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Agensky, Jonathan...... 281 (117.30)Aggarwal, Minali ..........354 (190.29)Aguilar, Rosario........... 294 (134.15)Aguirre, Kelly.................349 (190.3)Agupusi, Patricia C. .... 381 (212.25)Aharoni, Tali ................ 367 (205.21)Ahmadoghlu, Ramin.... 310 (152.10)Ahmed, Amel F. ...............184 (26.5)Ahn, Suhwoo ...............367 (205.23)Ahrens, Achim ...............371 (209.7)Ahrens, Stephanie .........363 (205.1)Ahrenshop, Mats ... 211 (51.10), 302
(143.5)Ahsan, Budrul........ 188 (26.23), 319
(162.8), 326 (168.10)Ahuja, Amit ....................192 (33.10)Ainley, Kirsten .............394 (218.19)Ainsworth, Scott H. .... 281 (117.32),
374 (209.26), 389 (215.26), 392(218.5)
Aitalieva, Nurgul R. .......241 (77.17)Aiyar, Yamini................ 387 (215.10)Ajisebiyawo, AdekunleSaheed ..........................258 (94.1)
Akbiyik, Ahmet .... 299 (134.45), 359(197.17)
Akbulut-Gok, Isil..............237 (74.1)Akhmetkarimov, Bulat ...............310
(152.10)Akirav, Osnat ......... 249 (85.27), 263
(99.23)Aklin, Michael ........ 199 (38.14), 306
(143.27)Akoto, William .............303 (143.13)Aksoy, Deniz ................344 (183.19)Aktan, Dogus .................290 (125.2)Akturk, Sener........... 211 (51.7), 240
(77.9), 318 (162.7)Al Saeedi, Safa ............273 (109.29)Al Sarhan, Atallah .........333 (173.2)Al Sukhni, Aiham.........312 (152.22)Al-Faham, Hajer ....... 196 (37.1), 305
(143.22)Alakoc, Burcu Pinar .... 299 (134.45)Alam, Zainab..................249 (85.27)Alamillo, Rudy ...............256 (91.21)Alarian, Hannah Marie...............214
(51.28), 375 (209.35)Albarello, Alessio .... 259 (95.1), 348
(187.1)Albarracin Dierolf, Juan ............240
(77.13), 303 (143.10), 342(183.7)
Albaugh, Ericka ...............211 (51.8)Albaugh, Quinn ..... 201 (38.29), 242
(77.21), 354 (190.28), 394(218.20)
Albert, Zachary ...... 249 (85.29), 355(195.1)
Albertus, Michael..... 203 (43.3), 216(57.4), 269 (109.7), 384
(212.41)Albistegui Adler, GarrettMichael................ 340 (180.1), 388
(215.16)Albright, Elizabeth Ann .............226
(63.25), 314 (152.35), 333(174.1)
Aldrich, Daniel P. ..... 211 (51.9), 397(219.2)
Aldrich, John H..............200 (38.26)Aldridge, Alejandra...... 304 (143.17)Aleman, Eduardo..........213 (51.21),
233 (71.21), 359 (197.19)Alexander, Dan ................197 (38.5)Alexander, Titus....... 215 (54.3), 317
(159.4)Alexandroff, Alan S. ......262 (99.16)Alexandrova, Iordanka ..............282
(117.37)
Alexiadou, Despina ......204 (43.10),335 (176.9)
Alfaro, Adriana ..............301 (143.1)Algara, Carlos........ 234 (71.30), 275
(113.2), 298 (134.35), 344(183.22), 383 (212.35)
ALI, MOHAMMED Seid ..............357(197.11)
Ali, Noaman G ...............198 (38.11)Ali, Sameen A. Mohsin ..............192
(33.11)Alizade, Jeyhun ..... 291 (128.1), 389
(215.25)Alkon, Meir...................361 (197.27)Alksnis, Antonia ..........339 (176.30)Allam, Nermin ...... 283 (117.42), 313
(152.28)Allamong, Maxwell ........248 (85.22)Allard-Tremblay, Yann ....191 (33.6),
349 (190.3)Allee, Todd...................311 (152.16)Allegri, Chiara..............365 (205.11)Allen, Jennifer N.......... 354 (190.29)Allen, Kyle ...................313 (152.31)Allen, Michael A....... 182 (16.2), 275
(114.1)Allen, Michael O. ... 326 (168.9), 380
(212.18)Allen, Susan H. .... 270 (109.15), 366
(205.15)Allen, Trevor J ............. 375 (209.35)Allen, William...............321 (162.24)Allendoerfer, Michelle......258 (93.1)Alley, Joshua .................186 (26.16)Allie, Feyaad ..................393 (218.9)Allison, David Minchin ..............303
(143.14)Almeida, Shana .............274 (111.3)Almqvist, Adam .............214 (51.29)Alphonso, Gwendoline M. .........216
(57.5), 325 (167.1)Alrababah, Ala ..... 347 (183.40), 358
(197.17)Alt, James E. .................364 (205.5)Altınok, Berat Uygar ......318 (162.7)Altamirano, Melina...........204 (43.7)Altema McNeely, Natasha..........218
(57.19), 241 (77.16), 281(117.33)
Altman, Dan ........... 224 (63.14), 373(209.23)
Altundal, Ugur .............338 (176.28)Alvarado, Arturo ..........345 (183.26)Alvarado Chavez, MarianaTeresa .........................393 (218.9)
Álvarez, Eliana...............211 (51.11)Alvarez, Amanda Milena............203
(43.5)Alvarez, R. Michael...... 281 (117.31)Alves, Gabriel Henrique dePaula .........................312 (152.22)
Amadae, Sonja M. .........377 (211.1)Amano, Kenya .............294 (134.11)Amaral, David J ........... 297 (134.31)Amat, Consuelo ... 295 (134.23), 352
(190.22)Amat, Francesc ....... 192 (33.8), 204
(43.9)Ambar, Saladin Malik.................296
(134.27)Amechi, Bianca O..........292 (133.2)Amer, Rawia.....................237 (73.1)Ameri, Mason.................268 (108.2)Amick, Joseph.................223 (63.7)Amin, Sanjida ................224 (63.11)Amiya-Nakada, Ryosuke ...........377
(212.1)Amodio, Francesco ..... 372 (209.17)Amoroso, Joseph Gerard..........193
(33.18)
Amos, Brian.................288 (122.18)Amri, Puspa D ....... 285 (122.3), 393
(218.10)Amsalem, Eran ...... 207 (43.27), 299
(134.44), 390 (215.29)An, Jingjing ............. 244 (79.1), 300
(139.1)An, Seung-Ho ................248 (85.22)Anagnostou, Dia..........283 (117.40)Ananda, Aurelia ...............222 (63.3)Anastasopoulos, Jason.............379
(212.11)Andersen, Simon Calmar ..........367
(205.22)Anderson, Joshua .........364 (205.3)Anderson, Noel............320 (162.18)Anderson, Rebecca ..... 345 (183.24)Anderson, Sarah......... 361 (197.27),
383 (212.34)Anderson, Stephanie.................280
(117.23)Andersson, Per Fredrik .............371
(209.10)Andi, Simge ........... 187 (26.23), 226
(63.22), 367 (205.23)Andreopoulos, George J. ..........257
(91.26), 288 (122.22)Andrew, Simon A...........248 (85.23)Andrews, Helen .............391 (216.1)Andrews, Talbot M........188 (26.24),
277 (117.8), 306 (143.27)Aneja, Abhay ......... 251 (85.38), 278
(117.11)Ang, Yuen Yuen ....... 214 (52.3), 351
(190.11)Ang Collan Granillo, Milena ......235
(71.35)Angevine, Sara ...... 264 (99.29), 299
(134.42)Angin, Merih ..................212 (51.14)Angiolillo, Fabio ............227 (63.29)Angioni, Giovanni Francesco ...326
(168.8)Angulo Amaya, Camila....198 (38.7)Anicetti, Jonata .............212 (51.16)Annarelli, Kathleen Michael ......348
(186.1)Anoll, Allison Penelope.............254
(91.6)Anria, Santiago ...... 261 (99.11), 303
(143.11)Ansell, Ben William ......250 (85.35),
293 (134.7), 315 (152.45), 365(205.12)
Antal, Attila ......................204 (43.9)Anter, Nora.......................229 (67.2)Anthony, Joseph ... 263 (99.26), 281
(117.31), 297 (134.34), 346(183.32)
Anton, Michael....... 266 (100.1), 348(184.1)
Anzia, Sarah F........ 187 (26.22), 250(85.38), 283 (117.41)
Aoki, Andy L. ............... 313 (152.29)Apfeld, Brendan.............251 (85.41)Aponte, Andrés Felipe ..............342
(183.7)Apostolidis, Paul C..........239 (77.3)Appeldorn, Niels H ........248 (85.19)Appiah- Thompson,Christopher .................255 (91.17)
Applin, Lydia................ 280 (117.27)Aragon, Janni L. ..............183 (25.1)Arana, Renelinda ...........242 (77.23)Arar, Rawan .................384 (212.44)Arat, Zehra F. Kabasakal ...........288
(122.22), 322 (162.27), 368(205.27)
Arató, Krisztina............360 (197.23)Arcand, Jean-Louis .........198 (38.9)
IndexofParticipants
Arceneaux, Giles David.............262(99.18)
Arceneaux, Kevin .........201 (38.30),234 (71.30), 376 (209.38)
Archer, Allison M.N. ......235 (71.32)Arguillas, Florio .............333 (174.2)Argyle, Lisa P...................230 (71.6)Arias, Enrique Desmond ...........233
(71.20), 328 (168.22)Arias, Luz Marina ............254 (91.8)Arias, Sabrina Beth ......255 (91.11),
270 (109.15)Ariotti, Margaret H. ...... 338 (176.29)Arjona, Ana M........ 205 (43.17), 218
(57.14), 302 (143.10)Arkilic, Ayca.................299 (134.45)Arlen, Gordon R ...... 197 (38.3), 210
(51.2)Armstrong, Brenna Gail ............321
(162.22), 372 (209.16)Arneil, Barbara ........ 222 (63.4), 391
(218.1)Arnesen, Sveinung ..........196 (34.2)Arnold, Kathleen R. .......236 (71.39)Arnon, Daniel...............296 (134.25)Aron, Hadas........... 217 (57.10), 326
(168.9)Aronow, P. M..................386 (215.6)Aroosi, Jamie...................197 (38.4)Arora, Maneesh ..... 219 (57.20), 238
(76.6), 305 (143.21), 391(217.1)
Arrington, Celeste ...........208 (44.1)Arrington, Nancy Bays ..............394
(218.17)Arriola, Leonardo R. .....234 (71.26),
261 (99.10), 388 (215.17)Arrondelle, Donna .........291 (126.2)Arsenault, Elizabeth Grimm ......212
(51.20)Arslan, Mehmet Erdem..............366
(205.16)Artes, Joaquin .............298 (134.36)Aryal, Narayan ...............356 (196.1)Asal, Victor ...182 (9.6), 238 (76.11),
283 (119.1), 332 (170.3)Ascencio, Sergio J ...... 389 (215.23)Asghar, Rizwan............373 (209.20)Ash, Elliott .......................210 (51.5)Ash, Konstantin..... 247 (85.17), 319
(162.9)Ashley, Sean Paul........384 (212.40)Asimovic, Nejla..............266 (99.42)Aslam, Ali ......................385 (215.2)Aslett, Kevin ............216 (57.6), 265
(99.35), 314 (152.34), 319(162.8), 330 (168.34), 360
(197.26), 376 (209.38)Atalay, Doga ....................209 (45.2)Atchison, Amy L. ..... 222 (62.2), 290
(123.4), 334 (176.1)Atkeson, Lonna Rae ....330 (168.33)Atkinson, Matthew....... 331 (168.37)Atmor, Nir ........................189 (28.1)Atsusaka, Yuki .............288 (122.18)Attai, Tamana...................229 (69.1)Attia, Hana .......................251 (87.1)Atuk, Sumru...................206 (43.22)Atwell, Kyle.......... 295 (134.23), 320
(162.18)Atzenhofer, Dennis ....... 205 (43.16),
271 (109.18)Atzili, Boaz.....................212 (51.19)Au, Nok Hin ...................227 (63.28)Au, Yung ......................383 (212.39)auberger, antoine ..........290 (124.1)Auerbach, Adam Michael ..........357
(197.6), 380 (212.15)Auerbach, Arthur H. ......292 (133.1)Auerbach, Jan ...............309 (152.5)Auerbach, Kiran Rose ...............333
(174.1)Auriemma, Rhiannon Love .......350
(190.5)Auslen, Michael ...........367 (205.22)Austin, Sharon Denise ..............218
(57.19)Avdeyeva, Olga A. ....... 372 (209.14)Avelino, George........... 380 (212.15)Avellaneda, Claudia N. ..............321
(162.21), 374 (209.27)
X : 25749$CHIX09-28-21 23:19:53 Page 399Layout: 11437P : Odd
INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 399KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Avramenko, Richard......362 (198.1)Awad, Emiel ...................318 (162.4)Awuah, Michael Amoah.............278
(117.12)Axelsson, Kaya............299 (134.44)Axster, Sabrina Diana....242 (77.23)Aydin, Aysegul....... 193 (33.16), 205
(43.16), 280 (117.25)Ayer, Joshua Harrison.....251 (86.1)Ayoub, Phillip M ............242 (77.21)Aytaç, S. Erdem ........... 393 (218.10)Azari, Julia Rezazadeh ..............313
(152.31), 344 (183.21), 397(219.5)
Azerrad, David ...............266 (100.1)Azevedo, Lauren..........382 (212.29)Azizi, Yousof ..................323 (164.1)
B
Bílek, Jaroslav ...............307 (147.1)Böcü, Gözde ............ 220 (58.2), 237
(71.42), 377 (209.43)Bøggild, Troels ............382 (212.27)Baccini, Leonardo ........192 (33.14),
240 (77.10), 372 (209.17)Bachner, Jennifer ..........194 (33.21)Back, Hanna .......... 213 (51.21), 233
(71.21)Backer, David.................235 (71.35)Backer, Larry Catá...........214 (52.3)Bacon, Tricia..................212 (51.20)Baden, Christian..........367 (205.21)Bado, Arsene Brice ..... 388 (215.17)Badr, Zahraa ..................333 (173.2)Badrinathan, Sumitra ...235 (71.32),
260 (99.3), 298 (134.38), 330(168.34), 360 (197.26)
Badu, Kedar P ...............348 (186.1)Bae, Jihyeon................ 343 (183.15)Baekgaard, Martin ....... 299 (134.44)Baerg, Nicole Rae......... 247 (85.14),
351 (190.12)Baeza Freer, Jaime ........348 (187.1)Bagg, Samuel Ely .... 184 (26.3), 198
(38.8), 222 (63.3)Bagozzi, Benjamin E. ....386 (215.9)Bagwell, Stephen Michael .........388
(215.17)Bah, Abu B .................. 271 (109.21)Bahador, Babak .............291 (126.1)Bai, Hui ..........197 (38.6), 253 (91.6)Bai, Yunpeng ......... 186 (26.12), 334
(175.3), 364 (205.8)Baik, Jongyoon ... 272 (109.24), 322
(162.29), 337 (176.20)Bailard, Catie Snow .......250 (85.33)Bailer, Stefanie ............375 (209.33)Bailey, Jack.................. 272 (109.22)Bailey, Jeremy D...........251 (85.39),
290 (125.3), 332 (168.42)Bailey, Michael A. ......... 199 (38.19),
200 (38.19), 326 (168.10), 381(212.22)
Baines, Erin .................394 (218.19)Baird, Ryan G. .................216 (57.7)Baisley, Elizabeth ........354 (190.28)Baker, Andy .................379 (212.13)Baker, Lauren Marie .... 273 (109.29)Baker, Melissa .............360 (197.25)Bakiner, Onur....... 294 (134.16), 329
(168.27), 374 (209.28)Bakke, Kristin Marie ......187 (26.18)Bakker, Bert ........... 201 (38.30), 234
(71.30)Balaguera, Martha ...........196 (36.1)Balan, Pablo ....................231 (71.8)Balasco, Lauren Marie ..............248
(85.19), 266 (99.40), 271(109.18)
Balasubramanian,Rajeshwari ................313 (152.30)
Balcazar, Carlos Felipe .............295(134.18), 351 (190.12)
Balcells, Laia ......... 236 (71.35), 360(197.22), 388 (215.20)
Balcioglu, Zeynep........347 (183.40)Baldi, Gregory Charles..............270
(109.13)Baldwin, Elizabeth ....... 372 (209.13)
Baldwin, Katharine A.................195(33.29), 240 (77.8)
Baldwin-Philippi, Jessica ..........290(125.1), 322 (162.26)
Balfour, Lawrie ..............285 (122.2)Balkan, Osman ........ 223 (63.6), 284
(121.4)Balla, Steven J.............312 (152.24)Ballard, Andrew Ojala ...275 (113.2)Ballard-Rosa, Cameron .............193
(33.14)Ballingall, Robert A .......362 (198.3)Balot, Ryan ......................184 (26.1)Bambrick, Christina.......391 (216.2)Ban, Pamela........... 213 (51.21), 278
(117.11)Banaszak, Lee Ann.........197 (37.1),
203 (43.4)Bandiera, Antonella.... 298 (134.40),
342 (183.7)Banducci, Susan A. .......226 (63.22)Bandula-Irwin, Tanya....248 (85.19),
334 (175.3)Banerjee, Arjun............373 (209.22)Banerjee, Kiran ..............308 (152.1)Banerjee, Sayan .......... 330 (168.29)Banerjee, Vasabjit........304 (143.19)Bang-Jensen, Bree Laura .........292
(130.1)Banini, Daniel K.............257 (91.29)Bankert, Alexa ....... 293 (134.5), 356
(197.2)Banks, Antoine J. .... 210 (51.3), 216
(57.3), 238 (76.8), 382 (212.31)Bankston, Levi............. 331 (168.36)Bao, Le...........................300 (139.1)Bar-Siman-Tov, Ittai .........228 (65.1)Baragwanath, Kathryn...............282
(117.36), 376 (209.39)Baral, Siddhartha...........324 (165.1)Baram, Gil ......................193 (33.16)Baraybar Hidalgo, Viviana.........244
(80.2)Barbera, Pablo......... 185 (26.6), 338
(176.25), 379 (212.11)Barberia, Lorena G. ......207 (43.25),
258 (94.1), 307 (147.1), 318(162.6), 392 (218.7)
Bardwell, Kedron..... 228 (66.1), 264(99.31)
Bargu, Banu........... 308 (152.4), 370(209.3)
Baril, Alexandre .............308 (152.4)Barker, David C............395 (218.23)Barker, Fiona C............389 (215.25)Barma, Naazneen ..........217 (57.11)Barnes, James.............354 (190.29)Barnes, Nicholas ... 232 (71.20), 328
(168.22)Barnes, Tiffany D........ 359 (197.19),
372 (209.16)Barnett, Carolyn ..........271 (109.19)Barnett, Julie C............347 (183.37)Barnett, Leda .................242 (77.23)Barnhart, Joslyn N. .......205 (43.16)Barnidge, Matthew........291 (126.2),
306 (143.26)Barnum, Miriam ...........358 (197.16)Baron, Hannah...............263 (99.22)Barreiros, Daniel de Pinho ........255
(91.13)Barrenechea, Rodrigo ...............361
(197.31)Barreto, Matt A. ...............221 (58.4)Barrett, Bridget ............347 (183.35)Barrett, Kathleen Regina ...........202
(38.34)Barrios Mateo, Elisabet .............194
(33.20)Barron, Nathan ................228 (66.1)Barry, Colin.................. 320 (162.14)Barry, Rachel .................265 (99.34)Barsky, Christina ......... 287 (122.14)Barta, Zsofia ................393 (218.10)Bartels, Lauren ............314 (152.35)Barter, Shane J ...... 348 (186.1), 369
(206.5)Bartoszewski, JakubAleksander..................261 (99.14)
Barzachka, Nina Simeonova .....186(26.12)
Basbugoglu, Tarik ...........208 (45.2)Basedau, Matthias .......271 (109.21)Baser, Bahar ..................237 (71.42)Baser, Caglayan.............212 (51.20)Baser, Ekrem T. ........... 366 (205.15)Bashar, Mdkhayrul.........300 (139.1)Basinger, Scott J ... 199 (38.19), 264
(99.33), 346 (183.33), 390(215.28)
Basnet, Post ................313 (152.31)Bassan-Nygate, Lotem ..............201
(38.30), 272 (109.23)Bassel, Leah ....................190 (31.1)Bassi, Anna .................377 (209.42)Bassi, Marie .....................223 (63.6)Basta, Karlo .................388 (215.20)Bastiaens, Ida .......... 204 (43.7), 336
(176.12)Basu, Amy .....................248 (85.22)Bateman, David Alexander........246
(85.6), 277 (117.10), 302(143.6), 333 (173.1)
Bates, David Curtis ..... 382 (212.32)Bates, Genevieve...........232 (71.14)Bates, Robert H. ............364 (205.5)Bateson, Regina A........206 (43.22),
211 (51.10), 248 (85.20), 303(143.15)
Batista Pereira, Frederico .........319(162.10), 390 (215.28)
Battiston, Giacomo........365 (205.9)Battistoni, Alyssa ..........391 (218.2)Baturo, Alexander .........226 (63.27)Bauer, Fin ....................280 (117.25)Bauer, Kelly ...................264 (99.32)Bauer, Michael W. ....... 312 (152.26),
388 (215.19)Bauer, Nichole ....... 218 (57.17), 352
(190.19)Bauer, Paul C...................185 (26.6)Bauerle Danzman, Sarah...........205
(43.12), 270 (109.14), 320(162.14)
Bauhr, Monika........ 264 (99.28), 294(134.15)
Baum, Matthew A. ........219 (57.23),265 (99.34), 379 (212.11)
Baumann, Markus ........225 (63.16),382 (212.27)
Bayard de Volo, Lorraine ..........238(75.3)
Bayer, Resat ..................188 (26.25)Bayerlein, Michael ....... 321 (162.23)Bayes, Robin .................291 (126.1)Baylouny, Anne Marie ...............271
(109.18)Bayram, A. Burcu .........193 (33.15),
387 (215.15)Bazurli, Raffaele ............206 (43.21)Beach, Derek .................386 (215.4)Beall, Katherine M ....... 336 (176.13)Beaman, Jean ..................190 (31.1)Bean, Conor.....................196 (34.3)Bearce, David H..... 247 (85.13), 343
(183.17), 372 (209.17)Beard, Lisa ....................386 (215.3)Beard, Steven ................224 (63.14)Beardsley, Kyle.... 296 (134.24), 344
(183.18)Beaumont, Elizabeth ......191 (33.3),
339 (176.32)Beauregard, Lisa .............257 (92.1)Beauvais, Edana.... 194 (33.24), 208
(44.3), 209 (49.1), 274 (111.3),277 (117.8), 301 (143.2), 349
(190.4)Beazer, Quintin H. ...... 294 (134.13),
310 (152.14), 331 (168.38), 380(212.16)
Becerra, Marisol ............213 (51.25)Becher, Michael ..... 192 (33.13), 309
(152.6), 365 (205.11)Becker, Megan ...............238 (76.11)Beckmann, Matthew N. .............382
(212.28)Beckwith, Karen ..........337 (176.21)Bedi, Sonu ...................345 (183.24)Bednar, Jenna.......... 238 (75.2), 386
(215.4)Beesley, Celeste ......... 270 (109.12),
307 (146.1)
Behl, Natasha ..........196 (37.1), 264(99.29), 290 (123.4)
Behling, Evelyn M............245 (83.1)Behrend, Jacqueline .......204 (43.9)Behrens, Lion .............. 368 (205.28)Beissinger, Mark..........310 (152.14)Bejarano, Christina Elizabeth ...352
(190.19)Bekker, Marleen ...........384 (212.43)Belanger, Eric .............. 390 (215.28)Belarmino, Karine..........274 (111.1)Bell, Andrew ..................224 (63.11)Bell, Duncan ..................334 (176.1)Bell, Elizabeth..................222 (62.2)Bell, Ryan ............ 305 (143.25), 383
(212.35)Bell-Martin, Rebecca V. .............248
(85.20), 302 (143.4), 364(205.9), 390 (215.28), 393
(218.14)Bellinger, Nisha Mukherjee .......230
(71.7), 327 (168.13), 379(212.12)
Bello-Gomez, RicardoAndres ...................... 374 (209.27)
Beloshitzkaya, Vera ..... 304 (143.20)Belot, Céline ....................196 (35.1)Beltran, Alberto ..... 231 (71.13), 317
(159.2)Beltran, Alejandro ....... 374 (209.27)Beltran, Cristina....... 196 (36.1), 264
(99.30), 337 (176.22), 341(183.3), 356 (197.1)
Ben-Menachem, Jonathan.........219(57.19)
Bene, Marton .................242 (77.18)Benhabib, Seyla...............191 (33.5)Benjamin, Andrea ............183 (22.1)Bennett, Andrew...... 209 (48.3), 288
(122.20), 338 (176.27)Bennett, Nolan......... 191 (33.3), 197
(38.3), 325 (168.4)Benney, Tabitha Marie ...............213
(51.25), 336 (176.12)Bennion, Elizabeth A......210 (51.6),
332 (170.4), 363 (199.4)Bennis, Idriss......... 198 (38.10), 300
(139.1)Bennouna, Cyril...............239 (77.7)Benson, Brett V. ...... 230 (71.3), 343
(183.17)Benson, Grace.............283 (117.40)Benson, Thomas .........288 (122.21)Bentivegna, Sara ...........188 (26.23)Benton, Allyson L..........318 (162.6)Beramendi, Pablo .........309 (152.6),
371 (209.8), 390 (215.31)Berardo, Ramiro ..........314 (152.35)Berens, Sarah Andrea ....204 (43.7),
230 (71.5)Berg, Louis-Alexandre ..............255
(91.14)Bergan, Daniel E...........265 (99.34),
367 (205.23)Bergbauer, Harald .........362 (198.1)Berger, J.M................... 361 (197.28)Berger, William (Zev) .......191 (33.7)Bergh, Johannes .............258 (95.1)Bergman, Elin .............. 329 (168.28)Bergman, Matthew Edward .......274
(111.2)Bergova, Ivanka.............206 (43.20)Bergquist, Parrish ........235 (71.33),
265 (99.36)Berinsky, Adam J. ....... 379 (212.11)Berk, Gerald.....................198 (38.8)Berk, Timothy ................325 (168.3)Berkel, Hanna ..................198 (38.7)Berkenpas, Joshua R. .....253 (91.3)Berkowitz, Jeremy Matthew ......193
(33.16)Berkowitz, Roger Stuart ............244
(81.1)Berliner, Dan ..................386 (215.9)Berman, Chantal...... 192 (33.9), 251
(85.40), 392 (218.8)Berman, Sheri........ 204 (43.11), 325
(167.2), 372 (209.15), 378(212.8)
Bermeo, Nancy ..............257 (91.25)
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400 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Bermingham, Katherine C.........325(168.3)
Bermudez, Gian Franco ............221(61.3)
Bernardi, Luca ....... 268 (108.2), 303(143.12)
Bernhard, Michael ... 215 (56.1), 235(71.35), 349 (189.3), 385
(214.3)Bernhard, Rachel..... 192 (33.8), 260
(99.6), 276 (115.1)Berry, Aberdeen....... 184 (26.4), 340
(179.2)Berry, Sara ...................384 (212.45)Bersch, Katherine..........386 (215.7)Bertram, Eva ....................216 (57.5)Bertrand, Eloïse.............250 (85.37)Bertrand, Jacques .........369 (206.5)Besley, Timothy ........... 390 (215.31)Bessen, Brett .................207 (43.26)Bessette, Murray StraussYuzwenko.............. 237 (72.2), 348
(184.1)Bestvater, Samuel .......338 (176.26)Betsalel, Kenneth A......355 (192.3),
362 (199.3)Betts, Alexander ..........306 (143.31)Betz, Timm............. 240 (77.10), 336
(176.11)Beyers, Jan......................209 (48.2)Bezerra, Paul .................332 (170.1)Bhandari, Abhit ...........347 (183.41)Bhasin, Tavishi ................239 (77.6)Bhatia, Jasmine ...........366 (205.19)Bhatia, Udit ......................222 (63.3)Bhavnani, Rikhil R........223 (63.10),
369 (208.1)Bianchi, Matías ............327 (168.15)Biccum, April Renee .....385 (213.1)Biderman, Ciro ............380 (212.15)Bieber, Florian ...............369 (207.1)Bieganski, Max ..............264 (99.27)Biesbroek, Robbert .......268 (108.1)Biggers, Daniel R. ....... 281 (117.33)Bigwood, Sam .............395 (218.22)Bilalova, Lana .............. 294 (134.13)Billard, Thomas J .........250 (85.32),
265 (99.37)Billing, Trey.................. 382 (212.32)Bils, Peter .............. 248 (85.22), 277
(117.7), 370 (209.6)Bimber, Bruce................213 (51.26)Bimes, Terri ........... 251 (85.39), 255
(91.15)Bin Kashem, Tauhid ....283 (117.40)Binding, Garret ..............234 (71.28)Binetti, Marco Nicola .....333 (173.2)Binev, Binio S. ............. 372 (209.14)Bird, Christine .............297 (134.29)Bird, Stephen......... 324 (165.2), 347
(183.36)Birkhead, Nathaniel A ...193 (33.18)Birkland, Thomas A......200 (38.20),
242 (77.19), 314 (152.35), 333(174.1)
Birnir, Johanna Kristin ..............199(38.18), 369 (206.5)
Bisbee, James Hodgdon ...........193(33.14), 279 (117.18), 288
(122.20), 395 (218.23)Biscaia, Afonso .............241 (77.18)Bischof, Daniel ............343 (183.11)Bisgaard, Martin .... 277 (117.8), 383
(212.35)Bishara, Dina ........... 192 (33.9), 251
(85.40)Bishin, Benjamin ........ 299 (134.42),
359 (197.19)Bishop, William................216 (57.3)Biswas, Bidisha .............238 (76.11)Bitterman, Abigail Lee....228 (66.1),
287 (122.17)Bivens, Robert Tanner ..............262
(99.21)Bizzarro Neto, Fernando ...........210
(51.4), 254 (91.9), 294 (134.11),337 (176.23), 367 (205.26)
Bjarnegard, Elin.......... 271 (109.19),337 (176.21)
Blackington, Courtney ..............342(183.8), 357 (197.9)
Blackley, Keith ...............248 (85.19)Blackman, AlexandraDomike ........................251 (85.40)
Blackstone, Bethany ...352 (190.17)Blair, Alasdair ..................210 (51.6)Blair, Christopher William .........320
(162.16), 328 (168.21)Blair, Graeme ......... 340 (180.1), 386
(215.8)Blair, Robert A. ...... 231 (71.10), 328
(168.23)Blais, André ......... 298 (134.36), 379
(212.11)Blake, Michael .............354 (190.31)Blake, William Dawes ................280
(117.28), 281 (117.28)Blanchard, Kenneth Caldwell....215
(53.1)Blaney, David L............396 (218.28)Blankenship, Brian ......295 (134.19)Blankshain, Jessica D...............340
(178.4)Blattman, Christopher ...............342
(183.7)Blaydes, Lisa ....... 283 (117.42), 392
(218.6)Bleck, Jaimie ....... 273 (109.27), 372
(209.13), 386 (215.9)Blee, Kathleen ...............261 (99.11)Blings, Steffen ...............227 (63.29)Block, Ray ............. 256 (91.21), 377
(211.1), 385 (214.2)Blofield, Merike................240 (77.7)Bloodgood, Elizabeth ................361
(197.32)Bloom, Stephen .............241 (77.14)Blum, Ashley ...............331 (168.38)Blume, Laura ......... 232 (71.20), 248
(85.20), 263 (99.22)Blumenau, Jack .............236 (71.38)Boas, Morten ...............273 (109.27)Boas, Taylor C. ..............356 (197.5)Boatright, Robert G. .......188 (27.1),
200 (38.22), 225 (63.21)Bob-Milliar, George Meyiri.........209
(46.1), 237 (73.1)Bobba, Giuliano.............273 (110.1)Bobo, Andrew Kyle .......397 (219.6)Bochet, Olivier ...............269 (109.8)Boda, Zsolt ..................312 (152.26)Bodamer, Florian ........ 358 (197.12),
386 (215.7)Bodea, Cristina ..............199 (38.14)Boehmer, Alison ............334 (175.1)Boehmer, Charles R. ...311 (152.19)Boehmke, Frederick J. ..............352
(190.18)Boersma, John ................258 (92.5)Boerzel, Tanja A. ......... 280 (117.23)Boese, Vanessa Alexandra .......235
(71.34)Bogiaris, Guillaume......236 (71.39),
277 (117.5), 362 (198.3)Bogliaccini, Juan Ariel ..............303
(143.11)Bohn, Simone R. ... 249 (85.27), 281
(117.30), 362 (199.1)Bohorquez Oviedo, Angela .......229
(69.1)Boittin, Margaret............242 (77.22)Boix, Carles ........... 371 (209.8), 384
(212.41)Bokobza, Laure Sarah...............226
(63.27), 365 (205.12)Bol, Geertje Jeanne.........222 (63.1)Bolet, Diane ...................225 (63.16)Bolin, Cammie Jo ......... 218 (57.17),
367 (205.21)Bollen, Paige ....... 374 (209.30), 375
(209.30)Bollfrass, Alexander ......217 (57.11)Bolotnyy, Valentin.... 196 (34.2), 361
(197.33)Bolte, Brandon Lee ..... 312 (152.23)Bolukbasi, H. Tolga .........216 (57.7)Bon, Esmeralda V. ........291 (126.1),
322 (162.25), 395 (218.22)Bond, Kanisha ....... 285 (122.4), 339
(178.1), 360 (197.25)Bonica, Adam ................355 (195.1)Bonifai, Niccolo ...........373 (209.19)
Bonikowski, Bart ...........335 (176.9)Bonilla, Tabitha........ 202 (39.1), 241
(77.17), 249 (85.26)Bonneau, Richard.... 185 (26.6), 195
(33.26), 200 (38.19), 216 (57.6),266 (99.42), 288 (122.20), 330
(168.34), 360 (197.26)Bonotti, Matteo ................220 (58.1)Boone, Catherine..........257 (91.29),
384 (212.45)Borelli, Gabriel..... 305 (143.25), 395
(218.23)Borges Monroy, Isadora............256
(91.24)Borick, Christopher P. ...............324
(165.2)Boris, Elizabeth T. ... 227 (64.1), 243
(78.2), 290 (123.2)Borwein, Sophie ............335 (176.9)Boryczka, Jocelyn M. ...268 (109.2),
353 (190.26)Bosancianu, ConstantinManuel ........................269 (109.7)
Bose, Anuja .....................197 (38.2)Bose, Meena .......... 206 (43.19), 320
(162.17)Bossetta, Michael .........265 (99.35),
338 (176.26), 346 (183.35)Boston, Joshua ..... 218 (57.16), 225
(63.18), 233 (71.24), 267(107.2), 280 (117.27)
Botcheva-Andonova, Liliana .....201(38.27)
Boucher, Anna Katherine ..........201(38.31)
Boucher, Jean-Christophe ........311(152.21)
Boucoyannis, Deborah A. .........222(63.5)
Bouka, Yolande..............240 (77.11)Boulding, Carew E..........239 (77.7),
310 (152.13), 385 (214.3), 392(218.9)
Boulianne, Shelley........213 (51.26),321 (162.25), 338 (176.26)
Boussalis, Constantine .............376(209.38)
Boutton, Andrew ...........247 (85.17)Bowen, Daniel.............. 346 (183.32)Bowen, Renee.............. 336 (176.11)Bowen, Tyler ..................247 (85.16)Bowers, Jacob......... 184 (25.2), 364
(205.6)Bowers, Melanie Marie ..............236
(71.37)Bowie, Jennifer...... 255 (91.18), 304
(143.18), 352 (190.17)Bowler, Shaun ...............284 (121.1)Bowles, Jeremy ..... 192 (33.11), 198
(38.7), 230 (71.5), 254 (91.7)Bowman, Quinlan ........339 (176.30)Bowra, Bethany .............233 (71.22)Box-Steffensmeier, Janet M. .....183
(21.2), 267 (102.1)Boyden, Evelyn .............325 (168.2)Boydstun, Amber Ellen .............190
(32.1), 230 (71.6)Boyea, Brent D. .............255 (91.17)Boyer, Ming M..............383 (212.36)Boyes, Christina A ..... 312 (152.23),
333 (174.1)Boynton, George Robert ...........331
(168.35), 347 (183.37), 395(218.25)
Bozcaga, Tugba ... 315 (152.44), 327(168.14)
Bozkurt, Basak ................227 (64.1)Braaten, Claire AngeliqueNolasco .....................361 (197.33)
Braaten, Daniel Bruce ...............361(197.33)
Brace, Paul R.................349 (189.1)Bracewell, Lorna Norman .........268
(109.2)Bracic, Ana ............ 213 (51.22), 265
(99.34)Bracken, David ............387 (215.11)Bradburn, Norman...........196 (34.2)Bradshaw, Samantha ................376
(209.40)Brady, David ................331 (168.40)
IndexofParticipants
Brady, Henry E...............219 (57.22)Braithwaite, Alex ... 286 (122.8), 385
(214.3)Braithwaite, Jessica Maves.......244
(80.1), 338 (176.29)Bram, Curtis ................389 (215.22)Braman, Eileen ...... 255 (91.17), 352
(190.17)Branch, Jordan ..............212 (51.19)Brand, Megan .............. 322 (162.28)Brandenberger, Laurence .........203
(42.1)Brandt, Caroline ......... 295 (134.23),
351 (190.15), 381 (212.25)Brannon, Elizabeth L....339 (178.2),
381 (212.25)Branton, Regina.............256 (91.21)Brass, Jennifer N......... 372 (209.13)Brathwaite, Robert Thuan .........288
(122.17)Braumoeller, Bear F. ......187 (26.20)Braun, Daniela ...............348 (186.1)Braun, Robert .......... 254 (91.8), 294
(134.14)Braver, Joshua ..............225 (63.18)Brazys, Samuel................217 (57.9)Brekhov, Boris ...............290 (125.2)Bremer, Björn Kristen ....239 (77.5),
261 (99.13)Bresee, BernadetteCatherine ....................317 (161.1)
Breslawski, Jori ... 373 (209.24), 374(209.24)
Bressler, Raymond Daniel.........279(117.22)
Brett, Annabel..................184 (26.1)Breunig, Christian ........202 (38.33),
224 (63.16), 241 (77.14), 375(209.33)
Breuning, Marijke ........295 (134.22)Bricker, Benjamin ........297 (134.29)Brierley, Sarah ....... 195 (33.29), 293
(134.6)Briffa, Hillary Victoria ....247 (85.16)Brigden, Noelle K. ...........223 (63.6)Bright, Jonathan............265 (99.37)Brik, Tymofii ................ 319 (162.10)Brinks, Daniel M. ......... 394 (218.16)Brinton, Aspen Elizabeth ..........197
(38.4), 226 (63.27), 377 (212.2)Britt, Lucy ... 197 (38.1), 324 (166.1),
391 (215.32)Broache, M.P............ 237 (74.1), 360
(197.25)Broberg, Nikolaj...........278 (117.16)Broderstad, Troy Saghaug ........224
(63.16)Broekaert, Clara ............264 (99.28)Brogdon, Matthew S......397 (219.1)Bromberg, Yael ..............397 (219.5)Bromley-Trujillo, Rebecca .........213
(51.25), 226 (63.25)Bromo, Francesco .........290 (125.2)Brooke, Steven ..............386 (215.8)Brooks, Risa A. ..... 247 (85.17), 262
(99.20), 275 (114.1), 328(168.19)
Brooks, Sarah M...... 240 (77.8), 262(99.15), 387 (215.13)
Brophy, Christopher Justin.......267(100.2)
Brothers, Nicholas.........207 (43.24)Brower, Margaret ..... 202 (39.1), 220
(57.28)Browers, Michaelle L.....268 (109.1)Brown, Jacob.................378 (212.7)Brown, Joseph ........ 237 (74.1), 287
(122.11)Brown, Junius Flagg ...299 (134.41)Brown, Lara Michelle......208 (44.4),
349 (189.1)Brown, Lawrence Allen .............229
(67.2)Brown, Megan.......... 185 (26.6), 288
(122.20)Brown, Mitchell........ 209 (48.1), 281
(117.31), 293 (134.9)Brown, Nadia E........ 190 (32.2), 218
(57.18), 264 (99.30), 284(121.4)
Brown, Owen Rhys......396 (218.28)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 401KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Brown, Rachel ...............378 (212.3)Brown, Trevor ........ 201 (38.26), 339
(176.31)Brown-Dean, Khalilah L. ...........256
(91.21), 395 (218.22)Browning, Robert X. ......349 (189.1)Brownsey, Keith Douglas..........184
(26.5), 249 (85.29), 315(152.40)
Brox, Brian J............ 259 (95.2), 267(107.1)
Broz, J. Lawrence......... 212 (51.15),336 (176.11)
Bruch, Sarah................389 (215.21)Bruehwiler Haeusermann, ClaudiaFranziska .............. 252 (88.2), 331
(168.37)Bruens, Alex ................296 (134.25)Brule, Rachel E...... 233 (71.25), 276
(115.1), 345 (183.27)Brunkert, Lennart Joe ...............322
(162.29)Brust, Steven J. .............316 (154.1)Brutger, Ryan......... 193 (33.15), 231
(71.13), 351 (190.12), 387(215.12)
Bruusgaard, Kristin Ven............262(99.18)
Bruyneel, Kevin M. .........209 (49.3),215 (55.1), 341 (183.3), 349
(190.3)Bryant, Lisa A................202 (38.34)Bryner, Sarah...................189 (27.1)Buccellati, Giorgio...........214 (52.2)Bucci, Laura C. ................258 (92.3)Buchanan, Ross ............340 (180.2)Buchler, Justin ..............264 (99.33)Buckley, David T. ... 225 (63.20), 313
(152.30), 386 (215.8)Buckley, Noah...... 314 (152.37), 331
(168.38)Budryte, Dovile ..............318 (162.7)Budsberg, Kristen .........317 (161.1)Bueno, Natalia Salgado.............306
(143.26), 329 (168.26), 380(212.15)
Bugaric, Bojan.............294 (134.16)Bujnoch, Louis ................189 (27.3)Bulbulia, Yusuf ........ 244 (82.1), 303
(143.11)Bull, Martin J .................273 (110.1)Bulli, Giorgia................ 368 (205.31)Bullock, Jessie ...... 212 (51.20), 285
(121.9), 328 (168.22), 379(212.14)
Bulutgil, H. Zeynep..........210 (51.7)Bunea, Adriana ............312 (152.27)Bunn, Philip ...................348 (184.2)Buntaine, Mark .... 282 (117.36), 337
(176.19)Bunte, Jonas ......... 204 (43.12), 240
(77.10)Bunting, Thomas David.............391
(216.2)Burbach, David T........ 320 (162.17),
383 (212.38)Burch, Traci ............. 190 (31.1), 352
(190.21)Burchell, Kenzie ..........294 (134.13)Burden, Barry C...........313 (152.32)Burdman, Javier ............308 (152.1)Burge, Camille Danielle.............218
(57.18), 375 (209.32)Burgess, Susan R............221 (58.5)Burke, Ryan .................336 (176.16)Burke, Sarah................ 304 (143.20)Burkhart, Ross E. .... 208 (44.4), 307
(144.2)Burlacu, Diana Elena.................380
(212.17)Burmeister-Rudolph, MiraEileen ........................377 (209.43)
Burns, Courtney ......... 296 (134.25),313 (152.28), 372 (209.16)
Burns, Daniel ...................237 (72.1)Burns, Nancy ...............352 (190.19)Burns, Peter F. ...............264 (99.27)Burns, Sarah..................286 (122.8)Burstein, Alon.............. 358 (197.14)Burton, Paul.....................244 (79.1)Busby, Ethan C................230 (71.6)
Buscatto Medeiros, Danilo........233(71.21)
Busemeyer, Marius R. ...212 (51.13)Bush, Sarah S........ 240 (77.11), 278
(117.15), 396 (218.29)Bussell, Jennifer L. .... 299 (134.44),
386 (215.9)Bussell Felder, Jessica .............321
(162.24)Bussing, Austin ..... 200 (38.19), 305
(143.24), 339 (178.2)Bussu, Sonia .................274 (111.3)Bustamante Kuschel,Gonzalo............... 341 (183.1), 377
(212.2)Butcher, Charity...............239 (77.6)Buthe, Tim ........... 365 (205.14), 387
(215.12)Butler, Daniel M. ......... 359 (197.19),
383 (212.34)Butsko, Diana ................241 (77.14)Butt, Ahsan Ishaq........316 (152.45)Buttorff, Gail ................283 (117.42)Buzas, Zoltan I..... 351 (190.14), 394
(218.18)Byerly, Shakari ...... 213 (51.24), 218
(57.19), 219 (57.19)Byers, Jason S. ...............229 (67.2)Byrnes, Timothy A.......305 (143.23)Byun, Joshua...............387 (215.14)Bzostek Walker, Rachel.............252
(88.2), 260 (99.7)Bülbül, Asya ..................207 (43.26)
C
Cabal, Manuel ........ 268 (107.3), 361(197.31)
Caballero, Christian.......355 (193.1)Cabrales Domínguez, SergioMiguel ............... 295 (134.23), 353
(190.22)Cabrera, Luis .................301 (143.2)Cabrera Rasmussen, Amy ........238
(76.1), 284 (121.4), 292 (133.1)Cai, Meina ........................198 (38.7)Cain, Bruce E...................221 (58.4)Cakmak, Furkan...........298 (134.38)Calasanti, Anna .............234 (71.25)Caldeira, Rodrigo Coppe...........369
(206.2)Calderon, Michele..........340 (178.3)Caldwell, Anne I...............259 (98.1)Caldwell, Christopher.....221 (58.6),
266 (100.1)Calfano, Brian R. ......... 298 (134.38)Calimbahin, Cleo Anne .............352
(190.20)Callaghan, Timothy Herbert ......188
(26.27), 282 (117.39)Callander, Steven ..........334 (176.4)Callis, Anna Firestone...............345
(183.27)Caluwaerts, Didier .........340 (179.1)Calvo, Ernesto F. ......... 329 (168.26)Calvo, Esther Mary L.....233 (71.21)Camacho, Elizabeth.........222 (62.1)Camacho, Gabriela ......294 (134.12)Camacho, Luis A. ..........250 (85.31)Camarillo, Earlene ...... 287 (122.14),
305 (143.21)Camatarri, Stefano..........259 (95.2),
269 (109.6), 360 (197.24)Cameron, Connor ..........340 (178.3)Cameron, Kimberly...... 304 (143.18)Cameron, Maxwell A......318 (162.2)Cameron, William ..........377 (212.1)Cammett, Melani.... 195 (33.30), 283
(117.42), 285 (121.7), 315(152.44), 327 (168.14), 353
(190.22)Campa, Naomi T. .............258 (92.5)Campbell, Andrea Louise..........236
(71.38)Campbell, Benjamin ........238 (76.5)Campbell, David E. ....... 200 (38.24),
249 (85.28), 289 (122.26), 337(176.21)
Campbell, Joel R. .... 185 (26.8), 204(43.8), 290 (123.3), 322
(162.28), 334 (175.3)Campbell, Karolyn .........350 (190.8)Campbell, Rosie ............225 (63.16)Campbell, Susanna ......212 (51.15),
240 (77.11), 351 (190.15)Campbell-Mohn, Emma .............247
(85.18)Campbell-Verduyn, Malcolm .....232
(71.13)Campion, Selene ...........186 (26.13)Campos, Juan................234 (71.26)Canen, Nathan J. ... 200 (38.19), 340
(180.1)Canes-Wrone, Brandice ............200
(38.21)Canfil, Justin K. ........... 394 (218.18)Cansunar, Asli ....... 214 (51.29), 315
(152.44)Cantarella, Michele ......306 (143.26)Cantor, Douglas M.........362 (199.3)Cantwell, Devon Kyla ................383
(212.38)Cao, Qitong............ 334 (175.3), 364
(205.8)Cao, Ruixing ..................283 (119.1)Capoccia, Giovanni ......235 (71.35),
357 (197.9)Caporaso, James A. .... 335 (176.10)Cappelen, Alexander ...368 (205.29)Caraccioli, Mauro J. .......253 (91.2),
341 (183.2)Carbajosa, Ignacio...........214 (52.2)Carcelli, Shannon ..........240 (77.11)Carey, John M................188 (26.23)Carey, Peter ............. 237 (74.1), 360
(197.25)Carey, Tony E. ...............256 (91.21)Cargas, Sarita ..................252 (88.2)Carkoglu, Ali ..................226 (63.22)Carlisle, Juliet.............. 353 (190.23)Carlitz, Ruth...................292 (130.1)Carlos, Roberto ..... 235 (71.32), 305
(143.22), 330 (168.30)Carlson, Allen ................273 (110.3)Carlson, Kirsten M...........238 (75.1)Carlson, Melissa Anne ..............336
(176.15)Carlson, Taylor Nicole ...............207
(43.27), 360 (197.26)Carmack, Meagan ........360 (197.27)Carmines, Edward G. ....249 (85.28)Carnaghan, Ellen ... 186 (26.12), 203
(43.5)Carnahan, Dustin..........265 (99.34),
367 (205.23)Carnegie, Allison ........ 311 (152.17),
365 (205.13), 388 (215.19)Carnes, Nicholas ... 220 (57.28), 306
(143.32), 390 (215.31)Carothers, Christopher .............365
(205.10)Carpenter, Daniel P. ......255 (91.16),
309 (152.7)Carr, Matthew...............287 (122.15)Carr, Sydney .......... 235 (71.31), 382
(212.31), 395 (218.24)Carreri, Maria .................250 (85.38)Carrington, Adam M ......397 (219.1)Carrion, Julio F. ..... 355 (192.2), 362
(199.4)Carrion Yaguana, Vanessa DelRocio......................... 375 (209.34)
Carroll, David...............281 (117.31)Carroll, Robert J. .............253 (91.5)Carroll, Ross..................363 (205.2)Carroll, Royce A. ... 233 (71.21), 375
(209.34)Carson, Andrea .............195 (33.25)Carson, Austin....... 247 (85.17), 351
(190.14), 381 (212.22), 387(215.14)
Carstensen, Martin B.....212 (51.13)Carter, Brett Logan.........230 (71.7),
272 (109.24), 335 (176.8), 376(209.41)
Carter, Christopher Lee.............216(57.4)
Carter, David B. .............199 (38.18)Carter, Elizabeth ..........278 (117.16)
Carter, Erin Baggott .......260 (99.9),286 (122.9), 335 (176.8), 366
(205.16), 381 (212.24)Carter, Jeff .....................193 (33.17)Carter, Keith...................224 (63.12)Carter, Niambi M. ........ 337 (176.22),
349 (189.2)Carty, Emily B........ 207 (43.27), 310
(152.12)Carugati, Maria Federica ...........238
(75.2), 367 (205.24)Carvalho, Mariana ...... 328 (168.22),
386 (215.9)CARVALHO, NELSONROJAS ........................274 (112.1)
Carvalho, Shelby .........347 (183.40)Carver, Terrell .............. 337 (176.21)Casal Bertoa, Fernando ............360
(197.23)Casas, Andres .................258 (94.1)Casas, Andreu ....... 250 (85.32), 282
(117.35), 319 (162.8), 330(168.34)
Casellas, Jason P. .........218 (57.16)Casey, Adam E. ..... 188 (26.26), 286
(122.10)Cash, Jordan T. .............316 (153.1)Casler, Donald ..... 328 (168.21), 381
(212.22)Casper, Gretchen G. .....207 (43.28),
364 (205.7)Cassotta, Priscilla Leine ...........338
(176.24)Castaneda Dower, Sonja ...........293
(134.5)Castanho Silva, Bruno dePaula ...... 241 (77.14), 261 (99.12),
294 (134.15)Castillo, Isabel .................203 (43.4)Castillo Ortiz, Pablo ......231 (71.12)Castillo Quintana, Martin ..........293
(134.4)Castle, Jeremiah..........288 (122.17)Castro, Paula ...............323 (162.32)Çat, Olgahan ..................205 (43.14)Catalano, Michael Anthony .......225
(63.17)Cattaneo, Matis..............233 (71.23)Cavaille, Charlotte ...... 283 (117.41),
310 (152.15), 368 (205.29)Cavari, Amnon ...............233 (71.22)Caverley, Jonathan D. ...247 (85.18)Ceballos, Rutger............234 (71.26)Cederman, Lars-Erik ....205 (43.16),
388 (215.16)Ceka, Besir .................. 343 (183.12)Cepenas, Simonas.........217 (57.10)Cerda, Maikol...............288 (122.18)Ceron, Andrea .................185 (26.9)Ceron, Matilde ....... 241 (77.15), 291
(128.1), 314 (152.39)Cerrone, Joseph ......... 297 (134.34),
390 (215.29)Cesari, Jocelyne ............225 (63.20)Cetin, Reha Atakan..... 299 (134.45),
363 (204.1)Ch, Rafael ......................217 (57.12)Cha, Hyunjin ..................256 (91.23)Cha, J. Mijin...................265 (99.36)Chadjipadelis, Theodore ...........185
(26.7)Chadwick, Andrew.........194 (33.25)Chae, Je Hoon ............. 367 (205.23)Chaisty, Paul................ 380 (212.16)Chakrabarti, Poulomi.................327
(168.13)Chakravarti, Sonali .........222 (63.4),
318 (162.2)Chamberlain, Adam......234 (71.27),
305 (143.24)Chambers, John M. .......201 (38.27)Chambers, Simone ........301 (143.2)Chan, Hei Yin.................291 (128.1)Chan, Ka Ming ...............227 (63.28)Chan, Kai Yui Samuel....276 (117.4)Chan, Nathan Kar Ming .............256
(91.23), 333 (172.1)Chan, Polly ......................237 (74.1)Chan, Shuk Ying............325 (167.1)Chan, Stephanie .... 289 (123.1), 325
(166.1)
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402 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Chan, Zenobia ...............226 (63.24)Chandler-Garcia, Lynne M ........355
(192.3)Chandran, Amy..............325 (168.2)Chang, Arturo .......... 184 (26.2), 252
(89.1), 396 (218.28)Chang, Chae Young .... 303 (143.11)Chang, Charles ............342 (183.10)Chang, Chia-Chien .........243 (78.3),
290 (123.3)Chang, Chingching..........227 (64.2)Chanto, Raquel ................185 (26.9)Chao, Brian C. ...............205 (43.13)Chapa, Samantha ..........324 (166.1)Chapman, Emilee ..........325 (168.6)Chapman, Terrence ......186 (26.15),
286 (122.7), 365 (205.15)Charasz, Pawel ..............333 (173.1)Charette, Danielle ............191 (33.2)Charles, Carl..................285 (121.8)Charles, Guy-Uriel ...........221 (58.4)Charles, J. Daryl ..............189 (27.3)Charlton, Mark ...............339 (178.3)Charm, Theodore..... 261 (99.9), 323
(163.2)Charman, Andrew........338 (176.27)Charnysh, Volha .... 277 (117.9), 294
(134.14), 309 (152.8), 320(162.19)
Charron, Nicholas ........264 (99.28),294 (134.15)
Chartock, Sarah.............393 (218.9)Chas Bartolome, Carmen ..........284
(120.1)Chatagnier, Tyson........358 (197.12)Chatterjee, Abhishek .......227 (64.3)Chatterjee, Sudeshna ................352
(190.20), 396 (218.31)Chattha, MuhammadKhudadad ...................225 (63.19)
Chattopadhyay, JacquelineM. ................................206 (43.19)
Chaturvedi, Neil .............193 (33.18)Chau, Tak Huen ...............261 (99.9)Chauchard, Simon..........260 (99.3),
276 (115.1), 360 (197.26)Chaudhry, Suparna........195 (33.27)Chaudoin, Stephen........231 (71.13)Chavez, Kerry ..............311 (152.20)Checkel, Jeffrey T. ..........209 (48.3),
248 (85.19), 286 (122.9), 368(205.28)
Cheek, H. Lee ..................189 (27.2)Cheema, Ali .................345 (183.27)Chen, Alicia R.............. 270 (109.15)Chen, Alison Sile .........395 (218.25)Chen, Amanda .............331 (168.35)Chen, Ani .......................292 (134.3)Chen, Catherine........... 314 (152.35)Chen, Chia-Chun ...........283 (119.1)Chen, Dean ......................227 (64.2)Chen, Frederick R........380 (212.18)Chen, Gong....................364 (205.4)Chen, Hao ........................189 (27.4)Chen, Haohan ..............388 (215.16)Chen, Jie..........................214 (52.3)Chen, Jowei ........... 213 (51.24), 288
(122.18)Chen, Jung .............. 197 (38.5), 302
(143.4)Chen, Ling ............. 186 (26.12), 351
(190.11)Chen, Lu-huei ..................196 (34.1)Chen, Mason................ 395 (218.22)Chen, Muyang................186 (26.14)Chen, Nuole .................351 (190.15)Chen, Sonya ..................289 (123.1)Chen, Ted Hsuan Yun....242 (77.19)Chen, Thomas ...............317 (161.1)Chen, Tian......................350 (190.7)Chen, Tianyu..................187 (26.21)Chen, Yen-Hsin ..............307 (147.1)CHEN, ZHAOYU .............286 (122.9)Chenette, Courtney ......255 (91.17),
362 (199.2)Cheng, Chao-yo........... 310 (152.11)Cheng, Christine.... 233 (71.20), 295
(134.22), 321 (162.20), 336(176.15), 373 (209.21)
Cheng, Cindy ...............387 (215.12)
Cheng, Edmund W........226 (63.24),272 (109.24), 296 (134.25)
Cheng, Eric ....................363 (205.1)Cheng, Jingyuan ... 334 (175.3), 356
(196.1), 378 (212.7)Cheng, Su-Feng.............323 (163.2)Cheng, Yang-Yang .........268 (109.1)Cheng, Zicheng .............291 (126.2)Chenoweth, Erica ..........231 (71.10)Chester, Patrick ...........269 (109.10)Cheung, Gabrielle..........247 (85.14)Cheung, Gloria ...... 207 (43.28), 272
(109.25)Cheung-Miaw, Calvin.................337
(176.22)Chiba, Daina ................372 (209.16)Chidambaram, Soundarya.........304
(143.19)Chiego, Christopher ..... 193 (33.17),
217 (57.10), 224 (63.11)Chien, Yi-Chun............. 368 (205.30)Chin, John Joseph ........188 (26.26)Chin, Michelle ................292 (133.1)Chinchilla, Alexandra ...247 (85.17),
358 (197.13)Chiou, Fang-Yi ...............206 (43.18)Chirot, Daniel...............380 (212.21)Chiu, Albert......................246 (85.8)Chiu, Yvonne ...................253 (91.1)Chiweza, Asiyati Lorraine .........302
(143.9)Chlouba, Vladimir ............229 (67.1)Chmel, Kirill ........... 192 (33.12), 263
(99.25)Cho, ChaeEun.............. 366 (205.16)Cho, Esol .....................365 (205.13)Cho, Hyun-Binn .............262 (99.18)Cho, Il Hyun...................188 (26.24)Cho, Jaeseok .................232 (71.19)Cho, Jiyoung .................324 (165.2)Cho, Soohyun........ 317 (159.1), 336
(176.12)Cho, Young Jun...........328 (168.21)Choate, Thomas ...... 197 (38.5), 334
(176.4)Choi, Danny ...................188 (26.26)Choi, Suon ...................366 (205.18)Choi, Yongjin ...............314 (152.39)Choi, Yujin .....................364 (205.3)Chomiak, Laryssa..........285 (121.7)Chong, Chinbo ............297 (134.33)Chong, Dennis...............256 (91.24)Chonn-Ching, Victoria ...............341
(181.1)Chou, Chelsea C............186 (26.11)Choulis, Ioannis...........379 (212.12)Chowdhury, Anirvan....310 (152.13)Chowdhury, Intifar ........265 (99.34),
281 (117.30)Chrisp, Joe ..................312 (152.27)Christ, Oliver .................364 (205.4)Christensen, Matias Engdal ......298
(134.37)Christensen, Thomas J. ............357
(197.8)Christensen, Tom ..........187 (26.21)Christia, Fotini ....... 195 (33.30), 283
(117.42), 359 (197.17)Christian, Thu-Mai Lewis ..........333
(174.2)Christiani, Leah .............324 (166.1)Christman, John ............308 (152.1)Christoffersen, Ashlee ....184 (25.1)Christov, Theodore.........239 (77.2),
253 (91.1)Chriswell, Kaitlyn ....... 350 (190.10),
356 (197.5)Chu, Yun-han .................207 (43.26)Chudy, Jennifer ........... 389 (215.24)Chung, C. K. Martin.........190 (28.2)Chung, Erin Aeran...... 272 (109.26),
331 (168.41), 368 (205.30)Chung, Eunbin............. 295 (134.22)Chung, Joon Hyuk.........199 (38.16)Chwalisz, Natalie ... 236 (71.40), 299
(134.46), 345 (183.26), 361(197.33)
Chwe, Michael ...............377 (211.1)Chwieroth, Jeffrey M. ....247 (85.14)Chyzh, Olga ............. 202 (42.1), 217
(57.13), 299 (134.43)
Ciccariello-Maher, George.........209(51.1), 222 (63.2)
Ciccolini, Giuseppe .......275 (113.1)Cicovacki, Predrag ........307 (144.1)Ciftci, Sabri ....................386 (215.5)Cinar, Ipek.................... 353 (190.27)Cinar, Kursat..................207 (43.26)Ciobanu, Costin MariusViorel...........................207 (43.25)
Cioroianu, Iulia ............347 (183.37)Cirone, Alexandra............203 (43.3)Cisneros, Isaac ................217 (57.8)Citrin, Jack ....................256 (91.24)Ciuk, David ....................226 (63.25)Clark, Ann Marie............275 (112.2)Clark, Caleb M. ..............273 (110.2)Clark, Jennifer Hayes ....200 (38.22)Clark, Jesse .................297 (134.34)Clark, Nicholas J. ..........302 (143.8)Clark, Richard...... 311 (152.17), 373
(209.19), 388 (215.19)Clarke, Christopher ..... 368 (205.28)Clarke, Erik ....................363 (204.1)Clarke, Kevin A...... 224 (63.14), 260
(99.6), 364 (205.6)Clarke, Killian ........ 257 (91.25), 392
(218.8)Clarke, Michelle Tolman ............184
(26.1)Clawson, Rosalee A. .......238 (75.3)Clayton, Amanda ... 250 (85.31), 302
(143.9), 345 (183.27)Clayton, Katherine Patricia .......335
(176.5)Clealand, Danielle P......248 (85.25),
284 (121.6)Clemm von Hohenberg,Bernhard ............. 207 (43.27), 288
(122.20)Clemons, Jared .............377 (211.1)Cleton, Laura .................242 (77.23)Cleveland, Clayton J. ................343
(183.15)Clifford, Scott .......... 191 (33.7), 201
(38.30), 210 (51.3), 301 (141.1),331 (168.40), 356 (197.2)
Clift, Ben ........................290 (124.1)Clinton, David ..................237 (72.3)Clinton, Joshua D..........275 (113.2)Clouser McCann, Pamela ..........394
(218.18)Clucas, Richard A..........292 (133.1)Cluverius, John ... 283 (117.39), 287
(122.15)Coan, Travis.................376 (209.38)Coburn, Elaine...............349 (190.3)Cochrane, Feargal ...........243 (79.1)Codevilla, Angelo ..........266 (100.1)Coffe, Hilde Roza...........276 (115.1)Cohen, Aylon ...................259 (98.1)Cohen, Cathy J. ....... 209 (49.1), 264
(99.30), 349 (189.2)Cohen, David B............382 (212.28)Cohen, Denis ...............387 (215.11)Cohen, Elisha ..................229 (69.1)Cohen, Elizabeth F.........268 (109.3)Cohen, Gidon........... 198 (38.9), 386
(215.5)Cohen, Hayley ...............225 (63.22)Cohen, Michael ............366 (205.18)Colbern, Allan........ 234 (71.26), 354
(190.30), 375 (209.32)Cole, Geneva ...............389 (215.24)Cole, Kathleen ...............355 (192.4)Coles, Stewart Matthew.............187
(26.23), 226 (63.23)Colgan, Jeff .................295 (134.20)Coll, Joseph........... 263 (99.26), 340
(179.1)Collingwood, Loren ......200 (38.25),
215 (55.1), 305 (143.22), 330(168.30), 345 (183.29), 375
(209.32)Collins, Jonathan .... 196 (34.2), 207
(43.29), 209 (49.1), 305(143.21), 349 (190.4)
Colombo, Francesco ...299 (134.44)Coman, Emanuel ...........251 (85.41)Combei, Claudia Roberta ..........361
(197.32)Combs, Ted......................221 (61.2)
IndexofParticipants
Comfort, Louise K. ........242 (77.19)Commins, Margaret M. ..............213
(51.22)Comparato, Scott A. ....297 (134.29)Comstock, Audrey Lynn............255
(91.11)Conant, Lisa .......... 231 (71.12), 279
(117.20)Condon, Meghan ... 194 (33.20), 306
(143.32), 361 (197.32)Condra, Luke N..............255 (91.12)Cone, Paige Price........ 279 (117.21)Conley, Shannon D........213 (51.25)Connaughton, Stacey L.............315
(152.41)Connell, Brendan J........341 (181.1)Conner, Thaddieus W. ...............287
(122.14)Connolly, Rachel .............185 (26.6)Conrad, Courtenay R.................285
(122.4), 339 (178.1), 344(183.19)
Conrad, Justin .............279 (117.21)Constantino, Sara..........302 (143.4)Contreras Guzmán, DanissaPaz ..............................219 (57.20)
Cook, Edgar V................201 (38.26)Cook, Nathan .................213 (51.25)Cook, Olivia .................321 (162.21)Cooley, Scott .................234 (71.27)Cooney, Kevin J. .............189 (27.3)Cooper, Barry ..................189 (27.6)Cooper, Carol B ..... 283 (118.2), 348
(184.2)Cooper, David A. ........ 311 (152.19),
328 (168.20), 340 (178.4)Cooperman, Alicia Dailey..........235
(71.33), 302 (143.4), 340(180.1), 356 (197.5)
Copelovitch, Mark ........212 (51.14),247 (85.13), 357 (197.10)
Coppedge, Michael J.....235 (71.34)Coppock, Alexander..... 333 (174.2),
354 (190.29)Corby, Jennifer ................210 (51.2)Cordova, Abby B. ....... 350 (190.10),
386 (215.8)Corduneanu-Huci, Cristina........188
(26.25), 282 (117.35), 379(212.12)
Cornell, Agnes......... 222 (63.5), 326(168.9)
Cornell, Angela ................228 (64.4)Corning, Peter .................243 (78.1)Corral, Alvaro Jose .....305 (143.22)Corrales, Javier .............348 (186.1)Correa-Cabrera, Guadalupe ......243
(78.2)Cortes, Juve J. ..............234 (71.26)Costalli, Stefano ............276 (114.1)Costoiu, Andrada ..........274 (112.2)Cottiero, Christina ....... 343 (183.15)Cottrell, Clifton ................252 (89.1)Cottrell, David................213 (51.24)Coulthard, Glen Sean ......222 (63.2)Courtin, Constant ..........307 (147.1)Covarrubias, Ana......... 280 (117.23)Cowan, Michael .............205 (43.15)Cowburn, Mike..... 313 (152.31), 390
(215.29)Cowell-Meyers, Kimberly B. ......190
(28.2)Cowley, Philip ................241 (77.14)Cox, Gary W.............210 (51.4), 364
(205.5)Cox, Loreto ......................203 (43.5)Coyoli, Julia Smith ...... 315 (152.45)Cozart, Darius................355 (193.1)Cozza, Joe ...................281 (117.28)Crabtree, Charles David ............201
(38.28), 214 (51.28), 366(205.17), 377 (211.1)
Crabtree, Kiela....... 219 (57.19), 293(134.8)
Craig, Alison ....................252 (89.2)Craig, Catherine...............259 (99.1)Cramer, Renee A. ............221 (58.5)Cranmer, Skyler J. ...........202 (42.1)Crasnic, Loriana ..........387 (215.14)Cravens, Royal Gene.................299
(134.42)
X : 25749$CHIX09-28-21 23:19:53 Page 403Layout: 11437P : Odd
INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 403KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Craw, Michael C.............248 (85.23)Crawford, Claire Brittany ..........266
(99.40)Crawford, Evan ............304 (143.19)Crawford, Matthew B.....266 (100.1)Crawford, Timothy...... 282 (117.37),
295 (134.19)Crawley, Sam ...............389 (215.25)Cremaschi, Simone ..... 387 (215.11)Crepaz, Michele ...........389 (215.26)Crescenzi, Mark J.C. .....218 (57.13)Crespin-Boucaud, Juliette.........257
(91.29)Crigler, Ann N. ...........182 (9.4), 298
(134.38)Criley, Mark......................252 (90.1)Crippa, Lorenzo ..... 205 (43.12), 321
(162.23), 351 (190.12)Crisman-Cox, Casey........253 (91.5)Cristancho-Mantilla, Camilo......281
(117.32)Crofts-Gibbons, KatherineGeneya .................. 230 (71.7), 299
(134.41), 319 (162.11)Croke, Kevin ................314 (152.39)Cross, James P ...............190 (28.2)Crosson, Jesse M...........209 (48.2),
234 (71.27), 277 (117.7), 345(183.25), 360 (197.23), 374
(209.25)Crouch, Jeffrey ...... 255 (91.15), 388
(215.18)Crow, Deserai Anderson ...........188
(26.24), 314 (152.35), 333(174.1), 347 (183.36)
Crowder, Chaya ....... 196 (37.1), 234(71.26)
Cruz, Cesi .............. 293 (134.6), 302(143.9)
Cruz, Jose Miguel.........200 (38.20),240 (77.13)
Cruz Nichols, Vanessa ..............257(91.27)
Cruz Ruiz, Ernesto ..........208 (44.3)Cryer, Jennifer E...........241 (77.16),
253 (91.6), 337 (176.21), 356(197.3), 379 (212.11)
Crystal, Faon .................286 (122.7)Csapo, Marika Danielle .............293
(134.5)Csehi, Robert...............372 (209.15)Csergo, Zsuzsa..............369 (207.1)Cueva, Sarah Ashley .......237 (74.1)Cui, Jasmine..................317 (161.1)Cunha, Raphael ..... 240 (77.10), 387
(215.13)Cunha Silva, Patrick........259 (95.2)Cunningham, Carissa Ann ........220
(57.25), 352 (190.20)Curiel, John Alexander .............281
(117.31), 298 (134.35)Curiel, Maria I ................217 (57.12)Curley, Cali ....................255 (91.16)Currier, Carrie Liu............253 (90.4)Curry, James M...... 275 (113.2), 353
(190.23)Curry, Todd A. ....... 206 (43.20), 225
(63.18), 304 (143.18)Curtice, Travis B............240 (77.11)Curtis, Kendall............. 376 (209.36)Cury, Emily ....................202 (38.34)Cyr, Jennifer ............ 183 (24.1), 239
(77.7), 306 (143.30), 314(152.38), 327 (168.15)
Cytarzynski, Mateusz ....273 (110.2)Czesnik, Mikolaj.............186 (26.11)
D
D'Alessandro, Martín .......190 (28.3)d'Ambruoso, William L. .............358
(197.16)d'Urso, Amanda Sahar ..............271
(109.20)da Conceicao-Heldt, EugeniaM. .............................. 372 (209.15)
Dafoe, Allan ........... 232 (71.16), 279(117.22)
Dahill-Brown, Sara E. ....207 (43.29)
Dahl, Adam J. .......... 184 (26.2), 317(162.1)
Dahl, Marianne...............232 (71.18)Dahl, Matthew ..............352 (190.17)Dahlberg, Matz............. 390 (215.31)Dahlgaard, Jens Olav ................261
(99.12), 375 (209.33)Dahlum, Sirianne .........282 (117.38)Dai, Yaoyao.............. 210 (51.5), 269
(109.9)Daifallah, Yasmeen ..........191 (33.1)Daigle, Delton T. ..............246 (85.9)Daily, Anna............... 222 (62.2), 350
(190.5)Dallas, Mark Peter ...........217 (57.9)Dalrymple, Kajsa E. .......242 (77.19)Dalton, Taylor ........ 290 (125.2), 323
(162.32)Daly, Sarah Zukerman ...............233
(71.20), 344 (183.19)Damsbo-Svendsen, Søren.........313
(152.33)Dancey, Logan...............233 (71.24)Dancy, Geoff ..................232 (71.14)Dancygier, Rafaela.......305 (143.25)Daniele, Gianmarco ......365 (205.9),
378 (212.8)Daniels, Ashley CJ ........202 (38.34)Daniels, Jennifer Renee ............389
(215.21)Daniels, Lesley-Ann ....388 (215.20)Daniels, Lorita ......... 245 (83.2), 256
(91.21)Dano, Kevin .....................210 (51.4)Daoust, Jean-François ..............390
(215.28)Darden, Keith A. ..............210 (51.7)Dariush, Mehrdad ..........309 (152.9)Darmofal, David ...............252 (89.2)Darr, Joshua P. ............395 (218.24)Darrow, Robert ..............324 (165.2)Das, Debak ............ 212 (51.18), 232
(71.15)Dasgupta, Aditya ..... 216 (57.4), 356
(197.4), 371 (209.8), 384(212.41)
Dassonneville, Ruth .....194 (33.24),219 (57.20), 243 (78.4), 288(122.19), 303 (143.12), 390
(215.27)Datta, Prithviraj................220 (58.1)datta, srijani...................264 (99.29)Daum, Courtenay W. .......221 (58.5)Davenport, Lauren D. ......254 (91.6)David-Barrett, Elizabeth ............377
(209.42)Davidson-Schmich, LouiseK............ 234 (71.25), 352 (190.19)
Davidsson, Simon ...........222 (63.5)Davies, Emmerich .........268 (107.3)Davis, Angelique ...........255 (91.18)Davis, Christina ... 311 (152.16), 393
(218.11)Davis, Elizabeth .............220 (57.27)Davis, Erik J. ...............390 (215.27)Davis, Jason Sanwalka .............318
(162.4), 327 (168.17)Davis, Jeffrey....... 347 (183.39), 382
(212.30)Davis, Justine ...... 303 (143.15), 388
(215.17)Davis, Nicholas Thomas ...........376
(209.37)Davis, Reed M..................237 (72.3)Davis, Taraleigh ...............244 (82.1)Davis Thomander, Sierra...........375
(209.34)Dawes, Christopher T. ...............318
(162.5)Dawkins, Sophia............187 (26.19)Dawson, James ...............222 (63.3)de Abreu maia, Lucas ...............241
(77.17), 376 (209.37)de Andrade, Rosiene Guerra ....296
(134.26)de Benedictis-Kessner,Justin ...... 245 (83.2), 379 (212.11)
De Bruin, Erica Susanne ...........262(99.20), 338 (176.29)
De Ciantis, Alexandra....277 (117.5)
De Giorgi, Elisabetta .................294(134.15), 379 (212.13)
de Graauw, Els ...... 206 (43.21), 362(199.1), 396 (218.31)
de Jong, Judith ....... 190 (32.2), 250(85.36)
De Juan, Alexander .... 271 (109.21),320 (162.19), 368 (205.26)
de Koster, Willem ..........234 (71.30)De la Calle, Luis ...... 254 (91.8), 358
(197.14)De La O Torres, Ana Lorena .....386
(215.9)de la Torre, Carlos...... 368 (205.31),
372 (209.15)de Lange, Tesseltje .......250 (85.36)de Leon, Alberto............286 (122.5)De Micheli, David...........211 (51.11)de Moragas, Antoni-Italo ...........318
(162.4)De Roche, Gabriel .........220 (57.27)De Silva, Nicole .............199 (38.15)De Soysa, Indra ........... 272 (109.21)de Vogel, Sasha...........310 (152.11)De Vries, Catherine E. ...............213
(51.21), 234 (71.30), 387(215.11)
Dean, Rikki ....................323 (163.3)Dearborn, John A. ........233 (71.22),
251 (85.39), 296 (134.27)Deardorff, Michelle D.................263
(99.24), 302 (143.8), 391(215.32)
Deardurff, Anthony........362 (198.2)Debre, Maria Josepha ...............390
(215.30)Debrix, Francois ..........322 (162.27)Debs, Alexandre ..............253 (91.5)Deckman, Melissa ...... 282 (117.34),
324 (166.1)DeDominicis, BenedictEdward ................ 205 (43.16), 224
(63.13), 324 (165.1), 366(205.16)
Deen, Rebecca E. ....229 (69.1), 301(142.1)
Deese, David A. ........... 303 (143.13)Dege, Carmen Lea ...........191 (33.5)Degrave, Anne ...............309 (152.8)DeHart, Cameron ...........233 (71.23)Deitch, Mora ................271 (109.21)Del Ponte, Alessandro ..............234
(71.30), 272 (109.25), 294(134.15), 343 (183.14), 378
(212.7)DeLeo, Rob A. ....... 200 (38.20), 314
(152.35), 333 (174.1), 361(197.27), 397 (219.2)
Delevoye, Angele......... 394 (218.21)Dell'Aera, Anthony D. ......221 (61.3)Della Volpe, John ..........265 (99.34)Dellmuth, Lisa Maria ....193 (33.15),
268 (108.1)Delton, Andrew ............306 (143.27)DeLude, Leilani................238 (75.1)DeMattee, Anthony James ........202
(38.32), 206 (43.20), 227 (64.1),289 (123.2), 361 (197.32), 374
(209.28)Demchak, Chris C.........199 (38.16),
271 (109.17)Demir, Burak....................243 (79.1)Demir, Nazim Uras.........341 (181.1)DeMora, Stephanie L. ....202 (38.34)Den Hartog, Chris..........234 (71.27)Denbow, Jennifer...........378 (212.3)Deng, Qinhao.................291 (126.1)Deng, Yong ............ 273 (110.3), 311
(152.18)Denly, Mike ..................271 (109.16)Denney, Steven..............214 (51.28)Denny, Elaine K. ...... 260 (99.3), 292
(133.2)Deo, Nandini ............ 227 (64.1), 252
(88.1), 264 (99.28), 313(152.30), 355 (192.3)
Derlén, Mattias.............344 (183.23)Dervesevic, Lejla .........323 (162.32)Desai, Zuheir ........... 246 (85.7), 260
(99.4), 277 (117.7)Desborough, Rachael......191 (33.6)
DeScioli, Peter .............343 (183.14)Deslatte, Aaron ...... 255 (91.16), 314
(152.35), 359 (197.21)Deslauriers, Theophile ...215 (57.1),
361 (197.30)Desmarais, Bruce .... 252 (89.2), 287
(122.15), 323 (162.32), 352(190.18)
Desposato, Scott W. ......335 (176.8)Destler, Katharine ElizabethNeem ...........................268 (107.3)
Dettman, Sebastian .......227 (63.28)Devaney, Joseph S. .......332 (169.2)Devdariani, Saba ...........370 (209.6)Devereaux Evans, Tessa ...........237
(74.1)Devich-Cyril, Malkia.......385 (215.3)Devoto, Lisandro Martín............217
(57.8)DeWitt, Darin.......... 317 (159.3), 331
(168.37)Dhima, Kostanca ...........225 (63.19)Dhingra, Reva ...... 327 (168.14), 347
(183.40)Diamond, Alexis J. ........198 (38.10)Diamond, Larry ........196 (34.2), 387
(215.10)Diaz, Gustavo ................300 (139.1)Diaz Guimaraens, CarlosDaniel ..........................233 (71.23)
Diaz-Dominguez, Alejandro.......390(215.28)
Dickinson, Matthew J. ...............382(212.28)
Diehl, Paul F.................373 (209.23)Diehl, Paula.................. 368 (205.31)Diehl, Trevor H.............306 (143.26)Dienstag, Joshua Foa ...301 (143.1)Dietrich, Bryce..... 282 (117.35), 383
(212.37)Dietrich, Joseph John ....221 (62.1),
238 (75.1)Dietrich, Simone .... 212 (51.15), 240
(77.11), 311 (152.17)Diggles, Michelle .............215 (56.2)DiGiuseppe, Matthew R.............262
(99.15)Dilgin, Tolgahan...........288 (122.19)Dillard, Kara N ...............355 (192.2)Dilling, Matthias.............333 (173.1)DiLorenzo, Matthew.......193 (33.17)Dilts, Andrew ...................245 (85.2)Dilworth, Richardson.....256 (91.19)Dimitrov, Martin ........... 368 (205.26)Dimmery, Drew ..............198 (38.10)Dinan, John ...................323 (163.4)Dinan, Matthew D. .........267 (100.2)Dinas, Elias.............. 246 (85.5), 368
(205.29)Dincecco, Mark ...... 277 (117.9), 378
(212.9)Dinesen, Peter Thisted ..............298
(134.37)Ding, Iza ............... 310 (152.11), 351
(190.11)Ding, Jeffrey ................322 (162.28)Dinkel, Christopher .......212 (51.14)Dion, Michelle L.............301 (142.3)Diones, Alexander .........276 (117.3)Dionne, Kim Yi.................229 (70.1)Dionne, Lee.................. 304 (143.17)Dipoppa, Gemma...........379 (212.9)DiSalvo, Daniel R.........297 (134.30)DiSalvo, Richard W........248 (85.22)DiSarro, Joseph...............228 (64.5)Disch, Lisa J. ...................222 (63.3)Dixon, Kim Nicole..........348 (187.1)Dixon, Peter J. ...............266 (99.40)Djupe, Paul A....... 353 (190.22), 367
(205.21)Dobbs, Kirstie Lynn.......213 (51.22)Doces, John...................242 (77.23)Dodds, Graham G........304 (143.17)Doi, Shohei .................. 366 (205.17)Dokumaci, Pinar ..........366 (205.20)Dolan, Kathleen ....... 215 (56.1), 284
(121.3)Dolan, Lindsay R. ..........254 (91.10)Dolan, Thomas M. ...........244 (80.2)Dolgert, Stefan P..............191 (33.6)Dollbaum, Jan Matti ........204 (43.6)
X : 25749$CHIX09-28-21 23:19:53 Page 404Layout: 11437P : Even
404 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Dolsak, Nives........... 252 (89.1), 360(197.27)
Dominguez, Jaime ...... 305 (143.21),374 (209.30)
Dominguez-Perez, Maria ...........299(134.44)
Dommett, Kate ..... 322 (162.25), 331(168.36)
Donahue, Bailee ............217 (57.13)Dong, Haonan..................230 (71.3)Donnay, Karsten ..........395 (218.24)Donnelly, Michael J. ..... 242 (77.21),
289 (122.24)Donno, Daniela ...... 240 (77.11), 271
(109.19), 289 (122.25), 291(130.1)
Donoso, Claudia ............242 (77.23)Donovan, Todd ...... 264 (99.32), 345
(183.28)Dooling, Bridget C.E..................312
(152.24)Dorff, Cassy............. 203 (42.1), 262
(99.21)Dornschneider, Stephanie.........192
(33.9), 364 (205.4)Dorr, Dalton Cunha......379 (212.13)Dorsey, Spencer ............213 (51.23)Dorssom, Elizabeth Ila ..............200
(38.22), 334 (175.2), 340(180.2)
dos Santos, Pedro G. ................274(111.1), 281 (117.30)
Dosek, Tomas ................340 (179.1)Dost, Meredith ....... 340 (180.2), 376
(209.37)Doucette, Jonathan ......274 (112.1),
346 (183.30)Dougall, Danielle .............259 (95.2)Douglas-Durham, Ella ...188 (26.27)Dow, David.....................335 (176.7)Dowd, Rebekah ...............185 (26.8)Dowe, Pearl K. ...............218 (57.18)Dowling, Conor M..........334 (174.2)Dowling, Ev Marie ...........210 (51.3)Downey, Davia C. ............238 (76.9)Downs-Tepper, Harlan ...............297
(134.31)Doyle, David ..................290 (124.1)Doyon, Jerome ............365 (205.10)Drapalova, Eliska.........368 (205.26)Dreier, Sarah K. ........... 381 (212.22)Drews, Wiebke .............270 (109.13)Dreyer, David ...............360 (197.24)Drezner, Daniel W. ........247 (85.15),
343 (183.17)Driscoll, Amanda ...........218 (57.16)Driscoll, Jesse ......... 183 (24.1), 255
(91.12), 310 (152.14), 358(197.13)
Druckman, James N. ....219 (57.23),265 (99.34), 307 (143.32), 350
(190.6), 395 (218.21)Drutman, Lee ...................183 (22.1)Dryzek, John S. ...............184 (26.3)Dube, Oeindrila............359 (197.18)Duch, Raymond ..... 249 (85.30), 377
(209.42)Duchovnay, Marley ......314 (152.34)Duck-Mayr, JBrandon................300
(139.1), 337 (176.20)Duckett, Jane...............327 (168.16)Dudley, Rebecca Ellen ..............344
(183.18)Dudley, Soren ..................245 (83.1)Duell, Dominik ......... 197 (38.5), 246
(85.8)Duepont, Nils .................342 (183.8)Duer, Andreas................240 (77.10)Duff, Alexander..............332 (169.1)Duit, Andreas...............288 (122.21)Dukalskis, Alexander.......217 (57.9)Dukeman, Ryan .............224 (63.13)Dulani, Boniface Madalitso .......302
(143.9), 351 (190.15)Dulay, Dean....203 (43.3), 230 (71.5)Dull, Matthew M. ............323 (164.1)Dumas, Tao L......... 263 (99.24), 344
(183.23)Dunaway, Johanna .......201 (38.30),
213 (51.26), 376 (209.38)
Duncan, Christopher M. ............305(143.23)
Duncan, Gustavo...........342 (183.7)Dunlap, Alina ...................246 (85.6)Dunn, Joshua M. ...........283 (118.1)Duong, Kevin ........... 245 (85.2), 325
(168.5), 361 (197.29), 370(209.3)
Duplessie, Derek ...........267 (100.3)Duran-Martinez, Angelica ..........319
(162.9), 350 (190.10)Duursma, Allard.............187 (26.19)Dwidar, Maraam ....... 196 (37.1), 219
(57.20)Dwinger, Felix ................226 (63.27)Dwyre, Diana ...................220 (58.1)Dyck, Joshua J. ........... 287 (122.15)Dyer, Justin B. ......... 237 (72.1), 332
(168.42)Dyer, Megan Kathleen ...284 (120.1)Dym, Abigail ..................202 (38.34)Dyzenhaus, Alex.... 348 (186.1), 384
(212.45)Dzutsati, Valery..............186 (26.11)
E
Early Bagdanov, Hannah...........321(162.20)
Eastman, Elizabeth........316 (153.1)Eastman, John C. ......... 391 (216.1),
397 (219.1)Eaton, Sarah ................ 365 (205.14)Eatough, Mandi ..... 205 (43.18), 268
(108.2)Eber-Schmid, Noah R......222 (63.1)Eberhardt, Lindsay ........397 (219.1)Eberhardt, Markus .........235 (71.34)Ebin, Chelsea...............379 (212.10)Eccel, Daiane .................369 (206.2)Eckhouse, Laurel...........293 (134.8)Eckstein, Tanja ............381 (212.24)Edelson, Chris .............388 (215.18)Edelstein, David M.......344 (183.17)Edgell, Amanda B.........235 (71.34),
396 (218.29)Edgerton, Jared Falkenberg .....187
(26.20), 262 (99.15), 381(212.26)
Edmonds, Bruce..............192 (33.9)Edwards, George C. ......233 (71.22)Edwards, Pearce............235 (71.35)Egami, Naoki .................198 (38.10)Ege, Joern ...................388 (215.19)Egel, Naomi ........... 212 (51.16), 320
(162.17)Egerod, Benjamin ....... 281 (117.32),
375 (209.33)Eggers, Andrew C. ..........192 (33.8)Eilstrup-Sangiovanni, Mette ......328
(168.18)Eisenberg, Avigail ...........191 (33.6)Eisenstadt, Todd A. ..... 353 (190.25)El Kurd, Dana ...... 312 (152.22), 358
(197.16)El-Meehy, Asya ................216 (57.7)El-Rayyes, Thoraya ..... 358 (197.17)El-Sabawi, Taleed ....... 288 (122.19),
396 (218.30)Ela, Nate ........................397 (219.5)Eldemerdash, Nadia ....397 (218.32)Elder, Elizabeth Mitchell............219
(57.22)Eldredge, Cody D. ....... 372 (209.17)Elejarza, Kassandra.....281 (117.33)Elfstrom, Manfred ..........308 (150.2)Elia, Emily ....................305 (143.25)Elias, Barbara ...... 312 (152.23), 320
(162.18)Elischer, Sebastian........250 (85.37)Ellenwood, Cheryl .........349 (189.3)Ellermann, Antje ..........288 (122.23)Ellger, Fabio.................389 (215.25)Ellinas, Antonis A..........357 (197.9)Elliott, Christian.............341 (181.1)Elliott, Kevin J. .... 273 (109.28), 363
(205.1)Ellis, Chris .....................397 (219.2)Ellis, Dustin .....................221 (61.1)
Ellis, Elisabeth H. .... 191 (33.4), 239(77.3), 392 (218.3)
Elsig, Manfred.............. 311 (152.16)Elswah, Mona .............. 376 (209.40)Emejulu, Akwugo ............190 (31.1)Emery, John R ............. 396 (218.28)Emery, Nicholas........... 279 (117.22)Emmenegger, Patrick ....212 (51.13)Emmons, Cassandra V. .............231
(71.12), 338 (176.27)Emmons-Allison, Juliann ..........297
(134.30)Endersby, James W. ......207 (43.24)Engel, Christoph............242 (77.22)Engelbrekt, Kjell ............262 (99.19)Engelhardt, Andrew M...............197
(38.6), 216 (57.3), 254 (91.6)Enggist, Matthias......... 365 (205.12)Englert, Gianna........ 259 (99.1), 276
(117.1), 370 (209.1)English, Ashley ...............196 (37.1)English, Jasmine Hope ...228 (64.3)Engster, Dan ..................301 (143.3)Engstrom, Richard Lee ...259 (95.2)Enns, Peter ............ 200 (38.21), 307
(144.2)Enos, Ryan D......... 266 (99.42), 350
(190.6)Enríquez, José Ramón ..............371
(209.9)Ensley, Michael J..........234 (71.29),
346 (183.33)Entel, Lucas...................284 (120.1)Epp, Derek ............. 255 (91.16), 297
(134.30), 321 (162.21)Epperly, Brad ...............329 (168.27)Epstein, Ben ........ 331 (168.36), 347
(183.37)Ercan, Harun..................188 (26.25)Erdilmen, Merve...........303 (143.13)Erickson, Megan.... 340 (180.1), 358
(197.13)Erickson, Peter M ..........275 (114.1)Eriksson, Anna-Karin ....318 (162.7)Erisen, Cengiz .................191 (33.7)Erkiletian, Sam Adam....212 (51.18)Erkulwater, Jennifer Leonor......350
(190.8), 379 (212.10)Erlich, Aaron S. ... 360 (197.26), 386
(215.9)Erlingsson, Gissur.......329 (168.25)Errera, Kelly...................225 (63.18)Ershova, Anastasia .......286 (122.6)Erzeel, Silvia ..................340 (179.1)Esaiasson, Peter..........298 (134.37)Esarey, Ashley ...............246 (85.10)Esarey, Justin E....... 246 (85.7), 330
(168.31)Escobar-Lemmon, Maria C........394
(218.17)Escudero illanes, MaríaCristina .......................348 (187.1)
Eshbaugh-Soha, Matthew .........206(43.19)
Eslava, Francisco ............192 (33.8)Essel, Kristen ..................190 (32.2)Estancona, Chelsea L ...............255
(91.14), 393 (218.14)Esterling, Kevin M. ....... 193 (33.18),
331 (168.40)Estlund, Cynthia ..............228 (64.4)Estlund, David M. ........ 354 (190.31)Estmann, Christian..........198 (38.7)Estrada, Jose Luis.......269 (109.10)Eubank, Nick ........... 231 (71.8), 278
(117.11)Euben, Roxanne L. .........190 (33.1),
203 (43.1), 209 (51.1)Evans, Allison D. ..... 203 (43.6), 227
(63.29), 231 (71.11), 308(150.2), 372 (209.14)
Evans, C. Lawrence.... 303 (143.16),393 (218.15)
Evans, Geoffrey ...........272 (109.22)Evans, Heather ..............265 (99.35)Evans, Laura E. ....... 252 (89.1), 349
(189.3)Evci, Ugurcan ................264 (99.32)Everitt, Joanna .... 323 (162.31), 354
(190.28)Evers, Miles .................396 (218.28)
IndexofParticipants
Ewenstein, Paul ...........312 (152.22)Ewing, Connor..... 280 (117.28), 304
(143.18), 332 (168.42)
F
Faas, Thorsten...............335 (176.9)Fabbe, Kristin E.......... 315 (152.44),
347 (183.40)Fabbrini, Sergio ..... 204 (43.11), 336
(176.10)Fabian, Sandor ..............247 (85.17)Faggert, Michelle Ashley...........332
(170.2)Fahey, James......... 326 (168.7), 375
(209.35)Fahmy, Dalia Fikry.........362 (199.2)Fairbanks, Bailey Rose-Marie ...304
(143.18), 334 (175.2)Fairfield, Tasha A..........201 (38.27),
209 (48.3), 338 (176.27)Falkenbach, Michelle.................384
(212.43)Falleti, Tulia G.......... 209 (49.3), 325
(167.2)Fang, Songying ...........373 (209.23)Fanlo, Abby M ............. 381 (212.22)FARAJEV, Nariman........307 (146.1)Farfan Mendez, Cecilia ..............255
(91.14), 393 (218.14)Farhart, Christina .........188 (26.27),
302 (143.4)Fariss, Christopher J.................236
(71.36), 322 (162.29), 339(178.1), 370 (208.2)
Farkas, Xénia .................242 (77.18)Farrell, Henry ........... 217 (57.9), 358
(197.12)Farrington, Alex K ....... 396 (218.27)Farris, Emily ............229 (69.1), 285
(122.4), 301 (142.2)Farrokhi, Ramin .............317 (161.1)Farzam, Amirhossein ....195 (33.26)Fashagba, Joseph Olayinka......258
(94.1), 315 (152.42)Faulk, Lewis.....................243 (78.2)Faulkner, ChristopherMichael................ 224 (63.12), 232
(71.18), 320 (162.15), 336(176.15)
Faulkner, Rebecca .......306 (143.29)Favell, Adrian......... 236 (71.39), 276
(117.4)Fazal, Tanisha................275 (114.1)Fearon, James D. ............230 (71.3)Fedi, Silvia .....................308 (152.3)Feeney, Sharon Mary......185 (26.7),
252 (88.2)Feezell, Jessica T. ...........230 (71.6)Feher, Zoltan.......... 232 (71.17), 356
(196.1)Feinstein, Scott G............240 (77.9)Feitosa, Fernando ....... 303 (143.12)Feitosa Dantas, Leonardo .........217
(57.11)Feldman, Jeffrey..............210 (51.2)Feldman, Stanley...........201 (38.30)Feldmann, Andreas E................342
(183.7)Felfeli, Julia .................322 (162.26)Felter, Joseph Harold ................320
(162.18)Feng, Jeff L....................236 (71.37)Feng, Xinrui .................278 (117.15)Fenzl, Michele................357 (197.9)Feola, Michael................370 (209.4)Ferguson, Kennan ..........209 (49.3),
285 (122.1), 331 (168.37)Ferguson, Lucien Maxwell ........391
(215.32)Ferguson, Michaele L................292
(134.3), 301 (143.2), 353(190.26)
Ferlenga, Francesco........210 (51.4)Fernandes, Leonardo ................312
(152.23)Ferrali, Romain Reda.....269 (109.8)Ferrara, Federico Maria .............199
(38.14), 341 (183.4)Ferrari, Diogo...................230 (71.6)
X : 25749$CHIX09-28-21 23:19:53 Page 405Layout: 11437P : Odd
INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 405KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Ferree, Karen E..............257 (91.29)Ferrillo, Vivian ...............188 (26.23)Ferry, Lauren Elizabeth .............212
(51.14), 351 (190.14), 366(205.15)
Ferwerda, Jeremy .........186 (26.13),227 (63.30), 313 (152.33), 365
(205.12)Fesnic, Florin Nicolae ...219 (57.21)Fetscher, Verena Rebecca.........310
(152.15), 368 (205.29), 371(209.9)
Field, Luke ...................269 (109.11)Fieldhouse, Edward A. ..............272
(109.22)Figueiredo, ArgelinaCheibub.....................296 (134.26)
Filler, Nicole........... 249 (85.26), 301(142.1), 329 (168.29), 391
(217.1)Filomeno, Felipe A ..........196 (36.1)Fimister, Alan Paul ........316 (154.1)Finan, Frederico ..............254 (91.7)Findley, Michael........... 344 (183.19)Finger, Leslie K...... 207 (43.29), 349
(189.3)Fink, Simon.................. 270 (109.13)Finkel, Steven E...........272 (109.24)Finnegan, Jared J........306 (143.27)Finnemore, Martha ......337 (176.17)Finseraas, Henning .......186 (26.13)Firchow, Pamina .... 266 (99.40), 306
(143.30)Fischer, Sarah.............. 382 (212.32)Fisher, Rachel................242 (77.22)Fisher, Scott ..................226 (63.24)Fisher Onar, Nora ........ 314 (152.36)Fishkin, James S. .... 196 (34.2), 349
(190.4)Fishman, Nic................ 376 (209.37)Fite, Owen Gunehame.....197 (38.4)FitzGerald, Michael....... 220 (57.25),
352 (190.19)Fix, Michael P............... 304 (143.18)Flavin, Patrick.............. 297 (134.30)Flavin, Rebecca McCumbers ....239
(77.6)Flessen, Ivy............ 317 (161.1), 362
(198.3)Fletcher, Richard ... 235 (71.32), 367
(205.23)Fleuss, Dannica .............274 (111.3)Flink, Carla M...............296 (134.28)Flom, Hernan ...............393 (218.14)Flores, Alejandro .............197 (38.6)Flores, Andrew R.........282 (117.34)Flores, Diego .................355 (193.1)Flores, Thomas E. ....... 306 (143.30)Flores-Macias, Gustavo A. ........204
(43.7)Flynn, Michael E. ...........275 (114.1)Foa, Roberto Stefan .... 306 (143.29)Foley, Edward B. ......... 330 (168.33)Foley, Neil ....................272 (109.26)Folke, Olle....................390 (215.31)Folsz, Hanna ................320 (162.19)Fong, Christian ............393 (218.15)Fonseca, Elize Massard da .......229
(70.1)Fontaine, Samuel...........233 (71.22)Foos, Florian ......... 226 (63.22), 266
(99.42)Ford, Robert ................ 272 (109.22)Fording, Richard C. .... 345 (183.28),
360 (197.25)Forestal, Jennifer .........308 (152.1),
378 (212.4)Forester, Summer ..........264 (99.29)Foret, Derek ...................267 (100.3)Forgash, Rachel ..............191 (33.6)Forman, Michael ............219 (57.24)Formicola, Jo Renee ...305 (143.23)Forrester, Katrina ....... 354 (190.31),
392 (218.2)Fortner, Michael Javen ..............256
(91.19)Fortson, Grace............. 289 (122.24)Fortunato, David.... 204 (43.10), 335
(176.9), 376 (209.36)Fossum, John Erik ....... 204 (43.11),
336 (176.10)
Foster, Chase Michael...............278(117.16)
Foster, David Robert ......260 (99.6),277 (117.7), 374 (209.26)
Foster, Luke.....................245 (83.1)Foster, Noel ...................226 (63.24)Fouka, Vasiliki ......... 211 (51.7), 246
(85.5)Fox, Ashley M...... 314 (152.39), 384
(212.43)Fox, Russell Arben.......284 (120.1),
325 (168.1)Foxworth, Raymond .......238 (75.1),
310 (152.13), 349 (189.3)Fraccaroli, Nicolò .........246 (85.12),
306 (143.26), 367 (205.23)Fraga, Bernard L. .........213 (51.24),
219 (57.19), 305 (143.22), 345(183.29)
Fraga, Luis Ricardo .....382 (212.31)Franceschet, Susan..........181 (5.8),
290 (123.4), 394 (218.20)Francis, John G. ...... 211 (51.9), 345
(183.24)Francis, Leslie Pickering...........211
(51.9), 345 (183.24)Francis, Megan Ming ....293 (134.8),
342 (183.5), 350 (190.9)Franco, Annie .............. 338 (176.25)Franco, Josue Alejandro ...........238
(76.7), 334 (175.2)Frank, Jason..................370 (209.3)Franklin Fowler, Erika ...............188
(26.27), 209 (48.2)Franko, William W....... 315 (152.43),
352 (190.18)Frankowski, Dan..........354 (190.29)Frantz, Erica ....................254 (91.9)Frantzeskakis, Nikolaos ............289
(122.25)Franz, Michael .................257 (92.2)Franzese, Robert J. .......392 (218.7)Fraser, Cary .................353 (190.26)Fraser, Nicholas AlexanderRymal .... 214 (51.28), 289 (122.24)
Fraser, Timothy.... 288 (122.21), 397(219.2)
Frasure, Lorrie......... 215 (55.2), 264(99.30), 334 (175.2)
Fravel, M. Taylor .... 273 (110.3), 311(152.18)
Frazier, Ryan................ 304 (143.16)Fredén, Annika ..............269 (109.9)Fredriksson, Klara MariaCecilia .........................309 (152.9)
Freedman, Michael ......367 (205.21)Freeman, Bianca.... 212 (51.17), 334
(175.1), 351 (190.14)Freeman, John R. ............229 (70.2)Freeman, Kahina Marie .............285
(121.8)Freeman, Samuel......... 354 (190.31)Freeman, Will Garrett ................303
(143.10)Fresh, Adriane ......... 210 (51.4), 235
(71.34), 278 (117.11), 384(212.41)
Frey, Anderson ..............342 (183.9)Frick, James Aubrey ...311 (152.18)Frid-Nielsen, SnorreSylvester .....................333 (173.1)
Fridkin, Kim L. ............. 346 (183.33)Fried, Ethan .................297 (134.30)Friedberg, Aaron L. .......240 (77.12)Frieden, Jeffry A...... 239 (77.5), 294
(134.17), 357 (197.10)Friedman, Jeffrey .... 252 (87.3), 273
(109.28)Friedman, Rachel ............239 (77.1)Friedman, Rebekka C. ...............206
(43.22), 394 (218.19)Friedman, Sally..............205 (43.18)Frierdich, Matthew D .......228 (66.2)Friesen, Amanda ........ 281 (117.28),
354 (190.29), 367 (205.21)Friesen, Paul................372 (209.13)Friess, Dennis................265 (99.35)Frisk, David B. .................189 (27.2)Frith, Michael James .....385 (214.3)Frohnen, Bruce P.............189 (27.2)Froomkin, David ............370 (209.5)
Frost, Lillian.................331 (168.41)Frye, Timothy.................246 (85.11)Frymer, Paul ............228 (64.4), 246
(85.6), 284 (121.3)Fu, Chengyu ..................302 (143.5)Fu, Diana......................342 (183.10)Fu, Ronan Tse-min .........189 (27.5),
227 (64.2)Fuchs, Daniel...............365 (205.14)Fuchs, Federico........... 278 (117.13)Fuentes, Alberto Jose .....217 (57.8)Fuhrmann, Matthew..... 351 (190.13)Fukushima, Mayumi ....295 (134.19)Fulda, Nancy....................230 (71.6)Fuller, Samuel..................246 (85.7)Fumurescu, Alin ..............222 (63.1)Funck, Amy....................356 (197.2)Fung, Archon...................209 (49.1)Funjika, Patricia........... 303 (143.11)Funk, Kevin....................284 (121.4)Furnas, Alexander Charles .......209
(48.2), 225 (63.21), 339 (178.2)Furtak, Dominika ...........291 (128.1)fuse, satoru....................199 (38.17)Fuselli, Silvia ...............372 (209.15)
G
Gómez Vidal, Analía ......248 (85.25)G. Pinheiro, Lucas.........349 (190.1)Gabbay, Michael ......... 299 (134.43),
358 (197.13)Gaboury, Jennifer ........281 (117.29)Gadarian, Shana Kushner .........201
(38.31)Gade, Emily K...... 299 (134.43), 381
(212.22)Gade, Emily Kalah ....... 358 (197.13)Gagne, Marie .................236 (71.41)Gagnon, Jean-Paul ........274 (111.3)Gaikwad, Nikhar .... 223 (63.10), 295
(134.18)Gainous, Jason ... 361 (197.28), 367
(205.24)Galais, Carol ................ 270 (109.13)Galambos, Kevin .........336 (176.15)Galano Toro, Paola .........252 (88.1),
258 (94.1)Galasso, Vincenzo...........210 (51.4)Gallagher, Janice Kreinick ........394
(218.16)Gallagher, Mary E. ...... 342 (183.10),
357 (197.11)Gallagher, Maryann E. ...............295
(134.22)Gallagher, Megan......... 395 (218.26)Gallagher, Nancy ......... 328 (168.20)Gallego, Aina .................276 (115.1)Gallego, Omar Hammoud..........315
(152.41)Gallien, Max ...................248 (85.20)Gallina, Marta...........259 (95.2), 360
(197.24)Galloway, Samuel R.........259 (98.1)Galvin, Daniel ..................258 (92.3)Gamarnik, Dan...............386 (215.5)Gambino, Elena ....... 184 (25.1), 259
(98.1), 308 (152.3)Gamboa, Laura ........ 197 (38.7), 227
(63.29), 317 (160.1)Gamm, Gerald.............. 287 (122.15)Gamso, Jonas........ 186 (26.14), 341
(181.1)Ganapati, Nazife Emel ...............200
(38.20)Gandhi, Jennifer .... 235 (71.35), 246
(85.11), 320 (162.14), 331(168.38), 371 (209.10)
Ganga, Paula Daniela ................192(33.12), 199 (38.13)
Ganguly, Sumit ............387 (215.10)Gannon, J Andres ...... 295 (134.19),
311 (152.20), 339 (178.2)Gao, Huan ....................365 (205.10)Gao, Wenyang .................244 (81.1)Gao, Ying ... 350 (190.7), 356 (196.1)Garand, James C......... 297 (134.33)Garay, Candelaria ..........261 (99.11)Garbe, Lisa .......... 322 (162.26), 376
(209.40)
Garbiras Diaz, Natalia................218(57.14), 369 (208.1)
García-Castañon, Marcela .........258(92.4)
Garcia, Jennifer .............206 (43.23)Garcia, John Armando ..............349
(189.2)Garcia, Luzmarina ....... 344 (183.23)Garcia, Margaret ..........314 (152.35)Garcia Bedolla, Lisa ........209 (49.1)Garcia Holgado, BenjaminGarcia........................322 (162.30)
Garcia Iommi, Lucrecia .............228(66.2)
Garcia Montoya, Laura ..............238(76.4), 361 (197.31)
Garcia Trejo, YazminArgentina .............. 238 (76.5), 284
(121.6)Garcia-Hernandez, Ana .............269
(109.7)Garcia-Macias, Angelica............213
(51.23)Garcia-Ponce, Omar ......364 (205.9)Garcia-Sanchez, Miguel.............218
(57.14)Garfias, Francisco ... 216 (57.4), 277
(117.9), 318 (162.6)Garfinkel, Nicholas W....362 (198.2)Garibaldo Valdez, Ramon..........196
(36.1), 220 (58.2)Garigliano, Jack...........305 (143.24)Garimella, Kiran Kiran...............359
(197.17)Garnett, Holly Ann..........183 (22.1),
201 (38.29), 207 (43.24)Garrett, Kristin N. ............210 (51.3)Garriga, Ana Carolina................199
(38.14), 247 (85.13)Garrison, Jean .............280 (117.23)Garro, Haritz ..................364 (205.6)Garske, Joseph P...........263 (99.24)Garsten, Bryan ..............349 (190.2)Gartzke, Erik .......... 232 (71.16), 286
(122.8)Gash, Alison ............ 221 (61.2), 285
(121.8), 322 (162.31), 354(190.28), 396 (218.27)
Gasparyan, Olga............307 (146.1)Gastil, John .....................196 (34.2)Gastinger, Markus .........254 (91.11)Gates, Scott ........... 262 (99.17), 280
(117.26), 321 (162.20), 364(205.8)
Gattie, David ................ 279 (117.21)Gauding, Patrick John ..............359
(197.21)Gaufman, Elizaveta........369 (207.1)Gause, LaGina ......... 190 (32.2), 219
(57.20)Gawronski, Vincent T. ...200 (38.20)Gaynor, SoRelle Wyckoff ..........206
(43.18)Ge, Haosen ............ 340 (180.1), 380
(212.19)Ge, Zoe Xincheng ........320 (162.14)Geddes, Barbara.... 235 (71.34), 294
(134.11)Gehlbach, Scott .............392 (218.6)Geiser, Carolyn ...... 201 (38.29), 226
(63.23)Geiser, Nicholas ...... 221 (61.1), 243
(78.1)Geisler, Alexander Matthias ......208
(44.3)Gelbman, Shamira M. ....342 (183.5)Geller, Daniel S. ........... 271 (109.17)Gellman, Mneesha ........194 (33.20),
215 (55.1), 237 (75.1), 271(109.20), 306 (143.30), 396
(218.31)Gelman, Jeremy .......... 393 (218.15)Gengler, Justin ............283 (117.42)Gennaro, Gloria ....... 185 (26.6), 210
(51.5), 225 (63.22)Genovese, Federica.... 295 (134.18),
351 (190.12)Gent, Stephen E. ... 217 (57.13), 218
(57.13)Gentry, Bobbi......... 292 (133.1), 355
(192.2)
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406 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Gentzkow, Matthew ..... 338 (176.25)George, Julie ....... 343 (183.16), 355
(192.3)George, Rachel ...... 284 (121.4), 385
(213.1)Geron, Kim.....................391 (217.1)Gerring, John........... 184 (25.2), 251
(85.41), 396 (218.29)Gershon, Sarah Allen ....218 (57.18)Gervais, Bryan....... 235 (71.32), 265
(99.35), 392 (218.4)Gessler, Theresa..............185 (26.6)Gest, Justin .................376 (209.38)Getmansky, Anna ..........217 (57.12)Ghassim, Farsan .........367 (205.22)Gherghina, Sergiu ........267 (107.1),
287 (122.13), 307 (146.1), 338(176.24)
Ghosh, Cyril.................299 (134.42)Ghosn, Faten ......... 195 (33.30), 385
(214.3)Giamario, Patrick..........285 (122.1),
334 (176.3)Giancola, Orazio ............188 (26.23)Gibbons, Andrew...........195 (33.25)Gibbons, Matthew ....... 271 (109.20)Gibbs, Cheryl.................385 (214.1)Gibilisco, Michael ....253 (91.5), 293
(134.4)Gibson, Alan Ray ........339 (176.32)Gibson, Clark C. ............386 (215.9)Gibson, James L. ..........200 (38.21)Gibson, Jenna ...............291 (126.2)Gibson, Nathan............359 (197.20)Gibson, Rachel K. ........291 (126.1),
322 (162.25), 395 (218.22)Gichohi, Matthew K .....315 (152.42)Gidron, Noam .............. 387 (215.11)Gieczewski, Germán Sergio ......230
(71.3)Giersch, Jason ............289 (122.26)Gies, Nathan ..................334 (176.3)Giger, Nathalie ....... 224 (63.16), 391
(215.31)Gil de Zúñiga, Homero ..............207
(43.27), 291 (126.2)Gilardi, Fabrizio ... 322 (162.26), 375
(209.35)Gilbert, Danielle ... 271 (109.17), 332
(170.1)Gilbert, Lauren...............286 (122.8)Giles, Micheal W. ......... 352 (190.17)Gilhooley, Simon ..... 191 (33.3), 391
(215.32)Giliberti, Gina...............367 (205.25)Gill, Emily R. ................ 330 (168.32)Gill, Hyungjin ...............383 (212.36)Gill, Jeff .........................300 (139.1)Gill, Paul ........................350 (190.6)Gill, Rebecca D. ....... 238 (75.3), 259
(97.1), 353 (190.23), 394(218.17)
Gill-Tiney, Patrick ..........286 (122.8)Gillespie, Andra ...........305 (143.21)Gillespie, Micala ..........295 (134.22)Gilli, Andrea .................343 (183.16)Gilligan, Michael J. ...... 359 (197.18)Gillion, Daniel Q. .............215 (55.2)Gillooly, Shauna N..........221 (58.2),
263 (99.22)Gilman, Nils .....................238 (75.2)Gilmore, Shawn ...............252 (90.1)Gilmour, Terry..................238 (76.1)Gilson, Lisa....................292 (134.3)Gimby, Nate .................367 (205.23)Gimenez Stahlberg,Stephanie ............ 263 (99.22), 328
(168.22)Gingerich, Daniel W.......371 (209.8)Gingrich, Jane R...........212 (51.13),
309 (152.9), 319 (162.13), 329(168.26)
Ginsberg, Benjamin.......194 (33.21)Ginsberg, Benjamin L .....221 (58.4)Ginsburg, Tom...............317 (160.1)Gippert, Birte Julia ...... 390 (215.30)Girard, Tyler .................387 (215.13)Girardin, Luc..................205 (43.16)Giraudo, Peter ...............378 (212.4)Giraudy, Agustina............239 (77.7)Giray, Burak ...................284 (119.1)
Girod, Desha..................255 (91.12)Gisselquist, Rachel M. ..............198
(38.11), 303 (143.11)Giudici, Anja S...............212 (51.13)Giugal, Aurelian........... 338 (176.24)Giuliano, Elise ...............246 (85.11)Giumelli, Francesco ......232 (71.13)Giusti-Rodriguez, Mariana.........383
(212.33)Givens, John Wagner ....246 (85.10)Gjerløw, Haakon ..........282 (117.38)Glas, Aarie ............. 220 (57.25), 286
(122.8), 385 (213.1)Glaser, Charles L.......... 247 (85.16),
262 (99.18)Glass, James M. ......197 (38.4), 253
(91.4)Glavin, Brendan........... 346 (183.32)Glazier, Rebecca A. ........230 (71.6),
246 (85.9), 313 (152.30), 346(183.30)
Gleason, Shane A.........255 (91.18),297 (134.29)
Gleditsch, Kristian Skrede ........183(21.2)
Gleeson, Shannon ....... 396 (218.31)Godbout, Jean-Francois............379
(212.11)Goddard, Stacie E. ....... 212 (51.17),
295 (134.20)Godefroidt, Amélie ......344 (183.20)Godinez Puig, Luisa ....375 (209.30)Godrej, Farah......... 214 (51.27), 352
(190.21)Goedert, Nicholas........374 (209.25)Goehring, Benjamin ....374 (209.26)Goel, Pranav ..................206 (43.18)Goemans, Henk Erich ...............212
(51.19), 373 (209.23)Goenaga Orrego, AgustinAlonso.........................326 (168.9)
Goertz, Gary ........ 314 (152.38), 338(176.27), 373 (209.23)
Goes, Iasmin..................286 (122.7)Gofie, Solomon M..........236 (71.41)Gohdes, Anita R. ........ 280 (117.24),
294 (134.13), 339 (178.1)Goidel, Robert Kirby ....188 (26.27),
333 (172.1)Goidel, Spencer Hamilton .........258
(95.1)Goksel, Gulay Ugur ..... 299 (134.45)Goktepe, Katherine........334 (176.3)Golan-Nadir, Niva ..........187 (26.21)Gold, Aaron .................295 (134.21)Goldberg, Abraham ......276 (116.1),
332 (170.4)Golden, Miriam A.............184 (25.2)Goldenberg, Edie N. ......332 (170.4)Golder, Matt ...................269 (109.9)Golder, Sona N. ........... 321 (162.22)Goldfien, Michael..........199 (38.17),
387 (215.14)Goldman, Samuel ............221 (58.6)Goldring, Edward ........322 (162.29)Goldsmith, Benjamin E. ............286
(122.10)Goldstein, Daniel A N................349
(189.3), 370 (209.6)Goldstein, Joshua A......308 (150.1)Goldstein, Judith Lynn..............193
(33.14), 372 (209.17)Goldstein, Rebecca .... 278 (117.11),
389 (215.22)Goldstone, Jack A. ........392 (218.8)Golesorkhi, Lara-Zuzan .............289
(122.24), 352 (190.20)Gollust, Sarah E. ... 188 (26.27), 236
(71.38), 257 (91.27), 266(99.41)
Golob, Stephanie R. ......362 (199.1)Golub, Mark ........... 363 (205.2), 385
(215.2)Gomez, Brad T. ............313 (152.33)Gomez, Daniel M ... 233 (71.22), 360
(197.26), 383 (212.37)Gomez, Jose S ...... 225 (63.22), 324
(166.1)Gomez-Aguinaga, Barbara ........305
(143.21)
Gomez-Cruces, JuanSalvador................ 231 (71.9), 281
(117.31)Gomez-Mera, Laura ..... 380 (212.20)Gong, Weila ...................324 (165.2)Gontier, Thierry ...............189 (27.6)González, Ricardo Ignacio ........203
(43.5), 258 (94.1)Gonzalez, Edward........296 (134.24)Gonzalez, Elsy ....... 262 (99.17), 291
(126.2)Gonzalez, Felipe ............265 (99.33)Gonzalez, Giancarlo A...............360
(197.24)Gonzalez, Lucas I. ....... 327 (168.15)Gonzalez, Michael Roland.........237
(72.3)Gonzalez, Sylvia ..........352 (190.19)Gonzalez, Yanilda Maria ............286
(122.4)Gonzalez Juenke, Eric...............218
(57.18), 345 (183.29)Gonzalez O'Brien, BenjaminFontaine ............ 298 (134.38), 330
(168.30), 383 (212.36)Gonzalez Ocantos, EzequielAlejo ..........................368 (205.28)
Gooch, Donald M...........302 (143.8)Goode, Paul ...................369 (207.1)Goodhart, Lucy M..........234 (71.29)Goodliffe, Gabriel ........372 (209.15)Goodliffe, Jay .......... 246 (85.7), 355
(195.1)Goodman, Rob ........ 197 (38.1), 395
(218.26)Goodman, Sara Wallace ............201
(38.31), 306 (143.31), 360(197.22)
Goodson, Sam...............268 (109.5)Gopal, Ishita ....................252 (89.2)Goplerud, Max ....... 206 (43.18), 213
(51.21), 269 (109.9)Gordon, Jane A. ..............209 (51.1)Gordon, Joshua C. ...... 315 (152.40)Gore, Christopher........ 372 (209.13)Goren, Lilly J. .......... 208 (44.4), 266
(99.38), 287 (122.13), 304(143.20)
Goss, Kristin............ 243 (78.2), 289(123.2)
Gossett, Charles W.......236 (71.37),259 (95.2)
Gothreau, Claire ...... 243 (78.1), 354(190.29)
Gotlib, Ian H.................303 (143.12)Gottardi, Francesca.......201 (38.28)Gottlieb, Jessica......... 327 (168.15),
386 (215.9)Gould, Amy.............. 228 (66.1), 349
(188.1), 394 (218.20)Gould, Deborah B..........285 (122.2)Govella, Kristi ..................221 (58.3)Goyal, Tanushree .........211 (51.10),
260 (99.4), 278 (117.15), 293(134.6)
Graber, Mark A...............225 (63.18)Grad, Marius Nicolae.....267 (107.1)Graefe, Andreas.............369 (206.4)Graefrath, Moritz Sebastian ......286
(122.8)Graf, Sinja ........................222 (63.4)Grafstein, Robert ...........246 (85.10)Graham, Benjamin A.T. .............212
(51.16), 341 (183.4)Graham, Erin R. ........... 387 (215.15)Graham, Matthew H ......301 (141.1),
395 (218.22)Grajewski, Nicole Bayat ............381
(212.23)Grant, Judith............ 182 (16.7), 219
(57.24), 268 (109.2)Grasse, Don S ....... 235 (71.35), 245
(85.5)Grasso, Anthony ...........301 (143.3)Grauer, Ryan D. .............255 (91.12)Gray, Carol J................ 382 (212.30)Gray, Romeo ..................201 (38.30)Greaser, Jordan ...........280 (117.25)Green, Avishai .................260 (99.6)Green, Donald P....... 184 (25.2), 225
(63.22), 354 (190.29)
IndexofParticipants
Green, Jane ......... 272 (109.22), 321(162.23)
Green, John C. ........ 228 (66.1), 249(85.28)
Green, Jon ............. 194 (33.25), 219(57.23), 250 (85.33), 265
(99.34), 306 (143.26), 376(209.37), 383 (212.34)
Green-Pedersen, Christoffer .....190(28.2), 261 (99.13)
Green-Riley, Naima..... 351 (190.14),366 (205.17)
Greenaway, James .......316 (153.2),362 (198.1)
Greenberg, Sarah ............239 (77.2)Greenberger, Michael ................375
(209.32)Greene, Amanda..............230 (71.1)Greene, Derek..................190 (28.2)Greene, Samuel A.........266 (99.39),
294 (134.13)Greene, Samuel R..........363 (199.4)Greene, Stacey Ann ...345 (183.29),
382 (212.31)Greene, Steven .... 282 (117.34), 376
(209.37)Greene, Zachary David..............261
(99.12), 380 (212.17)Greenhill, Brian D. .........186 (26.15)Greenstein, Claire.........266 (99.40),
321 (162.20)Greenwood, Maja Touzari..........227
(64.3)Greer, Christina .............256 (91.21)Greer, Scott L. ......... 229 (70.1), 266
(99.41), 350 (190.7), 384(212.43)
Greitens, Sheena Chestnut .......262(99.20)
Grenier, Kelly ...................185 (26.8)Grewal, Gwenda-lin Kaur ..........307
(144.1)Grewal, Sharan ..............386 (215.8)grier, kevin ...................272 (109.24)Griffith, Brian J ............361 (197.29)Griffiths, Amanda .........276 (117.3),
292 (134.1)Griffiths, Ryan D. .........388 (215.20)Grimmer, Justin ....... 210 (51.5), 216
(57.6), 234 (71.28), 317 (159.1),381 (212.22)
Grinberg, Marc Toby......217 (57.11)Grittersova, Jana ...........247 (85.13)Groenendyk, Eric........ 346 (183.34),
382 (212.31)Grogan, Colleen M.......282 (117.39)Groh, Rita B................. 321 (162.22)Gronich, Lori Helene ....223 (63.11),
336 (176.16), 367 (205.25)Gronke, Paul..............181 (6.4), 215
(56.1), 313 (152.32), 330(168.33)
Gronlund, Kimmo ............196 (34.2)Grose, Christian R........219 (57.19),
299 (134.44), 354 (190.29)Grossman, Allison Namias .......388
(215.17)Grossman, Emiliano......290 (124.1)Grossman, Guy ....... 204 (43.9), 254
(91.7), 354 (190.30), 377(209.42)
Grossman, James R. .....257 (91.26)Grossman, Kathryn .......187 (26.21)Grossman, Nichole......283 (117.40)Grossmann, Matt ... 207 (43.29), 307
(143.32)Grotophorst, Zoe ...........250 (85.31)Grover, Rohan .............338 (176.26)Groves, Dylan ................340 (180.1)Grovogui, Siba...............317 (162.1)Grubman, Nate ..............192 (33.11)Gruendel, Anke............339 (176.30)Grumbach, Jake M .......251 (85.38),
258 (92.3), 263 (99.26), 339(176.31), 355 (195.1), 396
(218.29)Grünewald, Marius Kilian ..........389
(215.25)Guardado, Jenny ...........356 (197.4)Guay, Brian ....................301 (141.1)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 407KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Gubitz, Sam ........... 291 (126.1), 395(218.24)
Gubler, Joshua Ronald ...230 (71.6)Guedes-Neto, João V.................312
(152.26), 324 (164.2)Guenther, Sara K ... 188 (26.24), 353
(190.24)Gueorguiev, Dimitar D ...............185
(26.10)Guerrero, Mario .............334 (175.2)Guess, Andrew ...... 188 (26.23), 273
(109.28), 330 (168.34), 338(176.25), 379 (212.11)
Guevara, Juan-Antonio .............274(110.4), 300 (139.1)
guha, Mrittika MI..........381 (212.24)Gui, Fred .... 206 (43.23), 323 (164.1)Gui, Peng .....................359 (197.20)Guild, Elspeth ................250 (85.36)Guinaudeau, Benjamin ..............241
(77.14), 379 (212.11)Guinjoan, Marc ..............371 (209.8)Guisan, Catherine Blanche .......294
(134.16), 319 (162.13)Guisinger, Alexandra.................351
(190.12), 387 (215.13)Gulevich, Olga .................239 (77.4)Guliford, Meg ....... 320 (162.18), 355
(192.3)Gulotty, Robert .... 327 (168.17), 380
(212.19)Gulzar, Saad ............230 (71.5), 293
(134.6)Gunderson, Anna M ... 280 (117.27),
389 (215.21)Gundogdu, Ayten ..........325 (168.5)Guntermann, Eric .........234 (71.28),
249 (85.30), 349 (189.3)Gunther-Canada, Wendy ...........215
(57.1)Guo, Yuequan ........ 290 (125.2), 364
(205.8)Guo, Zhaowen .............394 (218.16)Gupta, Devashree ..........257 (91.25)Gupta, Shagun............. 327 (168.13)Gurantz, Ron ....... 280 (117.25), 320
(162.15), 373 (209.21)Gurganus, Kayla............265 (99.36)Gurol, Julia ....................195 (33.30)Gurstelle, Jon .......... 253 (90.3), 300
(137.1)Gusmano, Michael K. .....215 (54.2),
257 (92.1), 333 (174.1)Gustafson, Carl .............256 (91.22)Gustafson, Lowell .........255 (91.13)Guth, James L. ..............264 (99.31)Gutierrez, Manuel ............260 (99.3)Gutierrez Mannix, CarlosDaniel ..........................291 (126.2)
Gutmann, Ethan.............391 (216.3)Gutnick Allen, Signy Thora.......268
(109.4), 370 (209.1)Guul, Thorbjørn Sejr ...343 (183.12)Gvosdev, Nikolas K. ......340 (178.4)Gülen, Berkay ................199 (38.17)Güngör, Gaye.................340 (181.1)
H
Ha, Eunyoung .............. 357 (197.11)Haas, Jennifer Marie .....263 (99.23)Haas, Melinda ........ 224 (63.13), 292
(130.1)Haas, Nicholas Semi .....266 (99.42)Haass, Felix ......... 320 (162.19), 368
(205.26)Habegger, Michael .........241 (77.18)Habich-Sobiegalla, Sabrina.......327
(168.16)Hacek, Miro....................300 (136.1)Hacker, Jacob S..... 218 (57.15), 258
(92.3)Hadar, Zvi.....................389 (215.22)Hadavi, Majid ...............288 (122.17)Haddad, Mary Alice ........221 (58.3),
348 (186.1)Hadden, Jennifer ......... 306 (143.27)Hadzic, Dino ................366 (205.19)Haeder, Simon F. ... 206 (43.19), 257
(91.27), 282 (117.39)
Haenschen, Katherine ...............395(218.24)
Hafer, Catherine....... 197 (38.5), 334(176.4)
Hafez, Mohammed M. ................346(183.30), 358 (197.13)
Hafner-Burton, Emilie Marie......254(91.11)
Hageboelling, David M. F...........341(181.1)
Hagel, Nina ....................334 (176.3)Hagemann, Sara ..........338 (176.24)Haggard, Stephan.... 183 (19.1), 282
(117.38), 325 (167.2), 338(176.27), 374 (209.28), 390
(215.30)Haglund, Evan ..... 312 (152.25), 344
(183.21)Hahm, Hyeonho ....... 244 (82.1), 333
(172.1)Hai, Zuhad ...................295 (134.18)Haider, Erum Aly ... 199 (38.13), 278
(117.13), 294 (134.12)Haider-Markel, Donald P. ...........219
(57.22), 282 (117.34), 360(197.25)
Haim, Dotan A .............388 (215.16)Haines, Pavielle ...........360 (197.25)Hakimov, Rustamdjan ...319 (162.9)Haklai, Oded ....................189 (28.1)Halabi, Samer ................364 (205.4)Hale, Christopher ....... 310 (152.13),
346 (183.30)Hale, Henry E........... 204 (43.9), 246
(85.11)Hale, Isaac ........... 315 (152.40), 337
(176.23)Hale, Kathleen .............281 (117.31)Halen, Ryan ...................364 (205.6)Halevy, Lotem .......... 203 (43.4), 386
(215.5)Halikias, Dimitrios Ioannis ........245
(83.1)Hall, Emma Ann........... 339 (176.32)Hall, Matthew E.K. ....... 352 (190.17)Hall, Stephen ...............390 (215.30)Hall, Todd H. ................ 383 (212.39)Hallenbrook, Christopher R. .....191
(33.4)Hally, Edmond ...............362 (199.2)Halterman, Andrew...... 311 (152.20)Hamayotsu, Kikue .........198 (38.12)Hamidi, Sidra ...............351 (190.13)Hamilton, Darrick.............238 (75.2)Hamilton, Mark David ....363 (199.4)Hamlin, Rebecca.... 206 (43.20), 283
(117.40), 288 (122.23), 306(143.31), 384 (212.44)
Hamm, Keith E..... 303 (143.15), 346(183.32)
Hammam, Soha .............200 (38.23)Hammami, Mohamed-Dhia ........251
(85.40)Hammond, Ben ............312 (152.24)Han, Enze.....................388 (215.16)Han, Hahrie C. ...............261 (99.11)Han, Kangwook ...........330 (168.29)Han, Rongbin.................246 (85.10)Han, Sung Min ......... 185 (26.9), 258
(95.1), 321 (162.23), 330(168.29)
Han, Xiao .....................311 (152.19)Han, Xin ...........................216 (57.7)Han, Yao...........................189 (28.2)Han, Yousueng ...... 187 (26.21), 263
(99.24)Han, Ze......................... 331 (168.38)Hanauer, Nick Joseph .....238 (75.2)Hanchard, Michael G. ....350 (190.9)Hancke, Bob M. .............385 (214.3)Hancock, Ange-Marie ....350 (190.9)Hancock, Kathleen J. ................297
(134.30)Hancock, Ralph C..........300 (135.1)Handlin, Samuel ...... 185 (26.8), 366
(205.15)Hanegraaff, Marcel ..... 337 (176.19),
389 (215.26)Hangartner, Dominik ....198 (38.11),
251 (85.41), 371 (209.7)
HANKINS, JAMES WARREN .....184(26.1)
Hankla, Charles R.........286 (122.5),330 (168.29), 343 (183.13)
Hanley, Danielle ..... 292 (134.3), 385(215.1)
Hanmer, Michael J. ....... 263 (99.26),282 (117.34)
Hanna, Tom....................364 (205.7)Hannah, Lee......... 346 (183.32), 382
(212.29)Hansen, Eric ................374 (209.29)Hansen, Holley E. ....... 295 (134.23),
373 (209.20)Hansen, Kasper M. ...... 313 (152.33)Hansen, Katy ......... 235 (71.33), 376
(209.39)Hanson, Erik Grant........324 (166.1)Hanson, Kolby ....... 212 (51.20), 223
(63.10)Hanson, Stephen E...... 371 (209.11)Hanson-Figueroa, Lauren .........225
(63.17)Hansson, Eva Louise ................293
(134.10)Haolan, Zheng .............280 (117.26)Harada, Masataka ..........342 (183.6)Harbers, Imke ................335 (176.6)Harbridge-Yong, Laurel .............329
(168.24), 383 (212.34)Harden, Jeffrey J. ....... 297 (134.30),
352 (190.18)Harder, Kate.................289 (122.24)Harding, Lauren Howard ...........241
(77.17)Harding, Robin ........ 260 (99.4), 315
(152.45), 379 (212.15)Hardy, Tranae............... 338 (176.27)Hare, Christopher .........234 (71.29),
356 (197.3), 383 (212.34)Hariri, Jacob Gerner......357 (197.6)Harkness, Kristen A. ....236 (71.41),
262 (99.20), 328 (168.19)Harrell, Baylee ...............195 (33.27)Harriger, Katy J............388 (215.18)Harris, Adam................ 372 (209.13)Harris, Allison P..... 285 (122.4), 352
(190.21)Harris, J. Andrew...........211 (51.10)Harris, Jacob .................356 (196.1)Harris, Katharine .........382 (212.29)Harris, Kevan ...............283 (117.42)Harris, Sabrina Kylie .....207 (43.29)Harris, Sean D ...............194 (33.23)Harrison, Joseph Patrick ..........207
(43.24)Harrison, Teddy ..... 301 (143.3), 391
(218.1)Harsch, Michael F. .........231 (71.10)Harsgor, Liran.............. 344 (183.20)Hart, Roderick P...........344 (183.21)Hartman, Alexandra......264 (99.28),
276 (115.1)Hartman, Erin...........184 (25.2), 335
(176.5)Hartmann, Felix .............318 (162.6)Hartnett, Allison Spencer ..........214
(51.29), 251 (85.40), 315(152.44)
Hartney, Michael T. ..... 297 (134.30),349 (189.3)
Hartshorn, Ian M. ..........227 (63.29),250 (85.34), 308 (150.2), 319
(162.9), 334 (175.3)Harvey, Cole J ......... 223 (63.8), 361
(197.31)Harward, Brian M.........374 (209.26)Haselswerdt, Jake ........236 (71.38),
323 (163.4)Hashemi, Layla M ....... 280 (117.24),
393 (218.14)Haskologlu, Isa ............303 (143.15)Hasmath, Reza.................214 (52.3)Hassan, Mai Omer ... 216 (57.4), 231
(71.10), 257 (91.29), 384(212.45)
Hassani, Sara ................308 (152.4)Hassell, Hans J.G. ....... 383 (212.34)Hassid, Jonathan......... 361 (197.32)Hassing, Richard ...........332 (169.1)Hassner, Ron E..............212 (51.19)
Hastedt, Glenn P. ...........369 (206.3)Hasunuma, Linda ............253 (90.4)Hatala, Tomas ................354 (191.2)Hauenstein, Matthew ....275 (114.1),
283 (119.1)Haufler, Virginia .............238 (76.11)Haugsgjerd, Atle..............258 (95.1)Hawes, Daniel P. .... 255 (91.16), 296
(134.28)Hawkins, Kirk A. .... 185 (26.10), 225
(63.20)Hawley, Michael C. .........244 (81.1),
284 (120.1), 370 (209.2)Hayat, Tsahi .................330 (168.34)Hayduk, Ron ..................391 (217.2)Hayek, Lore.......... 314 (152.33), 330
(168.35), 347 (183.35)Hayes, Matthew J. .........206 (43.23)Hayes, Sarah Virginia....202 (38.34)Hayes, Thomas J........ 299 (134.42),
359 (197.19)Haynes, Jeffrey............330 (168.32)Haynes, Kyle................ 343 (183.17)Haynes, Nola .................264 (99.29)Haynie, Kerry L..............206 (43.23)Hayward, Clarissa Rile ..............301
(142.3)Hazama, Yasushi .............221 (61.3)Hazlett, Chad .................198 (38.10)He, Jianzi .......................231 (71.11)he, lingnan .....................186 (26.14)Headinger, Grace......... 336 (176.16)Heaney, Michael T.........219 (57.20),
383 (212.33)Heard, Kathryn A...........334 (176.3)Heberle, Renee ..............325 (168.4)Heberlig, Eric S................189 (27.1)Hebert, Laura A. ............195 (33.27)Hedberg, Masha...........384 (212.40)Hedding, Kylah ..............242 (77.19)Hedgecock, Kathryn.... 272 (109.23)Hedlund, Ronald D. .....303 (143.15)Heerwig, Jen................ 389 (215.22)Heffern Ponicki, Maureen..........350
(190.7)Heffernan, Andrew........332 (170.1),
336 (176.12)Heffernan, Ann Kathleen ...........222
(62.2), 350 (190.8)Heidt-Forsythe, Erin ......220 (57.26)Heikkila, Tanya ............314 (152.35)Heilke, Thomas W............251 (86.1)Heine, Klaus ..................242 (77.22)Heinze, Alyssa ...............276 (115.1)Heinzel, Mirko Noa ...... 388 (215.19)Heiss, Andrew ...............289 (123.2)Heith, Diane J. ...............255 (91.15)Hejny, Jessica..............313 (152.31)Hekimci, Dilara ........254 (91.9), 307
(147.1)Helbling, Marc................186 (26.13)Held, Alexander ..... 207 (43.25), 335
(176.9)Helfer, Ariel ............ 267 (100.3), 362
(198.3)Helfer, Luzia...................224 (63.16)Heller, William B. ...........207 (43.25)Hellwig, Timothy.... 204 (43.10), 365
(205.11)Helmke, Gretchen ........353 (190.27)Helmke-Long, Laura .... 314 (152.35)Helms, Benjamin Clay ...............223
(63.10)Hemesath, Sebastian.................383
(212.38)Hemphill, Libby ...........390 (215.29)Hemrajani, Rahul ...........192 (33.10)Henceroth, Nathan........267 (107.1),
375 (209.35)Henderson, Christine Dunn ......276
(117.1)Henderson, Michael B. ..............356
(197.2)Henderson, Rebecca M .............238
(75.2)Hendrickson, Petra..... 337 (176.18),
355 (192.1)Henig, Jeffrey R..... 207 (43.29), 289
(122.26)
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408 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Henke, Marina Elisabeth ...........279(117.21), 295 (134.20), 393
(218.11)Henn, Soeren Jannik ....195 (33.29),
381 (212.26)Hennessy, Alexandra.................379
(212.12)Henning, C. Randall ... 328 (168.18),
373 (209.19)Henning, Maye...............302 (143.6)Henninger, Jakob ..........220 (57.27)Henrique Teixeira Gomes, AnaLucia .........................338 (176.24)
Henry, Daniel ...................197 (38.1)Henry, Yitzhak..................211 (51.9)Hense, Svenja.............. 298 (134.37)Hensel, Paul R. ............373 (209.23)Herasimenka, Aliaksandr ..........265
(99.37), 299 (134.41)Herman, Biz .................303 (143.15)Herman, Lise Esther........222 (63.3)Hermansen, Silje SynnøveLyder ...........................261 (99.12)
Hern, Erin Accampo ... 353 (190.22),372 (209.13)
Hernandez, Maylin .........218 (57.17)Hernandez, Rodolfo K .....251 (86.1)Hernandez Florez, Nicolas ........355
(193.1)Hernandez-Huerta, VictorAntonio .........................203 (43.6)
Herndon, Michael ..........274 (112.1)Herne, Kaisa ....................196 (34.2)Hero, Rodney E. ...... 183 (21.2), 345
(183.29)Herrick, Rebekah ... 200 (38.25), 263
(99.26)Herrnson, Paul S. ..........263 (99.26)Herrold, Catherine E.......243 (78.2),
290 (123.2)Herron, Michael C..........263 (99.26)Hersh, Eitan D. ..............355 (195.1)Hertel, Shareen .... 288 (122.22), 322
(162.27)Hertz, Zachary Lorico................346
(183.31)Herzog, Stephen ......... 303 (143.14),
320 (162.16)Heseltine, Michael .........235 (71.31)Hess, Katelyn ................307 (147.1)Hetherington, Marc J.....201 (38.26)Hewstone, Miles ............364 (205.4)Hibben, Mark ...............387 (215.13)Hibbing, Matthew V..........197 (38.5)Hickel, Flavio R........... 305 (143.22),
324 (166.1)Hicken, Allen D. ....... 231 (71.8), 264
(99.32), 357 (197.7)Hickey, Molly..................214 (51.29)Hickle, Jessica.................244 (82.1)Hicks, Heather .................216 (57.3)Hicks, Thomas...............292 (132.1)Hicks, Timothy...............236 (71.38)Hidalgo, F. Daniel ......... 302 (143.5),
356 (197.5)Hierro, Maria Jose ....... 388 (215.20)Higashijima, Masaaki....187 (26.22),
236 (71.40), 265 (99.34)Higate, Paul ...................212 (51.17)High-Pippert, Angela .......229 (69.1)Hightower, Tristan ... 228 (66.1), 304
(143.16), 366 (205.21)Hilbig, Hanno .................378 (212.8)Hilbink, Lisa ......... 382 (212.30), 394
(218.16)Hill, Joshua B .............. 287 (122.15)Hill, Kathy Wagner.........194 (33.21)Hill, Seth J. ....................194 (33.24)Hill, Sophie ..................387 (215.11)Hillebrecht, Courtney ................279
(117.20), 288 (122.22)Hillygus, Sunshine ........251 (85.41)Hilpert, David Dominik ...244 (82.1),
333 (172.1)Hilton, Adam................ 313 (152.31)Himelboim, Itai...............219 (57.23)Hines, Lincoln.............. 320 (162.17)Hinojosa, Magda............340 (179.1)Hintz, Lisel S.......... 188 (26.25), 190
(29.1)Hinze, Annika M.............248 (85.24)
Hiraldo, Danielle ..............238 (75.1)Hiroi, Taeko............ 236 (71.38), 296
(134.26)Hirsch, Roni .............210 (51.2), 239
(77.1)Hirschel-Burns, Daniel Raoul....331
(168.37), 342 (183.7)Hirschl, Ran ...................200 (38.21)Hirschmann, Nancy J. .....245 (85.3)Hiskey, Jonathan T. ......207 (43.26),
315 (152.41), 321 (162.24)Hitman, Gadi ................366 (205.15)Hitt, Matthew P.................229 (70.2)Hiwatari, Nobuhiro.........274 (110.5)Hjermitslev, Ida Baek.....204 (43.10)Hjortskov, Morten ........367 (205.22)Hlatky, Roman .................240 (77.9)Ho, Karl ....... 208 (44.2), 273 (110.2),
323 (163.2), 339 (177.1)Hoang, Bai Linh.............206 (43.23)Hobbs, William ...... 250 (85.33), 306
(143.26)Hoberg, George .............201 (38.27)Hobolt, Sara B ....... 234 (71.30), 338
(176.24)Hochschild, Jennifer L. .............196
(37.1), 256 (91.24), 307(143.32), 376 (209.37)
Hockaday, Shelby ........376 (209.39)Hodge, Jennifer .............283 (119.1)Hoekstra, Kinch ....... 191 (33.2), 245
(85.3), 349 (190.2)Hoekstra, Valerie J. .....394 (218.17)Hoes, Emma ................322 (162.26)Hofer, Scott J......... 218 (57.16), 274
(112.1)Hoffmann, Christian Pieter........338
(176.26)Hoffmann, Lisa ............271 (109.21)Hofhansel, Claus ...........236 (71.39)Hofmann, Stephanie Claudia ....328
(168.18), 373 (209.19)Hofmann, Tobias ... 186 (26.15), 211
(51.9), 255 (91.11)Hofnung, Menachem .......189 (28.1)Hofnung, Tamar ........... 277 (117.10)Hogan, John W. ....... 185 (26.7), 252
(88.2)Hohmann, Daniel ......... 375 (209.33)Hoipkemier, Mark...........325 (168.1)Holbein, John ........ 251 (85.41), 256
(91.23), 359 (197.22), 377(211.1)
Holland, Emily ....... 217 (57.10), 326(168.9)
Hollenbach, Florian ........245 (85.5),316 (152.45), 351 (190.11), 371
(209.7)Hollibaugh, Gary E. ........245 (85.4),
351 (190.16)Holliday, Derek ..............263 (99.25)Holliday, Hunter Michael ...........290
(125.3)Hollifield, James F. .......201 (38.31),
272 (109.26)Hollis-Brusky, Amanda..............296
(134.27)Holloway, Carson L. .......237 (72.1),
316 (153.1)Holm, Federico ............314 (152.35)Holman, Craig B. .............189 (27.1)Holman, Mirya R. ... 200 (38.22), 277
(117.11), 285 (122.4), 359(197.19), 376 (209.38)
Holmes, Lisa M. ..... 218 (57.16), 255(91.17)
Holmes, Marcus...........272 (109.25)Holmes, Ronald David...............294
(134.10)Holmlund, Marcus ...... 347 (183.41),
359 (197.18)Holmsten, Stephanie S..............346
(183.31), 375 (209.33)Holsinger, Jordan A .... 294 (134.11)Holyoke, Thomas T.......267 (107.1),
389 (215.26)Holzner, Claudio A....... 379 (212.12)Homola, Jonathan .........302 (143.9)Honeker, Alex .............. 365 (205.12)
Hong, Ji Yeon (Jean) .................272(109.23), 277 (117.9), 322
(162.29)Honig, Dan ........... 388 (215.19), 393
(218.11)Honig, Lauren ........ 257 (91.29), 272
(109.27), 372 (209.13), 384(212.45)
Hood, Christopher .........307 (145.1)Hooghe, Marc .......... 244 (81.1), 389
(215.25)Hooijer, Gerda........ 201 (38.31), 385
(214.3)Hooker, Juliet........... 196 (36.1), 285
(122.2)Hooser, Kara..................256 (91.20)Hoover Green, Amelia ...............205
(43.17)Hopewell, Kristen ........279 (117.18)Hopkins, Daniel J. ....... 305 (143.25)Horiuchi, Yusaku .......182 (9.4), 286
(122.10), 335 (176.5)Horne, Cynthia M.............204 (43.8)Horne, Will ...................387 (215.11)Horowitz, Donald L........185 (26.10)Horowitz, Michael .........232 (71.16),
275 (114.1), 320 (162.16), 387(215.14)
Horowitz, Shale ...............252 (88.1)Horschig, Doreen ..........269 (109.6)Horta Gaviria, Carolina María....190
(28.3)Horvath, Laszlo ...........354 (190.28)Horz, Carlo Matthias......370 (208.2)Hosam, Christian......... 375 (209.30)HoSang, Daniel ............337 (176.22)Hospidales, AyojideEmmanuel ...................219 (57.19)
Hossainzadeh, Nura Alia ...........239(77.2), 276 (117.2)
Hou, Rui ....................... 342 (183.10)Hou, Yue ......................351 (190.11)Houston, David ............289 (122.26)Houston, Thomas E.....345 (183.26)Howard, Jeffrey ...............184 (26.3)Howard, Nicholas ....... 329 (168.24),
345 (183.25)Howard, Philip N............265 (99.37)Howard, Robert M..........256 (91.18)Howard, Tiffiany O.........324 (166.1)Howell, Samantha........271 (109.17)Howlett, Marnie - .............220 (58.2)Hoxha, Eva ......................231 (71.9)Hoyle, Alexander ...........206 (43.18)Hsiao, Yi-ching ..............273 (110.2)Hsueh, Roselyn ...........311 (152.18)Htun, Mala.................... 345 (183.27)Hu, XueYing ...................364 (205.7)Hu, Yulong ...................321 (162.24)Hua, Shiping ..................254 (91.10)Huang, Chi .....................323 (163.2)Huang, Grace C. ...... 195 (34.1), 204
(43.8), 367 (205.25)Huang, Haifeng ..............357 (197.8)Huang, Jingyang .............189 (27.4)Huang, Jou Fei ................214 (52.1)Huang, Kai-Ping.............185 (26.10)Huang, Qin...................394 (218.20)Huang, Wei-hao ....... 189 (27.5), 195
(34.1), 227 (64.2), 339 (177.1)Huber, Evelyne ...... 211 (51.13), 338
(176.27)Huber, Gregory ...... 275 (113.2), 385
(212.46)Huber, Laura ................ 366 (205.19)Hubert, Ryan............ 215 (57.2), 370
(208.2)Huberts, Alyssa .............356 (197.5)Huddleston, R. Joseph....243 (79.1)Huddy, Leonie................201 (38.30)Hudgins, Kamri............382 (212.31)Huerta, Juan Carlos ..... 284 (121.1),
324 (166.1), 346 (183.34)Huertas-Hernández, Sergio .......275
(113.2)Huff, Connor .......... 232 (71.19), 381
(212.26)Hughes, Glenn...............316 (153.2)Hughes, Sara ....... 314 (152.35), 376
(209.39)Hughes, Tyler.................248 (85.21)
IndexofParticipants
Huhe, Narisong................214 (52.3)Hui, Victoria Tin-bor ....390 (215.27)Huidobro, Alba ...... 204 (43.10), 287
(122.13)Huikuri, Tuuli-Anna.......291 (130.1),
320 (162.17)Hulme, Michael Patrick .............286
(122.8)Hult, Karen M......... 349 (189.1), 382
(212.28)Hulvey, Rachel A ... 247 (85.15), 290
(125.1)Humayun, Fahd .............205 (43.14)Hummel, Calla ......... 239 (77.7), 385
(214.3)Humphreys, Macartan ....184 (25.2),
260 (99.4), 269 (109.7)Hundman, Eric...............205 (43.15)Hunnicutt, Patrick..........276 (114.1)Hunt, Charles......... 265 (99.33), 288
(122.18), 304 (143.16), 346(183.32), 383 (212.34)
Hunt, Eileen M. ..............334 (176.1)Hunt, Kate ......................385 (214.3)Hunt, Stacey Leigh ....... 206 (43.22),
238 (75.3), 326 (168.11)Hunter, Kelly ........ 279 (117.19), 341
(181.1)Hunter, Tom .................338 (176.24)Hunter, Wendy ......... 260 (99.8), 329
(168.26), 335 (176.6)Hur, Hyunkang............. 303 (143.11)Hurd, Ian F. .................. 314 (152.36)Hurley, David J ..............363 (199.4)Hurst, Elizabeth Hampton .........298
(134.38)Hurst, William ........ 246 (85.10), 319
(162.12)Hurwitz, Mark S. ..............209 (49.2)Hussain, Nazia.............393 (218.14)Hussin, Iza .......................203 (43.1)Hutchings, Vincent L. ................289
(122.26), 382 (212.31)Huth, Paul K. ...................209 (49.2)Hutton Ferris, Daniel .....326 (168.6)Huygens, Addison Daniel .........279
(117.21)Hwang, Jeeseon ..........311 (152.17)Hwang, Wonjae............311 (152.17)Hyde, Susan D. ..............212 (51.15)Hyder, Misbah...... 306 (143.29), 362
(199.1)Hyman, Briana ...............324 (166.1)Hymans, Jacques E.C. ..............304
(143.20)
I
Iannantuoni, Alice ........240 (77.11),341 (181.1)
Ianosev, Bogdan..............209 (45.2)Iaryczower, Matias ...........260 (99.4)Ibanez, Marcela..............232 (71.19)Ibaragi, Shun .................188 (26.23)Idika-Kalu, Cecilia..........232 (71.15)Idler, Annette Iris ... 187 (26.20), 255
(91.12), 303 (143.15), 319(162.9)
Idris, Murad.............. 197 (38.2), 203(43.1), 209 (51.1), 391 (218.2)
Iglesias, Sol ...................198 (38.12)Iida, Fumio .....................277 (117.4)Iida, Takeshi.................269 (109.10)Ijaz, Syeda ShahBano ...............223
(63.10), 339 (178.2), 380(212.15)
Ikenberry, G. John ........262 (99.16),280 (117.23)
Ikenze, Sarai-Anne.......299 (134.46)Ikuta, Jennie Choi ... 245 (85.2), 259
(99.1), 301 (143.1), 325 (168.5),349 (190.2)
Iliev, Iliyan ............ 287 (122.15), 296(134.23)
Illuzzi, Michael J. ...........355 (192.3)Iltekin, Sumeyye Mine ...............354
(190.30)Imai, Kosuke............ 203 (42.1), 364
(205.6)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 409KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Immergut, Ellen M. ....... 261 (99.12),380 (212.17)
Imparato, Mary Clare .....348 (184.2)Inácio, Magna .............. 296 (134.26)Incantalupo, Matthew ................299
(134.42), 383 (212.33)Ince, Onur Ulas...... 318 (162.2), 363
(205.2)Ingham, Sean...................230 (71.1)Ingram, Callum ........ 253 (91.4), 341
(183.2), 396 (218.27)Ingram, Katherine .... 253 (91.5), 293
(134.4)Ingram, Matthew C. .........252 (89.2)Innes, Alexandria J........323 (163.3)Invernizzi, Giovanna.......185 (26.9),
290 (125.2), 334 (176.4)Invernizzi Accetti, Carlo ............368
(205.31)Io-Low, Michelle.............333 (172.1)Iqtidar, Humeira ....... 203 (43.1), 306
(143.29)Irajpanah, Katherine ........251 (87.1)Isani, Mujtaba ...... 353 (190.24), 397
(218.32)Isenbletter, Kayla Christine .......363
(199.4)Ishiyama, John ........ 253 (90.4), 313
(152.31), 348 (185.1)Isiksel, Turkuler ...............222 (63.4)Islam, Md Mujahedul ...337 (176.23)Israel-Trummel, Mackenzie........239
(77.4), 254 (91.6)Israelson, Emily Ann .....318 (162.5)Issar, Siddhant...............378 (212.3)Issarachai, Yuttaporn ................322
(162.26)Ito, Gaku ........................342 (183.6)Ito, Ryuta .........................215 (53.1)Itzkowitz Shifrinson, Joshua.....186
(26.16)Ivarsflaten, Elisabeth.....201 (38.31)Iversen, Torben................239 (77.1)Ives, Brandon ................319 (162.9)Ivey, Andrew ..................232 (71.19)Iyengar, Shanto ...........298 (134.39)Iyer, Lakshmi .................264 (99.28)Izadi, Roya ............. 232 (71.18), 247
(85.18)Izumi, Mauricio Yoshida ............233
(71.21), 296 (134.26)Izumikawa, Yasuhiro ...295 (134.19)Izzo, Federica...........259 (98.2), 277
(117.7), 309 (152.5), 334(176.4), 370 (209.6)
J
Jäger, Anton ..................292 (134.2)Jäger, Felix ....................186 (26.13)Jäger, Kai.....................273 (109.28)Jöst, Prisca......................231 (71.8)Jablonski, Ryan Steele..............386
(215.9)Jackson, Alice M. ..........335 (176.6)Jackson, Jaime............358 (197.14)Jackson, Janae Lynn ....355 (193.1)Jackson, Jasmine..........363 (204.1)Jackson, Jenn M. ....190 (31.1), 214
(51.27), 256 (91.21), 385(215.3)
Jackson, Katharine.........198 (38.8),378 (212.5)
Jacob, James ..................228 (67.1)Jacob, Marc S.............. 331 (168.39)Jacobs, Alan M. ..... 236 (71.38), 314
(152.38), 325 (167.2)Jacobs, Lawrence R. .......260 (99.5)Jacobs, Rachel P......... 296 (134.25)Jacobson, Gary C..........255 (91.15)Jacobson, Sophie........339 (176.31)Jacques, Olivier........... 380 (212.17)Jadoon, Amira ..... 358 (197.16), 373
(209.22)Jagers, Sverker C. .........266 (99.39)Jaiteh, Salif ..................343 (183.14)Jakli, Laura ............ 302 (143.4), 350
(190.6)
Jalalzai, Farida....... 206 (43.19), 234(71.25), 274 (111.1), 287
(122.13)Jambrina Canseco, Beatriz .......326
(168.8)James, Michael R. .........276 (117.4)James, Nicholas ..........372 (209.14)James, Patrick .............296 (134.24)James, Toby S. ..............207 (43.24)James, William D ......... 381 (212.23)Jamil, Rehan Rafay .......342 (183.9)Jamison, Anne............. 380 (212.19)Jang, Jinhyeok ...... 273 (110.2), 290
(123.3)Jang, Jinhyuk ...... 321 (162.22), 348
(187.1)Jang, JunHyeok........... 269 (109.10)Jang, Sojin...................352 (190.18)Jankowski, Richard .... 298 (134.36),
346 (183.33)Jansa, Joshua ....... 263 (99.26), 302
(143.8), 340 (180.2), 352(190.18)
Janusz, Andrew ..... 248 (85.25), 271(109.20)
Jap, Jangai ....................357 (197.7)Jardina, Ashley E. ....... 352 (190.19)Jarman, Holly...........229 (70.1), 323
(163.1)Jaros, Kyle Alan ...... 189 (27.4), 231
(71.11)Jaskoski, Maiah .............213 (51.25)Jassal, Nirvikar..............192 (33.10)Javed, Umair................ 327 (168.15)Jayaram, Athmeya...........257 (92.1)Jeanmaire, Caroline ....322 (162.28)Jeannet, Anne.............. 365 (205.11)Jee, Haemin ...................300 (140.1)Jeffers, Willa ................ 299 (134.43)Jefferson, Hakeem Jerome .......220
(57.28), 359 (197.22)Jenco, Leigh K. ....... 190 (33.1), 209
(51.1), 268 (109.4)Jendrysik, Mark Stephen ..........377
(212.2)Jenkins, Clinton....... 252 (88.2), 292
(133.1)Jenkins, Laura Erika .....362 (198.2)Jenkins, Matthew..........235 (71.32),
290 (125.1), 360 (197.26), 383(212.37)
Jenks, Andrew...............350 (190.8)Jennings, Will .............. 321 (162.23)Jensen, Jeffrey Louis......210 (51.4)Jensen, Katarina..........389 (215.22)Jensen, Kristian Kriegbaum .....343
(183.12)Jensen, Mads Dagnis ....333 (173.1)Jensenius, Francesca R............318
(162.6), 335 (176.7)Jentleson, Bruce W. .... 320 (162.16)Jentzsch, Corinna .........187 (26.19)Jeong, Jihyun ..................244 (81.1)Jeong, Jongwoo ............324 (166.1)Jerit, Jennifer.................301 (141.1)Jerome, Bruno ...............369 (206.4)Jerome, Veronique .........243 (78.4),
369 (206.4)Jeschke, Nathan ............333 (174.1)Jessee, Stephen .... 251 (85.41), 309
(152.9)Jett, Janel ... 259 (99.3), 326 (168.7),
347 (183.36), 360 (197.27)Jha, Saumitra...............393 (218.13)Ji, Chengyuan.............. 365 (205.10)Ji, Tianxin ........................185 (26.6)Ji, Zhiqiang ....................284 (120.1)Jia, Ruixue ............... 197 (38.7), 277
(117.9), 392 (218.6)jiang, haiying .................335 (176.7)Jiang, Jonathan .............267 (100.3)Jiang, Junyan .......... 261 (99.9), 269
(109.11), 371 (209.11)Jiang, Yanru............. 252 (87.3), 291
(126.1)Jibreen, Jena ...............295 (134.22)Jileta, Ivan .....................341 (181.1)Jin, Hwalmin ....................237 (74.1)Jin, Rongbo ...................318 (162.5)Jin, Shuai.......................333 (172.1)Jin, Xianan ...................329 (168.29)
Jin, Xin......... 252 (87.3), 291 (126.1)Jo, Hyeran ............. 232 (71.14), 291
(130.1)Jo, Seo Nyeong ........... 344 (183.23)Jochim, Jordan................230 (71.1)Johansen, Nicklas ...... 298 (134.38),
360 (197.26)Johansson, Moa ............269 (109.9)Johns, Leslie ......... 232 (71.14), 286
(122.7)Johns, Robert ................268 (108.2)Johnson, April A. .... 197 (38.6), 268
(108.2), 282 (117.34), 395(218.22)
Johnson, Ben ...... 337 (176.20), 362(198.2)
Johnson, CathrynEvangeline ................315 (152.42)
Johnson, Gbemende .....255 (91.18)Johnson, Genevieve Fuji ..........323
(163.3)Johnson, Jaclyn m ........232 (71.18)Johnson, Janet E. ........211 (51.12),
238 (75.3)Johnson, Juliet ..............247 (85.14)Johnson, Kaneesha......214 (51.27),
334 (175.1)Johnson, Kimberley S. ....216 (57.5)Johnson, Marcus..........248 (85.25),
362 (199.1)Johnson, Martha C. .....326 (168.11)Johnson, Paul Lorenzo .............205
(43.15)Johnson, Philip Luke ...263 (99.22),
284 (121.4)Johnson, Richard ....... 328 (168.21),
345 (183.29)Johnson-Kanu, Ada........203 (43.3),
237 (74.1)Johnston, Jocelyn M. ....187 (26.21)Johnston, Michael ....... 344 (183.22)Johnston, Richard ........234 (71.29),
315 (152.40)Johnston, Travis..........278 (117.11)Jones, Benjamin Thomas .........187
(26.20), 237 (74.1), 392 (218.7)Jones, Bruce D. .............262 (99.16)Jones, David R. .............362 (199.1)Jones, Erik............. 273 (110.1), 290
(124.1), 319 (162.13), 372(209.15)
Jones, Marc Owen....... 376 (209.40)Jones, Sam ......................230 (71.5)Jones-Correa, Michael ...245 (83.2),
305 (143.22)Jonsdottir, Gudbjorg Andrea ....269
(109.11)Jordan, Richard Pell......378 (212.6)Jordan-Zachery, Julia S. ...........337
(176.17)Jorgensen, Miriam R. ......238 (75.1)Joseph, Michael Frederick ........387
(215.14)Joyce, Renanah Miles ...247 (85.17)Ju, Angela............ 315 (152.41), 368
(205.30)Jud, Stefano ................372 (209.16)Judd, Gleason ....... 277 (117.7), 370
(209.6)Judge-Lord, Devin ........255 (91.16),
275 (113.2), 288 (122.21), 324(164.2)
Juhl, Sebastian ............376 (209.36)Jun, Jenny .....................193 (33.16)Jung, Danielle F. .... 240 (77.13), 344
(183.19), 393 (218.14)Jung, Jae-Hee.............. 376 (209.36)Jung, Jai Kwan ................208 (44.1)Jung, Seyoung ................244 (80.2)Jung, Yoo Sun ..... 295 (134.17), 336
(176.11), 357 (197.11)Jungkunz, Vincent.........277 (117.6)Junk, Wiebke Marie ..... 389 (215.26)Junn, Jane Y. .................264 (99.30)Juon, Andreas .............321 (162.20)Jurado, Ignacio............298 (134.36)Jurkevics, Anna...............191 (33.5)Jurkovich, Michelle .........192 (33.9)Just, Marion R. ............298 (134.38)Just, Petr .......................300 (136.1)
Justesen, Mogens K.......223 (63.7),357 (197.6)
Justino, Patricia.............205 (43.17)Justo, Nathalia............. 361 (197.30)
K
Köbrich, Julia .............. 271 (109.21)Köksal, Abdullatif ........299 (134.45)König, Pascal...............322 (162.26)Kaas, Jonas Gejl .............227 (64.3)Kabala, Boleslaw Z........325 (168.2)Kachi, Aya.....190 (32.1), 252 (89.2),
313 (152.27)Kadera, Kelly M. .... 284 (121.3), 301
(142.3)Kagalwala, Ali ................356 (197.3)Kagan, Jennifer ...........314 (152.35)Kagan, Max ....................231 (71.13)Kage, Rieko ...................340 (180.1)Kaheny, Erin B.............296 (134.29)Kahler, Miles ..................262 (99.16)Kahn-Nisser, Sara........336 (176.13)Kahraman, Filiz............279 (117.20)Kaire, Jose.....................236 (71.36)Kaiser, Johannes...........194 (33.25)Kakenmaster, William....285 (121.9)Kalandrakis, Tasos ..........246 (85.7)Kalmoe, Nathan P. ...........260 (99.3)Kalogeropoulos, Antonis ..........265
(99.37)Kaltenthaler, Karl C. .... 397 (218.32)Kalyanpur, Nikhil .........393 (218.11)Kalyvas, Stathis N. ....... 205 (43.17),
287 (122.12)Kaminski, Marek M. .......264 (99.32)Kammerer, Edward F. ....236 (71.37)Kamola, Isaac ..........252 (90.1), 317
(162.1)Kamoo, Sayaka..............274 (110.5)Kamphorst, Jonne .........291 (128.1)Kamrava, Mehran ..........262 (99.19)Kane, Kellen A. .... 283 (117.39), 388
(215.21)Kang, Alice .............. 228 (67.1), 394
(218.17)Kang, Eunju .............229 (67.2), 389
(215.22)Kang, Myunghoon ... 229 (67.2), 318
(162.4)Kang, Sooyeon ............280 (117.26)Kang, Stephanie ..........336 (176.15)Kania, Elsa Babette ..... 343 (183.16)Kantola, Johanna ........337 (176.21)Kao, Jay Chieh ..............226 (63.24)Kao, Kristen........... 195 (33.29), 212
(51.20), 299 (134.45), 328(168.23), 357 (197.6), 366
(205.19)Kapiszewski, Diana ........183 (20.1),
338 (176.27)Kaplan, Morgan L. ....... 358 (197.14)Kaplan, Oliver .............. 344 (183.19)Kaplan, Stephen B.......311 (152.18)Kaplan, Yael Rivka...........189 (28.1)Kaplow, Jeff .................320 (162.15)Kapur, Devesh ...............192 (33.10)Kapust, Daniel J. ..... 253 (91.2), 268
(109.4)Karabulut, Selin .............267 (107.1)Karakas, Uluc ..............354 (190.30)Karam, Jeffrey G. ..........285 (121.7)Karcher, Sebastian .........183 (20.1),
334 (174.2)Karekurve-Ramachandra,Varun....... 260 (99.4), 345 (183.27)
Karim, Sabrina....... 224 (63.15), 386(215.8)
Karl, Kristyn L. ..............241 (77.15)Karlsen, Rune ..................258 (95.1)Karol, David ............. 184 (26.5), 234
(71.30), 249 (85.29), 305(143.24), 312 (152.24)
Karp, Jeffrey A. ...........281 (117.33)Karpowitz, Christopher F...........353
(190.23)Kartal, Mert ............ 262 (99.15), 355
(192.1)Kasahara, Yuri ...............356 (197.5)Kasara, Kimuli ...............350 (190.6)
X : 25749$CHIX09-28-21 23:19:53 Page 410Layout: 11437P : Even
410 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Kasimis, Demetra Fannie ..........259(99.2)
Kaslovsky, Jaclyn....... 304 (143.16),345 (183.25)
Kassen, Maxat ..... 269 (109.10), 331(168.36), 367 (205.24)
Kassop, Nancy ................183 (23.1)Kassow, Benjamin .........218 (57.16)Kastner, Scott L.............273 (110.3)Kasuya, Yuko...............352 (190.20)Katada, Saori N........ 221 (58.3), 247
(85.14)Katitas, Aycan..............279 (117.18)Kato, Gento.............. 197 (38.5), 327
(168.12)Kato, Sota .............. 188 (26.23), 319
(162.8), 326 (168.10)Katz, Heather L. ..... 195 (33.26), 226
(63.26), 290 (125.1)Katzenstein, Emily...........210 (51.2)Kaufman, Aaron Russell ...........210
(51.5), 335 (176.5)Kaufman, Chelsea ....... 310 (152.10)Kaufmann, Eric P. .... 237 (72.2), 315
(152.40), 346 (183.34)Kaul, Shasta ..................285 (121.9)Kaur, Amarpreet ............217 (57.11)Kaur, Dipin .......................244 (79.1)Kaurin, Pauline M. Shanks........189
(27.3)Kavakli, Kerim Can..... 271 (109.17),
358 (197.12)Kavanagh, Matthew .........229 (70.1)Kaya, Ayse ........... 366 (205.15), 388
(215.19)Kaya, Serdar .......... 236 (71.39), 326
(168.12), 338 (176.28), 378(212.7)
Kayaoglu, Turan ..........384 (212.42)Kayran, Elif Naz ....... 191 (33.7), 227
(63.30)Kayser, Mark A. .............261 (99.13)Kazakov, Vitaly ............294 (134.13)Kazemi, Parichehr ....... 381 (212.21)Kazemian, Sara..............214 (51.28)Kearney-Parata, Ruben Toa ......271
(109.20)Kearns, Erin.................287 (122.11)Kedrowski, Karen M. ...389 (215.23)Keels, Eric .....................193 (33.15)Keena, Alex.............. 183 (22.1), 234
(71.28)Kefford, Glenn .............331 (168.36)Kehlenbach, Stefan .......355 (192.3)Keiser, Lael R. ..... 296 (134.28), 329
(168.25)Keita, Lamin.................273 (109.27)Kelemen, R. Daniel ....... 231 (71.12),
279 (117.20), 319 (162.13), 357(197.9)
Keller, Melissa ...............368 (206.1)Kellstedt, Lyman............264 (99.31)Kelly, Andrew S. ..........396 (218.30)Kelly, CongresswomanRobin...........................238 (76.10)
Kelly, Gary Matthew ........259 (99.1)Kelly, Sean Q .................355 (192.2)Kelly-Thompson, Kaitlin............264
(99.29)Kelmendi, Pëllumb ..........240 (77.9)Kelsall, Haylee .................244 (80.2)Kemahlioglu, Ozge ........188 (26.25)Kemerli, Pınar .......... 253 (91.2), 349
(190.1)Kemmerling, Michael.....226 (63.26)Kendall, Chad ................200 (38.19)Kendall, Joe.................343 (183.12)Kendall-Taylor, AndreaHerschman....................254 (91.9)
Kenealy, Andrew Michael ..........187(26.17)
Kenkel, Brenton....... 230 (71.3), 378(212.6)
Kennard, Amanda........295 (134.18)Kennedy, John James ...............335
(176.8)Kennedy, Megan ............200 (38.22)Kennedy, Ryan P......... 304 (143.16),
356 (197.2)Kenney, Patrick............346 (183.33)Kenny, Christopher .......255 (91.16)
Kenny, Meryl ................337 (176.21)Kenny, Paul D. ...............226 (63.27)Kent, Thomas Bradley...............219
(57.22)Kentikelenis, Alexander ............388
(215.19)Kenwick, Michael..........232 (71.18),
328 (168.19)Keohane, Robert O........302 (143.4)Kepenek, Selin...............220 (57.27)Kerchner, Alexander.... 343 (183.13)Kern, Andreas........ 199 (38.14), 393
(218.10)Kern, Holger Lutz ........ 380 (212.16)Kernell, Georgia..... 213 (51.26), 337
(176.24)Kernell, Samuel ...........374 (209.25)Kerner, Andrew.... 279 (117.18), 371
(209.7), 393 (218.10)Kerr, Jaclyn....................247 (85.15)Kerr, Nicholas .............. 289 (122.25)Kertzer, Joshua D. ..........203 (42.2),
272 (109.25)Kesler, Charles R...........300 (135.1)Kessler-Mata, Kouslaa ...209 (49.3),
221 (62.1)Ketchley, Neil...............358 (197.17)Ketola, Hanna .............. 394 (218.19)Kettler, Jaclyn J........... 346 (183.32)Keum, Tae-Yeoun..........292 (134.2),
301 (143.1), 349 (190.2)Keys, Mary M. ........ 377 (210.1), 395
(218.26)Khadka, Prabin ...... 235 (71.34), 334
(176.5)Khaleel, Nadeen...........347 (183.37)Khan, Lina .......................198 (38.8)Khan, Saad Ullah........ 295 (134.22),
324 (165.1)Khan, Saeed Ullah ........277 (117.6),
323 (164.1)Khan, Sarah ........... 242 (77.22), 302
(143.9), 345 (183.27)Khattab, Ahmed........... 377 (209.43)Khokhlova, Aleksandra .............286
(122.6)Khoury, Rana B. .... 195 (33.30), 358
(197.17)Kiang, Lisa...................394 (218.21)Kidder, Paul E................316 (153.2)Kielty, Abigail............... 304 (143.16)Kiewiet de Jonge, Chad ............298
(134.39)Kijima, Rie ...................328 (168.18)Kikuchi, Hirokazu ..........275 (113.2)Kikuchi, Masanori..........317 (159.3)Kilavuz, M. Tahir ..........299 (134.45)Kilinc, Ramazan...............185 (26.9)Kim, Boyun .................. 368 (205.30)Kim, Claire Jean ..........337 (176.22)Kim, D.G............... 297 (134.33), 351
(190.14)Kim, Dukhong................234 (71.26)Kim, Eun Kyung ............257 (91.29)Kim, Eun Young...........315 (152.43)Kim, Eunji ....................307 (143.32)Kim, Hannah June ..........208 (44.1),
305 (143.21), 391 (217.1)Kim, Hyunki ...................286 (122.9)Kim, In Song .......... 240 (77.10), 371
(209.7)Kim, Jae Eun ....... 330 (168.30), 379
(212.14)Kim, Jeehye .................336 (176.16)Kim, Jeong Hyun .........339 (176.31)Kim, Jieun....................394 (218.18)Kim, Jiwon Lee ............310 (152.13)Kim, Jiyoung .................302 (143.9)Kim, Juman.............. 197 (38.3), 301
(143.3), 392 (218.3)Kim, Jung Eun.................204 (43.8)Kim, Ki Young................378 (212.5)Kim, Lami............... 199 (38.16), 332
(172.1)Kim, Minju.................... 357 (197.11)Kim, Mirae........................243 (78.2)Kim, Nadia ...................337 (176.22)Kim, Seo-young Silvia...............207
(43.24), 259 (95.2), 346(183.34), 355 (195.1), 367
(205.22)
Kim, Seok Joon .............205 (43.13)Kim, Seungjun ....... 240 (77.10), 327
(168.17)Kim, So Young...............188 (26.24)Kim, Sojeong ...................229 (67.2)Kim, Soo Yeon ..... 271 (109.16), 336
(176.11), 365 (205.15)Kim, Sung Eun ...... 193 (33.14), 311
(152.17), 320 (162.17), 335(176.5)
Kim, Sung Mi ............... 311 (152.16)Kim, Suzie....................339 (176.30)Kim, Tae Gyoon ...............185 (26.6)Kim, Taesim ...................348 (186.1)Kim, Wukki.....................286 (122.9)Kim, Yeaji.......................274 (112.1)Kim, Yong Jae .................204 (43.8)Kim, Yongkwang.......... 390 (215.28)Kim, Youngwan............328 (168.21)Kim, Yu Bin....................276 (114.1)Kim, Yushim ................ 287 (122.14)Kim-Leffingwell, Sanghoon .......235
(71.32), 314 (152.37), 384(212.40)
Kimball, David C......... 297 (134.34),313 (152.32)
Kimondo, Gathoni Anne............200(38.22)
Kinane, Christina M. ..................352(190.16), 359 (197.20)
King, Bridgett ................292 (133.2)King, Desmond ...... 201 (38.31), 218
(57.15), 296 (134.27), 350(190.9), 385 (214.3)
King, Elisabeth ................229 (70.1)King, Gary.............. 335 (176.5), 349
(189.1)King-Meadows, Tyson D............206
(43.23)Kingzette, Jonathon .... 304 (143.16)Kinkela, Claudia.............385 (214.1)Kinne, Brandon J. ...... 296 (134.23),
336 (176.15), 358 (197.12)Kinsella, Helen.............394 (218.19)Kinsey, Barbara Sgouraki .........386
(215.4)Kinsley Chewning, Taylor .........383
(212.34)Kirk, James....................356 (196.1)Kirkland, Justin ..... 193 (33.18), 297
(134.30), 345 (183.25)Kirkland, Patricia ...........202 (38.33)Kirkpatrick, Andrew......286 (122.6),
324 (165.2)Kirkpatrick, Jennet ..........197 (38.3)Kirsch, Robert E. ... 284 (121.4), 306
(143.28)Kirshner, Alexander.........222 (63.3)Kirss, Alexander ............247 (85.18)Kirzinger, Ashley ......... 282 (117.39)Kishi, Roudabeh ..........383 (212.33)Kisic Merino, Pasko ......269 (109.9)Kistner, Michael ... 287 (122.15), 345
(183.25)Kitaevich, Evgenia Jane............314
(152.37)Kitchens, Karin ...... 207 (43.29), 392
(218.8)Kittilson, Miki Caul ....... 276 (115.1),
394 (218.17)Kiyani, Ghashia .............201 (38.28)Klamberg, Mark ...........343 (183.15)Klar, Samara ................353 (190.23)Klarner, Carl E. ..............307 (144.2)Klasa, Kasia...................266 (99.41)Klasnja, Marko......... 192 (33.8), 378
(212.8)Klaus, Kathleen ... 289 (122.25), 384
(212.45)Klaver, Joe .......................203 (43.6)Klein, Graig R. ...............226 (63.24)Kleinberg, Mona S. ......338 (176.26)Kleinerman, Benjamin A. ..........332
(168.42)Klemm, Thomas....... 215 (55.1), 222
(62.1)Klemmensen, Robert.....318 (162.5)Kliewer, Nicole...............265 (99.33)Klimova, Aigul ....... 192 (33.12), 263
(99.25)Klimowich, Lorraine ........253 (90.3)
IndexofParticipants
Kline, Reuben .............. 306 (143.27)Klinger, Ulrike ..............361 (197.28)Klingler, Jonathan D.....206 (43.19),
245 (85.4), 255 (91.15)Kljajic, Marko .................275 (114.1)Klocek, Jason A. .........346 (183.30)Klüser, Jonathan ......... 322 (162.26)Klüver, Heike .................226 (63.22)Kneuer, Marianne R. .......183 (21.2),
190 (28.3)Knight, Amber ...............350 (190.8)Knight, David Jonathan.............214
(51.27)Knox, Dean ..................379 (212.11)Knuppe, Austin............280 (117.24)Knutsen, Carl Henrik ....235 (71.34),
371 (209.10)Knuutila, Aleksi .............265 (99.37)Knüpfer, Curd Benjamin............390
(215.29)Ko, Hyein .....................383 (212.37)Ko, Inhwan...................353 (190.25)Ko, Jiyoung ........... 205 (43.16), 336
(176.16)Kobayashi, Tetsuro .........237 (74.1)Koc Michalska, Karolina ...........361
(197.28)Kocacik Senol, Melike Ayse ......346
(183.33)Kocak, Korhan .........259 (98.2), 334
(176.4), 370 (208.2)Koch, Jeffrey W. ..........375 (209.34)Koebele, Elizabeth...... 288 (122.21),
314 (152.35), 333 (174.1), 347(183.36), 376 (209.39)
Koehler, John .............. 382 (212.28)Koehler-Derrick, Gabriel............315
(152.44), 392 (218.8)Koehnlein, Brittney Danielle .....388
(215.16)Koeker, Philipp ..............290 (124.1)Koenig, Biko ............ 238 (76.3), 284
(121.4), 363 (204.1)Koger, Gregory ...... 248 (85.21), 374
(209.25)Kogl, Alexandra ...........304 (143.20)Koker, Neveser ................253 (91.2)Kokkonen, Andrej........ 321 (162.24)Kolberg, Deanna............356 (197.5)Kolcak, Burcu .............. 328 (168.19)Kolers, Avery .................268 (109.3)Koliev, Faradj...............288 (122.21)Koller, Boglárka .............300 (136.1)Kolodny, Robin A. ...........188 (27.1)Komisarchik, Mayya .......259 (95.1),
293 (134.8), 335 (176.5), 361(197.33)
Konak Unal, Saadet..... 359 (197.19)Koning, Edward A. ........335 (176.6)Konisky, David....... 213 (51.25), 306
(143.27)Konken, Lauren C...........220 (58.2),
372 (209.17)Konstantinidis, Nikitas ..............212
(51.14)Koo, Gyo Hyun ..............291 (126.1)Koob, Sigrid Alexandra .............223
(63.7)Kook, Rebecca ............389 (215.22)Koon, Adam.................314 (152.39)Koos, Carlo.......... 320 (162.19), 366
(205.19)Kopp, Heather M............276 (114.1)Kopstein, Jeffrey ........ 294 (134.14),
301 (143.2), 371 (209.11)Koren, Ore .....................232 (71.18)Korkut, Umut ........... 208 (45.2), 209
(45.2)Kornreich, Yoel .... 327 (168.16), 369
(207.2)Kosec, Katrina ...............386 (215.9)Kosiara-Pedersen, Karina .........274
(111.2), 375 (209.31)Kostadinova, Petia A.....231 (71.11)Kostadinova, Tatiana....231 (71.11),
254 (91.9)Kostelka, Filip...... 298 (134.36), 321
(162.23)Kostka, Genia .............. 365 (205.14)Kostyuk, Nadiya .... 232 (71.16), 322
(162.29)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 411KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Kotef, Hagar...................356 (197.1)Koter, Dominika ..... 236 (71.41), 356
(197.6)Kotsadam, Andreas..... 359 (197.18)Kotsch, Raphaela ........323 (162.32)Kotsovilis, Spyridon..... 284 (119.1),
332 (170.1)Kouba, Karel..................340 (179.1)Koubi, Vally............ 242 (77.19), 295
(134.18)Kousser, Thad ......... 215 (56.2), 250
(85.38)Koutnik, Gregory ...........354 (191.2)Kovac, Igor ....................369 (206.3)Kovyliaeva, Natalia ........307 (146.1)Kröker, Evgenija ............286 (122.9)Krause, George A. ........193 (33.18),
351 (190.16)Krause, Jana..................187 (26.19)Krause, Peter ......... 256 (91.25), 287
(122.11)Krawatzek, Félix ..............240 (77.9)Krcmaric, Daniel ..........387 (215.14)Kreft, Brianna Elise .......274 (111.1)Krehbiel, Jay..................218 (57.16)Kreisberg, Anna...........396 (218.31)Kreitzer, Rebecca J. ... 283 (117.39),
388 (215.21)Kreppel, Amie .............. 343 (183.13)Kreps, Sarah E. .............308 (150.1)Kreutzer, Willow........... 382 (212.30)Krewel, Mona ....... 306 (143.26), 367
(205.23)Krewson, Rosa Castillo.............245
(83.2), 256 (91.21)Krieger, Tim ...................205 (43.14)Kries, Douglas ...............377 (210.1)Krimmel, Katherine..........184 (26.5)Kring, William N.............341 (181.1)Kripp, Jacob ..................363 (205.2)Krisel, Rebecca ........... 297 (134.31)Krishnamurthy, Arvind Ram......309
(152.9), 389 (215.22)Kristensen, Nicolai ........261 (99.12)Kristensen, Peter Marcus..........333
(173.1)Kritzer, Herbert M. .........200 (38.21)Krivoshchekov, Vladislav ..........239
(77.4)Kroeger, Mary .......... 196 (37.1), 275
(113.2), 353 (190.27)Krolikowski, Alanna ... 365 (205.14),
383 (212.39)Kronebusch, Karl .........257 (91.27),
266 (99.41)Krook, Mona Lena ... 253 (91.4), 276
(115.1)Kropf, Martha E. ..........289 (122.26)Krosnick, Jon A.............392 (218.4)Kruks-Wisner, Gabrielle ............192
(33.10), 386 (215.9)Krumbholz, Katie...........309 (152.9)Krupenkin, Masha T ..... 236 (71.40),
280 (117.26)Krupnikov, Yanna ........346 (183.34)Kruse, Douglas ..............268 (108.2)Kruse, Mathias.............343 (183.12)Krutz, Glen S. .............. 297 (134.30)Kselman, Daniel Max....194 (33.24),
223 (63.7), 309 (152.6), 337(176.24)
Ksiazkiewicz, Aleksander..........197(38.6), 243 (78.1), 318 (162.5),
395 (218.22)Ku, Charlotte .................261 (99.14)Ku, Jackie Chuan Yin ....290 (125.1)Kubinec, Robert..... 231 (71.13), 254
(91.10), 341 (183.4), 371(209.9)
Kubli, Maël Dominique ..............322(162.26)
Kuebler, Daniel ............329 (168.28)Kuehl, Colin ...................188 (26.24)Kuhelj Bugaric, Max .... 344 (183.17)Kuhn, Patrick Michael ....198 (38.9),
334 (176.5), 386 (215.5)Kuhn, Theresa ...............261 (99.13)Kuipers, Nicholas .........250 (85.38),
369 (208.1)Kujala, Jordan ...............256 (91.22)
Kuk, John Seungmin....202 (38.33),339 (176.31)
Kukathas, Chandran........259 (99.2)Kukovic, Simona ...........300 (136.1)Kulenkamp, Emily Rachel .........199
(38.16)Kulesza, Christopher.................382
(212.29)Kumar, Martha Joynt .....349 (189.1)Kumar, Rithika ...............211 (51.10)Kumar, Tanu .......... 200 (38.23), 327
(168.13), 342 (183.9)Kundmueller, Michelle M. ..........265
(99.38), 307 (144.1), 331(168.37), 395 (218.26)
Kunimoto, Erica.............266 (99.38)Kunz, Michael ................369 (206.3)Kunz, Verena .................213 (51.21)Kunze, Stefanie ...........305 (143.21)Kuo, Alexander ............388 (215.20)Kupzok, Nils ..................199 (38.14)Kurella, Anna Sophie ................391
(215.31)Kurer, Thomas .............387 (215.11)Kurizaki, Shuhei ..........366 (205.17)Kursuncu, Ugur ...........361 (197.28)Kurtz, Reed ....................354 (191.2)Kuskova, Valentina...... 311 (152.21)Kustov, Alexander ...... 288 (122.18),
396 (218.31)Kweon, Yesola ..... 339 (176.31), 365
(205.11), 389 (215.23)Kwok, Chi ......................318 (162.3)Kwon, Irene....................241 (77.16)Kwon, Jinah.................384 (212.42)Kwon, Minju...................286 (122.9)
L
López-Cariboni, Santiago..........204(43.7), 230 (71.5)
La Raja, Raymond J. ......220 (58.1),355 (195.1)
Lachance, Sarah.... 194 (33.24), 333(173.1)
Lachapelle, Erick .........390 (215.28)Lachapelle, Jean............188 (26.26)Lacina, Bethany........... 388 (215.20)Lacombe, Matthew ..........246 (85.6)LaCombe, Scott James .............287
(122.15), 352 (190.18)Ladam, Christina ...........339 (178.2)Ladd, Jeremy Martin .....227 (63.29)Ladd, Jonathan M.........207 (43.26),
256 (91.24)Laebens, Melis G.......... 194 (33.23),
317 (160.1)Lago, Ignacio ......... 194 (33.22), 264
(99.32)Lagodny, Julius ..... 227 (63.30), 367
(205.23)Lai, Angela.......................185 (26.6)Lai, Brian ............. 279 (117.21), 296
(134.23), 312 (152.23), 358(197.14)
Lai, James S. ...........253 (90.4), 313(152.29)
Lai, Ruilin.......................363 (204.1)Laible, Janet M. ..... 323 (163.1), 368
(206.1)Laird, Chryl ....................241 (77.16)Laitin, David D. ........ 190 (32.1), 211
(51.8)Lajevardi, Nazita .... 250 (85.33), 265
(99.34), 298 (134.36), 330(168.31)
Lake, David A. ..... 314 (152.36), 373(209.19), 380 (212.20)
Lake, Milli.....................366 (205.19)Lakeman, Amy.............287 (122.17)Lakhtakia, Shruti ... 217 (57.12), 225
(63.19), 309 (152.9)Lal, Apoorva .......... 198 (38.10), 371
(209.9)Lall, Ranjit......................240 (77.11)Lalwani, Sameer Prem ..............373
(209.22)Lambek, Simon..............285 (122.1)Lamberova, Natalia........269 (109.8)Lambert, Joshua..........382 (212.32)
Lambert, Priscilla A..... 345 (183.24)Lamothe, Meeyoung......187 (26.21)Lamothe, Scott ...... 187 (26.21), 287
(122.14)Lan, Xingchen................285 (122.3)Lancaster, Thomas D. ...273 (110.4)Landa, Dimitri ..................197 (38.5)Landauer, Matthew .........230 (71.1),
245 (83.1)Landemore, Helene E. ....196 (34.2),
318 (162.2)Landry, Jordan ..............256 (91.22)Landy, Jamie M............379 (212.14)Landy, Marc ...................290 (125.3)Lane, Daniel.................306 (143.26)Lane, Elizabeth ...... 241 (77.15), 297
(134.29)Lane, Melissa......... 349 (190.2), 391
(218.2)Lang, Daniel G. ................237 (72.3)Langø, Hans-Inge ........373 (209.20)Laniyonu, Ayobami........219 (57.19)Lankina, Tomila ....... 223 (63.8), 326
(168.8)Lanko, Dmitry .......... 185 (26.7), 210
(51.6)Lanthorn, Heather Elisabeth .....314
(152.39)LaPira, Timothy M. .........209 (48.2),
225 (63.21), 267 (107.1)Lapuente, Victor ..........321 (162.21)Larcinese, Valentino......326 (168.8)Larocca, Roger ............374 (209.25)Larreboure, Magdalena .............248
(85.24), 265 (99.33), 281(117.33)
Larreguy, Horacio Alejandro .....195(33.30), 254 (91.7), 298
(134.40), 357 (197.6), 371(209.9)
Larrosa-Fuentes, JuanSebastian ....................250 (85.32)
Larsen, Frederik Kjøller.............261(99.12)
Larsen, Jeffrey A. ........328 (168.20)Larsen, Martin Vinæs ...248 (85.23),
383 (212.35)Larson, Bruce A. .............189 (27.1)Larsson, Oscar Leonard ...........323
(163.3)Larue, Patrick ..................237 (74.1)Laruffa, Matteo ..............342 (183.8)Lascher, Edward L.......287 (122.15)Lascurettes, Kyle M..... 373 (209.21)Lash, Kurt ....................332 (168.42)Lastro, Claudia ..............207 (43.28)Laterzo, Isabel ....... 309 (152.9), 364
(205.9)Latner, Michael ................183 (22.1)Latura, Audrey ...............302 (143.9)Lau, Richard R...............356 (197.2)Lauby, Fanny ......... 236 (71.40), 361
(197.33)Lauer, Ritu S. .................323 (164.1)Laustsen, Lasse ............269 (109.6)Lauterbach, Erinn K ... 329 (168.24),
359 (197.19)Lavariega Monforti, JessicaL. ...............................353 (190.26)
Laver, Michael J.............392 (218.5)Lavery, Lesley................207 (43.29)Lavigne, Mathieu ......... 390 (215.28)Lawall, Katharina...........226 (63.22)Lawler, Janet Marie .......340 (179.2)Lawless, Jennifer L. .......215 (56.1),
284 (121.3)Lawrence, Adria.............256 (91.25)Lawrence, Jennifer ..........228 (66.2)Laws, Serena .................243 (77.24)Lawton, Sally F ..............200 (38.23)Layman, Geoffrey C. ....249 (85.28),
264 (99.31)Lazarus, Jeffrey ...........389 (215.26)Lazer, David ........... 219 (57.23), 250
(85.33), 265 (99.34), 298(134.39), 306 (143.26)
Le, Loan K. ......................253 (90.4)Le Foulon, Carmen.........203 (43.5),
233 (71.25)Le Moglie, Marco ...........365 (205.9)Le Penne, Shirley ..........356 (196.1)
Le Pennec, Caroline ........210 (51.4)Le Veness, Frank P. .........228 (64.5)Leal, David L................ 305 (143.22)Leal, Marcelo ...............320 (162.16)Lean, Sharon F. ........... 374 (209.27)Leavitt, Thomas ....... 184 (25.2), 364
(205.6)LeBas, Adrienne .... 233 (71.20), 317
(160.1), 327 (168.15), 371(209.12)
Leber, Andrew .............351 (190.14)Lebovitz, Adam..............292 (134.2)Lechartre, Joséphine.................321
(162.20)Lechner, Lisa ...............336 (176.12)Lee, Alexander..... 345 (183.27), 379
(212.14)Lee, Annalyssa Catherine .........283
(118.1)Lee, Ashley ..................347 (183.37)Lee, Bomi.......................226 (63.25)Lee, Boram ..................295 (134.17)Lee, Boyoon ............230 (71.4), 242
(77.19)Lee, Cathy Sona ..........381 (212.22)Lee, Charles T. ....... 301 (142.1), 391
(217.1)Lee, Chen-Yu .................307 (147.1)Lee, Chia-yi.......... 295 (134.21), 366
(205.18)Lee, Daewoo ................ 303 (143.11)Lee, Don S. .................. 360 (197.23)Lee, Dong Sun.............282 (117.37)Lee, Dong Wook ............309 (152.6)Lee, Frances E......... 260 (99.5), 296
(134.27), 309 (152.7)Lee, Haillie Na-Kyung................372
(209.17)Lee, Heejin ...................365 (205.14)Lee, Hsuan-Wei............323 (162.32)Lee, Hyo Won .............. 272 (109.23)Lee, Jaewook.................324 (165.2)Lee, Ji Min .....................255 (91.12)Lee, Jieun .............. 205 (43.12), 254
(91.10)Lee, Kangkyu.................284 (119.1)Lee, Keunyoung ..........359 (197.20)Lee, Kristine ................270 (109.12)Lee, Kyu Young ........... 371 (209.11)Lee, Kyung Suk .............333 (172.1)Lee, Kyuwon .......... 241 (77.15), 312
(152.25)LEE, MANSEOK .............212 (51.18)Lee, Marcus .....................183 (25.1)Lee, Melissa M. ...... 309 (152.8), 320
(162.18), 373 (209.23), 392(218.8)
Lee, Myunghee ................208 (44.1)Lee, Sang Yup ............. 367 (205.23)Lee, Sang-Hwan...........328 (168.21)Lee, Sarah......................200 (38.24)Lee, Seonghui................204 (43.10)Lee, Shinkyu....................253 (91.1)Lee, Shinwoo ...............321 (162.21)Lee, Siu Yau.................321 (162.24)Lee, So Jin............. 187 (26.17), 366
(205.16)Lee, Sojeong..................226 (63.25)Lee, Soyoung.................187 (26.20)Lee, Su-Hyun ......... 207 (43.25), 231
(71.13)Lee, Sumin............. 224 (63.15), 328
(168.19)Lee, Taeku....................297 (134.33)Lee, Tai De ...................293 (134.10)Lee, Wei-chin ...................189 (27.5)Lee, Wondong ...............200 (38.24)Lee, Yeon Ju ....................203 (43.5)Lee, Yoonkyung...............208 (44.1)Lee, Young-Im................348 (187.1)Lee, Youngchae .............341 (181.1)Lee-Whiting, Blake ........335 (176.9)Leebaw, Bronwyn Anne ............287
(122.16), 322 (162.27), 341(183.2), 350 (190.5)
Leech, Beth L. ......... 209 (48.2), 389(215.26)
Leemann, Lucas ............234 (71.28)Leeuw, S.E. Edith ........ 330 (168.34)Legard, Sveinung ........367 (205.24)Leheny, David ..................221 (58.3)
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412 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Lehman, Daniel George.............215(56.2)
Lehoucq, Fabrice.............260 (99.8)Lei, Zhenhuan.............. 351 (190.11)Leifeld, Philip...................203 (42.1)Leighley, Jan E. ...............209 (49.2)Leininger, Arndt..... 207 (43.24), 335
(176.9), 386 (215.6)Leipziger, Lasse...........282 (117.38)Leiter, Debra Lynn ...208 (44.4), 369
(206.4), 390 (215.27)Lelkes, Yphtach .............350 (190.6)Lem, Steve B. ................263 (99.23)Lemaire, Pauline..........322 (162.26)Lemieux, Scott...............397 (219.5)Lemke, Tobias ....... 212 (51.17), 241
(77.18)Lendway, Paul .............385 (212.46)Leng, Ning .....................199 (38.14)Lenoir, Brandon W.........239 (76.11)Lenz, Gabriel ......... 234 (71.28), 349
(189.3)Lenze, Paul E......... 269 (109.6), 312
(152.22), 358 (197.14), 384(212.40)
Leone, Samuel ...............192 (33.11)Lepers, Etienne .............199 (38.14)LeRiche, Matthew ....229 (69.2), 237
(74.1)Lerma, Michael ..............341 (183.3)Lerman, Amy E. ..... 201 (38.26), 302
(143.7)Lerner, Alexis Monique .............360
(197.22)Lerner, Joshua Yoshio ..............200
(38.19), 333 (174.1)Lerner, Michael Henry ...............306
(143.27)LeRoux, Kelly ........ 187 (26.21), 248
(85.22)Lertchoosakul, Kanokrat...........294
(134.10)Leslie, Gregory John....249 (85.26),
313 (152.29)Lessing, Benjamin.........342 (183.7)Lester, Quinn ...................253 (91.4)Letsa, Natalie Wenzell ...............195
(33.29), 314 (152.37), 331(168.38)
Leung, Brian ............ 203 (43.5), 280(117.26)
Leung, Vivien...............305 (143.21)Leutert, Wendy ........ 204 (43.8), 223
(63.9)LeVan, Carl ..................299 (134.46)Levan, Carrie ...............345 (183.29)LeVeck, Brad L. ....... 197 (38.5), 272
(109.25)Levi, Effi...........................260 (99.6)Levi, Margaret.......... 238 (75.2), 390
(215.31)Levin, Dov H. ............... 286 (122.10)Levine, Adam Seth ....182 (9.9), 315
(152.43)Levine, Joseph ...... 206 (43.21), 278
(117.12)Levine, Lauren .............353 (190.24)Levine, Peter.......... 300 (139.1), 354
(191.1)Levinson, Nanette S. .....226 (63.26)Levitas, Edward ...............208 (44.4)Levitsky, Steven ...... 260 (99.5), 353
(190.27), 392 (218.8)Levitt, Barry S................200 (38.20)Levshin, Anatoly............187 (26.17)Levy, Gabriella ...............218 (57.14)Levy, Jacob T.................391 (218.2)Levy, Jeremy ...................239 (77.4)Levy, Morris E................256 (91.24)Levy, Naomi ........... 201 (38.26), 306
(143.30)Lewis, Andrew R. .........249 (85.28),
264 (99.31), 367 (205.21)Lewis, Daniel C............ 282 (117.34)Lewis, David E. ............351 (190.16)Lewis, Jacob S. ..... 205 (43.16), 269
(109.11), 280 (117.26)Lewis, Janet I......... 187 (26.18), 231
(71.8), 338 (176.29)Lewis, Verlan .................251 (85.39)
Lewis-Beck, Michael S. .............307(144.2), 369 (206.4)
Li, Chien-pin ....................208 (44.2)Li, Dancheng ......... 290 (125.1), 334
(175.3)Li, He..............................369 (207.2)Li, Huimin ......................186 (26.15)Li, Jia ........... 254 (91.9), 307 (147.1)Li, Jianing ......................301 (141.1)Li, Kaiyu.........................264 (99.27)Li, Peiyuan .......................254 (91.8)Li, Qianhui ...................337 (176.19)Li, Quan .......................343 (183.14)Li, Siyao ............... 295 (134.17), 351
(190.11)Li, Siyu......................... 297 (134.29)Li, Tao ..........................365 (205.10)Li, Xiaojun.............. 341 (183.4), 373
(209.23)Li, Xinyi ..........................250 (85.33)Li, Yimeng.................... 281 (117.31)Li, Yishuang.................351 (190.11)Li, Yueyi ....... 244 (80.1), 350 (190.7)Li, Zeren.........................302 (143.5)Li, Zhao .... 283 (117.41), 355 (195.1)Liang, Baowen............. 270 (109.11)Liang, Wei .............. 186 (26.14), 303
(143.13), 369 (207.2)Liao, Da-Chi ...................273 (110.2)Liao, Hsiao-chuan ........275 (114.1),
358 (197.15)Liao, Steven...................240 (77.10)Liao, Yen-Chieh .............275 (113.1)Liao, Yu-Ceng ..................214 (52.1)Libgober, Brian Daniel ..............205
(43.18), 225 (63.17), 233(71.23), 255 (91.16), 281
(117.32), 312 (152.25), 361(197.33), 389 (215.26)
Licht, Hauke...................269 (109.9)Lichtenheld, Adam G.................365
(205.13)Lieberman, Robert C. .....260 (99.5),
309 (152.7), 354 (191.1)Liebertz, Scott .................252 (88.1)Liebhart, Karin...............241 (77.15)Liebow, Edward .............257 (91.26)Lien, Pei-te............. 249 (85.26), 391
(217.1)Lienesch, Rachel .............254 (91.6)Lierl, Malte ........... 272 (109.25), 347
(183.41)Lightcap, Tracy L. R. .....348 (187.1)Lightfoot, Sheryl R. ........209 (49.3),
284 (121.4)Lilleker, Darren ..............226 (63.23)Lim, Elvin T. .................281 (117.28)Lim, Gabrielle .............. 376 (209.40)Lim, Haeyong.................348 (186.1)Lim, Jimmy ....................284 (120.1)Lim, Junghyun............. 272 (109.24)Lim, Sijeong.................272 (109.23)Lim, Timothy C. ...............260 (99.7)Limbocker, Scott ......... 359 (197.20)Lin, Alex Min-Wei ............227 (64.2)Lin, Alex Yu-Ting ...........308 (150.1)Lin, Hsuan-Yu .............. 387 (215.15)Lin, Jennifer........... 219 (57.23), 265
(99.34)Lin, Jiun-Chi ..................273 (110.2)Lin, Nick..... 290 (123.3), 339 (177.1)Lin, Shao Fan ...... 282 (117.37), 318
(162.3), 336 (176.14), 375(209.31), 383 (212.39)
Lin, Tse-min ........... 250 (85.32), 261(99.9), 323 (163.2)
Lin, Ulrich Y.-C.............358 (197.15)Lin, Yu-Hsiu .....................208 (44.2)Lin, Yu-Ru .................... 352 (190.18)Lin, Yue ..........................292 (130.1)Lin-Greenberg, Erik ......262 (99.18),
311 (152.20)Lind, Jennifer M.............205 (43.15)Lindaman, Kara L. .........355 (192.2)Lindberg, Staffan I.........235 (71.34)Linde, Jonas ................ 321 (162.24)Linden-Retek, Paul ..........191 (33.5)Lindgren, Karl-Oskar .....251 (85.41)Lindholm, Johan.... 225 (63.17), 344
(183.23)
Lindsey, Summer..........220 (57.25),224 (63.15), 366 (205.19)
Lindstam, Emmy............266 (99.42)Linn, Suzanna..................252 (89.2)Linos, Elizabeth .............302 (143.7)Liou, Stacey...................370 (209.3)Lioz, Adam R .................397 (219.5)Lipina, Kimberly ............332 (170.2)Lipman, Maria .............. 310 (152.14)Lipscomb, Michael ........220 (57.24)Lipscy, Phillip Y. ..........328 (168.18)Lipsitz, Keena ..................220 (58.1)Lischer, Sarah Kenyon ..............332
(170.1)Litke, Justin B. ................189 (27.2)Little, Andrew ........ 201 (38.30), 310
(152.11), 370 (208.2)Little, Conor.....................190 (28.2)Littlepage, Kelley G. .... 304 (143.18)Littman, Rebecca..........266 (99.42),
359 (197.18)Litvin, Boris ............. 259 (99.1), 341
(183.1)Liu, Amy H. .............. 211 (51.8), 292
(133.2), 326 (168.11), 357(197.7), 369 (206.5)
Liu, Anita Kueichun.......219 (57.23)Liu, Antong ....................370 (209.2)Liu, Baodong Paul...........259 (95.2)Liu, Dongshu ...............351 (190.11)Liu, Glory M. ....................191 (33.2)Liu, Hanzhang.............. 278 (117.15)Liu, Huchen ........... 248 (85.21), 304
(143.17)LIU, Jingping ...............372 (209.14)Liu, Li-Yin.......214 (52.1), 243 (78.3)Liu, Mingxing ...............278 (117.15)Liu, Muen .......................362 (198.1)Liu, Naijia................. 216 (57.6), 331
(168.38), 379 (212.11)Liu, Rigao ......................254 (91.10)Liu, Shelley ............ 202 (38.32), 232
(71.19), 374 (209.24)Liu, Shiyao.....................226 (63.24)Liu, Tzu-Ping ........... 246 (85.7), 275
(113.1)Liu, Yanjun.......................223 (63.9)Liu, Zixuan .....................317 (161.1)Livaudais, Maria ..........382 (212.31)LiVecche, Marc ................189 (27.3)Livingston, Steven L. ................390
(215.29)Livny, Avital .................315 (152.44)Lizotte, Mary Kate ....... 282 (117.34)Lo, Adeline............. 201 (38.30), 203
(42.1)Lobell, Steven E. ......... 296 (134.24)Loblova, Olga ........ 269 (109.8), 384
(212.43)Locatelli, Luis Gustavo .............338
(176.24)Lockhart, Mackenzie ....198 (38.10),
256 (91.22)Lockwood, Erin ... 351 (190.12), 387
(215.14)Lockwood, Sarah Jane..............348
(183.41)Loepp, Eric ......................246 (85.9)Loewen, Peter John ......335 (176.9)Loewenthal, Amit...........269 (109.7)Logan, David ...............320 (162.18)Logan, Justin...................208 (45.1)Loggins, Jared.................183 (25.1)Loizides, Neophytos........243 (79.1)Lollis, Jacob Michael.................374
(209.25)Lombardini, John T. .......184 (26.4),
285 (122.1)Londrigan, Paul ...............244 (81.1)Long, James D..... 278 (117.14), 310
(152.13), 347 (183.41)Long, Le Anh Nguyen ...268 (108.1)Long, Sean David ............215 (55.1)Long, William J................185 (26.8)Longo, Matthew ....... 191 (33.5), 268
(109.3)Longuet Marx, Nicolas ..............365
(205.11)Loonat, Farhana ..............238 (76.9)Lopez, Anthony C..........255 (91.13)
IndexofParticipants
Lopez, Diego Alejandro.............332(169.2)
Lopez Bunyasi, Tehama ............277(117.6)
Lopez Garcia, Ana Isabel ..........185(26.9), 204 (43.7)
Lopez Ortega, Alberto .....216 (57.6)Lopez-Levy, Arturo ...... 319 (162.12)Lopez-Moctezuma, Gabriel........260
(99.4)Lopez-Santana, Mariely .............323
(163.4)Lopez-Videla, Bruno ......318 (162.6)Lordan, Thomas E. ........332 (169.2)Lorenz, Geoffrey M.........209 (48.2),
329 (168.24), 383 (212.33)Lori, Noora Anwar ...... 332 (168.41),
347 (183.40)Lotito, Nicholas John ................336
(176.15)Lott, Cindy .....................290 (123.2)Lou, Diqing ....................348 (186.1)Louwerse, Tom ..............225 (63.16)Love, Nancy Sue .......181 (5.7), 182
(16.7), 322 (162.27), 353(190.26)
Love, Paul Max ..............291 (128.1)Love, Shanequewa ........355 (193.1)Lowande, Kenneth...... 304 (143.17),
374 (209.26)Lowe, Will ....................281 (117.31)Lowenkamp, Hannah.....233 (71.22)Lowndes, Joseph E. ......284 (121.4)Loyle, Cyanne E. ... 248 (85.19), 367
(205.24), 373 (209.24)Lu, Catherine ...................222 (63.4)Lu, Fan....... 197 (38.5), 327 (168.12)Lu, Fengming...............278 (117.15)LU, Wenzhi...................342 (183.10)Lu, Xiao..........................335 (176.5)Lu, Xiaobo ............. 309 (152.8), 392
(218.6)Lu, Yingdan..................327 (168.16)Lu, Yue.........................271 (109.16)Luartz, Lewis Alexander............259
(95.2), 360 (197.24)Lubbers, Rebecca J .......238 (76.7),
391 (217.2)Lubell, Mark N. ..............235 (71.33)Lublin, David ....... 346 (183.31), 375
(209.33)Lucardi, Adrian ............381 (212.27)Lucas, Caleb.......... 250 (85.33), 358
(197.16)Lucas, Christopher..... 376 (209.36),
379 (212.11)Lucky, Matthew..............340 (179.2)Luders, Joseph E. ....... 383 (212.33)Ludwig, Paul W..............363 (205.1)Lueck, Dean L.............. 360 (197.23)Lueders, Hans .............298 (134.40)Lugg, Andrew David....311 (152.16)Luhiste, Maarja ........ 251 (87.2), 343
(183.11)Luik, Lelde .....................377 (212.1)Luke, Timothy W...........220 (57.24),
397 (219.3)Luna, Juan Pablo ..........342 (183.7)Luna, Zakiya ....................202 (39.1)Lund, Neil ....................311 (152.16)Lunde Seefeldt, Jennapher .......182
(10.3), 252 (90.1), 301 (142.2)Lundgren, Magnus ......343 (183.15)Lunz Trujillo, Kristin Kay ..........188
(26.27), 216 (57.3), 396(218.30)
Luo, Kevin Wei ..............386 (215.5)Luo, Xuan ......................319 (162.8)Luo, Zhaotian...............353 (190.27)Lupton, Robert N. .........234 (71.29),
375 (209.35)Lupu, Noam ......... 298 (134.37), 303
(143.12), 310 (152.15), 337(176.24), 390 (215.31)
Luskin, Robert C. ..........301 (141.1)Lust, Ellen M.......... 195 (33.29), 231
(71.8), 257 (91.29), 271(109.19), 357 (197.6), 372
(209.13), 386 (215.8)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 413KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Lusvardi, Amber N .......200 (38.22),264 (99.29), 352 (190.19), 388
(215.21)Lutai, Raluca.......... 267 (107.1), 291
(128.1)Lutmar, Carmela .... 186 (26.17), 193
(33.17), 212 (51.16), 251 (87.1)Lutscher, Philipp .........395 (218.24)Lutz, Mark J. ....................258 (92.5)Luxon, Nancy......... 325 (168.5), 356
(197.1)Ly, Minh V .................... 354 (190.31)Lyall, Jason....................205 (43.15)Lynch, Julia .................319 (162.13)Lynch, Marc ............. 190 (29.1), 273
(109.29)Lyon, Melissa......... 207 (43.29), 258
(92.3)Lê, Adam J...................315 (152.43)
M
Méndez, Claudio A. .........221 (61.3)Méndez, Michael ............265 (99.36)Méndez Gutiérrez, María ...........248
(85.20)Ma, Claire............. 315 (152.43), 385
(212.46)Ma, Haofeng.....................223 (63.8)Ma, Ji .............................290 (123.2)Ma, Siyuan ...................367 (205.23)Ma, Xiao ............... 342 (183.10), 365
(205.10)MA(•••), Jie(•••) .................223 (63.9)Maas, Willem................354 (190.30)Maass, Richard W..........212 (51.17)Macaulay, Christopher Cody.....373
(209.23)Macdonald, Bradley J................219
(57.24), 353 (190.26)MacDonald, Erica E .......195 (33.27)Macdonald, Julia ...........205 (43.13)Macdonald, Maggie ......200 (38.19),
280 (117.27)MacDonald, Mary Jo.......215 (57.1),
341 (183.1)MacDonald, Paul K. ......212 (51.17),
381 (212.23)Macedo, Stephen..... 184 (26.1), 259
(99.2), 354 (190.31), 363(205.1)
MacGilvray, Eric....... 209 (51.2), 338(176.30), 391 (218.1)
Machado, Marta Correa .............258(94.1)
Machado Farias, Jéssica...........319(162.10)
Machinist, Peter...............214 (52.2)Macias Mejia, Yoshira................305
(143.22)Mackey, Amber ................215 (55.2)Mackie, Kenneth ..........281 (117.33)Mackinnon, Emma Stone ..........239
(77.3)MacLean, Lauren M. ..... 195 (33.29),
284 (121.4), 306 (143.30), 353(190.25), 372 (209.13)
Macpherson, Andrew ....369 (206.3)Madan, Nicolas ..............263 (99.24)Madariaga, Aldo.............199 (38.13)Madeira, Mary Anne ... 327 (168.17),
372 (209.16)Madrid, Raul L. ................254 (91.9)Mady, Abdel-Fattah........284 (120.1)Maeda, Ko ......................194 (33.24)Magana, Lisa ......... 284 (121.6), 301
(142.1)Magat, Janica...............327 (168.15)Magazinnik, Asya .... 197 (38.5), 259
(98.2), 277 (117.11), 293(134.8), 334 (176.4)
Magesan, Arvind.... 200 (38.25), 217(57.12), 340 (180.1)
Magiya, Yusuf ........ 214 (51.29), 315(152.44)
Magni, Gabriele ..... 186 (26.13), 354(190.28)
Magyar, Zsuzsanna Blanka .......192(33.13), 204 (43.10)
Mahdavi, Paasha ..... 222 (62.1), 342(183.9)
Mahmood, Zuhaib Sheikh .........326(168.10)
Mahnken, Thomas G. ................328(168.20)
Mahoney, Casey ............232 (71.15)Mahoney, Charles W..................287
(122.11)Mahoney, Daniel J. ....... 391 (216.1),
397 (219.4)Mahoney, James......... 314 (152.38),
325 (167.2)Maier, Carl Georg ..........309 (152.6)Maier, Juergen .............321 (162.25)Maierean, Andreea Raluca ........308
(150.2)Maile, Uahikea ...............284 (121.4)Mainwaring, Scott........ 294 (134.11)Maione, Angela ..............195 (33.26)Majed, Rima ........... 285 (121.7), 392
(218.8)Majic, Samantha Ann ...187 (26.18),
228 (64.3), 284 (121.4)Major, Sophie.................349 (190.1)Majumdar, Medha ..........256 (91.20)Majumdar, Rajeshwari ...............195
(33.26)Mak, Maxwell H.H. ....... 352 (190.17)Makse, Todd .......... 263 (99.23), 346
(183.33)Malandrino, Anna ..........323 (163.3)Malbin, Michael J.........346 (183.32)Malejacq, Romain ..........248 (85.20)Malesevic, Sinisa...........369 (207.1)Malesky, Edmund J. .......230 (71.5),
246 (85.5), 264 (99.28), 294(134.17), 310 (152.11), 347
(183.38), 380 (212.19)Malet, Giorgio ................193 (33.15)Malik, Aditi .....................224 (63.15)Malik, Mashail Aman ....242 (77.22),
294 (134.12), 393 (218.13)Malik, Rabia ........... 211 (51.10), 318
(162.6), 389 (215.23)Malji, Andrea................ 313 (152.30)Mallinson, Daniel J ....... 220 (57.26),
263 (99.25), 292 (133.1), 310(152.10), 352 (190.18), 382
(212.29)Malloy, Tamar........... 184 (26.3), 308
(152.2), 350 (190.5)Malmin, Natasha ..........329 (168.25)Maloyed, Christie L. ........184 (26.4)Mamet, Elliot ........ 305 (143.24), 325
(168.4)Mammadov, Abbas ........324 (164.1)Mampilly, Zachariah Cherian.....187
(26.18)Manchanda, Nivi ............212 (51.17)Mancilla, Alejandra ..........191 (33.4)Mancosu, Moreno ..........273 (110.1)Mandaville, Peter Phillips..........283
(119.1)Manekin, Devorah S. .....212 (51.19)Manger, Mark S...... 199 (38.14), 247
(85.13)Mangini, Michael-David .............365
(205.13)Mangla, Akshay .............192 (33.10)Mangonnet, Jorge G.....266 (99.39),
298 (134.40)Manheim, Frank T. .......289 (122.26)Manion, Melanie Frances ..........214
(52.3), 342 (183.10)Mann, Christopher B ...330 (168.33)Manning, Eric........... 189 (27.1), 281
(117.31)Mansbridge, Jane .... 184 (26.1), 204
(43.11), 209 (49.1)Mansell, Jordan Michael ...........386
(215.6)Mansfield, Edward D. ................372
(209.17)Manson, Paul ...............313 (152.32)Mansoori, Naveed............197 (38.2)Mantena, Karuna .............197 (38.2)Manzi, Lucia.................384 (212.42)Maoz, Ifat .......................364 (205.4)Maracchione, Frank..... 361 (197.32)Maranto, Robert.............283 (118.1)
Marasa, Sabrina..... 277 (117.5), 334(175.3)
Marasco, Robyn....... 203 (43.2), 222(63.2), 356 (197.1)
Marbach, Moritz ..... 198 (38.11), 356(197.3), 380 (212.17)
Marble, William ..............234 (71.28)Marcesse, Thibaud .......392 (218.9),
393 (218.9)Marchal, Nahema........ 322 (162.26),
346 (183.34)Marchant, Emily.............300 (137.1)Marchetti, Kathleen .........196 (37.1)Marchetti, Rita ...............226 (63.23)Marcoci, Alexandru .........184 (26.3)Marcos-Marne, Hugo .....207 (43.27)Marcotte Chenard, Sophie ........325
(168.3)Mares, Isabela.............. 368 (205.29)Margalit, Yotam...... 285 (122.3), 368
(205.29), 371 (209.7)Margulies, Max Zeldes ..............224
(63.12), 328 (168.19)Margulis, Matias E. ...... 380 (212.20)Marien, Sofie....................208 (44.3)Marietta, Morgan..........395 (218.23)Marin Hellwege, Julia ......258 (92.4)Marinov, Nikolay V. ........192 (33.12)Marion, Summer ...... 243 (78.2), 289
(123.2)Mark, Brendan Skip.......232 (71.18)Markovits, Elizabeth ......385 (215.1)Markowitz, Jonathan ....212 (51.16),
217 (57.13)Markstedt, Elias .............249 (85.31)Markus, Dror Kris ............260 (99.6)Marlar, Trenton Gregory ............379
(212.13)Marona, Marjorie Correa ...........274
(111.1)Marple, Tim ....................235 (71.33)Marquardt, Kyle L. ....... 331 (168.38)Marquez, Benjamin.........227 (64.1),
243 (78.2), 284 (121.6)Marset, Mario .................317 (161.1)Marsh, Wayde ZC .........200 (38.25),
282 (117.34), 378 (212.7)Marshall, Andrew.............228 (67.1)Marshall, John ......... 254 (91.7), 350
(190.7)Marso, Lori...............230 (71.2), 268
(109.2), 334 (176.3)Martínez Bustos, Sebastián ......203
(42.1)Martel, James R..... 334 (176.2), 356
(197.1), 370 (209.3)Marten, Linna...............390 (215.31)Martin, Cathie Jo ... 212 (51.13), 319
(162.13)Martin, Christian W........275 (113.1)Martin, Gregory John .....260 (99.4),
334 (176.4)Martin, Jerry L. ..............283 (118.2)Martin, Lisa L............... 328 (168.18)Martin, Scott B.............306 (143.28)Martinek, Wendy L.........255 (91.18)Martinez, Brandi ............213 (51.24)Martinez, Gabriel E ........256 (91.21)Martinez, Michael D. ... 287 (122.17),
321 (162.23), 367 (205.21)Martinez, Ruben...........305 (143.22)Martinez, Sergi.................254 (91.8)Martinez Machain, Carla............275
(114.1)Martinez-Alvarez, Cesar B.........282
(117.36)Martinez-Ebers, Valerie J. .........256
(91.21)Martinez-Port, Lizbet Brianna ...274
(111.1)Martorano Miller, Nancy ............303
(143.15)Marwah, Inder Singh ......190 (33.1),
245 (85.2)Maschke, Karen ...............215 (54.2)Maseland, Robbert .......205 (43.12),
333 (173.1)Masket, Seth E.............313 (152.31)Maskivker, Julia .............370 (209.5)Mason, Lilliana Hall .........260 (99.3)Mason, Winter.............. 338 (176.25)
Masood, Ali Shiraz ....... 218 (57.16),304 (143.18), 395 (218.23)
Masoud, Tarek E. ...........214 (51.29)Massey, Joshua ...........279 (117.21)Masterson, Michael .......240 (77.12)Mastro, Oriana Skylar................240
(77.12), 357 (197.8)Masullo, Gina M...........314 (152.34)Masuoka, Natalie ... 264 (99.30), 305
(143.21)Masuyama, Mikitaka ......263 (99.23)Matakos, Konstantinos .............259
(98.2), 347 (183.40)Matanock, Aila M. ......... 218 (57.14),
344 (183.19), 351 (190.15), 388(215.17)
Matchett, Leah ....... 247 (85.18), 272(109.23)
Matesan, Ioana Emy ......237 (71.42)Matfess, Hilary...............187 (26.19)Mathew, Nicole Asmussen ........264
(99.31)Mathur, Sahil..................199 (38.16)Matsunaga, Miku ...........267 (107.1)Matsuo, Akitaka .............233 (71.21)Mattes, Kyle .....................245 (85.4)Mattes, Megan .................208 (44.3)Mattes, Michaela.... 193 (33.17), 295
(134.19)Matthews, Peter Hans ...............272
(109.25)Matthews, Scott .............236 (71.38)Matthewson, Donald J...............266
(99.38)Matthijs, Matthias .... 239 (77.5), 286
(122.6)Mattia, Taylor ...............375 (209.32)Mattiacci, Eleonora.......187 (26.20),
262 (99.17), 344 (183.17), 358(197.15)
Mattingly, Daniel .... 186 (26.14), 342(183.10), 365 (205.10), 392
(218.6)Matto, Elizabeth C. .........239 (77.6),
276 (116.1), 332 (170.4)Maurer, John..................397 (219.4)Mauro, Vincent ............322 (162.30)Mawalagedara, Nimendra ..........285
(121.9)Maxey, Sarah .................262 (99.17)Maxfield, Sylvia .............247 (85.14)Maxwell, Lida E........259 (98.1), 308
(152.3)Maxwell, Rahsaan.........186 (26.13),
387 (215.11)Maydom, Barry ........ 185 (26.9), 204
(43.7), 364 (205.7)Mayer, Sebastian .........395 (218.23)Mayer, William G..........383 (212.37)Mayerfeld, Jamie ... 285 (122.2), 301
(143.2)Mayka, Lindsay Rose ................302
(143.10)Mayo-Adam, Erin .........281 (117.29)Mayoral, Juan Antonio ..............231
(71.12)Mazareas, Kara ........ 221 (62.1), 238
(75.1)Mazepus, Honorata...... 331 (168.39)Mazur, Allan .....................214 (53.1)Mazur, Amy G. ......... 196 (35.1), 290
(124.1)Mazzaro, Kyong L.........235 (71.31),
282 (117.35)Mbarek, Jawaher ...........192 (33.11)McAlexander, Richard ...............296
(134.25), 320 (162.16)McAllister, Ian ................265 (99.34)McArthur, Daniel..........329 (168.26)McBrayer, Markie...........274 (112.1)McCabe, Katherine .........216 (57.3),
257 (91.27), 277 (117.8), 331(168.35)
McCabe, Stefan ..... 194 (33.25), 250(85.33), 306 (143.26)
McCambly, Heather .......293 (134.7)McCann, James A........377 (209.43)McCann, Michael W. ... 345 (183.28),
394 (218.16)McCarthy, Gerard ..........357 (197.7)
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414 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
McCarthy, Lauren ....... 319 (162.11),395 (218.21)
McCartney, Alison RiosMillett ...... 276 (116.1), 340 (178.3)
McCarty, Nolan ..............371 (209.7)McCauley, John F. ........249 (85.27),
257 (91.29), 382 (212.32)McClain, Paula D. .... 238 (75.3), 349
(189.2)McClean, Charles ..........187 (26.22)McClellan, Oliver ...........225 (63.21)McClendon, Gwyneth ......203 (42.2)McClintock, Cynthia .....256 (91.22),
297 (134.34)McConnaughy, Corrine M..........377
(211.1)McCormick, John P. ......318 (162.2)McCormick, William A. ..............305
(143.23)McCoy, Jennifer.............317 (160.1)McCrain, Josh........ 193 (33.18), 339
(178.2), 393 (218.15)McCrary, Lorraine Krall .............215
(57.1)McDermott, Rose..........205 (43.14),
303 (143.14)McDonagh, Eileen ........218 (57.17),
293 (134.7), 345 (183.24)McDonald, Jared...... 191 (33.7), 282
(117.34), 392 (218.4)McDonald, Michael P. ....263 (99.26)McDonald, Patrick J. .....255 (91.12)McDonald, Taylor R .......201 (38.29)McDoom, Omar Shahabudin .....287
(122.12)McDowell, Daniel ...........262 (99.15)McElwain, Kenneth Mori ...........274
(110.5)McGee, Zachary...........374 (209.25)McGhee, Eric ......... 256 (91.22), 346
(183.33)McGowan, Tara ............354 (190.29)McGrath, Robert J. ...... 352 (190.18)McGraw, Johnny..........367 (205.23)McGregor, Shannon C ...............250
(85.33), 330 (168.35), 347(183.35)
McGroarty, Emmett James........184(26.4)
McGuire, Cydney Marie .............257(91.27)
McGuire, Steven ...... 257 (92.2), 362(198.1)
McHugh, Mary A. ..... 239 (77.6), 304(143.17), 339 (178.3)
McIvor, David W....... 184 (26.4), 276(117.3)
McKay, Amy Melissa .................281(117.32), 389 (215.26)
McKay, Lawrence ....... 270 (109.11),321 (162.23)
McKean, Benjamin..........239 (77.3),377 (212.2), 392 (218.3)
McKenna, Bruce ............261 (99.14)McKenna, Elizabeth.......261 (99.11)McKibbin, Mark...... 249 (85.30), 348
(187.1)McKie, Kristin ................236 (71.41)McKiernan, Katherine Marie......252
(88.1), 278 (117.13), 379(212.15), 380 (212.15)
McKinney, Claire C. ......350 (190.8),378 (212.3)
McLauchlin, Theodore D. ..........262(99.20)
McLaughlin, Alex...........354 (191.2)McLean, Elena V. ......... 320 (162.14)McLean, Scott L...............183 (23.1)McMahon, Patrice ..........211 (51.12)McMann, Kelly M. ......... 188 (26.25),
198 (38.11), 202 (41.1), 220(57.26), 322 (162.30)
McManus, Ian P........... 297 (134.32),323 (163.1), 384 (212.43)
McMenamin, Iain............290 (124.1)McMillion, Christopher P. ..........281
(117.28)McMurray, Sophie........ 279 (117.21)McMurry, Nina.......... 221 (62.1), 329
(168.26), 357 (197.7)McMurtry, Caitlin ...........266 (99.41)
McNamara, Kathleen R..............357(197.10)
McNeil, Andrew .............326 (168.8)McPartland, Thomas J. .............316
(153.2)McQueen, Alison ..... 191 (33.2), 245
(85.3), 334 (176.1)McQueen, Shannon ......202 (38.34),
318 (162.5), 337 (176.23), 362(199.3)
McWagner, Kyle....... 228 (66.1), 260(99.6), 287 (122.17)
McWard, Andrew ........ 279 (117.19),291 (130.1)
McWilliams, Susan ..... 391 (215.32),395 (218.26)
Mead, Samuel WarrenWashburn....................267 (100.3)
Meade, Rachel ....... 302 (143.4), 337(176.23)
Mealy, Kimberly ....... 209 (50.2), 238(76.8), 245 (84.2), 301 (142.1),
307 (149.1), 316 (155.5), 349(189.2)
Means, Taneisha Nicole ............394(218.17)
Mecham, Quinn ..... 227 (63.28), 312(152.22), 360 (197.23)
Mechkova, Valeriya......321 (162.22)Meckling, Jonas...........306 (143.27)Meckstroth, Christopher ...........239
(77.2), 253 (91.1)Medenica, Vladimir Enrique ......313
(152.29)Medina, Alejandro ....... 296 (134.26)Meeks, Lindsey..............213 (51.23)Meguid, Bonnie M...........215 (54.4),
276 (115.1)Mehlhaff, Isaac ............322 (162.30)Mehmood, Sultan .... 210 (51.4), 225
(63.20), 242 (77.22)Mehrdad, Navid ..... 194 (33.23), 249
(85.30), 299 (134.43), 319(162.11), 342 (183.6), 378
(212.8), 386 (215.7)Mehta, Rupal........ 279 (117.21), 358
(197.16)Meier, Anna.................. 271 (109.18)Meier, Ken ....................296 (134.28)Meierding, Emily..........278 (117.12)Meijers, Maurits .............261 (99.13)Meireles, Fernando......296 (134.26)Meisels, Mellissa ...........275 (113.2)Mejia, Armando Xavier ..............227
(63.30), 324 (166.1)Melchiorre, Luke............198 (38.11)Melendez, Carlos ......... 310 (152.12)Melin, Molly M..............344 (183.18)Melkote, Meghna Parvati ...........304
(143.18)Mellon, Jonathan ......... 272 (109.22)Melo, Marcus Andre ......356 (197.5)Menchaca, Marcos.......375 (209.35)Menchaca-Bagnulo, Ashleen ....221
(58.6)Menchik, Jeremy .............203 (43.1)Mendelberg, Tali ..............203 (42.2)Mendenhall, Elizabeth ...275 (112.2)Mendez, Fernando ....... 344 (183.20)Mendez, Geidy Soraida .............350
(190.5)Mendez, Jeanette Morehouse ...238
(76.9)Mendez, Matthew......... 299 (134.42)Mendez, Nathalie ..... 258 (94.1), 321
(162.21)Mendoza, Mary Anne......208 (44.5),
238 (76.3), 306 (143.29), 355(192.3), 396 (218.28)
Menendez, Irene ...... 230 (71.5), 309(152.6)
Meng, Anne............ 188 (26.26), 217(57.10), 338 (176.29), 371
(209.10), 392 (218.8)Meng, Tianguang..........186 (26.11),
234 (71.30), 310 (152.11), 319(162.11), 364 (205.7), 371
(209.11)Menninga, Elizabeth J. ..............344
(183.18)Menon, Anil.................. 320 (162.19)
Menton, Jane Darby ......194 (33.19)Menzel, Annie .......... 230 (71.2), 378
(212.3)Merand, Frederic ..... 196 (35.1), 286
(122.6), 314 (152.36)Meraz, Sharon.............. 395 (218.25)Meriläinen, Niina..............210 (51.6)Merivaki, Thessalia......313 (152.32)Merolla, Jennifer L..........216 (57.3),
249 (85.28)Merrell, Brandon.... 217 (57.10), 271
(109.18), 295 (134.21), 381(212.26)
Merriam, Jesse ................237 (72.2)Mershon, Carol A. ........192 (33.13),
238 (75.3), 349 (189.2), 364(205.5)
Mertha, Andrew ...........327 (168.16)Messerschmidt, Luca Elias .......270
(109.14)Messina, Anthony M......335 (176.6)Messing, Solomon....... 354 (190.29)Metinsoy, Saliha ............212 (51.14)Metten, Anne .................275 (113.1)Metternich, Nils W. ........348 (186.1)Mettler, Suzanne .... 201 (38.26), 260
(99.5), 296 (134.27), 354(191.1)
Metz, Tamara..................378 (212.3)Metzger, Shawna K........392 (218.7)Meyer, John M. ..............397 (219.3)Meyer, Madeleine...........340 (178.3)Meyer-Sahling, Jan-Hinrik .........242
(77.20)Meyerrose, Anna M. .... 396 (218.29)Mhajne, Anwar............. 347 (183.39)Michel, Julian...............299 (134.41)Michel-Luviano, Veronica ..........244
(82.1), 258 (94.1), 368 (205.27)Michelitch, Kristin Grace...........254
(91.7)Michelson, Melissa R. ...............202
(38.34), 238 (76.8), 256 (91.23),305 (143.22), 354 (190.28)
Michener, Jamila D. ......220 (57.28),242 (77.24), 257 (91.28), 260
(99.5), 339 (176.31), 385(214.2)
Micheni, Makena Nyawira .........271(109.20)
Micinski, Nicholas R......195 (33.30)Mickelson, Roslyn Arlin ............289
(122.26)Mickey, Robert.................227 (64.1)Micozzi, Juan Pablo ..... 233 (71.21),
381 (212.27)Mignozzetti, Umberto .....246 (85.7),
309 (152.5), 370 (209.6)Mijs, Jonathan Jan Benjamin....234
(71.30)Mikiya, Yuki....................300 (140.1)Mikkelsen, Kim Sass .....242 (77.20)Mikulaschek, Christoph.............186
(26.15)MIlanese, Juan Pablo ................303
(143.10)Milbank, John ..................214 (52.2)Mildenberger, Matto......235 (71.33),
265 (99.36)Miler, Kris............... 206 (43.18), 303
(143.16), 304 (143.16)Miles, Matthew R ... 234 (71.28), 245
(85.4), 344 (183.21), 383(212.34)
Milikh, Arthur ......... 266 (100.1), 332(169.1), 348 (184.1)
Miljanich, Chris..............235 (71.33)Milkis, Sidney M. ...........342 (183.5)Millar, Katharine M....... 287 (122.16)Millard, Matthew ..............237 (74.1)Miller, Carly Maya ........376 (209.40)Miller, Char Roone...........191 (33.4)Miller, David Ryan .........218 (57.16)Miller, Douglas...............274 (110.5)Miller, Edward Alan ........257 (92.1),
333 (174.1)Miller, Erin........................220 (58.1)Miller, Joshua Preston ..............350
(190.8)Miller, Kathryn Elizabeth ...........207
(43.29)
IndexofParticipants
Miller, Lisa L. .................293 (134.8)Miller, Michael K. ......... 396 (218.29)Miller, Patrick R. ..........282 (117.34)Miller, Susan Marie ...... 329 (168.25)Miller, Ted H. ....................245 (85.3)Millies, Steven P. ... 267 (100.2), 305
(143.23)Milliff, Aidan............. 243 (79.1), 339
(178.2), 393 (218.13)Milner, Helen V......... 183 (21.2), 223
(63.10), 341 (183.4), 372(209.17)
Milonopoulos, Theo..... 358 (197.15)Milstein, Brian M............349 (190.4)Min, Eric............... 351 (190.14), 366
(205.17), 381 (212.22)Minaudier, Clement..........259 (98.2)Mineshima-Lowe, Dale ....208 (44.3)Minhas, Shahryar ............203 (42.1)Minkov, Svetozar ...........348 (184.1)Minkowitz, Honey ..........333 (174.1)Minnella, Carlotta Maria ............361
(197.30)Minnich, John David ...336 (176.11)Minozzi, William........... 304 (143.16)Mir, Asfandyar Ali ..........212 (51.18)Miratrix, Luke.................364 (205.6)Mirilovic, Nikola ..... 200 (38.24), 249
(85.27), 377 (209.43)Misawa, Buba ..................228 (64.5)Mistree, Dinsha FarrokhAllen ..........................387 (215.10)
Mitchell, Austin Michael ............203(43.3), 364 (205.8)
Mitchell, Charles L........200 (38.25),241 (77.18), 244 (80.1), 268
(107.2), 302 (143.8), 324(165.2), 359 (197.21), 367
(205.24)Mitchell, Colleen ..............253 (91.1)Mitchell, Jocelyn Sage ..............214
(51.29), 239 (77.6)Mitchell, Matthew I...........222 (62.1)Mitchell, Sara McLaughlin.........373
(209.23), 382 (212.30)Mitteregger, Reto ......... 375 (209.35)Mittiga, Ross.......... 354 (191.2), 397
(219.3)Mitton, Kieran ................255 (91.14)Miwa, Hirofumi............. 352 (190.20)Miyano, Sayumi .............240 (77.10)Mizuno, Takayuki......... 366 (205.17)Mo, Cecilia Hyunjung ...220 (57.28),
242 (77.22), 272 (109.23), 306(143.25)
Moehlecke, Carolina..... 204 (43.12),295 (134.17)
Moehler, Devra Coren................298(134.39)
Moffett, Ken ......... 331 (168.36), 374(209.26)
Moffett, Michael .............186 (26.14)Moffett-Bateau, Alexandra.........196
(37.1)Mohamed, Ahmed .........251 (85.40)Mohammadi, Saeedeh ...............195
(33.26)Mohmand, Shandana Khan.......345
(183.27)Moise, Alexandru Daniel ...........384
(212.43)Moktan, Sayam ..............335 (176.7)Molchanov, Stan ..............244 (81.1)Molina, Angel Luis....... 296 (134.28)Moncada, Eduardo .......233 (71.20),
239 (77.7), 342 (183.7), 350(190.10)
Moncagatta, Paolo....... 310 (152.12)Money, Jeannette ..........214 (51.28)Mongrain, Philippe ..........208 (44.4)Moniz, Philip ....................191 (33.7)Monroe, Kristen Renwick ..........201
(38.28), 236 (71.36)Monroe, Steve.............. 366 (205.19)Monshipouri, Mahmood ............201
(38.28), 373 (209.22)Monson, Quin ...... 344 (183.20), 377
(211.1)Mont'Alverne, Camila ...235 (71.32),
383 (212.37)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 415KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Montagnes, Brendan Pablo.......249(85.30), 259 (98.2)
Monten, Jonathan..........262 (99.17)Montero, Sergio ..... 249 (85.30), 260
(99.4)Montgomery, Evan B. ................373
(209.22)Montgomery, Jacob M. ..............376
(209.36)Montoya, Celeste M. .......196 (36.1),
221 (58.5), 264 (99.29), 290(123.4), 301 (142.3)
Montoya Garcia, Ana Maria.......218(57.14)
Mookherjee, Dilip.............216 (57.7)Moon, Chungshik ..........266 (99.39)Moon, Phoebe Woorim....208 (44.1)Mooney, Christopher Z..............297
(134.30)Moore, Casey Kennedy .............314
(152.34)Moore, Margaret ............268 (109.3)Moore, Matthew J. ....... 394 (218.17)Moore, Nina M. ..............234 (71.27)Moore, Wayne D. ......... 339 (176.32)Mor, Guy ..........................260 (99.6)moradi, parham .............195 (33.26)Moraguez, Ashley ..........220 (57.26)Moral, Mert............. 194 (33.24), 346
(183.33), 367 (205.22), 390(215.27)
Moran, Rachel Elizabeth ...........265(99.37)
Moran Tobar, Azucena....209 (49.1),349 (190.4)
Moreau, Julie .................242 (77.21)Moreira, Natalia .............392 (218.7)Moreira, Thiago de MirandaQueiroz .......................356 (197.3)
Morell, Sara..................352 (190.19)Morgan, Kimberly J. ..... 218 (57.15),
250 (85.36)Morgan, Samuel.............324 (165.1)Morgan-Collins, Mona ...............320
(162.19), 384 (212.41)Morgan-Jones, Edward ...243 (79.1)Morgenbesser, Lee ......371 (209.10)Morin, Jason L.............305 (143.21)Morone, James Evans...............277
(117.10)Morris, Irwin L. .... 374 (209.29), 392
(218.4)Morris, Kevin Thomas ...............219
(57.19), 309 (152.9), 360(197.24)
Morris, Marcella ...........303 (143.15)Morris, Stephen Edward............318
(162.4)Morrisey, Will .................397 (219.4)Morrison, James Ashley ...........357
(197.10)Morrison, Jeffry H............189 (27.2)Morrison, Kelly Elizabeth ..........199
(38.15)Morrison, Megan..........299 (134.43)Morriss, Andrew ............261 (99.14)Morrow, James D...........364 (205.5)Morse, Julia C........ 232 (71.14), 261
(99.14), 373 (209.18), 393(218.11)
Morse, Yonatan L.............240 (77.8)Morucci, Marco ........223 (63.7), 318
(162.8)Moscoso, Manuel ........328 (168.23)Moseley, Mason Wallace ...........207
(43.26), 357 (197.6)Moser, Robert G. ... 194 (33.22), 223
(63.8), 346 (183.31)Moses, Laura .................341 (182.1)Moshref, Kamran ...........392 (218.3)Mosimann, Nadja......... 375 (209.35)Moskop, Wynne Walker.............308
(152.2), 325 (168.1)Moskowitz, Daniel J. ...304 (143.16)Mosley, Layna........ 262 (99.15), 278
(117.17)Mosqueda, Teresa .........349 (188.1)Moss, Zoe ......................276 (117.3)Motin, Dylan...................324 (165.1)
Motta, Matthew P. .........188 (26.27),244 (80.2), 263 (99.26), 282
(117.39), 353 (190.24)Moura de Oliveira, Tassiana......329
(168.27), 344 (183.23)Mourad, Lama........ 195 (33.30), 284
(121.7), 327 (168.14)Mousa, Salma ................266 (99.42)Moy, Bryant James........274 (112.1)Moya, Samantha ..........379 (212.13)Mozaffar, Shaheen ....... 367 (205.21)Mrchkovska, Nela ........313 (152.30)Mrovlje, Masa.................285 (122.2)Much, Melina ........... 215 (55.2), 260
(99.6)Muchlinski, David ....198 (38.9), 301
(140.1)Mudaliar, Praneeta.........226 (63.25)Muddiman, Ashley....... 395 (218.25)Mueller, Julie L. .............391 (217.2)Mueller-Redwood, Susanne ......311
(152.16)Muendler, Marc-Andreas ...........336
(176.11)Mugge, Liza .....................190 (32.2)Muhab, Norhan ..............195 (33.30)Muhtadi, Burhanuddin...............285
(122.3), 293 (134.10)Muirhead, Russell............222 (63.3)Mukherjee, Chirasree ....199 (38.18)Mukherjee, Shivaji ...........216 (57.4)Mukhin, Nikolai ................230 (71.7)Mukhopadhyay, Dipali ...............205
(43.17), 351 (190.15)Muller, James W. ...........397 (219.4)Mullin, Megan ........ 202 (38.33), 226
(63.25), 235 (71.33)Mulroy, Quinn W. ...........293 (134.7)Munger, Kevin........ 265 (99.37), 354
(190.29)Munis, Kal ......................378 (212.7)Muno, Wolfgang ..........312 (152.26)Munoz, Phillip .............. 332 (168.42)Muradova, Lala ..............277 (117.8)Murakawa, Naomi .........214 (51.27),
221 (58.5)Murali, Kanta ...............387 (215.10)Muraoka, Taishi ...........376 (209.36)Murdie, Amanda .... 317 (161.1), 336
(176.13)Muriaas, Ragnhild Louise .........315
(152.42)Murib, Zein............. 242 (77.21), 301
(142.1)Murillo, Ana ...................292 (133.2)Murphy, Andrew R. ..........222 (63.1)Murphy, Dawn C. ......... 312 (152.21)Murphy, Gary .................290 (124.1)Murphy, Michael P. A. .....246 (85.9),
332 (170.1)Murr, Andreas Erwin ......243 (78.4),
369 (206.4)Murray, Gregg R. ...........386 (215.6)Murray, Leah A. ..... 317 (159.4), 332
(170.4)Murtazashvili, Jennifer Brick ....328
(168.23)Musayev, Jahandar...... 395 (218.22)Musgrave, Paul .... 286 (122.10), 320
(162.16)Musselin, Christine..........196 (35.1)Muste, Christopher........219 (57.22)Musthaq, Fathimath.........258 (94.1)Mustillo, Thomas ...........211 (51.11)Mutyaba, Michael...........250 (85.37)Mutz, Diana C. ......... 203 (42.2), 378
(212.7)Mvukiyehe, Eric N........359 (197.18)Myers, C. Daniel .... 235 (71.31), 392
(218.4)Myers, Emily ..................213 (51.23)Myers, Peter C. ................237 (72.2)Myerscough, Rhea.........202 (38.33)Mylonas, Harris ...............211 (51.7)Myrick, Rachel Maureen............320
(162.17)MYUNG, SUKYOUNG.....195 (33.26)Müller, Stefan........... 190 (28.2), 217
(57.9)Müller-Crepon, Carl .......205 (43.16)
N
Nachlis, Herschel .... 216 (57.5), 221(61.3)
Nachman, Lev................256 (91.23)Nackenoff, Carol...... 216 (57.5), 302
(143.6)Nacol, Emily.............191 (33.3), 239
(77.1), 268 (109.4), 284 (120.1)Nadash, Pamela....... 257 (92.1), 333
(174.1)Nadeau, Nikki...............347 (183.36)Nadeau, Richard ..........390 (215.28)Nadler, Anna-Lena .........227 (63.30)Nafa, Adam Jordan........225 (63.19)Nagler, Jonathan ..... 185 (26.6), 195
(33.26), 200 (38.19), 216 (57.6),266 (99.42), 288 (122.20), 330
(168.34), 360 (197.26), 395(218.22)
Nagler, Rebekah ............188 (26.27)Nai, Alessandro ...........321 (162.25)Nail, Stephanie A.......... 187 (26.22),
198 (38.10), 219 (57.22), 225(63.21), 332 (172.1), 390
(215.27)Naimark-Rowse, Benjamin R ....262
(99.21)Nair, Gautam ..................261 (99.10)Nakaguma, Marcos Yamada......309
(152.5)Nakajo, Miwa .................274 (110.5)Nakanishi, Takafumi ..... 188 (26.23),
319 (162.8)Nalepa, Monika ...... 235 (71.35), 242
(77.20), 386 (215.4)Nalewajko, Kasia ...........261 (99.13)Nall, Clayton M. ....... 229 (69.2), 263
(99.25), 312 (152.27), 317(159.1), 324 (164.2), 329
(168.28), 344 (183.22)Nam, Hannah ........... 216 (57.3), 318
(162.5), 360 (197.25)Nam, Hoshik ..................224 (63.13)Nam, Jiwon ....................277 (117.8)Namazi, Rasoul..............377 (210.1)Nanes, Matthew ...........280 (117.24)Napolio, Nicholas G. ...359 (197.20)Nascimento da Silva, Thiago ....296
(134.26)Naseemullah, Adnan .....397 (219.2)Naseer, Shaheen.... 242 (77.22), 389
(215.23)Nath, Anusha ...................216 (57.7)Nathan, Charles .............284 (120.1)Nathan, Noah ......... 250 (85.37), 293
(134.6)Naurin, Daniel ........ 225 (63.17), 344
(183.23)Naurin, Elin ............ 249 (85.31), 359
(197.19)Naz, Farhat...................313 (152.30)Nazrullaeva, Eugenia.................371
(209.10)Neafie, Jessica Elizabeth ..........282
(117.34)Neame, Alexandra Catherine ....341
(183.2), 378 (212.4)Neblo, Michael .............304 (143.16)Nederman, Cary J..........397 (219.6)Neeman, Ari ............. 222 (62.2), 314
(152.39), 350 (190.8)Neill, Lorcan ................390 (215.29)Nellis, Gareth ........... 183 (24.1), 293
(134.6), 324 (165.1), 340(180.1)
Nelsen, Brent F. ........... 319 (162.13)Nelsen, Matthew D.......375 (209.32)Nelson, Amy J. ............328 (168.20)Nelson, Austin .............374 (209.28)Nelson, Chad ...............380 (212.21)Nelson, Kjersten ............233 (71.24)Nelson, Michael J. ........200 (38.21),
218 (57.16)Nelson, Roy C................341 (181.1)Nelson, Stephen Craig ..............212
(51.14)Nelson-Nunez, Jami .......239 (77.7),
385 (214.3)
Nemerever, Zoe ... 374 (209.29), 389(215.21)
Nemeth, Stephen C. ... 296 (134.23),358 (197.14)
Nershi, Karen......... 261 (99.14), 300(139.1)
Neumann, Manuel..........285 (121.9)Neumeier, Stefanie ......338 (176.28)Neundorf, Anja .... 272 (109.24), 350
(190.7), 371 (209.10)Neuner, Fabian Guy..... 353 (190.23)Neupert-Wentz, Clara ...224 (63.15),
264 (99.28), 381 (212.25)Newburg, James............364 (205.4)Newby, Kara.................359 (197.21)Newland, Sara A. ..... 227 (64.2), 243
(78.3), 335 (176.8)Newman, Abraham .........217 (57.9),
373 (209.19), 387 (215.12), 393(218.11)
Newsome, Scott..... 275 (113.2), 324(164.1)
Newton, Monique...........309 (152.9)Nexon, Daniel H....... 208 (45.1), 247
(85.15), 295 (134.20), 314(152.36)
Ng, Ka Lun.....................227 (63.28)Nguyen, Hung Hoang Viet.........326
(168.10)Ni Aolain, Fionnuala ....394 (218.19)Nichols, Robert..............325 (168.4)Nicholson-Crotty, Jill......229 (67.2),
296 (134.28)Nickels, Ashley E. ....... 329 (168.28)Nickerson, David W. .... 376 (209.38)Nicolaidis, Kalypso...... 294 (134.16)Nicoli, Francesco...........261 (99.13)Niedzwiecki, Sara .... 216 (57.8), 335
(176.6)Nielsen, Rasmus Kleis ..............235
(71.32)Nielsen, Richard ............350 (190.6)Nielson, Daniel L. ......... 240 (77.11),
254 (91.10), 311 (152.17)Niemeyer, Simon J. .........184 (26.3)Nieto Matiz, Camilo ..... 328 (168.22)Nikolenyi, Csaba..............228 (65.1)Nilsson, Desirée ..........271 (109.21)Niou, Emerson M. S......194 (33.24),
230 (71.3)Nishikawa, Masaru ........333 (173.1)Niven, David .......... 213 (51.24), 219
(57.21), 304 (143.20)Nix, Cara Mae ................342 (183.6)Noesselt, Maren Eilika Nele ......369
(207.2), 381 (212.24)Noh, Yuree ............. 214 (51.29), 322
(162.29)Nokken, Timothy P. ......193 (33.18),
234 (71.27), 386 (215.4)Nolette, Paul ..................323 (163.4)Nones, Nicola ..................251 (87.2)Nong, Xin .......................348 (187.1)Nonnemacher, Jeffrey ...246 (85.12)Noor, Salih O. ........ 202 (38.32), 307
(147.1)Noort, Sam van...... 371 (209.8), 384
(212.41)Nordyke, Shane ....... 209 (48.1), 293
(134.9)Norman, Julie .............. 306 (143.30)Norman, Kelsey P. .........195 (33.30)Norris, Andrew ..............301 (143.1)Norris, Haley V ............297 (134.32)Norris, Pippa..................256 (91.24)Norrlof, Carla .................247 (85.16)Northmore-Ball, K........371 (209.10)Norton, Sean..................300 (140.1)Noury, Abdul G. ...........294 (134.15)Novaes, Lucas M. ........353 (190.22)Novak, William J. .............198 (38.8)Novkov, Julie L. ....... 221 (58.5), 301
(142.3)Novotna, Tereza..... 291 (128.1), 343
(183.12), 387 (215.15)Nowacki, Tobias ............194 (33.22)Nteta, Tatishe Mavovosi ............395
(218.21)Nuamah, Sally.......... 190 (31.1), 241
(77.16), 352 (190.21)
X : 25749$CHIX09-28-21 23:19:53 Page 416Layout: 11437P : Even
416 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Nugent, Elizabeth R........203 (42.2),237 (71.42), 396 (218.32)
Nunes, Felipe...............390 (215.28)Nunez, Lucas ...................243 (78.2)Nunnally, Shayla C. ..... 289 (122.26)Nusbaum, Rachel ..........370 (209.4)Nwakanma, Pamela ..... 315 (152.42)Nwankwor, Chiedo..........258 (94.1),
315 (152.42), 355 (192.3), 362(199.1)
Nwokora, Zim...................220 (58.1)Nyenhuis, Robert E .......301 (142.2)Nygård, Håvard Mokleiv ............232
(71.18)Nyhan, Brendan..... 188 (26.23), 390
(215.28)Nyholt, Niels ..................333 (172.1)Nyrup, Jacob ......... 226 (63.27), 248
(85.23), 365 (205.12)
O
O' Brian, Neil ......... 219 (57.22), 305(143.24)
O' Brien, Shannon Bow.............255(91.15)
O'Brien, Diana Z. ........ 345 (183.27),372 (209.16), 387 (215.11)
O'Brien, Kevin J.............335 (176.8)O'Brien-Udry, Cleo Marie...........186
(26.15), 285 (122.3), 339(178.2), 351 (190.14)
O'Brochta, William..........216 (57.6),367 (205.24)
O'Bryan, Joan Eleanor ..............325(167.1)
O'Byrne, Sarah ..............194 (33.21)O'Donnelll, Rachel .......321 (162.22)O'Grady, Tom .................236 (71.38)O'Kane, Chris ..................203 (43.2)O'Loughlin, Ben..... 219 (57.23), 297
(134.31)O'Neal, Rachel .............379 (212.13)Oates, Sarah A. ..... 235 (71.31), 310
(152.14), 347 (183.35)Oatley, Thomas............279 (117.17)Obermeier, Nina.......... 279 (117.18),
339 (178.2)Obert, Jonathan..... 195 (33.28), 205
(43.15)Obydenkova, Anastassia V. ......390
(215.30)Ocampo, Angela Ximena...........389
(215.24)Och, Malliga ........... 213 (51.23), 234
(71.25), 290 (123.4), 394(218.20)
Ochoa Espejo, Paulina ..............209(51.1), 268 (109.3)
Odell, Rachel Esplin ........208 (45.1)Oden, Ayla .....................356 (197.2)Oduor, Reginald MJ.......274 (111.3)Oduro, Alfred ...............347 (183.41)Oeri, Fintan Damien .... 313 (152.27)Oestman, Jared ...........358 (197.15)Offer-Westort, Molly Rachael ....198
(38.10), 331 (168.40)Ofosu, George Kwaku ...............195
(33.29), 289 (122.25)Ogden, Benjamin..... 215 (57.2), 290
(125.2), 309 (152.5)Ognyanova, Katherine...............219
(57.23), 265 (99.34)Oh, Seung-Youn ............231 (71.13)Oh, Soo Min.................327 (168.13)Ohberg, Patrik ....... 213 (51.21), 359
(197.19)OKAMOTO, HIROSHI .................326
(168.10)Oker, Ibrahim ...............282 (117.38)Oklobdzija, Stan Nguyen...........215
(56.2)Okolikj, Martin .............389 (215.25)Oksamytna, Kseniya ...390 (215.30)Olaniyan, Azeez O. .........209 (46.1),
237 (73.1)Older, Malka ...................334 (176.1)Olejníková, Lenka ........287 (122.16)Olesker, Ronnie May .......189 (28.1)Olimpieva, Evgenia...... 354 (190.27)
Oliveira, Camile ...........394 (218.19)Oliveira, Fernanda ....... 367 (205.25)Oliveira, Maria Leticia Claro deFaria ............................392 (218.7)
Oliveira, Rodrigo de Abreu .......369(206.2)
Olivella, Santiago ............203 (42.1)Oliver, Steven Matthew .............185
(26.10)Oliveros, Virginia..........211 (51.11),
371 (209.12)Olmeda, Juan Cruz.........216 (57.8),
217 (57.8)Olofsson, Kristin ...........268 (108.1)Olsen, Asmus Leth......377 (209.42)Olson, Kevin ..................370 (209.3)Olson, Michael P. .........345 (183.25)Olson, Philip Robert ......277 (117.5)Olson, Richard S. ..........200 (38.20)On, Stephen Siu Kay ......184 (26.4),
208 (44.5), 268 (109.5)Onakpoya, Lulu ...............243 (79.1)Ondercin, Heather L ........215 (55.2)Ondetti, Gabriel ...........278 (117.14)Ong, Jiayun Elvin ......... 185 (26.10),
208 (44.5), 227 (63.29)Ong, Lynette H...............240 (77.13)Ong Whaley, Carah........332 (170.4)Ono, Yoshikuni ..............233 (71.21)Onuch, Olga............. 204 (43.9), 319
(162.10)Opalo, Ken Ochieng' ......240 (77.8),
338 (176.29), 379 (212.15)Opertti, Martín.......... 204 (43.7), 211
(51.11)Ophir, Yotam ..................219 (57.23)Oppenheimer, Harry ......247 (85.15)Oprea, Alexandra..... 184 (26.3), 276
(117.1), 370 (209.2)Ordonez, Martin ........... 304 (143.19)Orenstein, Mitchell A.....261 (99.13)Orhan, Yunus E ........... 314 (152.37)Orozco Mendoza, ElvaFabiola ..........................230 (71.2)
Orr, Lilla .........................309 (152.9)Orrego-Torres, Ely ........276 (117.2),
334 (176.2)Orren, Karen ....................239 (77.1)Ortbals, Candice D. ........210 (51.6),
389 (215.23)Ortega Poveda, PabloAlberto ......................345 (183.29)
Osada, Hiroki ........... 228 (66.2), 347(183.39)
Oser, Jennifer ...... 303 (143.12), 389(215.25)
Osipian, Ararat L. ............223 (63.9)Oskarsson, Sven ...........251 (85.41)Oskooii, Kassra AR ......200 (38.25),
305 (143.22), 330 (168.31)Osmundsen, Mathias.................330
(168.34)Osorio, Eliza ................321 (162.24)Osorio, Javier ........ 263 (99.22), 365
(205.9)Osorio, Maricruz Ariana ............238
(76.9), 290 (123.4), 330(168.30), 334 (175.1)
Osorio Michel, Daniela ..............285(121.9)
Ost, David ................ 228 (64.4), 361(197.29)
Ostermann, Susan L .....192 (33.10)Otlan, Yana ....................217 (57.10)Otteni, Cyrill.................389 (215.23)Ou, Kai ...........................356 (197.3)Ouyang, Yu .............. 183 (23.1), 323
(164.1)Overbeck, Maximilian ................367
(205.21)Overfield, Andrew P .... 280 (117.25)Owen, Erica ......... 270 (109.14), 295
(134.17), 378 (212.8)Owen, Lucas..................340 (180.1)Owen, Rose ...................308 (152.3)Owens, Michael Leo ......285 (122.4)Owolabi, Kunle ................211 (51.8)Owsiak, Andrew...........373 (209.23)Oxendine, Alina ....... 254 (91.6), 318
(162.5)Ozduzen, Ozge ................209 (45.2)
Ozel, Isik D.....................274 (110.4)Ozer, Adam L .................235 (71.31)Ozkan, Ozgur ...............326 (168.12)Ozkurt, Seyfullah ...........192 (33.12)Ozturk, Ahmet Erdi......346 (183.30)Ozturk, Aykut ...............272 (109.24)
P
Pérez, Daniel Royuela ...............312(152.24)
Pérez Bentancur, Verónica........261(99.11)
Pérez Rajó, Juan .........270 (109.13)Paarlberg, Michael Ahn .............223
(63.6), 330 (168.30)Pachano, Simón ..............190 (28.3)Pacheco, Julianna .........257 (91.27)Pacheco, Tainá Souza .....230 (71.5)Pacheco-Vega, Raul ......284 (121.6)Paci, Simone..................286 (122.5)Paczynska, Agnieszka...............279
(117.19)Padar, Zahra ..................195 (33.26)Padilla, Javier ..................220 (58.1)Padmanabhan, Deepika.............217
(57.8), 331 (168.37)Pagán Sánchez, AntonioJosé ............................205 (43.13)
Pagatpatan, Jemilah.... 366 (205.16)Page, Douglas ...............333 (172.1)Page, Scott E .................341 (182.1)Paglayan, Agustina S ................315
(152.45)Paik, Christopher......... 272 (109.23)Paine, Jack ............ 202 (38.32), 253
(91.5), 293 (134.4), 353(190.27), 371 (209.10), 392
(218.8)Palermo, Carlo Maria....291 (128.1),
314 (152.39)Paller, Jeffrey W.............274 (112.1)Pallitto, Robert Michael .............266
(99.38), 296 (134.29)Palmer, Marshall ..........286 (122.10)Palmer, Ruth ..................250 (85.32)Palmer-Rubin, Brian ......386 (215.9)Palmtag, Tabea ............270 (109.14)Palonen, Emilia................209 (45.2)Pampinella, Stephen .....212 (51.17)Pamuk, Zeynep ..............349 (189.3)Pan, Chaohong ............311 (152.21)Pan, Jennifer ....... 298 (134.39), 327
(168.16)Pan, Pengshan ............319 (162.12)Panagia, Davide..... 284 (121.3), 308
(152.1), 334 (176.1), 385(215.2)
Panagiotidou, Georgia ....185 (26.7)Pandya, Sonal S. ......... 294 (134.17)Pangle, Lorraine ............370 (209.2)Paniagua, Victoria ...........222 (63.5)Panov, Trajche Z. ...........224 (63.16)Papcke, Luise ................308 (152.1)Papp, Zsófia.................383 (212.35)Paraschiv, Anca Maria...............249
(85.29), 270 (109.12)Pardelli, Giuliana .............210 (51.4)Pardos-Prado, Sergi ... 321 (162.20),
350 (190.7)Parens, Joshua S. .........377 (210.1)Parent, Joseph M. ....... 381 (212.23)Parente, Francesca.......199 (38.15),
232 (71.14)Parikh, Sunita A...............216 (57.6)Parinandi, Srinivas ........233 (71.23)Park, Baekkwan ..... 201 (38.28), 288
(122.17, 122.21)Park, Bo Yun................321 (162.25)Park, Gene .....................247 (85.14)Park, Jaehan ................322 (162.28)Park, Jieun...................343 (183.14)Park, Jong Hee .... 311 (152.17), 320
(162.17), 335 (176.5)Park, Ju Yeon ........ 193 (33.18), 213
(51.21)Park, Kyuri ...................358 (197.12)Park, Seo-Hyun...... 187 (26.17), 272
(109.23)Park, Seungbin ............366 (205.20)
IndexofParticipants
Park, Taeyong................386 (215.6)Park, Won-ho ...............298 (134.36)Park, Yeon Kyung........320 (162.14)Park, Yeon Soo ..............248 (85.24)Park, Yohan ...................193 (33.17)Park, Yon Soo ..............393 (218.11)Park, Yul Min .................250 (85.32)Park, Yumi .....................291 (130.1)Park-Ozee, Dakota ....... 321 (162.25)Parker, Christopher S.....260 (99.5),
309 (152.7), 345 (183.28)Parker-Magyar, Elizabeth ..........195
(33.30), 358 (197.17), 359(197.17)
Parkinson, Sarah E.......187 (26.18),195 (33.30), 262 (99.21), 284
(121.4)Parmigiani, Alberto........326 (168.8)Parr, Christianna MarieSirindah.......................324 (165.2)
Parrado, Salvador..........274 (110.4)Parreira, Christiana Moreira......327
(168.14)Parrish, John Michael ...............239
(76.11), 253 (91.1)Parson, Sean ........... 196 (34.3), 361
(197.29), 397 (219.3)Parsons, Craig A. .... 196 (35.1), 286
(122.6), 335 (176.10)Partis-Jennings, Hannah...........206
(43.22)Parvin, Phil ....................308 (152.2)Parvulescu, Radu Andrei ..........212
(51.20)Paschall, Collin..............194 (33.21)Pascoe, Henry .................223 (63.7)Pascolo, Laura...............263 (99.25)Pascu-Lindner, Andra......259 (95.2)Pashayan, A.R. ...... 276 (117.3), 339
(176.32)Paskhalis, Tom ........ 198 (38.9), 216
(57.6), 222 (63.5), 294 (134.13)Passarelli, Gianluca.......274 (111.2)Passmore, Timothy ..... 358 (197.15)Paszat, Emma .............. 323 (162.31)Patana, Pauliina..... 207 (43.25), 335
(176.9), 365 (205.11)Pathak, Durgesh ............293 (134.6)Pathak, Swapna ...........361 (197.30)Patten, Alan ...................325 (167.1)Patterson, Dennis P. ......289 (123.1)Patterson, Eric.................189 (27.3)Patterson, James M.........221 (58.6)Pattie, Charles .............272 (109.22)Paul, Eitan .....................357 (197.7)Paul, James David.........283 (118.1)Paul, Ruxandra ................223 (63.6)Paul, Sanjukta..................198 (38.8)Pauley, Alexandra C. .......244 (80.2)Pauley, Matthew A. ..........228 (64.5)Paulsen, Tine N ..... 194 (33.22), 389
(215.25)Paulson-Smith, Kaden...............202
(38.32)Pauly, Reid........... 311 (152.20), 351
(190.13)Pauselli, Gino .............. 336 (176.13)Pavlik, Melissa Jane.... 383 (212.33)Pavone, Tommaso .........231 (71.12)Pavão, Nara ........... 302 (143.5), 390
(215.28)Pawlak, Patryk .............328 (168.18)Payne, Andrew ............381 (212.23)Payson, Julia ......... 233 (71.23), 250
(85.38)Peacock, Anthony .........397 (219.1)Pearson, Margaret M. .....217 (57.9),
270 (109.15), 341 (183.4)Pechenkina, Anna O.....199 (38.18),
295 (134.22), 381 (212.25)Pecorella, Robert F. .........228 (64.5)Pedersen, Helene Helboe ..........209
(48.2), 228 (65.1), 382 (212.27)Pedersen, Jenna..........360 (197.26)Pedersen, Lene Holm ................375
(209.33)Peele, Gillian R. ...............211 (51.9)Peer, Limor ....................333 (174.2)Peh, Zi En Kimberly ....388 (215.17)Peinert, Erik ........... 261 (99.14), 387
(215.12)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 417KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Pelc, Krzysztof J...........193 (33.14),351 (190.12)
Peled, Yoav ......................231 (71.9)Pelletier, Alexandre .... 306 (143.29),
369 (206.5)Pellicer, Miquel ................223 (63.7)Pelrine, Kellin .............. 379 (212.11)Peltonen, Markku.............245 (85.3)Pempel, T.J. .....................221 (58.3)Pena-Vasquez, Andrea ..............291
(128.1), 335 (176.6)Penar, Peter ...................186 (26.15)Peng, Peng ....................309 (152.8)Pengl, Yannick Immanuel..........205
(43.16)Penn, Elizabeth Maggie.............392
(218.5)Pepinsky, Thomas ........201 (38.31),
221 (58.3)Pereira, Miguel Maria.................299
(134.44)Pereira, Miguel M........ 299 (134.44),
377 (209.42), 381 (212.27)Perera, Fabiana Sofia ....217 (57.11)Peretti, Terri ...................255 (91.17)Pereyra Bordon, Roberto ..........363
(199.4)Perez, Addie ................360 (197.25)Perez, Sarah Van .............253 (90.4)Perez, Vanessa ..............324 (166.1)Perez Chiques, Elizabeth ..........396
(218.30)Perez-Linan, Anibal ......199 (38.15),
260 (99.8)Perlis, Roy ............. 219 (57.23), 265
(99.34)Perlman, Rebecca .......295 (134.18)Persaud, Randolph B. ...............212
(51.17), 351 (190.14)Persson, Mikael ..... 251 (85.41), 303
(143.12)Pertsis, Ruthie ...............269 (109.6)Peskowitz, Zachary F.................194
(33.20), 233 (71.23), 249(85.30), 259 (98.2), 298
(134.36)Peters, B. Guy .............312 (152.26)Peters, Margaret E....... 299 (134.41)Peters, Yvette.................224 (63.16)Peterson, David .............292 (130.1)Peterson, Erik ...... 288 (122.20), 314
(152.34)Peterson, Matthew J.......221 (58.6),
316 (154.1), 391 (216.1)Peterson, Steven A..........214 (53.1)Petrov, Philip .................220 (57.26)Petrova, Bilyana ......... 279 (117.17),
298 (134.37)Petrova, Kristina............268 (108.1)Petrovics, Ariel F.W. .....262 (99.18),
303 (143.14)Petrow, Gregory A. ..........260 (99.3)Petzschmann, Paul...... 294 (134.16)Pevehouse, Jon C. W. ...............311
(152.16), 372 (209.17)Pfeffer, Elizabeth ... 309 (152.9), 339
(176.31)Pfiffner, James P..........382 (212.28)Phan, Ngoc ............ 202 (38.34), 215
(55.1), 238 (75.1), 252 (89.1),297 (134.33), 348 (187.1)
Phayal, Anup ......... 235 (71.34), 295(134.21)
Philbrick, Stacey Sheridan........190(29.1)
Phillips, Brian J. .... 255 (91.14), 287(122.11)
Phillips, Christian Dyogi ...........218(57.18)
Phillips, Connor Halloran ..........345(183.25)
Phillips, Joseph ..... 188 (26.23), 363(204.1)
Phillips, Justin..... 287 (122.15), 388(215.21)
Phillips, Justin Bonest ..............195(33.25)
Phillips, Melanie Lauren............257(91.29), 315 (152.42)
Philpot, Tasha S. ......... 394 (218.21)
Phoenix, Davin Lanier ...............249(85.26), 334 (175.2), 389
(215.24)Piano, Natasha ................222 (63.3)Piazza, Kelly Senters.................379
(212.14)Picard, Layla........ 360 (197.25), 366
(205.20)Piccirillo, Alexandra ......225 (63.17)Piccolino, Gianluca ..... 294 (134.15)PICKARD, Sarah .... 323 (163.1), 368
(206.1)Pickerill, Mitch ...............362 (198.2)Pickering, Paula M.........211 (51.12)Pickup, Mark A. ........... 353 (190.24)Pierman, Garrett ............277 (117.6)Pierre, Jon ...................312 (152.26)Pierre, Sherelle Roberts ............233
(71.22)Pierskalla, Jan Henryk ..............316
(152.45), 368 (205.26), 369(208.1), 378 (212.9)
Pierson, Patrick ...........344 (183.19)Pierson, Paul ........... 260 (99.5), 283
(117.41)Pietryka, Matthew ........313 (152.33)Pietrzyk-Reeves, Dorota............211
(51.12)Pignataro, Adrián ........287 (122.13)Pike, Stuart ....................232 (71.15)Pimentel, Alvaro ............369 (206.2)Pinckney, Jonathan ..... 295 (134.23)Pinderhughes, Dianne M. ..........183
(21.2), 354 (191.1)Pindyck, Shira Eini ........205 (43.14)Pineda, Erin ............. 239 (77.3), 392
(218.2)Pinggera, Michael ........365 (205.11)Pinotti, Paolo .................365 (205.9)Pinson, Lauren ...... 255 (91.14), 387
(215.15)Pinto, Pablo Martin..... 327 (168.17),
341 (183.4), 380 (212.19)Pinzon, Enrique ...............215 (54.1)Pion-Berlin, David ....... 328 (168.19)Piotrowska, Barbara Maria........242
(77.20)Piper, Christopher Mark ............351
(190.16)Pipkin, Seth ............. 217 (57.8), 264
(99.27)Pippenger, Nathan .........301 (143.3)Piscopo, Jennifer M. ....233 (71.25),
290 (123.4), 345 (183.27), 394(218.21)
Pitney, John J. ..... 298 (134.35), 344(183.21)
Pitt, Daniel .....................368 (206.1)Pizzi, Elise ............. 242 (77.19), 327
(168.16)Piñeiro, Rafael ...............261 (99.11)Plana, Sara .................. 320 (162.18)Planinc, Emma......... 253 (91.2), 276
(117.1)Planinc, Zdravko...... 189 (27.6), 307
(144.1)Plantan, Elizabeth............204 (43.8)Platas Izama, Melina Raquel .....396
(218.29)Platt, Matthew B. .............238 (76.1)Plesak, Mikulas...... 198 (38.10), 300
(139.1)Ploof, Rebecca Aili .........191 (33.4),
253 (91.2)Plümmer, Franziska..... 327 (168.16)Poast, Paul............. 186 (26.16), 393
(218.11)Podaru, Dan Niculae ...338 (176.24)Podder, Sukanya .........374 (209.24)Poertner, Mathias .........225 (63.21),
356 (197.5)Poetranto, Irene .............369 (206.5)Pogrebinschi, Thamy .....208 (44.3),
347 (183.37)Polga-Hecimovich, John ...........211
(51.11)Pollert, Isaac................ 352 (190.18)Polo, Sara ....................321 (162.20)Poloni-Staudinger, Lori .............210
(51.6), 389 (215.23)
Polyak, Palma .......... 239 (77.5), 365(205.12)
Pomirchy, Michael .......381 (212.27)Pond, Amy ............. 193 (33.15), 240
(77.10), 387 (215.12)Ponder, Daniel E. ...........349 (189.1)Pons, Vincent .......... 210 (51.4), 365
(205.11)Pontusson, Jonas ...... 283 (117.41),
310 (152.15)Poole, Taylor..................301 (140.1)Pop-Eleches, Grigore ...235 (71.35),
357 (197.9), 380 (212.16)Popa, Mircea..................378 (212.9)Popa, Raluca Andreea...............249
(85.29), 270 (109.12)Pope, Jeremy C. ......... 304 (143.17),
353 (190.23)Popelier, Patricia .............228 (65.1)Popescu, Bogdan Gabriel .........333
(173.1), 378 (212.9)Popescu, Diana Elena .....184 (26.3)Popescu, Ionut ..............232 (71.17)Popova, Maria................192 (33.12)Popp, Raluca-Florica .......243 (79.1)Porisky, Alesha...... 220 (57.25), 240
(77.8), 342 (183.9), 372(209.13)
Porter, Ethan................ 390 (215.28)Porter, Jack..................336 (176.14)Porter, Rachel ................339 (178.2)Portmann, Lea ...............324 (164.2)Porzycki, Vered................260 (99.6)Posch, Konrad.............383 (212.38)Posen, Barry....................208 (45.1)Posey, Patricia ....... 242 (77.24), 256
(91.19)Posner, Daniel N. .........347 (183.38)Posner, Paul Wesley....294 (134.12)Pospieszna, Paulina ......211 (51.12)Post, Alison E........ 200 (38.23), 235
(71.33), 286 (122.5)Post, Margaret A..............227 (64.1)Postell, Joseph ...... 300 (135.1), 316
(153.1)Postell, Samuel..............316 (153.1)Postnikov, Evgeny....... 336 (176.12)Pottenger, John R............244 (81.1)Potter, A. Bradley ..........247 (85.16)Potter, Philip B. K. ...... 360 (197.25),
372 (209.16), 381 (212.24)Potter, Rachel Augustine ..........374
(209.25), 379 (212.9)Pottle, Justin .................326 (168.6)Potz, Maciej .....................243 (78.1)Povitkina, Marina..........266 (99.39),
268 (108.1)Pow, James Timothy .....364 (205.4)Powell, Emilia Justyna ..............199
(38.15)Powell, G. Bingham......194 (33.22),
389 (215.25)Powell, Jonathan M. ......232 (71.18)Powell, Lynda W. .........287 (122.15)Powell, Sierra......... 213 (51.23), 268
(108.2)Power, Catherine R.........239 (77.2),
276 (117.2), 330 (168.32), 397(219.6)
Powers, Ryan M...........373 (209.18)Powers, Thomas..............237 (72.2)Praca, Sergio .................274 (111.1)Prakash, Aseem ......... 353 (190.25),
360 (197.27)Pralle, Sarah B.............314 (152.35)Prasad, Mahendra .......279 (117.22)Prasad, Neeraj Vimal .....318 (162.6)Prather, Lauren ............286 (122.10)Pratici, Lorenzo ...............211 (51.9)Prato, Carlo......................254 (91.7)Pratt, Tyler ........... 270 (109.16), 328
(168.18), 373 (209.18)Preble, Keith A ..............212 (51.16)Preece, Jessica Robinson.........205
(43.18)Pressly, Lowry ...............301 (143.1)Preuhs, Robert R.......... 235 (71.32),
345 (183.29)Pribble, Jennifer ..............240 (77.7)Price, J. Ricky.............. 379 (212.10)Priebe, Miranda ...............208 (45.1)
Prieto Sanabria, Juan Diego .....302(143.10)
Prillaman, Soledad Artiz............302(143.9), 345 (183.27)
Prince, Sarah .................349 (187.1)Prins, Brandon C. ........295 (134.21)Prior, Markus ......... 277 (117.8), 383
(212.35)Priupolina, Elizaveta.... 381 (212.24)Proctor, Andrew Thomas ..........242
(77.21)Promisel, Michael ..........391 (216.2)Pronin, Kira.......... 272 (109.25), 312
(152.27)Prorok, Alyssa .............344 (183.18)Prosser, Christopher ...272 (109.22)Provins, Tessa ......... 237 (75.1), 252
(89.1), 345 (183.25)Prowse, Gwen..................245 (83.2)Prud'homme, Joseph .....228 (64.5),
260 (99.7)Pruett, Lindsey ..............236 (71.41)Pruitt de Santos, GabriellaM. ..................................185 (26.8)
Przeworski, Adam .......353 (190.27)Pu, Xiaoyu ........... 311 (152.18), 357
(197.8)Puck, Logan...................364 (205.9)Puerta, Maria Isabel........182 (10.3),
238 (76.1), 252 (90.1), 274(111.2), 315 (152.41)
Pugh, Alex K..................292 (130.1)Pugh, Jeffrey Daniel .... 354 (190.30)Pullan, Danielle...... 241 (77.14), 261
(99.12)Pupcenoks, Juris...........226 (63.24)Purdon, Mark ......... 201 (38.27), 278
(117.14), 347 (183.36)Purohit, Bhumi ...... 211 (51.10), 334
(175.1)Purtle, Jonathan ............266 (99.41)Putcha, Chandrasekhar.............249
(85.30)Putnam, Lara ...............346 (183.32)Putnam, Robert M..........354 (191.1)
Q
Qayum, Nayma ........ 216 (57.7), 354(192.1)
Qi, Bokai ........................350 (190.7)Qi, Dan .........................297 (134.33)Qian, Jing ....................393 (218.10)Qian, Jingyuan ..............186 (26.12)Qian, Jiwei ...................327 (168.16)Qiang, Xiao ....................246 (85.10)Qiu, Xiaoyan ..................202 (38.32)Queirolo, Rosario .... 204 (43.7), 211
(51.11)Quek, Kai .......................224 (63.14)Queralt, Didac........ 276 (115.1), 388
(215.20)Querubin, Pablo...............260 (99.4)Quezada, Enrique ..........249 (85.26)Quiason, Marcy .............264 (99.28)Quigley, Ellen............... 279 (117.22)Quinones, Clemente.... 389 (215.25)Quirk, James M...... 194 (33.19), 239
(77.6)
R
R. Daneri, Danny ...........275 (113.1)Rabbany, Reihaneh ..... 379 (212.11)Rabe, Barry G. ....... 265 (99.36), 383
(212.38)Rabinowitz, Beth ...........199 (38.13)Rabinowitz, Laura............222 (63.1)Rackaway, Chapman .....202 (38.34)Rader, Katherine............342 (183.5)Radford, Benjamin J ......210 (51.5),
269 (109.9)Radnitz, Scott B...........310 (152.14)Rafanelli, Lucia M. ...........253 (91.4)Raffler, Pia .......................254 (91.7)Rafiq, Samah ...............384 (212.39)Ragazzoni, David..... 184 (26.1), 191
(33.2)Rahbari, Mohammad ...361 (197.28)Rahe, Paul A. .................397 (219.4)
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418 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Rahman, Md Muhibbur ..............337(176.23)
Rahman, MohammadShafiqur ......................370 (209.5)
Rahman, Tahmina..........317 (160.1)Rains, Emily......... 278 (117.13), 297
(134.31), 327 (168.15)Raisi, Alireza....................228 (66.1)Rajan, Akhil .................288 (122.18)Rakner, Lise...................250 (85.37)Ram, Melanie H............373 (209.19)Ramachandran, Rajesh .............211
(51.8)Ramakrishnan, Karthick............220
(57.28)Ramanathan, Kumar..... 342 (183.5),
356 (196.1)Ramesh, Hari ........... 253 (91.3), 268
(109.1)Ramey, Adam........... 230 (71.4), 245
(85.4), 340 (180.1)Ramirez, Mark Daniel .....191 (33.7),
353 (190.23)Ramirez, Ricardo ...........249 (85.26)Ramos Pastrana, Julio A...........360
(197.23)Ramsay, Gordon..........347 (183.35)Ramsay, Kristopher W...............224
(63.14), 378 (212.6)Ramusovic, Aida ... 226 (63.23), 298
(134.38)Rana, MD Sohel .............307 (147.1)Rand, John ......................198 (38.7)Randahl, David ............326 (168.10)Rank, Allison .................332 (170.4)Rapoport, Ronald B.....377 (209.43)Rapp, Kyle .....................236 (71.36)Rappel-Kroyzer, Or ........234 (71.29)Rashin, Steven ...... 255 (91.16), 312
(152.25)Rasho, Nahrain Senharib ..........296
(134.23)Rasmussen, Anne ........225 (63.21),
298 (134.35), 303 (143.12), 312(152.27)
Rasmussen, Jesper.......256 (91.24)Rasmussen, Magnus Bergli ......384
(212.41)Rastovic, Milos ..............348 (187.1)Ratan, Ishana...............306 (143.27)Rathnam, Lincoln ..........268 (109.1)Ratkovic, Marc Thomas.............246
(85.8), 281 (117.31)Ravanilla, Nico......... 231 (71.8), 357
(197.7), 388 (215.16)Ravecca, Paulo Daniel ...253 (91.3),
389 (215.23)Ravenhill, John................221 (58.3)Raviv, Shir....................368 (205.29)Ray, Ayesha .....................246 (85.9)Ray, Emily ........................196 (34.3)Ray, Subhasish.... 269 (109.11), 288
(122.19), 360 (197.24)Rayas, Andres Besserer ...........220
(57.25), 289 (122.24)Raychaudhuri, Tanika.....245 (83.2),
315 (152.43)Raymond, Leigh S. ........265 (99.36)Raymond, Mark ...........365 (205.14)Razeq, Zarlasht............311 (152.16)Read, Benjamin L. ... 183 (24.1), 189
(27.4), 195 (33.28), 304(143.19)
Read, Blair ............. 249 (85.31), 315(152.45)
Read, James H. .............290 (125.3)Reardon, Catlan Erin .................326
(168.12)Reardon, Lawrence C......214 (52.3)Reardon, Robert .... 212 (51.18), 282
(117.37), 369 (206.3)Reckhow, Sarah E. ....... 207 (43.29),
265 (99.34)Reddick, Celia................194 (33.20)Reddie, Andrew William ............311
(152.20)Redeker, Nils ...................239 (77.5)Redlawsk, David P. .........245 (85.4),
269 (109.6), 277 (117.8)Reed, Ryan ......................191 (33.4)Reeder, Bryce W. ...........276 (114.1)
Reedy, Justin ...............298 (134.38)Reenock, Christopher M. ..........213
(51.25)Reese, Michael J. ........310 (152.10)Reese, Thomas J......... 305 (143.23)Rega, Rossella....... 188 (26.23), 226
(63.23)Reghunadhan, Ramnath............369
(207.2)Reher, Stefanie ........ 222 (62.2), 268
(108.2), 312 (152.27)Reich, Noam ............230 (71.3), 378
(212.6)Reichert, Matthew J........240 (77.9),
386 (215.7)Reid, Jeremy....................230 (71.1)Reifler, Jason A. ............188 (26.23)Reilly, Benjamin..... 264 (99.32), 297
(134.34)Reilly, Kathleen P.........304 (143.20)Reimann, Kim D...............252 (89.1)Reinke, Grace E.............268 (109.5)Reinl, Ann-Kathrin .........348 (186.1)Reinmuth, Kate ............382 (212.28)Reinsberg, Bernhard ....212 (51.14),
240 (77.11), 286 (122.7)Reisigl, Martin.............. 368 (205.31)Reisinger, William M........223 (63.8)Reiter, Dan ............. 186 (26.16), 372
(209.16)Remmal, Soukayna......327 (168.15)Renckens, Stefan ..........341 (181.1)Renner, Laura ................205 (43.14)Renno, Lucio R..............198 (38.11)Reno, William.................224 (63.12)Renshon, Jonathan .......201 (38.30)Rensmann, Lars ............370 (209.4)Renteln, Alison Dundes ............257
(91.26), 288 (122.22)Reny, Tyler Thomas.... 376 (209.38),
390 (215.29)Repnikova, Maria..........246 (85.10),
357 (197.8)Resh, William G. ......... 351 (190.16),
359 (197.20)Resnik, Philip.................206 (43.18)Restrepo Sanin, Juliana ............206
(43.22)Rettl, Paula ............ 378 (212.8), 387
(215.11)Reuning, Kevin ...... 234 (71.27), 346
(183.32)Reuter, Ora John ..... 223 (63.8), 266
(99.39), 331 (168.38), 361(197.31), 376 (209.41)
Revkin, Mara.......... 309 (152.9), 328(168.23)
Reyes, Liana Eustacia...............303(143.15), 328 (168.23)
Reyes-Housholder, Catherine ...233(71.25), 313 (152.28)
Reyna, Veronica.............284 (121.1)Reynolds, Andrew S..................354
(190.28)Reynolds, Molly ........... 329 (168.24)Rezai, Hamid............192 (33.9), 278
(117.16)Rezvani, David A. ............261 (99.9)Rhea, Carter...................386 (215.6)Rhee, Inbok.......... 311 (152.17), 320
(162.17), 335 (176.5)Rhee, Kasey.................366 (205.17)Rhodes-Purdy, Matthew ............254
(91.9), 326 (168.7)Riachi, Roland ...............285 (121.7)Riano, Nayeli Leandra ...............348
(184.2)Riaz, Sascha ........ 320 (162.19), 337
(176.18), 378 (212.8)Ribar, David .................328 (168.21)Ribeiro, Felipe .............271 (109.20)Ricart-Huguet, Joan .....202 (38.32),
203 (43.4), 216 (57.7), 222(63.5), 347 (183.41)
Rice, Laurie L. .............331 (168.36)Rich, Jessica .................261 (99.11)Richards, Erin E. .............182 (10.2)Richardson, Mark D.....359 (197.20)Richardson Jr., Glenn W. ..........331
(168.35)
Richter, Brian Kelleher ..............312(152.25)
Richter, Friederike ....... 320 (162.16)Rickard, Christopher .......237 (74.1)Rickert, Patrick Donald .............233
(71.24)Rickne, Johanna..........390 (215.31)Ricks, Boris E................219 (57.19)Ricks, Jacob Isaac ........357 (197.7)Ridge, Hannah ....... 333 (174.1), 396
(218.32)Ridout, Travis N...............209 (48.2)Riedl, Rachel Beatty ..... 198 (38.12),
250 (85.37), 254 (91.9), 293(134.6)
Riedmann, Trevor Bryan ...........289(122.24)
Riera, Pedro........... 264 (99.32), 313(152.31)
Rietz, Thomas..................243 (78.4)Rigger, Shelley ..............339 (177.1)Riggs, Tara...................306 (143.25)Right, Lucille E ........ 246 (85.5), 279
(117.19)Rinaldi, Chiara .............384 (212.43)Ringe, Nils ............. 198 (38.11), 233
(71.21)Ringsmuth, Eve M. ....... 233 (71.24),
302 (143.8)Rinscheid, Adrian ........313 (152.27)Rios, Eva..........................239 (77.7)Ripberger, Joseph T. .....219 (57.21)Riquelme, Nicolas .........318 (162.4)Risse, Thomas.............280 (117.23)Ritchie, Melinda ........... 312 (152.24)Ritholtz, Samuel ............224 (63.15)Ritner, Scott Benjamin ...203 (43.2),
363 (205.2)Ritter, Emily Hencken................339
(178.1), 344 (183.19), 373(209.18)
Ritter, Michael James ....263 (99.26)Rivera, Sari Krieger .........245 (82.1)Rivera Celestino, MauricioAlejandro ....................232 (71.18)
Rivera-Burgos, Viviana..............362(199.1)
Rivero, Albert...................245 (82.1)Rivers, Douglas .............219 (57.22)Rivlin-Angert, Naama ......245 (85.4)Rizzo, Tesalia...................231 (71.8)Ro, Hyeon-Young ........387 (215.12)Robbett, Andrea ..........272 (109.25)Robbins, Michael.............192 (33.9)Roberts, Adam...............185 (26.10)Roberts, Damon Charles ...........375
(209.34)Roberts, Joseph W. ..........182 (9.6),
238 (76.11), 246 (85.9), 332(170.3)
Roberts, Kenneth M. ......228 (64.4),260 (99.5)
Roberts, Margaret E ........217 (57.9)Roberts, Neil....................191 (33.3)Roberts, Patrick S. ........323 (164.1)Roberts, William Clare ...203 (43.2),
209 (51.2)Robertson, Graeme ........204 (43.9),
246 (85.11), 380 (212.16)Robertson, Matthew P...............391
(216.3)Robiadek, Katherine M. .............339
(178.3)Robinson, Amanda Lea.............302
(143.9)Robinson, Esther......... 361 (197.30)Robinson, Nicholas Adam ........264
(99.27)Robinson, Scott.............369 (206.2)Robles, Jose Manuel .... 274 (110.4),
300 (139.1)Robson, Maria ...............369 (206.3)Rocco, Philip B...... 263 (99.25), 282
(117.39)Rochat, Philippe Etienne...........329
(168.28)Roche, MaryClare ..........218 (57.17)Rodda, Patricia Charlotte ..........206
(43.20)Rodden, Jonathan ........309 (152.6),
326 (168.9)
IndexofParticipants
RODEHAU-NOACK,JOHANNA .....................237 (74.1)
Rodman, Emma ...............197 (38.3)Rodon, Toni .....................222 (63.5)Rodríguez, Javier ........310 (152.12)Rodrigues Vieira, Vinicius G. ....251
(87.1), 270 (109.16)Rodriguez, Pedro L. ........210 (51.5)Roemmele, Andrea ........291 (126.1)Roessler, Philip .............262 (99.20)Rogers, Annah...............194 (33.20)Rogers, Kathleen M. ......218 (57.17)Rogers, Melissa Ziegler.............200
(38.23), 238 (75.1), 309 (152.6),371 (209.8)
Rogers, Michael T. .........302 (143.8)Rogowski, Jon C. ........ 304 (143.17)Rohlfing, Ingo .............. 368 (205.28)Rojas, Hernando..........383 (212.36)Rojecki, Andrew ..........353 (190.24)Roland, Gerard ..............392 (218.6)Rom, Mark Carl........ 260 (99.7), 310
(152.10)Roman, Marcel............. 330 (168.30)Romano, Michael K. ..... 218 (57.16),
304 (143.18)Rombi, Stefano ..............273 (110.1)Romero, Diego José.......223 (63.7),
376 (209.41)Romero, Mindy ...... 213 (51.24), 330
(168.33), 346 (183.33)Romero, Richie A ..........283 (119.1)Rommel, Tobias........... 270 (109.14)Romney, David Alexander.........239
(77.4), 350 (190.6)Rooney, Bryan ...............193 (33.17)Roscher, Franziska.........258 (95.1),
335 (176.7)Roscoe, Douglas D.......219 (57.20),
346 (183.32)Rose, Michelle ...............385 (215.2)Rose, Richard ................368 (206.1)Roseman, Ira ...................245 (85.4)Rosenberg, Emma .........333 (173.1)Rosenberg, Rachel ......346 (183.31)Rosenblatt, Fernando....261 (99.11)Rosenbluth, Frances McCall .....288
(122.18), 340 (180.1)Rosendorf, Ondrej ....... 303 (143.14)Rosendorff, B. Peter......193 (33.14)Rosenfeld, Bryn..... 242 (77.20), 250
(85.35), 331 (168.38), 380(212.16)
Rosenfeld, Sam ....... 183 (22.1), 305(143.24)
Rosenstiel, Leah..........312 (152.24)Rosenthal, Aaron......... 389 (215.21)Rosenthal, Abigail L. .....283 (118.2)Rosenthal, Maoz ...... 189 (28.1), 329
(168.27), 386 (215.4)Rosenzweig, Leah R........231 (71.8)Ross, Jason.....................189 (27.2)Ross, Melisa .......... 250 (85.34), 322
(162.30)Ross, Robert S. ..... 273 (110.3), 357
(197.8)Ross Arguedas, Amy ....235 (71.32)Rossel, Maria Cecilia.......204 (43.7)Rossello, Diego Hernan ............253
(91.3), 334 (176.2)Rosset, Jan.......... 310 (152.15), 391
(215.31)Rossini, Patricia ............265 (99.37)Rossiter, Erin ......... 207 (43.27), 350
(190.6)Rossteutscher, Sigrid....335 (176.9)Rostboll, Christian F......308 (152.2)Rosvold, Elisabeth Lio ..............268
(108.1)Rotem, Noga ..................385 (215.2)Roth, Simon........... 241 (77.14), 379
(212.11)Rothenberg, Lawrence S...........260
(99.6), 359 (197.20), 374(209.26)
Rothschild, David ........280 (117.26)Rottinghaus, Brandon ...............374
(209.26)Rotzer, Alexandra Infanzon.......280
(117.25)Rovny, Jan .....................357 (197.9)
X : 25749$CHIX09-28-21 23:19:53 Page 419Layout: 11437P : Odd
INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 419KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Roychowdhury, Poulami ...........192(33.10)
Royo, Sebastian ............274 (110.4)Rozell, Mark J. ..... 305 (143.23), 388
(215.18)Rozenas, Arturas..........188 (26.26),
298 (134.40), 347 (183.38)Rubenstein, Jennifer C..............392
(218.3)Rubin, Michael A. ........ 296 (134.25)Rubinson, Eyal .... 279 (117.17), 366
(205.15)Rubio, Rosalie ...............217 (57.11)Ruckelshaus, Jay ..........308 (152.2)Rudalevige, Andrew C...............374
(209.26), 382 (212.28)Rudkin, Aaron................263 (99.25)Rudolph, Ben...................245 (85.4)Rudra, Nita............. 193 (33.14), 223
(63.10)Rudy, Sayres S. .............217 (57.12)Rueda, David ....... 310 (152.15), 368
(205.29)Rueda, Miguel R. ...........261 (99.10)Ruger, Jennifer Prah .......221 (61.3)Ruggeri, Andrea .... 276 (114.1), 283
(119.1), 392 (218.8)Ruiz, Christopher Daniel ...........237
(72.3)Ruiz, Isabel ..................321 (162.24)Ruiz, Nelson Alejandro .............261
(99.10)Ruiz-Euler, Alexander................314
(152.39)Runderkamp, Zahra..... 321 (162.22)Ruparelia, Sanjay ............202 (41.1)Rush, Mark E. .............. 388 (215.18)Rush, Tye .......................340 (179.1)Russell, Andrew ..............244 (81.1)Russell, Annelise..........250 (85.32),
265 (99.35), 329 (168.24)Russell, Greg ...................237 (72.3)Russell, Ryan.................325 (168.4)Russmann, Uta ..............242 (77.18)Ruth, Saskia Pauline .....342 (183.8)Ryan, Mary K ........... 197 (38.1), 339
(176.32), 396 (218.27)Ryan, Megan..................198 (38.12)Rybalko, MikhailLeonidovich ................300 (140.1)
Rydén, Oskar .................266 (99.39)Rys, Andrew ..................247 (85.13)Rytting, Christopher........230 (71.6)Ryu, Jeheung...............320 (162.14)Ryu, Seungok ..................258 (94.1)Ryu, Shin Kue..............287 (122.14)
S
Sältzer, Marius .............313 (152.31)S.P., Harish ............ 223 (63.10), 278
(117.12)Slarzynski, Marcin .........194 (33.23)Sasmaz, Aytug...............267 (107.1)Saalfeld, Thomas.............228 (65.1)Saavedra Cisneros, Angel.........281
(117.33)Saavedra-Lux, LauraMichelle.....................381 (212.26)
Sabaté, Oriol.......... 326 (168.9), 371(209.10)
Sabl, Andrew .................325 (168.1)Sacko, David H. ........... 311 (152.19)Sadeh, Tal ....................279 (117.17)Sadhwani, Sara...... 292 (132.1), 313
(152.29)Sadiq, Kamal ....... 272 (109.26), 315
(152.41), 331 (168.41)Sadykova, Almira ........393 (218.12)Safarpour, Alauna........ 382 (212.31)Safra, Lou ....................320 (162.16)Saglam, Gulcan ...............223 (63.6)Sahn, Alexander Laurence........235
(71.33), 250 (85.38)Saiegh, Sebastian M........210 (51.4)Saijo, Harunobu........... 326 (168.12)Saikkonen, Inga A-L ........223 (63.8)Sajed, Alina....................317 (162.1)Sajjadi, Sina...................386 (215.6)Sajuria, Javier.............. 343 (183.11)
Sakurai, Takamichi ........268 (109.1)Salam, Amna .................277 (117.7)Salamone, Michael .......218 (57.16),
304 (143.18)Salas, Valentina ...........382 (212.30)Saleh, Mohamed ............251 (85.40)Salgado, Isaac Gabriel ....184 (26.2)Salgado, Marcos..............203 (43.3)Salgado, Susana............226 (63.23)Salles, Nara..................296 (134.26)Salloukh, Bassel..............190 (29.1)Salnykova, Anastasiya ..............348
(187.1)Samford, Steven ..........347 (183.36)Samii, Cyrus ............184 (25.2), 328
(168.23), 359 (197.18)Samsudean, Dragos ........228 (66.1)Samuel-Azran, Tal........330 (168.34)Samuel-Burnett, Sosamma .......368
(205.27)Samuels, David J.......... 250 (85.35),
356 (197.4)San-Akca, Belgin ..... 210 (51.7), 358
(197.14)Sanaei, Ali....................288 (122.17)Sanborn, Howard Bartlett .........272
(109.23)Sanchez, Gabriel ..... 238 (75.1), 305
(143.21), 349 (189.3)Sanchez, Lisa May.......382 (212.31)Sanchez, Maria ............347 (183.39)Sand, Erik ......................186 (26.16)Sandal, Nukhet Ahu ..... 301 (142.2),
346 (183.30)Sandel, Michael J. ...........239 (77.1)Sanders, Elizabeth.........251 (85.39)Sandholtz, Wayne..........199 (38.15)Sandholtz, Wayne Aaron...........318
(162.6)Sands, Melissa ...... 220 (57.28), 368
(205.29)Sanford, Luke ...... 282 (117.36), 300
(139.1)Sanhueza Petrarca,Constanza .................280 (117.24)
Sankaran, Jaganath.......262 (99.19)Santamaria, Gema ........248 (85.20),
350 (190.10), 364 (205.9)Santana-Pereira, Jose AntónioAfonso ......................294 (134.15)
Santillana, Mauricio......219 (57.23),265 (99.34)
Santos, Gustavo A. .......369 (206.2)Santoso, Lie Philip ....... 207 (43.27),
259 (95.2)Santucci, Jack ......... 183 (22.1), 297
(134.34), 340 (179.1)Sanyal, Sreerupa .........395 (218.25)Sapiro, Virginia ...... 200 (38.25), 238
(75.3)Saraceno, Joseph....... 298 (134.38),
338 (176.28), 354 (190.28)Sarbahi, Anoop K. .........262 (99.21)Sardo, Michael Christopher ......354
(191.2)Sarnoff, Daniella ............284 (121.4)Sarsfield, Rodolfo......... 207 (43.26),
326 (168.7)Sartre, Emilie .................378 (212.8)Sarwari, Mehwish ..........248 (85.19)Sasse, Gwendolyn...........204 (43.9)Sasso, Gregory...... 277 (117.7), 370
(209.6)Satana, Nil S. .................199 (38.18)Satkunanandan, Shalini ............245
(85.2)Sato, Yuko .....................256 (91.23)Sattler, Thomas ..... 199 (38.14), 341
(183.4)Saunders, Elizabeth Nathan......366
(205.17), 387 (215.14)Saunders, Tracee Morgan .........396
(218.30)Savas, Elif ....................326 (168.11)Savchak-Trogdon, Elisha ..........304
(143.18)Savic, Bojan...................249 (85.27)Savin, Nikita........... 192 (33.12), 263
(99.25)Savje, Fredrik ................371 (209.9)Savun, Burcu .................385 (214.3)
Sawyer, Katherine M.......216 (57.3),360 (197.25)
Saylor, Ryan ................299 (134.46)Saynova, Denitsa...........269 (109.9)Saywitz, Robin Rose ...359 (197.21)Sazak, Selim Can......... 351 (190.13)Scacco, Alexandra..........184 (25.2),
266 (99.42), 350 (190.6)Scalera, Jamie Elizabeth ...........206
(43.20), 372 (209.16)Scarrow, Susan ....... 220 (58.1), 284
(121.1)Scauso, Marcos Sebastian........361
(197.30)Scerri, Andy............. 196 (34.3), 306
(143.28), 397 (219.3)Schäfer, Armin...............335 (176.9)Schäfer, Sarina J. ..........364 (205.4)Schöpke-Gonzalez, AngelaM. .............................. 390 (215.29)
Schaefer, Andreas .........318 (162.7)Schafer, Dean .............. 384 (212.40)Schakel, Wouter ............225 (63.16)Schalit, Naomi Brodie .....253 (90.3)Schaub, Max ..................319 (162.9)Schechter, Benjamin H..............311
(152.20)Scheinerman, Naomi .....277 (117.6)Scheiring, Gabor ......... 384 (212.43)Scheller, Erik .................275 (113.2)Schenck, Marcela ........389 (215.23)Schenk, Caress Rene ....192 (33.12)Schenk, Marie ........ 265 (99.35), 331
(168.35)Schenker, Laura...........359 (197.21)Schenoni, Luis....... 199 (38.15), 373
(209.23)Scherpereel, John A......302 (143.8)Scheve, Kenneth F........269 (109.7),
326 (168.9)Schickler, Eric..................260 (99.5)Schiel, Rebecca Eileen..............232
(71.18)Schiff, Daniel S. ........... 306 (143.26)Schiff, Kaylyn Jackson .............259
(98.2), 306 (143.26), 329(168.28)
Schilde, Kaija E. .... 247 (85.18), 358(197.12)
Schilling, Felix Sören ......230 (71.5)Schillinger, Daniel .........385 (215.1)Schimmel, Noam .........322 (162.27)Schleiter, Petra ..............187 (26.22)Schlesinger, Mark ..........236 (71.38)Schlingensiepen, Marah....181 (6.4)Schlosser, Joel Alden ...385 (215.1)Schlosser, Tessy ...........308 (152.3)Schlozman, Daniel..........184 (26.5),
305 (143.24)Schlozman, Kay Lehman ..........352
(190.19)Schmøkel, Rasmus........265 (99.35)Schmid, Lukas ...............251 (85.41)Schmid, Samuel David ..............338
(176.28)Schmidt, Cody Joseph ..............279
(117.21)Schmidt, Eric R..............219 (57.21)Schmidt, Ronald J ........264 (99.30),
350 (190.9)Schmidt, Vivien A. ........204 (43.11),
336 (176.10), 372 (209.15), 379(212.10)
Schmidt Passos, Eduardo.........369(206.2)
Schmidtke, Henning ......254 (91.11)Schmitz, Volker..............349 (190.1)Schmoll, Moritz..............227 (63.28)Schmotz, Alexander .....266 (99.39),
322 (162.30)Schnakenberg, Keith E..............197
(38.5), 309 (152.5), 370 (208.2)Schneer, Benjamin ......304 (143.16)Schneider, Carsten Q. ...............314
(152.38)Schneider, Christina J. ..............212
(51.15), 239 (77.5), 285 (122.3)Schneider, Jacquelyn ................232
(71.16), 311 (152.20)Schneider, Monica C. .....222 (62.2),
314 (152.39)
Schober, Gregory .... 221 (61.3), 236(71.38)
Schoen, Anna Marisa ......215 (57.1)Schoenherr, Jessica .....241 (77.15),
244 (82.1), 297 (134.29)Schoettmer, Patrick L................375
(209.30)Scholte, Jan Aart...........193 (33.15)Schomburg, Madeline ...334 (175.3)Schoner, Rachel ............275 (112.2)Schoonvelde, Martijn.......190 (28.2)Schotel, Anne Louise ................323
(162.31)Schouela, Noah ...............216 (57.4)Schram, Peter ................378 (212.6)Schram, Sanford F...... 345 (183.28),
360 (197.25)Schramm, Madison V. ...............387
(215.14)Schraudenbach, Emily ..............206
(43.21)Schrauwen, Annette ......250 (85.36)Schroder, Madison ........225 (63.17)Schroder, Maya Isabel...............218
(57.13)Schroedel, Jean Reith ....221 (62.1),
238 (75.1)Schroeder, Philipp .........225 (63.17)Schubiger, Livia Isabella ...........213
(51.23), 218 (57.14), 339(178.1)
Schuck, Dirk .......... 325 (168.3), 370(209.1)
Schuessler, John......... 336 (176.16)Schuett, Arica N ..........299 (134.43)Schulte, Daniel Joseph ...211 (51.7)SchulteCloos, Julia ..... 270 (109.13)Schultz, Kenneth A.......217 (57.13),
232 (71.16), 373 (209.23)Schulz, Nicolai............. 294 (134.11)Schulze, Kai.................337 (176.19)Schumock, Collin Thomas ........309
(152.5)Schupmann, Benjamin A. .........308
(152.1)Schur, Lisa............... 222 (62.2), 268
(108.2)Schuster, Christian........242 (77.20)Schutte, Sebastian ......337 (176.18)Schvitz, Guy ..................205 (43.16)Schwartz, Avshalom M ..............259
(99.1), 276 (117.2), 330(168.32)
Schwartz, Devra.............239 (76.11)Schwartz, Joshua .... 251 (87.1), 328
(168.21)Schwartz, Stephanie........237 (74.1)Schwarz, Tanya Brooke.............284
(121.4)Schwarze, Michelle A. ...............276
(117.1), 325 (168.1), 370(209.2), 391 (218.1)
Schwarzenbach, Anina..............193(33.16)
Schwedler, Jillian M. .....285 (121.7)Schweinberger, Tanja ................279
(117.18)Sciabarra, Christina MI..............391
(217.2)Sciara, Gian-Claudia......340 (180.2)Sclofsky, Sebastian .......250 (85.34)Scoggins, Suzanne E. ...246 (85.10)Scogin, Shana ...............285 (121.9)Scotch, Richard .............205 (43.18)Scott, Adrienne............330 (168.31)Scott, Emily K.M. ... 214 (51.29), 303
(143.13)Scott, Jamil Shatema .....190 (32.2),
206 (43.23), 241 (77.15), 297(134.34), 346 (183.31), 359
(197.22)Scott, Jasmine....... 307 (149.1), 316
(155.5), 332 (171.1)Scott, John T..................370 (209.2)Scott, Ralph .................289 (122.26)Scott, Zachary ....... 241 (77.18), 249
(85.29)Scotti Muth, Nicoletta.....189 (27.6),
214 (52.2)Scribner, Druscilla L..................345
(183.24), 384 (212.42)
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420 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Scudder, Molly...............363 (205.1)Scuderi, Caitlin ............366 (205.16)Sculos, Bryant William ..............306
(143.28)Sczepanski, Ronja ...........254 (91.6)Seabrooke, Leonard ....388 (215.19)Seay, Laura ......................228 (67.1)Sebell, Dustin ................332 (169.1)Sebold, Karen Denice......189 (27.1)Sebro, Tani H .................284 (121.4)Sebudubudu, David..... 278 (117.14)Sechrest, Paige ....... 209 (50.2), 245
(84.2)Sechser, Todd S. ...........186 (26.16)Seddon, Jack .................199 (38.14)Seddone, Antonella .......273 (110.1)Sedziaka, Alesia ..............223 (63.9)Seeberg, Henrik Bech ...261 (99.13)Seeberg, Merete Bech ...............289
(122.25)Seiler, Robert S..............283 (118.2)Seim, Brigitte .................386 (215.9)Seki, Katsunori ................252 (87.2)Seki, Yoshifumi..............188 (26.23)Selin, Jennifer L. ........ 351 (190.16),
359 (197.20)Sell, TM ..... 332 (170.1), 355 (192.4),
362 (199.3)Sellars, Emily A. ...... 216 (57.4), 245
(85.5)Sellers, Mitchell Dylan...............382
(212.29)Sells, Cameron ..............293 (134.6)Selvik, Lisa-Marie Måseidvåg....322
(162.26)Selway, Joel Sawat........185 (26.10)Selçuk, Orçun ........ 207 (43.25), 307
(147.1), 342 (183.8)Semans, OJ .....................183 (22.1)Sen, Maya ........................203 (42.2)Senk, Kaitlin ................387 (215.11)Seri, Guillermina.... 250 (85.34), 253
(91.3)Serlin, Theo ...................269 (109.7)Seror, Avner...................225 (63.20)Serra, Gilles ........... 370 (208.2), 379
(212.12)Serrano, Sofia..............381 (212.22)Serritzlew, Soren .........299 (134.44)Seth, Pyar ......................349 (190.1)Sethy, Priyanka............365 (205.13)Settle, Jaime E..... 298 (134.39), 306
(143.26), 376 (209.38)Sevenans, Julie .............224 (63.16)Sexton, Renard J........ 296 (134.25),
374 (209.24), 388 (215.16)Seyis, Didem..................207 (43.25)Seymour, Lee.................187 (26.18)Sha, Hsiang-Chuan...... 323 (162.32)Shachar, Ayelet...... 236 (71.39), 250
(85.36), 268 (109.3)Shadmehr, Mehdi...........318 (162.4)Shafer, Byron E. ..........346 (183.30)Shafer, Matthew .............378 (212.4)Shaffer, Rachael ..........311 (152.20)Shaffer, Robert ..............255 (91.11)Shafie, David M............312 (152.25)Shah, Paru ............. 218 (57.18), 249
(85.26), 345 (183.29)Shah, Syed Waqar .........317 (159.2)Shahshahani, Sepehr ....371 (209.7)Shahzad, Gul-i-Hina..... 272 (109.24)Shaikh, Rizwan ..............263 (99.24)Shair-Rosenfield, Sarah ............293
(134.10), 326 (168.11)Shalaby, Marwa...... 195 (33.30), 271
(109.19), 283 (117.42)Shamaileh, Ammar ......273 (109.29)Shambaugh, George E. .............224
(63.13)Shames, Shauna L ........334 (176.1)Shames, Shauna L. ..... 352 (190.19)Shammama, Obaida ....366 (205.15)Shanahan, Elizabeth Ann ..........314
(152.35), 360 (197.27)Shanks, Delphia..... 243 (77.24), 315
(152.43)Shanks, Madison .........337 (176.20)Shanks, Torrey ..............268 (109.4)Shao, Li............................223 (63.9)Shapiro, Ian .................288 (122.18)
Shapiro, Jacob Norman ............308(150.1)
Shapovalov, Miroslav ....247 (85.17)Sharafutdinova, Gulnaz.............246
(85.11)Sharma, Moksha............235 (71.35)Sharratt, Grant ...............284 (120.1)Sharrow, Elizabeth A. .....222 (62.2),
285 (121.8), 352 (190.20), 395(218.21)
Shaver, Andrew C..........217 (57.11)Shaw, Daron R.............330 (168.33)Shay, Laine ......................229 (67.2)Shaykhutdinov, Renat ...............310
(152.10)She, Xiaoye..................270 (109.12)Shea, Patrick E. .............262 (99.15)Sheafer, Tamir.......... 189 (28.1), 260
(99.6)Sheagley, Geoffrey .......277 (117.8),
293 (134.5), 331 (168.40)Sheahan, Luke C ........ 281 (117.28),
348 (184.2)Sheblo, Olesya ..............323 (164.1)Sheehan, Reggie S. .........209 (49.2)Sheen, Greg Chih-Hsin .............189
(27.5), 243 (78.3), 318 (162.4)Sheets, Sarah ..............329 (168.27)Sheffer, Lior .............245 (85.4), 299
(134.44)Shehaj, Albana ............343 (183.14)Sheikh, Shahana..........310 (152.13)Shelef, Nadav G..... 212 (51.19), 275
(114.1)Shella, Kimberly L. .........229 (67.1),
267 (107.1), 329 (168.29), 375(209.34)
Shelton, Beth Anne .........229 (69.1)Shen, Fei......................296 (134.25)Shen, Shuyuan ..............364 (205.8)Shen-Bayh, Fiona ..........188 (26.26)Shenhav, Shaul Rafael ...189 (28.1),
260 (99.6)Shenk, Jamie Lee ........302 (143.10)Shepsle, Kenneth A.......364 (205.5)Shesterinina, Anastasia ............187
(26.18), 205 (43.17)Shevel, Oxana..................240 (77.9)Shi, Weiyi.......................364 (205.7)Shibaike, Takumi ........ 347 (183.41),
361 (197.32), 380 (212.20)Shieh, Marcy................ 280 (117.27)Shih, Victor C. ......... 217 (57.9), 365
(205.10)Shils, Nathaniel ...............209 (49.3)Shim, Gyu Sang...........327 (168.17)Shimek, Luke Martin .....289 (123.2)Shimizu, Naoki...............187 (26.22)Shin, Mi Jeong..... 270 (109.14), 366
(205.20)Shin, Sooahn .................364 (205.6)Shino, Enrijeta ...............213 (51.24)Shiraef, Mary .................285 (121.9)Shiran, Myriam ............352 (190.20)Shires, James .............. 287 (122.16)Shirikov, Anton ..............195 (33.25)Shirk, David A................255 (91.14)Shirk, Susan L. ..............262 (99.16)Shirkey, Zachary Coleman ........324
(165.1)Shirodkar, Aditi Rajeev ...203 (43.1)Shmaryahu Yeshurun, Yael.......324
(166.1)SHORES, KENNETH A ..............352
(190.18)Shortell, Christopher ....233 (71.24),
374 (209.28)Shoub, Kelsey ....... 275 (113.2), 278
(117.11)Shoup, Brian..................213 (51.22)Shpaizman, Ilana ......... 287 (122.13)Shrestha, Grace.............206 (43.20)Shreve, Aaron.............. 328 (168.21)Shu, Min....................... 282 (117.37)Shugars, Sarah ........ 202 (42.1), 229
(70.2), 250 (85.33)Shulman, George M......341 (183.3),
356 (197.1)Shum, Maggie.............. 390 (215.27)Shuster, Noah .............. 306 (143.28)
Shvetsova, Olga V. .........182 (16.2),257 (92.1), 392 (218.5)
Shyrokykh, Karina .........268 (108.1)Siachiwena, Hangala .......240 (77.8)Siberdt, Benoit...............187 (26.19)Siddiqi, Bilal Murtaza ...211 (51.10),
359 (197.18)Siddiqui, Niloufer..........212 (51.18),
241 (77.13), 393 (218.13)Sides, John M..................245 (83.2)Sidman, Andrew H.......352 (190.17)Sidney, Mara ..................256 (91.19)Sieberg, Katri K. ............392 (218.5)Siegel, Alexandra Arons ...........195
(33.26), 237 (71.42), 280(117.24), 350 (190.6), 358
(197.17)Siegel, Dave........... 250 (85.34), 270
(109.12)Siegel, David A. ........... 272 (109.25)Siegel, Nica......................222 (63.2)Sigman, Rachel .............261 (99.10)Signoret, Patrick Joseph...........263
(99.22)Sil, Rudra ... 308 (150.2), 325 (167.2)Silan, Wasiq .....................215 (55.1)Silber Mohamed, Heather..........220
(57.26), 284 (121.6)Silberberger, Magdalene ...........205
(43.12)Silfa, Maria ...................312 (152.25)Silva, Guilherme A.........318 (162.7)Silverman, Daniel ........397 (218.32)Silverstone, Scott A. ...296 (134.24)Simas, Elizabeth N. ........258 (95.1),
375 (209.34), 383 (212.35)Simien, Evelyn M......... 353 (190.26)Simison, Emilia............282 (117.38)Simko, Tyler .................304 (143.17)Simmons, Alan ............373 (209.18)Simmons, Beth A. ........247 (85.15),
378 (212.7), 387 (215.15)Simmons, Daniel J. ......234 (71.30),
344 (183.22)Simmons, Erica S. ........195 (33.28),
220 (57.25), 385 (213.1)Simon, Joshua......... 184 (26.2), 253
(91.3)Simon, Thorsten ..........314 (152.33)Simonson, Matthew......219 (57.23),
265 (99.34)Simonton, Matthew..........230 (71.1)Simpser, Alberto...... 254 (91.7), 318
(162.6), 371 (209.9)Simpson, Dick ......... 185 (26.7), 276
(116.1)Simpson, Elizabeth..........257 (92.1)Simpson, Liz....................257 (92.1)Simpson, Ximena ............204 (43.9)Sinanoglu, Semuhi .........185 (26.8),
207 (43.28), 220 (57.27)Sinclair, John Andrew ...............329
(168.25)Singer, Matthew ........... 310 (152.12)Singer, Phillip M. .............229 (70.1)Singh, J.P. .................... 331 (168.37)Singh, Naunihal ........... 272 (109.27)Singh, Prerna........... 211 (51.7), 229
(70.1), 325 (167.2), 369 (207.1)Singh, Rajkamal.............192 (33.10)Singh, Renu .............229 (70.1), 266
(99.41), 314 (152.39)Singh, Shane P. ... 298 (134.36), 313
(152.33)Singh, Shikhar ..... 371 (209.12), 395
(218.22)Singletary, Loretta ....... 376 (209.39)Sinha, Indira .......... 225 (63.19), 258
(95.1)Sinpeng, Aim ......... 185 (26.10), 198
(38.12)Siow, Orly ......................192 (33.13)Sirin, Cigdem V. ...............210 (51.3)Siroky, David S. ........... 388 (215.20)Siu, Alice..........................196 (34.2)Sjöstedt, Martin .............266 (99.39)Sjoberg, Laura ..... 287 (122.16), 322
(162.27)Skarbek, David ..............241 (77.13)Skerry, Peter N.................259 (99.2)Skestere, Lasma ..........269 (109.10)
IndexofParticipants
Skigin, Natan ....... 294 (134.11), 328(168.22), 381 (212.27)
Skinner, Kiron Kanina ...............295(134.22)
Sklar, Sarah ........... 231 (71.11), 341(181.1)
Skowronek, Stephen ...296 (134.27)Skytte, Rasmus ..... 277 (117.8), 330
(168.34)Slagter, Tracy H. ..........384 (212.42)Slapin, Jonathan B. .......357 (197.9)Slaski, Alexander...........262 (99.15)Slater, Dan ............. 188 (26.26), 353
(190.27)Slaughter, Christine Marie.........241
(77.17), 257 (91.27), 305(143.25), 330 (168.31)
Slayton, Rebecca......... 383 (212.39)Sledge, Daniel..................216 (57.5)Sloam, James ..............297 (134.31)Sloboda, Brian...............249 (85.30)Slomczynski, Kazimierz M. .......190
(32.1)Slothuus, Rune ........ 259 (99.3), 277
(117.8), 383 (212.35)Slough, Tara L ......... 215 (57.2), 260
(99.4), 282 (117.36), 331(168.40), 369 (208.1)
Slupek, Agatha Anna.....293 (134.3)Smelcer, Susan Navarro............352
(190.17)Smetana, Michal ..........303 (143.14)Smid, Sina ... 223 (63.7), 285 (121.9)Smidt, Corwin D. ...........248 (85.21)Smidt, Hannah ...............187 (26.19)Smirnova, Vera ..............231 (71.11)Smith, Aidan ................ 394 (218.20)Smith, Amy Erica..... 260 (99.8), 281
(117.30), 310 (152.12), 353(190.22)
Smith, Andrew Hewitt................355(192.4), 374 (209.29)
Smith, Andy .....................196 (35.1)Smith, AshLee ...............293 (134.8)Smith, Benjamin ..........331 (168.39)Smith, Bradley C .............253 (91.5)Smith, Brigid Mary.........274 (111.1)Smith, Candis Watts .......209 (50.1),
389 (215.24)Smith, Charles .............299 (134.42)Smith, Daniel A...... 213 (51.24), 263
(99.26)Smith, Daniel M. .... 213 (51.21), 340
(179.1), 342 (183.6)Smith, Frank L. .... 343 (183.16), 383
(212.39)Smith, Gemma .............376 (209.39)Smith, Heidi Jane M. ...279 (117.17)Smith, Jasmine ............345 (183.29)Smith, Jonathan C.........251 (85.41)Smith, Joseph L. ......... 394 (218.18)Smith, Katy ..................326 (168.11)Smith, Kelly B................220 (57.26)Smith, Lahra .......... 284 (121.4), 331
(168.41)Smith, Marisa A. .... 207 (43.27), 395
(218.24)Smith, Max ...................339 (176.32)Smith, Morgan Noel.... 313 (152.33),
323 (164.1)Smith, Natalie .............. 304 (143.18)Smith, Nicholas Rush................195
(33.28), 248 (85.20)Smith, Nicholas Rush................284
(121.4), 337 (176.17), 350(190.10), 385 (213.1)
Smith, Noah A. ............381 (212.22)Smith, Robert Courtney ............220
(57.25), 289 (122.24)Smith, Rogers M. ..........251 (85.39),
325 (167.1), 350 (190.9)Smith, Sophie ................349 (190.2)Smith, Steven Rathgeb .............257
(91.26)Smith, William................225 (63.21)Smooth, Wendy G. .........190 (32.2),
352 (190.19)Smyth, Peter ................ 395 (218.22)Snegovaya, Maria ..........261 (99.13)Snidal, Duncan ............357 (197.10)Sniderman, Paul M. .......201 (38.31)
X : 25749$CHIX09-28-21 23:19:53 Page 421Layout: 11437P : Odd
INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 421KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Snyder, Jack L. ............336 (176.13)Snyder, Patrick ............273 (109.29)Snyder, Richard O. ..........239 (77.7)So, Florence ..................335 (176.9)Sobol-Sarag, Danit ........364 (205.4)Sobolev, Anton ...... 186 (26.12), 269
(109.10)Soboleva, Irina....... 207 (43.25), 270
(109.12), 319 (162.10), 366(205.20)
Soderborg, Seth Nathan............327(168.15), 371 (209.12)
Soedirgo, Jessica .........198 (38.12),284 (121.4), 385 (213.1)
Soeker, Philipp ..............194 (33.19)Soenderskov, KimMannemar .................298 (134.37)
Sohlberg, Jacob ..........298 (134.37)Sohnius, Marie-Lou .......335 (176.9)Soifer, Hillel David ........192 (33.11),
314 (152.38), 338 (176.27), 396(218.29)
Sokhey, Anand Edward .............249(85.28), 323 (162.32)
Sokoloff, William W. ....353 (190.26)Sokolon, Marlene K. .... 395 (218.26)Sokolov, Boris .............380 (212.16)Solís Arce, Julio Saul......184 (25.2)Solanki, Durgesh ...........198 (38.11)Solanki, Gopika ...........375 (209.31)Solis, Rodolfo .............. 330 (168.31)Sollenberger, Mitchel A. ............388
(215.18)Solodoch, Omer.......... 283 (117.40),
285 (122.3)Solomon, Daniel ......... 294 (134.14),
338 (176.27), 359 (197.22)Solomon, Emma Bari ....233 (71.24)Somer, Murat .................317 (160.1)Somer-Topcu, Zeynep ...............292
(133.2), 346 (183.31), 376(209.36)
Sommer, Udi ..................234 (71.29)Sommerer, Thomas ..... 380 (212.20)Sonenshein, Raphael J. ............219
(57.19)Song, Hyunjin .............. 367 (205.23)Song, Jaehyun......... 237 (74.1), 269
(109.10), 368 (205.30)Song, Mingsi................ 343 (183.14)Song, Miyeon...............278 (117.11)Song, Sarah .................384 (212.44)Song, Wonjun ................188 (26.26)Sonin, Konstantin..........269 (109.8)Sonnleitner, Willibald ......190 (28.3)Sood, Gaurav.................301 (141.1)Sookrajowa, Sheetal Sheena ....210
(51.6)Sorace, Christian Phillip ...........246
(85.10)SoRelle, Mallory E. ....... 202 (38.33),
218 (57.15), 242 (77.24)Sorensen, Ashley ..........249 (85.31)Soroka, George ....... 240 (77.9), 264
(99.31)Soroka, Stuart N. ......... 303 (143.12)Souazoube, Jude.............228 (64.5)Soules, Michael James..............283
(119.1)Southworth, Susanna................345
(183.24)Souva, Mark...................283 (119.1)Souvannaseng, Pon ...319 (162.12),
397 (219.2)Sovner, Merrill ...............227 (63.27)Sowell, Jesse Horton ....261 (99.14)Soylemez, Busra..........380 (212.18)Spanakos, Tony P. ...........258 (92.2)Sparrow, Bartholomew H. .........302
(143.6)Spektorowski, Alberto...............325
(167.1)Sperber, Elizabeth S. .................353
(190.22)Sperling, Valerie ............200 (38.22)Spilker, Gabriele S.......351 (190.15)Spindel, Jennifer ......... 295 (134.20)Spirig, Judith .................220 (57.27)Spirling, Arthur ................210 (51.5)Spitzer, Scott ....... 277 (117.10), 323
(164.1), 362 (199.3)
Spoon, Jae-Jae ..............246 (85.12)Spotts, Michelle .............308 (152.4)Spriggs, James F. ..........233 (71.24)Springman, Jeremy ........246 (85.5),
279 (117.19)Spruk, Rok ............. 333 (173.1), 340
(181.1)Srinivasan, Kailash..........244 (81.1)Srivastava, Swati .........387 (215.14)Sriyai, Surachanee ........265 (99.37)Stöckle, Pirmin ................210 (51.3)St. Marie, Joseph J.........244 (79.1),
280 (117.25), 340 (181.1)Stafford, Eoghan ... 232 (71.16), 298
(134.40)Stanescu, Diana...........393 (218.11)Staniland, Paul ...... 205 (43.17), 257
(91.25)Stanton, Jessica ......... 271 (109.18),
337 (176.18)Stanton, Samuel S.......280 (117.25)Stanziano, Anna .... 226 (63.23), 288
(122.20)Starblanket, Gina...........349 (190.3)Stark, Alexandra ..........387 (215.14)Stark, Heidi Kiiwetinepinesiik ...341
(183.3)Stasavage, David..... 211 (51.8), 326
(168.9)Stashko, Allison ............364 (205.6)Staszak, Sarah.................246 (85.6)Staton, Jeffrey ....... 206 (43.20), 317
(159.2), 394 (218.18)Stauffer, Devin ...............332 (169.1)Stauffer, Katelyn E..........191 (33.8),
278 (117.11), 329 (168.25)Stauffer, Reto...............314 (152.33)Staysa, Abigail Marie.......258 (92.5)Stearns, Elizabeth .......289 (122.26)Stecher, Elayne..............302 (143.9)Stecula, Dominik Andrzej..........188
(26.27), 219 (57.23), 241(77.18), 353 (190.24)
Stedem, Kelly...............327 (168.14)Steele, Brent ............ 246 (85.9), 314
(152.36)Steelman, Tyler ............377 (209.42)Stefan, George....... 249 (85.29), 270
(109.12), 307 (146.1)Stegmaier, Mary....... 243 (78.4), 369
(206.4)Stegmueller, Daniel .... 343 (183.11),
380 (212.17)Steigerwalt, Amy L. ......225 (63.17),
244 (82.1)Stein, Arthur ....................243 (79.1)Stein, Arthur A...............262 (99.16)Stein, Eric ............ 306 (143.28), 343
(183.14)Stein, Michael K...........396 (218.27)Steinberg, David A. ......247 (85.13),
262 (99.15), 278 (117.17), 393(218.10)
Steinberg, Jessica ........293 (134.4),367 (205.24)
Steiner, Nils ...................275 (113.1)Steinert-Threlkeld, Zachary.......280
(117.24), 342 (183.6), 358(197.17)
Steinmetz, Alicia............325 (168.3)Stenberg, Matthew.........200 (38.23)Stengl, Noah ..................391 (216.2)Stephanopoulos, Nicholas ........288
(122.18)Stephens, John D. .........211 (51.13)Stephenson, Alexander .............215
(57.2)Stepp, Kyla ..................288 (122.17)Stevens, Daniel................245 (85.4)Stevens, Madeleine I .....188 (26.25)Stevens, Sam...................259 (99.1)Stevenson, Randolph T. ............204
(43.10), 376 (209.36)Stewart, Ashley ...........374 (209.29)Stewart, Brandon Michael .........210
(51.5), 379 (212.11)Stewart, Charles ......... 313 (152.32),
330 (168.33)Stewart, Megan A. ...... 374 (209.24),
392 (218.8)Stiansen, Øyvind ...........199 (38.15)
Stiers, Dieter................ 288 (122.19)Stiller, Kenneth ..............341 (181.1)Stobb, Maureen ..... 206 (43.20), 225
(63.17)Stockbruegger, Jan .....322 (162.28)Stockmann, Daniela ....357 (197.11)Stockton, Hans J. ............243 (78.3)Stoeckel, Florian..........343 (183.12)Stojanovic, Nenad ...........208 (44.3)Stokan, Eric ...................255 (91.16)Stoker, Gerry ...............321 (162.23)Stoker, Laura ......... 200 (38.26), 285
(121.9), 354 (190.29)Stokes, Leah.......... 235 (71.33), 265
(99.36)Stokes, Susan C. ......... 353 (190.27)Stokke, Espen................237 (71.42)Stoll, Heather ...................183 (22.1)Stollenwerk, Eric .........271 (109.21)Stommes, Drew ...........393 (218.13)Stone, Andrew R ... 233 (71.24), 280
(117.27)Stone, B .........................284 (121.4)Stone, Peter C. ........189 (28.2), 253
(91.3)Stone, Randall W. .........212 (51.14),
327 (168.17)Stone, Robert.................326 (168.6)Stone-Richards, Felicity ............266
(99.38)Stoner, James R. ..... 237 (72.1), 257
(92.2), 290 (125.3), 332 (169.2)Storch, Katharina ............244 (80.1)Stott, Jerry Michael ..... 353 (190.23)Stout, Christopher T. ......196 (37.1),
234 (71.26), 241 (77.16), 249(85.26), 305 (143.21), 345
(183.29), 382 (212.31)Stowers, Anthony ............228 (66.1)Strach, Patricia ............396 (218.30)Strachan, J. Cherie.........210 (51.6),
389 (215.23)Strange, Austin........ 204 (43.8), 367
(205.25)Strauch, Rebecca ..........226 (63.26)Straus, Scott........ 287 (122.12), 337
(176.17)Strausz, Michael ............274 (110.5)Stravers, Andrew...........275 (114.1)Strawbridge, Michael.....257 (91.27)Street, Alex ....................397 (219.5)Street, Ella .....................385 (215.1)Strezhnev, Anton ... 286 (122.7), 336
(176.12)Strickland, James Manning.......305
(143.24), 390 (215.26)Strickler, Ryan .............395 (218.23)Strijbis, Oliver..................216 (57.6)Strokan, Mikhail A. ....... 307 (146.1),
308 (150.2), 348 (187.1)Strolovitch, Dara Z. ........196 (37.1),
221 (58.5), 222 (62.2), 284(121.4), 394 (218.21)
Strong, Tracy B................245 (85.3)Stronko, Kylie .............. 379 (212.14)Strother, Logan............337 (176.20)Stroud, Natalie Jomini...............298
(134.39), 338 (176.25)Stroup, David R. ............369 (207.1)Stuckatz, Jan .................205 (43.12)Stundal, Logan ..............275 (114.1)Sturm, Ingmar................242 (77.19)Style, Hillary ....................216 (57.3)Su, Phi Hong ...................208 (44.5)Suarez-Cao, Julieta .......233 (71.25)Subotic, Jelena ...... 266 (99.40), 294
(134.14)Sudduth, Jun Koga ......188 (26.26),
232 (71.18)Sudulich, Laura ...............243 (79.1)Suffian, Ibrahim ...........293 (134.10)Suh, Kyungwon ........... 351 (190.13)Suhay, Elizabeth .... 220 (57.28), 298
(134.37), 376 (209.37)Sukhtankar, Sandip .......192 (33.10)Sukin, Lauren ...... 272 (109.23), 303
(143.14)Sullivan, Kathleen S. .....302 (143.6)Sullivan, Mary Elizabeth............397
(219.6)Sullivan, Michael J. ..... 288 (122.23)
Sullivan, Vickie B.............184 (26.1)Sultan, Nazmul S. ............191 (33.1)Sumaktoyo, NathanaelGratias ........................285 (122.3)
Sumer, Bilgesu ........ 227 (64.3), 239(77.6)
Sumner, Jane Lawrence............279(117.18), 315 (152.43), 320
(162.14)Sun, Jessica ............259 (98.2), 293
(134.4)Sun, Meicen ...................247 (85.15)Sun, Taiyi .......185 (26.7), 210 (51.6)Sunday, James Harris ...............305
(143.25), 333 (173.2), 360(197.23)
Sundell, Anders ........... 303 (143.12)Sundstrom, Lisa McIntosh ........211
(51.12), 279 (117.20), 382(212.30)
Sung, Rena ..................365 (205.13)Sung, Yu-Hsien ................214 (52.1)Suong, Clara H. ..... 292 (130.1), 366
(205.18)Super, Elizabeth.............385 (214.1)Surak, Sarah ......................181 (5.7)Suryanarayan, Pavithra .............223
(63.10), 254 (91.8), 277 (117.9),309 (152.8), 318 (162.6), 390
(215.31)Suss, Joel ....................321 (162.23)Sutherland, Joseph .......225 (63.22)Suttmann-Lea, Mara ... 281 (117.31),
313 (152.32)Suzuki, Kohei......... 242 (77.20), 321
(162.21)Svensson, Isak ............271 (109.21)Svolik, Milan ........ 371 (209.10), 384
(212.41)Svraka, Dragana ..........343 (183.12)Swaine, Lucas ...............391 (218.1)Swatton, Philip James....246 (85.7),
258 (95.1), 321 (162.23)Swedlow, Brendon.........219 (57.21)Sweet, Rachel .......... 202 (41.1), 295
(134.21)Sweet-Cushman, Jennie............197
(38.6)Swenson, Geoffrey ......373 (209.22)Switzer, David ...... 287 (122.14), 359
(197.21), 376 (209.39)Syedullah, Jasmine ........230 (71.2),
385 (215.3)Sylvan, David...................198 (38.9)Sylvester, Christine A................261
(99.12), 343 (183.11)Sylvester, Steven M. ..... 257 (91.27),
282 (117.39), 374 (209.29)Syros, Vasileios .............397 (219.6)Syse, Henrik ..................316 (153.2)Szakonyi, David ..... 261 (99.10), 371
(209.7)Szentkirályi, Levente ....363 (199.4),
392 (218.3)Szewach, Paula .............226 (63.23)Szmer, John J...... 297 (134.29), 337
(176.20)Szwarcberg Daby, Mariela.........206
(43.22), 357 (197.6)Szymanski, Ann-Marie E. ..........337
(176.19)
T
Tørstad, Vegard .............292 (130.1)Taden, John ........... 257 (91.29), 299
(134.46), 371 (209.11)Taghvaiee, Jessica ........214 (51.28)Tagma, Halit M ...............355 (192.1)Tai, Hugo...... 196 (34.1), 291 (126.1)Tai, Yongkang ................317 (161.1)Tai, Yuehong ........ 327 (168.16), 394
(218.17)Tait, Margaret.................188 (26.27)Tajima, Yuhki .................369 (206.5)Takahashi, Tomoko ..... 270 (109.15)Takahashi, Yuriko .... 190 (28.3), 269
(109.10)Takeda, Okiyoshi .........313 (152.29)Takei, Makito................ 366 (205.18)
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422 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Taliaferro, Karen ......239 (77.2), 377(210.1)
Talibova, Roya ....... 236 (71.36), 246(85.5)
Tallberg, Jonas ...... 193 (33.15), 380(212.20), 388 (215.19)
Talukder, David ............346 (183.31)Tamamizu, Leo ............366 (205.18)Tampio, Nicholas...........318 (162.3)Tan, Alexander C. ......... 273 (110.2),
323 (163.2)Tan, Yeling ... 217 (57.9), 254 (91.10)Tanaka, Seiki..................340 (180.1)Tang, Chengzuo..... 185 (26.11), 231
(71.11)Tang, Keyi ........................228 (67.1)Tang, Li ..........................275 (113.1)Tang, Phoebe Mengxiao............335
(176.8)Tang, Yiwei...................304 (143.18)Tang, Zhangmei .............292 (134.1)Tanigawa-Lau, Cole .......234 (71.28)Taninchev, Stacy Bondanella ....343
(183.15)Tanjeem, Nafisa .............355 (192.3)Tansey, Oisin .................266 (99.39)Tanveer Ahmed, Ali ........203 (43.5),
269 (109.7)Tap, Paul ......................287 (122.13)Tapscott, Rebecca ....... 350 (190.10)Taraktas, Basak .............386 (215.6)Tarar, Ahmer ..................224 (63.14)Tarlea, Silvana-Maria ......203 (43.6),
226 (63.27)Tarp, Finn.........................230 (71.5)Tarr, Nathan .................382 (212.32)Tarrow, Sidney....... 261 (99.11), 342
(183.5)Tatalovic, Stevan .............209 (45.2)Tavana, Daniel .............283 (117.42)Tavits, Margit ...............376 (209.36)Taylor, Andrew J............267 (107.1)Taylor, Chloë..................308 (152.4)Taylor, James Benjamin ............219
(57.23), 353 (190.24)Taylor, Jami K. .............282 (117.34)Taylor, Julie E. ...............385 (214.1)Taylor, Kirstine ..............214 (51.27)Taylor, Kristin ........ 200 (38.20), 314
(152.35), 333 (174.1), 361(197.27), 376 (209.39)
Taylor, Whitney K .........211 (51.11),394 (218.16)
Taylor, Zak ............. 193 (33.19), 206(43.19)
Taylor-Robinson, Michelle M.....287(122.13)
Teachout, Zephyr.............198 (38.8)Teas, Andrew Parker .....391 (217.2)Tecott, Rachel.............. 311 (152.20)Teele, Dawn L. ..... 278 (117.15), 345
(183.27), 371 (209.8)Tellez, Juan Fernando ...............218
(57.14)Temin, David ....................191 (33.1)Temnyalova, Mila...........246 (85.12)Temoney, LaRaven ........213 (51.24)ten Napel, Hans-Martien............348
(184.2)Tenenboim-Weinblatt, Keren.....367
(205.21)Tennyson, Timothy Tyler...........391
(218.1)Teodora, Zlei Ecaterina .............249
(85.29), 270 (109.12)Teodoro, Manny P. ........248 (85.22),
329 (168.25), 376 (209.39)Teorell, Jan ..................371 (209.10)Tepe, Markus Stephan...............383
(212.38)Tepe, Sultan ........... 225 (63.20), 249
(85.29), 267 (107.1)Teppo, Annika Björnsdotter ......209
(45.2)TerBeek, Calvin................191 (33.3)Terechshenko, Zhanna ..............185
(26.6), 216 (57.6)Terman, Rochelle Layla.............336
(176.13), 381 (212.22)Terris, Lesley G. ..........373 (209.20)
Tertytchnaya, Katerina ..............294(134.13), 331 (168.38), 364
(205.8), 371 (209.10)Terwiel, Anna M. ............325 (168.4)Testa, Paul Franz .............239 (77.7)Testriono, Fnu .........243 (78.3), 286
(122.5)Tezcur, Günes Murat .................199
(38.18), 330 (168.32), 342(183.8), 382 (212.32)
Thachil, Tariq ...............380 (212.15)Thaler, Kai Massey ........257 (91.25)Thames, Frank C. ..........241 (77.14)Thayer, Bradley A. ..........243 (78.1),
255 (91.13)Theocharis, Yannis........213 (51.26)Theodoridis, AlexanderGeorge ........................234 (71.30)
Theriault, Sean M. ........263 (99.23),374 (209.25)
Theuerkauf, Ulrike Gisela..........320(162.19)
Thiébaut, Cyrille ..........320 (162.16)Thies, Cameron G.........293 (134.9),
311 (152.21)Thijssen, Peter............. 298 (134.35)Thiollet, Helene C ........ 272 (109.26)Thomas, Anjali............. 330 (168.29)Thomas, Darryl Clark ......183 (25.1)Thomas, George ..........332 (168.42)Thomas, Herschel F........209 (48.2),
216 (57.5)Thomas, Jacob Richard ............396
(218.31)Thomas, Jakana ............187 (26.19)Thomas, John................248 (85.25)Thomas, Lahoma......... 337 (176.17)Thomas, Matthew O. .....264 (99.27)Thomas, Sue..................200 (38.25)Thomas, Tyler ................325 (168.2)Thomassen, Bjorn ...........189 (27.6)Thomassen, Lasse ........273 (110.4)Thompson, Alexander ...............212
(51.15)Thompson, C. Bradley ..............300
(135.1)Thompson, Daniel M .....233 (71.23)Thompson, Doug..........325 (168.6),
370 (209.4), 378 (212.5)Thompson, Frank J. .... 396 (218.30)Thompson, Henry Haynes.........317
(161.1)Thompson, Peter Onah .............243
(79.1)Thompson, Sarah F. ......293 (134.6)Thompson, W. Rafferty..............389
(215.22)Thompson-Uberuaga, WilliamM. ..................................214 (52.2)
Thomsen, Danielle...... 288 (122.18),329 (168.24)
Thomson, Henry ......... 298 (134.40),331 (168.39), 356 (197.4)
Thomson, Susan M. ..... 187 (26.18),306 (143.30)
Thornhill, Chandler........301 (140.1)Thornton, Ashley.............198 (38.9)Thorpe, Rebecca U...... 277 (117.10)Thorson, Emily .... 338 (176.25), 385
(212.46)Thorson, Kjerstin...........265 (99.34)Thorvaldsdottir, Svanhildur ......286
(122.7)Thrall, Calvin ...............295 (134.17)Thurber, Ches ........ 205 (43.15), 262
(99.21), 328 (168.19)Thurman, Devon .... 206 (43.20), 244
(82.1)Thurston, Alexander.... 273 (109.27)Thurston, Chloe..... 218 (57.15), 243
(77.24), 256 (91.19)Tiberghien, Yves E. .......262 (99.16)Tiberti, Federico .... 192 (33.11), 231
(71.10)Tichelbaecker, Thomas .............320
(162.19), 389 (215.25)Tichenor, Daniel..... 257 (91.28), 272
(109.26), 341 (183.5)Tiede, Lydia Brashear ...............281
(117.28), 329 (168.27), 374(209.28)
Tiemann, Guido .............317 (159.1)Tien, Charles P......... 243 (78.4), 307
(144.2)Tierney, Dominic............255 (91.12)Tierney, Thomas F. ........308 (152.4)Tiessen, Margarete ........292 (134.2)Timken, Alice Cho .........268 (107.2)Timmons, Jeffrey F. .........210 (51.4)Ting, Wang Leung .........227 (63.28)Tingley, Dustin Halliday ............295
(134.18)Tirrell, Andrew ...............275 (112.2)Tisch, Daniel ..................220 (57.26)Tiscornia, Lucia ... 379 (212.14), 386
(215.8), 393 (218.14)Titiunik, Rocio ...............233 (71.23)Tjia, Linda Yin-nor .......319 (162.12)Tkacheva, Olesya ..........192 (33.12)Tkacova, Katerina..........187 (26.20)To, James Jiann Hua.................299
(134.45)Tobin, Jennifer L ........ 279 (117.19),
379 (212.13)Tobon, Santiago ............342 (183.7)Tobon Palma, Sebastian ...........363
(204.1)Todd, Jason Douglas ................310
(152.11), 389 (215.22)Toender, Lars......... 285 (122.1), 361
(197.29)Toff, Benjamin ....... 235 (71.32), 250
(85.32), 390 (215.28)Toha, Risa ......................185 (26.10)Tokdemir, Efe.................193 (33.15)Tolbert, Caroline J. .......264 (99.32),
297 (134.34), 313 (152.32), 352(190.18)
Toledo Orozco, Zarai .......252 (88.1)Tolika, Maria ....................252 (88.2)Tolkin, Alexander...........241 (77.17)Tomashevskiy, Andrey ..............224
(63.15), 270 (109.14), 380(212.18)
Tomba, Massimiliano....325 (168.5),356 (197.1)
Tombe, Sandra ............299 (134.43)Tomescu-Dubrow, Irina ...190 (32.1)Tominaga, Yasutaka ... 295 (134.21),
366 (205.18)Tomz, Michael R. ... 193 (33.15), 286
(122.10), 373 (209.18)Tong, Zhichao................187 (26.20)Topor, Lev ......................193 (33.16)Topper, Keith ...................245 (85.3)Toral, Guillermo .............369 (208.1)Torcal, Mariano ............310 (152.12)Tormos Aponte, FernandoArturo......... 183 (22.1), 202 (39.1),
252 (89.1), 290 (123.4), 334(175.1)
Toro, María-Celia ......... 280 (117.23)Toros, Emre .................346 (183.33)Torrens, Gustavo F......360 (197.23)Torres, Felipe...............377 (209.42)Torres, Marcela ................209 (49.3)Torres, Michelle .............318 (162.8)Torres, Priscilla..............224 (63.15)Torres, Rachel ......... 238 (76.6), 330
(168.30)Torres Guevara, Angel ..............319
(162.9)Torres Morales, Bernat..............189
(27.6), 307 (144.1)Torres-Beltran, Angie ....339 (178.2)Toshkov, Dimiter.......... 331 (168.39)tosun, yasemin ........ 204 (43.6), 346
(183.33)Toth, Aliz................ 223 (63.10), 278
(117.14), 293 (134.6)Toubian, Lea M. ...........373 (209.18)Tovar, Jesus ....................190 (28.3)Tower, Kimberly D .........348 (186.1)Towner, Terri L.............395 (218.25)Townsend-Bell, Erica......196 (36.1),
238 (76.9), 271 (109.20)Trachtman, Sam..... 235 (71.33), 324
(164.2)Trager, Robert F. .... 232 (71.16), 279
(117.22), 366 (205.17), 378(212.6)
Tran, Anh .....................310 (152.11)
IndexofParticipants
Tran, Janet .....................332 (170.2)Tran, Van..........................208 (44.5)Transue, John E. ..... 245 (85.4), 260
(99.3)Traunmuller, Richard ....186 (26.13),
335 (176.5)Travaglini, Giulia Leila...............326
(168.8)Travis, Candice K ........396 (218.27)Trebbi, Francesco..........200 (38.19)Treger, Clareta ...............332 (172.1)Treisman, Daniel S. ......250 (85.35),
331 (168.39)Tremblay, Manon ......... 323 (162.31)Trevisan, Filippo ..........395 (218.25)Trexler, Andrew R.L. ......265 (99.35)Triadafilopoulos, Triadafilos .....272
(109.26)Tripp, Aili Mari ....... 233 (71.25), 271
(109.19)Troeger, Vera Eva .... 215 (56.1), 252
(89.2)Tromble, Rebekah ....... 298 (134.39)Trounstine, Jessica Luce ..........250
(85.38), 344 (183.19)Troutman, Noelle ......... 358 (197.16)Troy, Kevin.....................231 (71.10)Truex, Rory ..................331 (168.38)Trump, Kris-Stella........ 368 (205.29)Truong, Nhu.................310 (152.11)Tsai, Kellee S. ..................189 (27.4)Tsai, Lily L. .................. 329 (168.26)Tsao, Roy Thomas.........341 (183.1)Tsay-Vogel, Mina..........347 (183.35)Tseng, Huan-Kai ..........323 (162.32)Tsourapas, Gerasimos ..............236
(71.42), 272 (109.26), 299(134.45), 315 (152.41), 331
(168.41)Tsunekawa, Keiichi..........221 (58.3)Tu, Fangjing .................390 (215.28)Tucker, Jacob ..................239 (77.4)Tucker, Joshua A..... 185 (26.6), 195
(33.26), 200 (38.19), 216 (57.6),242 (77.20), 266 (99.42), 288
(122.20), 298 (134.39), 308(150.1), 330 (168.34), 338
(176.25), 360 (197.26)Tucker, Tina ...................377 (211.1)Tuckness, Alex ................253 (91.1)Tudor, Maya Jessica.....198 (38.12),
282 (117.38), 387 (215.10)Tuite, James Joseph ....265 (99.34),
275 (113.2)Tukiainen, Janne ...........342 (183.6)Tulis, Jeffrey K.............296 (134.27)Tulle Varela, Ashley Karina .......292
(133.2)Tung, Hans Hanpu........200 (38.24),
243 (78.3), 260 (99.9)Tungohan, Ethel ..............202 (39.1)Tur Prats, Ana................276 (115.1)Turbino Torres, LuisaFernanda.......................220 (58.2)
Tures, John A. ...............362 (199.2)Turkenburg, Emma ........364 (205.4)Turnbull, Megan........... 388 (215.17)Turnbull-Dugarte, Stuart J.........226
(63.22)Turner, Ian R. ........... 215 (57.2), 309
(152.5), 369 (208.1)Turner, Jack .....................197 (38.1)Turner, Jacob......... 274 (112.1), 322
(162.30)Turner, Kimberly .... 217 (57.11), 238
(76.4)Turner, Robin L..............284 (121.4)Turska-Kawa, Agnieszka ...........300
(136.1)Tuñón, Guadalupe ...... 345 (183.27),
352 (190.22), 353 (190.22)Twomey, Christopher P..............262
(99.18)Tworzecki, Hubert......... 194 (33.23),
227 (63.29), 307 (147.1), 319(162.11)
Tykocinski, Orit E. ....... 373 (209.20)Tyler, Matthew.......... 216 (57.6), 317
(159.1)Tyner, Katie....................206 (43.19)Tyson, Katherine T.........292 (130.1)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 423KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Tyson, Scott............. 259 (98.2), 290(125.2), 293 (134.4), 318(162.4), 334 (176.4), 356
(197.3), 370 (208.2)
U
Ucaray-Mangitli, Burcu..............341(181.1)
Udani, Adriano............. 289 (122.23)Ufen, Andreas................317 (160.1)Ugur, Etga......................249 (85.27)Ugur Cinar, Meral ..........318 (162.7)Uji, Azusa.....................295 (134.18)Ulbig, Stacy G................355 (192.3)Umek, Philipp .............. 314 (152.33)Umit, Resul ....................241 (77.14)Umpierrez de Reguero, SebastiánA....................................223 (63.6)
Unah, Isaac ..................352 (190.17)Unden, Megan.......... 202 (39.1), 361
(197.29)Urbinati, Nadia......... 260 (99.8), 363
(205.1)Uribe, Andres......... 342 (183.7), 353
(190.27)Uribe-McGuire, Alicia ....233 (71.24)Urtuzuastigui, Jerry.......275 (114.1)Usher, Nikki ........... 235 (71.32), 376
(209.38)Uttermark, Matthew Joseph ......323
(163.4), 340 (180.2)Utych, Stephen Michael ............292
(133.2), 326 (168.7)Uzonyi, Gary ........ 337 (176.18), 381
(212.26)
V
Vabulas, Felicity .... 193 (33.15), 291(130.1)
Vaccari, Cristian .... 194 (33.25), 213(51.26)
Vaccaro, Andrea ............386 (215.7)Vachudova, Milada Anna...........357
(197.9)Vail, Mark I. ....................323 (163.1)Valbruzzi, Marco ............273 (110.1)Valdez, Ines....197 (38.2), 222 (63.4)Valdimarsdóttir, Margrét............269
(109.11)Valdini, Melody E. ....... 374 (209.28),
394 (218.17)Valdivieso Kastner, Pablo .........275
(113.2)Valentim, António .........192 (33.13),
219 (57.20)Valentim, Vicente..........261 (99.12),
343 (183.11)Valentino, Benjamin A. ..............287
(122.12), 303 (143.14)Valentino, Lauren ........339 (176.31)Valentino, Nicholas A. .....210 (51.3)Valenzuela, Ali A............200 (38.25)Valeriani, Augusto .........213 (51.26)Valeriano, Brandon..........208 (45.1)Vallée-Dubois, Florence ............207
(43.24)Vallbe, Joan-Josep ........285 (122.4)Vallejo, Agustin .............341 (183.4)Vallejo Vera, Sebastian..............233
(71.21), 248 (85.25), 379(212.13)
Valli, Chiara.................. 321 (162.25)van Beek, Mael ............393 (218.12)van de Walle, Nicolas ....250 (85.37)van den Boogaard, Vanessa .....327
(168.15)van den Dool, Annemieke .........397
(219.2)van der Linden, Clifton..............353
(190.24)van der Veen, A. Maurits...........286
(122.6)van der Vet, Freek ....... 279 (117.20)van der Waal, Jeroen ....234 (71.30)Van der Windt, Peter .....195 (33.29)van der Zwan, Natascha............247
(85.14)
van Dijk, Lisa ........... 208 (44.3), 364(205.4)
van Mierlo, Trix ........ 227 (64.1), 243(78.2)
Van Noort, Sam .............211 (51.10)Van Nostrand, Rachel Dawn .....244
(80.1)Van Nuys, Maya ........... 351 (190.14)Van Overbeke, Toon ......385 (214.3)Van Vechten, Renee B. ..............292
(133.1), 354 (192.1), 362(199.2)
van Vugt, Mark...............269 (109.6)van Wessel, Margit ...... 313 (152.30)Vanberg, Georg ..... 309 (152.6), 353
(190.27)Vande Bunte (APSA), Ashley ....221
(60.2)Vanderhill, Rachel ........185 (26.11),
317 (161.1)VanMeter, Emily .............378 (212.9)VanSickle-Ward, Rachel ............394
(218.18)Varacalli, Thomas ..........316 (154.1)Vargas, Andres ............328 (168.23)Vargas Nunez, Cesar Daniel......396
(218.30)Varsanyi, Monica W......242 (77.23),
257 (91.28), 354 (190.30)Varsori, Andrea............328 (168.22)Vasko, Timothy Bowers ............268
(109.4)Vasquez Cortes, Mateo .............217
(57.12), 344 (183.20), 381(212.26)
Vassallo, Francesca ......265 (99.34)Vasselai, Fabricio ..........342 (183.6)Vassiliou, Constantine ...222 (63.1),
370 (209.2)Vatter, Miguel .................334 (176.2)Vaughan, Michael ........395 (218.25)Vaughn, Abigail ........... 336 (176.11)Vaynman, Jane Eugenia............232
(71.16), 343 (183.15)Vazquez Arroyo, Antonio Y. ......318
(162.2)Vecchiato, Alessandro ...216 (57.6),
354 (190.29)Vega, Catalina.............. 315 (152.41)Vega, Diego.................. 329 (168.26)Vega, Facundo...............334 (176.2)Vegelius, Johan ...........326 (168.10)Vegetti, Frederico .........273 (110.1),
294 (134.15)Vegter, Abigail ..... 367 (205.21), 382
(212.32)Velasco Guachalla, V.Ximena ...... 239 (77.7), 385 (214.3)
Velasquez, Alcides ......395 (218.25)Velez, Yamilet.................355 (193.1)Velez-Serrano, Mayra.................367
(205.24)Veneti, Anastasia...........242 (77.18)Venturini, Giulia ...............252 (87.2)Venturino, Fulvio ...........273 (110.1)Vera-Adrianzen, FiorellaPatricia ........................266 (99.40)
Verdun, Amy ................ 336 (176.10)Vergara, Camila ..... 292 (134.1), 318
(162.2), 377 (212.2)Vergara, Ezekiel ..... 224 (63.11), 244
(81.1)Vergara, Gabriel.............377 (212.2)Verge, Tània .................337 (176.21)Verghese, Ajay.............306 (143.29)Verhaegen, Soetkin .......193 (33.15)Vermassen, Daan...........340 (179.1)Verovšek, Peter J. ... 191 (33.5), 294
(134.16), 319 (162.13)Verschuren, Sanne ........186 (26.16)Vertier, Paul ...................378 (212.8)Vertika, Vertika...............292 (134.1)Vetter, Lisa Pace...... 215 (57.1), 391
(215.32)Vieira, Everett Albert .......203 (43.5)Vikberg, Carl ................ 380 (212.20)Villalobos, Jose D............210 (51.3)Villamil, Francisco .........236 (71.35)Villamizar Chaparro, Mateo .......218
(57.14), 297 (134.31)
Villegas Cruz, Angel Manuel .....254(91.10)
Vimo, Jackie ................379 (212.10)Vining, Peter B.............359 (197.18)Vining, Richard L.........337 (176.20)Viola, Lora Anne.... 193 (33.15), 280
(117.23)Virtue, Isabel Claire ..... 367 (205.23)Visconti, Giancarlo .......211 (51.11),
319 (162.10)Viskupic, Filip ..............373 (209.21)Vitriol, Joseph ....... 188 (26.27), 253
(91.6), 318 (162.5)Vitullo, Margaret Weigers..........257
(91.26)Vivyan, Nick ...................386 (215.5)Vlasenko, Anastasiia .................270
(109.12), 300 (140.1)Vllasi, Elis ....................315 (152.41)Voeten, Erik ......... 270 (109.15), 284
(121.3), 381 (212.22)Vogel, Steven K. ..............198 (38.8)Vogler, Jan P. ......... 201 (38.26), 371
(209.8), 379 (212.9)Volden, Craig ....... 329 (168.24), 374
(209.25)Volintiru, Clara....... 249 (85.29), 270
(109.12), 307 (146.1)Volpe, Tristan A. ............232 (71.16)Volpi, Elisa .....................224 (63.16)von Billerbeck, Sarah ................390
(215.30)von Borzyskowski, Inken ..........193
(33.15), 388 (215.17)Von Bulow, Marisa...........240 (77.7)von Heyking, John F.......251 (86.1),
257 (92.2), 316 (153.2)von Schiller, Armin.........230 (71.5),
278 (117.14)von Soest, Christian....322 (162.29)von Stein, Jana..............254 (91.11)Vortherms, Samantha....254 (91.10)Voss, Dustin ..................385 (214.3)Vowles, Jack ........ 271 (109.20), 395
(218.22)Voytas, Elsa ........... 234 (71.26), 360
(197.22)Vromen, Ariadne..........395 (218.25)Vu, Tuong.....................381 (212.21)Vyas, Gargi ..................358 (197.12)Vyborny, Kate ................211 (51.10)
W
Wäckerle, Jens ...... 241 (77.14), 261(99.12)
Wachhaus, Aaron ........382 (212.29)Waddick, Aubrey ...........254 (91.10)Waggoner, Jacob...........255 (91.16)Wagle, Gauri ............ 184 (26.2), 245
(85.1)Wagner, Kevin..............367 (205.24)Wagner, Markus........... 375 (209.35)Wagner, Michael W. .......301 (141.1)Wagner, Regina ... 346 (183.30), 374
(209.29)Wagner, Sarah .................258 (95.1)Wahl, Rachel Lee........ 273 (109.28),
395 (218.24)Wahman, Michael .........227 (63.28),
289 (122.25), 338 (176.29), 388(215.17)
Wakao, Shinya .................196 (34.2)Wald, Kenneth D..........367 (205.21)Waldorf, Steven .............332 (169.2)Walk, Erin Elizabeth .... 359 (197.17)Walker, Alexis .......... 216 (57.5), 246
(85.6), 258 (92.3)Walker, Duncan Gregory ...........358
(197.16)Walker, Hannah........ 183 (22.1), 256
(91.21), 309 (152.9), 352(190.21)
Walker, Lee D...........209 (49.2), 256(91.18)
Walker, Richard M ....... 296 (134.25)Walker, Zoe .................. 382 (212.31)Wallace, Adryan.............264 (99.29)Wallace, Geoffrey P.R. ...............232
(71.14)
Wallace, Jeremy L. ..........217 (57.9)Wallace, Sophia Jordan ............330
(168.30)Wallach, John R..... 362 (198.3), 370
(209.1)Walling, Carrie Booth ................288
(122.22)Wallman Lundasen, Susanne....317
(159.2), 329 (168.25)Wallsten, Kevin Jay ..... 395 (218.21)Walsh, Colleen C. ........ 396 (218.30)Walsh, David J......... 214 (52.2), 267
(100.2)Walsh, Denise Marie .......215 (56.1),
313 (152.28)Walsh, Shannon Drysdale .........206
(43.22), 275 (112.2), 368(205.27)
Walter, Andrew ..............247 (85.14)Walter, Annemarie Sophie.........269
(109.6)Walter, Dror....................219 (57.23)Walter, Stefanie.............. 193 (33.14,
33.15), 239 (77.5)Walters, Kirsten ...............196 (37.1)Walters (APSA), Julia ....291 (127.1)Wamble, Julian ...... 218 (57.18), 241
(77.16)Wan, Kinman ...............269 (109.11)Wan, Yifeng.................. 382 (212.30)Wang, Austin Horng-En.............194
(33.24), 290 (123.3)Wang, Binfan .................318 (162.3)Wang, Chan .................287 (122.14)Wang, Chen .................381 (212.24)Wang, Chendi ................341 (183.4)Wang, Ching-Hsing.........196 (34.1),
214 (52.1), 243 (78.3), 273(110.2)
Wang, Erik H................ 278 (117.15)Wang, Frances Yaping ..............224
(63.12)Wang, Gang ...................335 (176.8)Wang, Hsu Yumin .... 230 (71.7), 290
(123.3)Wang, Huiru ...................334 (175.3)Wang, Jeffery Shih-Chieh .........275
(114.1)Wang, Joy ......................363 (205.2)Wang, Juan .............. 204 (43.8), 335
(176.8)Wang, Mengqiao ............226 (63.25)Wang, Mingsen ..............317 (161.1)WANG, Qingyan........... 382 (212.30)Wang, Raymond ..........343 (183.16)Wang, T.Y. .............. 273 (110.2), 323
(163.2)Wang, Tova ....................256 (91.23)Wang, Vibeke ...............315 (152.42)Wang, Xiaonan...............341 (183.4)Wang, Ye ....... 217 (57.9), 223 (63.9),
307 (147.1), 322 (162.29), 371(209.9), 392 (218.7)
Wang, Yiqiang.............. 297 (134.29)Wang, Yuan-kang.............208 (44.2)Wang, Yuhao..................231 (71.11)Wang, Yuhua.......... 277 (117.9), 342
(183.10), 392 (218.6)Wang, Zheng............ 208 (44.5), 348
(186.1)Wangge, Hipolitus .........369 (206.5)Wangnerud, Lena ..........264 (99.28)Warber, Adam L. ..........388 (215.18)Warburton, Eve............293 (134.10)Ward, Ann ......................362 (198.3)Ward, Dalston G .... 198 (38.11), 251
(85.41)Ward, Lee.......................391 (218.1)Ward, Matthew ...............218 (57.16)Warren, Joseph ....... 260 (99.6), 276
(117.4), 376 (209.37)Warren, Mark E. .............349 (190.4)Warshaw, Christopher ....245 (83.2),
287 (122.15)Washburn, David J ........188 (26.27)Washida, Hidekuni.........187 (26.22)Wasow, Omar...................209 (49.1)Wassel, Kathryn Elizabeth ........255
(91.16)Waterbury, Myra A. ..........223 (63.6)
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424 INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS
Waterbury, Nicholas ..... 233 (71.24),244 (82.1)
Waterman, Richard W................233(71.22)
Waxman, Andrew...........340 (180.2)Wayne, Carly Nicole ... 272 (109.25),
370 (208.2)Weaver, Catherine ....... 388 (215.19)Weaver, Holly...............338 (176.28)Weaver, Julie Anne........302 (143.9)Weaver, Michael....... 254 (91.8), 324
(165.1), 333 (173.1), 340(180.1)
Weaver, Timothy ............256 (91.19)Webb, Clayton McLaughlin .......252
(89.2)Webb, Michael William ..............343
(183.13)Webb Williams, Nora ......198 (38.9),
229 (70.2), 319 (162.8)Webber, Julie A. ............285 (122.1)Weber, Christopher R. ...............353
(190.23)Weber, Lori M ................362 (199.3)Weber, Shlomo ................211 (51.8)Weber, Till .................... 368 (205.31)Webster, Nicole........185 (26.7), 276
(116.1)Webster, Steven W. .......201 (38.26)Wedeen, Lisa .................385 (213.1)Wedeking, Justin..........233 (71.24),
280 (117.27)Weeks, Ana Catalano ....276 (115.1)Weeks, Harrison James ............193
(33.18)Weeks, Jessica L. P......193 (33.17),
254 (91.9), 286 (122.10), 347(183.38)
Wegner, Eva.....................223 (63.7)Wegschaider, Klaudia......203 (43.4)Wei, Pei-Yu............... 251 (87.1), 366
(205.16)Weible, Chris ...............314 (152.35)Weiler, Florian.............. 270 (109.13)Weinberg, Joe.............. 357 (197.11)Weiner, Greg ....................189 (27.2)Weingast, Barry R. ........386 (215.4)Weinstock, Daniel............259 (99.2)Weintraub, Michael Lee.............218
(57.14), 328 (168.23), 364(205.9)
Weir, Margaret .............296 (134.27)Weisiger, Alex.............. 320 (162.15)Weiss, Chagai........ 217 (57.12), 266
(99.42), 317 (159.1), 350(190.6), 364 (205.4)
Weiss, Jessica Chen .......217 (57.9)Weiss, Meredith L........293 (134.10)Weiss, Penny A. ..............253 (91.3)Weisstanner, David........211 (51.13)Welborne, Bozena Christina .....264
(99.28), 271 (109.19)Welch, Susan...............294 (134.14)Weldon, S. Laurel .... 202 (39.1), 264
(99.29)Weldzius, Ryan M. ........247 (85.13),
336 (176.11)Welker, Chelsea ....... 196 (34.3), 341
(183.2)Wellhausen, Rachel .... 295 (134.17),
319 (162.14), 380 (212.19)Wellman, Elizabeth Iams ...........332
(168.41), 377 (209.43)Wells, Matthew ............337 (176.18)Wells, Rob......................254 (91.10)Welsh, Blair ...................187 (26.17)Wendell, Dane G. .............191 (33.7)Weng, Dennis Lu-Chung ...........196
(34.1), 208 (44.2)Weng, Li-Hong...............290 (123.3)Werner, Hannah ...............208 (44.3)West, Emily Anne ..........241 (77.17)West, Karleen ..............353 (190.25)West, Paris.......................253 (90.3)Westbrook, Marisa K .....363 (204.1)Westerwinter, Oliver ... 270 (109.16),
328 (168.18), 373 (209.19)Westler, Brendon ..........268 (109.1),
391 (216.2)Westwood, Sean............317 (159.1)Weted, Carley ..............353 (190.25)
Weyland, Kurt ..........260 (99.8), 357(197.9)
Weymouth, Stephen ..... 193 (33.14),387 (215.12)
Whalen, Emily Ingrid ...381 (212.23)Whetstone, Crystal ......394 (218.20)Whitaker, Beth Elise ......242 (77.23)White, Allison C...............223 (63.8)White, Ariel Rebecca ....302 (143.7),
345 (183.29)White, Ismail K. ....... 203 (42.2), 209
(50.1), 377 (211.1), 385 (214.2)White, Peter .................280 (117.24)White, Stephen K...........363 (205.1)White, Steven......... 234 (71.26), 246
(85.6), 277 (117.10)White, Timothy J. ............190 (28.2)Whitesell, Anne ... 297 (134.32), 333
(174.1), 346 (183.32)Whiting, Susan .... 351 (190.11), 394
(218.16)Whitney, David N. ..........362 (198.1)Whitten, Guy D. .............356 (197.3)Wibbels, Erik M........ 246 (85.5), 279
(117.19), 376 (209.41)Wichowsky, Amber.........245 (83.2),
307 (143.32), 317 (159.1), 339(176.31), 361 (197.32)
Widmeier, Michael W .....205 (43.16)Widner, Kirsten .... 280 (117.27), 345
(183.24)Wiebelhaus-Brahm, Eric............237
(71.42), 394 (218.19)Wiebrecht, Felix...............204 (43.8)Wieck, Bianca .............. 304 (143.18)Wiedekind, Jakob ..........194 (33.19)Wiedemann, Andreas ...275 (113.1),
278 (117.16)Wiedemann, Johannes ..............349
(189.3), 371 (209.7)Wiegand, Krista E.........217 (57.13),
373 (209.23)Wieland, AndersGammelholm...............386 (215.7)
Wiener, Elizabeth......... 374 (209.29)Wiesehomeier, Nina.......342 (183.8)Wig, Tore...................... 282 (117.38)Wijk, Anne....................296 (134.24)Wijsman, Katinka..... 196 (34.3), 353
(190.25)Wild, Chayne Thomas .....196 (34.3)Wilder, Matt....................269 (109.8)Wiley, Susan L. ........ 252 (88.2), 292
(133.1)Wilfahrt, Martha ..... 195 (33.29), 240
(77.8)Wilhelm, Teena ............337 (176.20)Wiliarty, Sarah Elise ......206 (43.19)Wilke, Anna Maria.... 184 (25.2), 215
(57.2)Wilkerson, John D. .......319 (162.8),
333 (174.1)Wilkins, Austin ..............254 (91.10)Wilkinson, Betina Cutaia ...........330
(168.31), 394 (218.21)Willard-Foster, Melissa ..............358
(197.15)Willen, Sarah S. ........... 396 (218.30)Willett, Thomas D. ....... 393 (218.10)Willi, Thomas Christian .............234
(71.28)Williams, Avery ..............267 (100.3)Williams, H. Howell.........238 (76.1),
379 (212.10)Williams, Ife ...................391 (217.2)Williams, Isabel............383 (212.36)Williams, Kim M...........345 (183.28)Williams, Laron K. ....... 376 (209.36)Williams, Princess Hope ...........375
(209.32)Williams, Rina Verma ...194 (33.23),
200 (38.24), 227 (64.3), 396(218.28)
Williams, Ryan P. ...........391 (216.1)Williams, Shaniqua...... 359 (197.21)Williamson, Abigail Fisher ........257
(91.28), 289 (122.24), 330(168.30), 396 (218.30)
Williamson, Scott .... 244 (80.1), 364(205.7)
Willis, Charmaine N. .......208 (44.1),220 (58.2)
Willison, Charley Ellen ..............229(70.1), 266 (99.41), 304
(143.19)Willoughby-Herard, Tiffany J. ...190
(31.1), 284 (121.4)Willumsen, David Munck...........213
(51.21)Wilmot, Claire .............. 394 (218.19)Wilson, Bruce M. ......... 394 (218.16)Wilson, Carter A. .............185 (26.5)Wilson, Elspeth.... 288 (122.23), 302
(143.6)Wilson, Hannah ..... 275 (113.2), 291
(128.1)Wilson, James A............385 (214.1)Wilson, James L. .............245 (85.2)Wilson, Matthew ............264 (99.31)Wilson, Meghan E.........207 (43.29),
241 (77.16)Wilson, Nicole E. ........ 372 (209.13),
384 (212.45)Wilson, Saul Kriger ........189 (27.4),
300 (140.1)Wilson, Steven Lloyd ................280
(117.24), 393 (218.15)Wilson, Walter........ 235 (71.32), 383
(212.36)Wilson-McDonald, AlexandriaN................................287 (122.16)
Wimpy, Cameron .............254 (91.7)Wind, Marlene................231 (71.12)Windett, Jason H. ......... 200 (38.22),
352 (190.18)Winecoff, William Kindred.........205
(43.12)Wineroither, Dave ........270 (109.13)Wingate, David ................230 (71.6)Wingrove, Elizabeth R. ..............308
(152.3)Winslett, Gary ...... 303 (143.13), 340
(181.1)Winters, Joseph...............239 (77.3)Winters, Matthew S. ... 279 (117.19),
285 (122.3), 351 (190.15)Wintersieck, Amanda ...234 (71.28),
249 (85.31), 281 (117.33), 375(209.31), 395 (218.23)
Winzen, Thomas ............267 (107.1)Wirsching, Elisa Maria ..............241
(77.15)Wirtz, James J. ............328 (168.20)Wiseman, Alan E. ....... 329 (168.24),
374 (209.25)Wisniewski, Erik ..........336 (176.14)Witlacil, Mary ......... 220 (57.24), 397
(219.3)Witmer, Richard C. ..........252 (89.1)Wittels, Annabelle........299 (134.44)Wlezien, Christopher .................303
(143.12)Woeffray, Théoda...........247 (85.12)Woessner, Matthew .......283 (118.1)Wohlforth, William C. ...247 (85.16),
295 (134.20)Wojciechowska, Marta ..............364
(205.3)Wojcieszak, Magdalena .............288
(122.20), 330 (168.34), 338(176.25)
Wojtasik, Waldemar.......300 (136.1)Wolak, Jennifer...... 219 (57.21), 241
(77.15), 249 (85.31), 346(183.34), 375 (209.34)
Wolbrecht, Christina.........181 (5.8),253 (90.3), 337 (176.21)
Woldemikael, Olivia Asmara .....347(183.40)
Wolf, Brianne M. W. .......276 (117.1)Wolfe, Christopher ..........237 (72.1)Wolfe, Rebecca............359 (197.18)Wolflink, Alena ..............349 (190.1)Wolford, Scott..................253 (91.5)Wolfson, Dorothea Israel ..........194
(33.21)Wolfson, Julia A ............266 (99.41)Woller, Anders ...............357 (197.6)Wolton, Stephane ............184 (25.2)Won, Eunji .......................243 (78.3)
IndexofParticipants
Wondreys, Jakub..........194 (33.23),369 (207.1)
Wong, Audrye................308 (150.1)Wong, Baldwin Bon-Wah ..........325
(168.1)Wong, Cara ....................391 (217.1)Wong, Diane ........ 337 (176.22), 375
(209.30)Wong, Janelle ..................215 (55.2)Wong, Seanon .............366 (205.17)Wong, Tom K. ...... 361 (197.33), 384
(212.44)Woo, Byungwon .... 231 (71.13), 266
(99.39), 365 (205.13)Woo, Yu Jin ........... 236 (71.40), 368
(205.30)Wood, Brittany.................217 (57.8)Wood, Colleen .........220 (58.2), 298
(134.41)Wood, Elisabeth Jean ...............284
(121.4), 337 (176.17)Wood, Stepan ..............365 (205.14)Wood, Thomas ............390 (215.28)Wood, Zachary David ................329
(168.28)Woodberry, Robert D.....235 (71.34)Woodly, Deva......... 214 (51.27), 284
(121.4), 301 (143.2), 341(183.3), 386 (215.3)
Woodward-Burns, Robinson.....225(63.18)
Woon, Jonathan ..........272 (109.25)Work, Alexis N...............248 (85.24)Worsnop, Alec ...............205 (43.15)Worth, Thomas ..............256 (91.20)Wright, Andrene ............241 (77.16)Wright, Austin L. ... 199 (38.18), 374
(209.24)Wright, Jamie M.............324 (166.1)Wright, Joseph ...... 188 (26.26), 254
(91.9)Wright, Kenicia ............296 (134.28)Wright, Kristina L. ....... 281 (117.32)Wright, Matthew........... 353 (190.25)Wright, Nancy E..... 188 (26.24), 198
(38.11), 317 (161.1), 361(197.30), 371 (209.11)
Wright, Wendy ......... 229 (69.1), 248(85.24), 263 (99.24), 323
(163.3), 345 (183.24), 362(199.1), 396 (218.27)
Wrighten, Jatia ..............241 (77.16)Wronski, Julie.......... 245 (85.4), 260
(99.3)Wu, (Clark) Aoqi .......... 282 (117.37)Wu, Charles Chong-Han............208
(44.2), 339 (177.1)Wu, Chun-Ying......... 214 (52.1), 323
(163.2)Wu, Chung-li ....................227 (64.2)Wu, Denis ....................347 (183.35)Wu, Fuzuo........................251 (87.1)Wu, Jason Yuyan...........335 (176.8)Wu, Jennifer ................313 (152.29)Wu, Kuan-Sheng.... 339 (177.1), 387
(215.15)Wu, Nicole....................357 (197.11)Wu, Patrick Y. .......... 210 (51.5), 269
(109.9)Wu, Weiting ........... 186 (26.12), 368
(205.27)Wu, Wen-Chin .......... 208 (44.2), 243
(78.3)Wu, Xiufan .....................286 (122.5)Wu, Ziyi ... 192 (33.12), 282 (117.35),
301 (140.1), 322 (162.29), 377(209.41)
Wucherpfennig, Julian ..............321(162.20)
Wuest, Joanna W...........285 (121.8)Wunische, Adam ......... 271 (109.17)Wurster, Stefan ............367 (205.26)Wuttke, Alexander .........266 (99.42)Wycoff, Asher .............. 330 (168.32)Wyllie, Robert ........ 267 (100.2), 325
(168.2)
X
Xi, Tianyang .................278 (117.15)
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INDEX OF PARTICIPANTS 425KEY: Name.......page # (Panel/Event #)
Xiang, Jun......................339 (177.1)Xiang, Nuannuan ...........293 (134.7)Xiao, Jenny Wenquan ...............279
(117.22)Xie, Yang........................392 (218.6)Xiong, Haoming .............240 (77.12)Xu, Alice Z ........... 282 (117.36), 304
(143.19)Xu, Jian ...... 185 (26.9), 380 (212.18)Xu, Jing...... 185 (26.9), 319 (162.11)Xu, Weifang ...................283 (119.1)Xu, Wenting .................396 (218.32)Xu, Xiaoyang ...............296 (134.28)Xu, Yiqing ... 198 (38.10), 229 (70.2),
246 (85.8), 327 (168.16), 392(218.7)
XU, Yue ..........................300 (140.1)Xydias, Christina ...........290 (123.4)
Y
Yablon, Robert.................221 (58.4)Yackee, Susan Webb....255 (91.16),
329 (168.25)Yadon, Nicole........... 190 (32.1), 219
(57.22), 241 (77.17), 275(113.1), 339 (176.31)
Yakter, Alon ............. 245 (85.4), 344(183.20)
Yalcin, Omer Faruk......299 (134.45)Yamin, Priscilla ............281 (117.29)Yan, Alan Nigel ........ 260 (99.6), 376
(209.37)Yan, Karl .... 186 (26.14), 219 (57.23)Yanai, Yuki .....................187 (26.22)Yang, Dali L. ................ 327 (168.16)Yang, Duancheng ..........207 (43.26)Yang, Eddie......................217 (57.9)Yang, Fan.......................369 (207.2)Yang, Joonseok ... 311 (152.17), 320
(162.17), 335 (176.5)Yang, Seo Eun ...............319 (162.8)Yang, Yang.....................364 (205.7)Yang, Yin........................219 (57.23)Yang, Yuezhou.................258 (94.1)Yang, Yujeong..........230 (71.7), 357
(197.11)Yang, Yunkang............. 390 (215.29)Yang, Zesen ......... 310 (152.11), 364
(205.7), 371 (209.11)Yannitell Reinhardt, Gina ..........292
(133.2)Yanus, Alixandra B...... 305 (143.24)Yao, Jielu .....................327 (168.16)Yao, Linan.................... 376 (209.41)Yarchi, Moran...............330 (168.34)Yardimci Geyikci, Sebnem ........194
(33.23)Yarhi-Milo, Keren ........ 328 (168.21),
387 (215.14)Yarish, Jasmine Noelle..............361
(197.29)Yashar, Deborah ............232 (71.20)Yaure, Philip ................391 (215.32)Yaylaci, Sule ..................349 (190.4)Yazici, Irmak ..................225 (63.20)Ye, Fangjin ...................270 (109.14)Ye, Min .........................311 (152.18)Yearwood, Doug ............332 (170.1)Yeh, Yao-Yuan..........195 (34.1), 227
(64.2), 339 (177.1), 387(215.15)
Yen, Wei-Ting........... 214 (52.1), 243(78.3)
Yesilkagit, Kutsal......... 312 (152.26)Yet, Steven.......................192 (33.9)Yi, Hongtao ..................314 (152.35)Yi, Joseph ......................200 (38.24)Yin, Chengzhi .............. 381 (212.24)Ying, Luwei ............ 199 (38.18), 230
(71.6), 280 (117.24)Ying, Tianhong ..............284 (120.1)Yntiso, Sidak .................309 (152.9)Yoder, Brandon...... 224 (63.14), 366
(205.18)Yoel, Benjamin...............233 (71.22)Yogev, Dvir.....................309 (152.9)Yom, Sean......................220 (57.25)Yom Tov, Elad .............. 280 (117.26)Yon, Rachel......................229 (69.1)
Yon, Richard M. ........... 373 (209.22)Yordanova, Nikoleta ......286 (122.6)Yordy, Jill .....................314 (152.35)Yorgason, Chenoa ....... 385 (212.46)York, Abigail M. ........... 376 (209.39)York, Erin .....................379 (212.12)You, Hye Young ....... 209 (48.2), 213
(51.21), 241 (77.15), 312(152.25), 359 (197.20), 393
(218.11)You, Jong-sung ....... 183 (19.1), 208
(44.1)You, Soosun ................306 (143.25)Youn, Leeann H ........... 379 (212.13)Young, Dennis .................203 (43.5)Young, Ezra ...................285 (121.8)Young, Joseph K. ........344 (183.19)Young, Katherine ...........219 (57.24)Young, Kayla..................265 (99.36)Young, Matthew H ...........197 (38.3)Yousef, Tarik M. ...............192 (33.9)Yozwiak, Madeline ...... 314 (152.35),
323 (163.4)Yu, Agnes ......................339 (178.1)Yu, Arthur Zeyang .........300 (139.1)Yu, Eric Chen-hua .........273 (110.2)Yu, Erico ......................394 (218.17)Yu, Tinghua......................260 (99.4)Yu, Tsung-chi.................339 (177.1)Yu, Victoria E. .............. 374 (209.26)Yuan, Yin...................... 342 (183.10)Yudelman, Jonathan........230 (71.1)Yue, Jiahua ....................186 (26.14)Yuen, Amy ...................270 (109.15)Yuval, Fany ..................389 (215.22)
Z
Zabdyr-Jamróz, Michał ..............384(212.43)
Zacka, Bernardo ...... 228 (64.3), 239(77.1)
Zackin, Emily ......... 218 (57.15), 243(77.24)
Zadorian, Amanda Leigh ...........231(71.11)
Zafar, Rabia....................212 (51.18)Zakharov, Alexei V.......380 (212.16)Zaloznaya, Marina ...........223 (63.8)Zaman, Fahmida ............226 (63.26)Zamani, Mehdi .............282 (117.35)Zanotti, Lisa.................310 (152.12)Zarakol, Ayse ....... 295 (134.20), 314
(152.36), 357 (197.10), 367(205.25)
Zarate, Marques.............249 (85.26)Zarpli, Omer.................344 (183.20)Zarra, Antonella .............241 (77.15)Zarychta, Alan .............299 (134.45)Zavadskaya, Margarita ...204 (43.9),
380 (212.16)Zavala, Reese ................267 (107.1)Zaw, Htet Thiha............316 (152.45)Zaytsev, Dmitry............311 (152.21)Zebadua-Yanez, Veronica ..........292
(134.3)Zechmeister, Elizabeth J. ..........200
(38.20), 367 (205.22)Zeira, Yael .............. 339 (178.1), 372
(209.13)Zeitlin, Samuel Garrett ...191 (33.2),
292 (134.2)Zeitz, Alexandra Olivia ..............212
(51.14)Zelina, Matthew ...........271 (109.17)Zellman, Ariel...............271 (109.21)Zeng, Ka................. 254 (91.10), 271
(109.16), 336 (176.11)Zeng, Nanxi.............. 189 (27.4), 382
(212.30)Zeng, Yu....................... 270 (109.12)Zengin, Huseyin..... 207 (43.28), 224
(63.12)Zenou, Yves ...................269 (109.8)Zenz, Adrian ..................391 (216.3)Zetterberg, Par....... 240 (77.11), 271
(109.19)Zevnik, Andreja ...............244 (81.1)Zhang, Anna ..................199 (38.18)Zhang, Bingbing ............291 (126.2)
Zhang, Emily............ 221 (58.4), 278(117.11)
Zhang, Han ....................335 (176.8)Zhang, Hong ..................199 (38.13)Zhang, Hongyu ...... 276 (114.1), 393
(218.12)Zhang, Jiakun ................254 (91.10)Zhang, Kaiping ...... 186 (26.11), 226
(63.24), 234 (71.30)Zhang, Kelly.................354 (190.29)Zhang, Ketian ................357 (197.8)Zhang, Manli ..................333 (174.1)Zhang, Nan ....................309 (152.8)Zhang, Qi ................. 198 (38.7), 373
(209.19), 393 (218.11)Zhang, Qian .................379 (212.11)Zhang, Shenghao ..........292 (130.1)Zhang, Tongtong ......... 282 (117.35)Zhang, Yifan...................317 (161.1)Zhang, Zhenyu.................223 (63.9)Zhang, Zhu............. 186 (26.12), 365
(205.10)Zhao, Bi .......................380 (212.20)ZHAO, Lingbo ................332 (172.1)Zhao, Quansheng ..........273 (110.3)Zhao, Tianshu (Tina) .....248 (85.22)Zhao, Xinzhi............. 244 (81.1), 284
(120.1)Zheleva, Elena .............353 (190.24)Zheng, Bang Quan .........260 (99.6),
289 (123.1), 360 (197.24)Zheng, Li......................270 (109.14)ZHENG, Siyao ................186 (26.11)Zhirkov, Kirill ...................230 (71.4)Zhirnov, Andrei ............367 (205.22)Zhong, Wei...................287 (122.14)Zhong, Yang ....................214 (52.3)Zhou, Andi Cam.............199 (38.16)Zhou, Congyi ........... 204 (43.8), 334
(176.4)Zhou, Hui .....................319 (162.11)Zhou, Junlong Aaron ....392 (218.7)Zhou, Kayee...................289 (123.1)Zhou, Luyang......... 307 (146.1), 380
(212.21)Zhou, Yingnan Joseph ..............333
(172.1)Zhou, Yuan............. 201 (38.28), 207
(43.26)Zhu, Boliang .......... 254 (91.10), 380
(212.19)Zhu, Jiangnan..................230 (71.7)Zhu, Ling...................... 296 (134.28)Zhu, Yuan Yi ................ 320 (162.17)Zhu, Yuner ............. 226 (63.24), 296
(134.25)Zhu, Zhiqun ...................273 (110.3)Zhukov, Yuri M.............320 (162.19)Zhumatova, Salta......... 361 (197.33)Ziaja, Sebastian ... 278 (117.14), 292
(130.1)Ziblatt, Daniel F............384 (212.41)Ziebarth, Dan ...................231 (71.9)Ziegler, J. Nicholas......270 (109.13)Zilinsky, Jan.................346 (183.34)Zilis, Michael........ 280 (117.27), 395
(218.23)Zimmer, Daniel...............370 (209.1)Zimmerman, Justin....... 309 (152.9),
334 (175.2)Ziolkowski, Caleb ..........340 (180.1)Zittel, Thomas........ 225 (63.16), 382
(212.27)Zivi, Karen ...................288 (122.22)Zoizner, Alon ......... 207 (43.27), 260
(99.6)Zonszein, Stephanie.... 354 (190.30)Zorzi, Graedon...............276 (117.2)Zu, Ziwen .......................198 (38.10)Zuber, Katie .................396 (218.30)Zucco, Cesar ........... 254 (91.7), 329
(168.26), 342 (183.9)Zucker, Noah .................340 (180.1)Zuckerman, Ian R. ...........197 (38.1)Zuckert, Michael P. ........300 (135.1)Zuhone, Kristin ..............276 (117.4)Zupan, Daniela...............231 (71.11)Zurn, Christopher F. ......378 (212.5)