Contributors P-R

Laurie E. Paarlberg 80x108Laurie E. Paarlberg – Texas A&M University

Laurie E. Paarlberg is an Associate Professor at the Bush School of Government & Public Service at Texas A&M University. Her publications include numerous articles on topics ranging from geographic mobility and philanthropic engagement to exploring change, transformational leadership, and complexity science as an alternative framework for understanding strategic management in a public serving organization.

Read articles by Laurie E. Paarlberg.

Valerie Pacer – University College London

Valerie Pacer is a PhD candidate in International Relations at University College London whose thesis considers Russian Euro-Atlantic security policy under Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev.

Read articles by Valerie Pacer.

Maria Pagano 80x108Maria E. Pagano – Case Western Reserve University

Dr. Maria Pagano is Associate Professor of Child Psychiatry at Case Western Reserve University. She is principal investigator on the Helping Others Live Sober project, and is recognized as an expert in the application of quantitative methods to study of mutual-help processes of change over time among youth and adults in addiction recovery. Her independent line of research regarding AA-related helping began with her application of event history methods to alcohol data collected in Project MATCH. She applies a broad range of advanced statistical skills to her 12-step research interests, including survival analysis, latent class analysis, mixture modeling, and cluster analysis.  

Read articles by Maria E. Pagano.

Will Page

Will Page is the former chief economist of Spotify. He has served as a fellow of LSE’s Marshall Institute throughout 2020 and has been appointed fellow to LSE’s European Institute starting in May 2021.

Read articles by Will Page.

Devah Pager 80x108Devah Pager – Harvard University

Devah Pager is Professor of Sociology and Public Policy at Harvard University. She is the Susan S. and Kenneth L. Wallach Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study. She is the Director of the Harvard Multidisciplinary Program in Inequality and Social Policy and the acting Faculty Director of the Program in Criminal Justice. Her research focuses on institutions affecting racial stratification, including education, labor markets, and the criminal justice system. 

Read articles by Devah Pager.

Emily Cox PahnkeEmily Cox Pahnke – University of Washington

Emily Cox Pahnke is an assistant professor of management and organizations at theFoster School of Business at the University of Washington.  Her research is at the nexus of innovation and entrepreneurship, with a focus on resource acquisition by new ventures.

Read articles by Emily Cox Pahnke.

Raluca L. Pahontu – LSE European Institute

Dr. Raluca L. Pahontu (@ralucapahontu) is Fellow in European and International Politics and Policy at the London School of Economics (@LSEEI), an Associate Member at Nuffield College, University of Oxford (@NuffieldCollege) and an Affiliate of the US Centre at the LSE (@LSE_US).

Read articles by Raluca L. Pahontu.

 

Vivek Pai 80x108Vivek Pai – University of California, Irvine

Vivek Pai is a research associate at the Center of Economics and Public Policy at the University of California, Irvine. He has researched extensively on the economics of networks, specifically in the context of airlines. His work has appeared in the in Industrial Journal of Industrial Organization, Journal of Air Transport Management, and Transportation Science. He holds a bachelors in economics from Cornell University, a masters in operations research from Columbia University, and a doctorate in economics from the University of California, Irvine.

 Read articles by Vivek Pai.

Paromita Pain – The University of Nevada, Reno

Dr. Paromita Pain is an Assistant Professor in Global Media Studies at The University of Nevada, Reno.

Read articles by Dr. Paromita Pain.
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Ariel Pakes 80x108Ariel Pakes – Harvard University

Ariel Pakes is the Thomas Professor of Economics in the Department of Economics at Harvard University, where he teaches courses in Industrial Organization and in Econometrics.  His research has been in Industrial Organization (I.O.), the Economics of Technological Change and in Econometric Theory.

Read articles by Ariel Pakes.

barbara-palmer-80x108Barbara PalmerBaldwin Wallace University

Dr. Barbara Palmer is professor of Political Science at Baldwin Wallace University and an expert on congressional elections and the success of female candidates.  Her most recent book, with Dennis Simon, is Women and Congressional Elections:  A Century of Change(2012, Lynne Rienner Press).  She is also the creator and Executive Director of the Baldwin Wallace Center for Women and Politics of Ohio.

Read articles by Barbara Palmer.

Carl Palmer 80x108Carl Palmer – Illinois State University

Carl Palmer is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Politics and Government at Illinois State University. His research examines how individual characteristics and predispositions interact with social stimuli to shape political behavior.

Read articles by Carl Palmer.    

geraldine-l-palmer-80x108Geraldine L. PalmerAdjunct Faculty, Adler University, Nonprofit Development Consultant

Geraldine L. Palmer, PhD, holds a doctorate degree in Community Psychology from National Louis University, Chicago, IL. She is the former Executive Director of South Suburban PADS, a nonprofit housing provider, and adjunct professor at Adler University, Chicago, IL. Her current research interests are spatial location and inequalities, housing, housing policy, homelessness, African American culture and community life, and power disparities.

Read articles by Geraldine L. Palmer.

Maxwell Palmer – Boston University

Maxwell Palmer is an assistant professor of Political Science at Boston University and a co-principal investigator of the Menino Survey of Mayors. His research interests include Congress, the judiciary, redistricting and election law, and local political institutions.

Read articles by Maxwell Palmer.

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Costas Panagopoulos 80x108Costas Panagopoulos – Fordham University

Dr. Costas Panagopoulos is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for Electoral Politics and Democracy and the graduate program in Elections and Campaign Management at Fordham University.  Dr. Panagopoulos, a leading expert on campaigns and elections, voting behavior, public opinion, and campaign finance, was part of the Decision Desk team at NBC News during the 2006 election cycle. A former candidate for the Massachusetts State Legislature in 1992, Dr. Panagopoulos also offers courses on campaign management and strategy, message development, and political communication.

Read articles by Costas Panagopoulos.

vijayVijay Pandurangan  – Mitro

Vijay Pandurangan is the founder and CEO of Mitro(www.mitro.co). He previously worked at Google, where he built infrastructure, ads, and mobile software. Follow him on twitter: www.twitter.com/vijayp Web: www.vijayp.ca.

Read articles by Vijay Pandurangan._


Andrew V. Papachristos 80x108Andrew V. Papachristos
Yale University
Andrew V. Papachristos is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at Yale University. His research examines neighborhood social organization, street gangs, interpersonal violence, illegal gun markets, and social networks. He is currently involved in a multi-city study on the diffusion of gun violence within high- risk social networks.

Read articles by Andrew V. Papachristos.

Irene Papanicolas – LSE Department of Health Policy

Irene Papanicolas is an Assistant Professor of Health Economics in the Department of Health Policy at the London School of Economics and a Visiting Assistant Professor at the Department of Health Policy and Management at the T.H. Chan Harvard School of Public Health. Her research focuses on performance measurement of health systems and health services.

Read articles by Irene Papanicolas. 

Evi Pappa – Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona

Evi Pappa is Professor of Macroeconomics at the European University Institute, and Associate Professor and Research Professor of Barcelona GSE at Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. She was an assistant professor of economics at the LSE (2001-2006), Bocconi University (2004-2005) and UAB (2005-2006). Her main research interests are International Macroeconomics and Monetary and Fiscal Policy. Given Evi’s interest in monetary policy analysis, she has been a visiting researcher in many Central Banks, like the Bank of England, the European Central Bank, the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, and the Riksbank (Sweden). She is a member of the Applied Macroeconomics Network (Amen), is a MOVE (Markets Organizations and Voting in Economics) Research Fellow and a Research Affiliate of the Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR). She received the IGIER Scholarship for Young Researchers in 2003-2004, the Paolo Baffi Fellowship in 2008 and the Ramon Areces scholarship in 2010. She has published in leading international journals.

Read articles by Evi Pappa.

takis-s-pappas-80x108Takis S. Pappas – Central European University

Takis S. Pappas, an expert on comparative populism, has recently authored Populism and Crisis Politics in Greece (Palgrave 2014) and co-edited European Populism in the Shadow of Great Recession (ECPR Press 2105). He is currently visiting professor of politics in Central European University, Budapest, Hungary. He tweets @takisspappas.

Read articles by Takis S. Pappsas.

Jacob Parakilas – LSE IDEAS

Jacob C. Parakilas is an author, consultant and analyst working on US foreign policy and international security. He is also an Associate with LSE IDEAS.

Read articles by Jacob C. Parakilas.

Joseph Parent 80x108Joseph Parent – University of Miami

Joseph Parent is an assistant professor of political science at University of Miami. His research interests include International Relations, American Foreign Policy, Political Integration, and Security Studies. He is the co-author of the forthcoming book “American Conspiracy Theories” (Oxford University Press, 2014).

Read articles by Joseph Parent.

Matthew J. Parent – University of Connecticut

Matthew J. Parent a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Connecticut. He has research interests in international relations theory, foreign policy, and military technology.

Read articles by Matthew J. Parent.

Wanda Parham-Payne 80x108Wanda Parham-Payne – Prince George’s Community College and American University

Wanda Parham-Payne, Ph.D. is assistant professor of sociology at Prince George’s Community College (Largo, MD) and adjunct professorial lecturer of sociology at American University (Washington, DC).  Her primary research interests include minority health disparities, the media’s social construction of innocence, and the intersection of race, class, and/or gender within the institutions of family and politics.  Dr. Parham-Payne is currently writing a book entitled, The Intersection of Race and Gender within National Politics (Lexington Books) that takes a socio-historical look at the past and present roles of African-American women within the national political arena.

Read articles by Wanda Parham-Payne.

Ji-Won Park – Cornell University

Ji-Won Park is a Ph.D. recipient in regional science at Cornell University.

Read articles by Ji-Won Park.

 

park-jung-chulJung Chul Park – South Florida Muma College of Business

Jung Chul Park is assistant professor of finance at the University of South Florida Muma College of Business. Park’s research interests are in market efficiency, corporate governance, risk management, international finance, and political finance. His work has been published in leading finance and economics journals such as the Journal of Financial Economics,Financial Management, Journal of Banking and Finance, Journal of Corporate Finance, and Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization.

Read articles by Junh Chul Park.

Sungho Park – University of Alabama

Sungho Park is an assistant professor of Public Policy and Administration at the Department of Political Science, University of Alabama. His research interests are in public budgeting and finance and include state and local fiscal condition, fiscal rules and institutions, government accounting and financial reporting, budget reform, and economic development financing. His research has appeared in American Review of Public AdministrationPublic Budgeting and FinancePublic Finance and ManagementJournal of Public Budgeting, Accounting and Financial ManagementState and Local Government ReviewPublic Administration QuarterlyPublic Policy and Administration, and other journals.

Read articles by Sungho Park.

Christopher Parker 80x108Christopher M. Parker – Centenary College of Louisiana

Christopher M. Parker is an assistant professor of political science at Centenary College of Louisiana. His current research focuses on judicial politics and decision making on the United States Supreme Court and state appellate courts.

Read articles by Christopher M. Parker.

Dominic Parker 80x108Dominic ParkerUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison

Dominic Parker is an Assistant Professor of Agricultural and Applied Economics at University of Wisconsin-Madison. In addition to studying resource booms,  Parker’s research examines how property rights and government policies affect natural resource use and economic development. 

Read articles by Dominic Parker.

Michael Parkin – Oberlin College

Michael Parkin is the Erwin N. Griswold professor of Politics at Oberlin College. He is also the Director of the Oberlin Initiative in Electoral Politics. His research and teaching interests are in campaign communication with a particular focus on candidate use of new media. He is the author of Talk Show Campaigns: Presidential Candidates on Daytime and Late Night Television.

Read articles by Michael Parkin.

Virginia-Parks-80x108Virginia Parks- University of Chicago

Virginia Parks is an Associate Professor at the School of Social Service Administration at the University of Chicago. Her fields of special interest include urban geography, urban labor markets, immigration, racial and gender inequality, residential segregation, and community organizing and development.

Read articles by Virginia Parks.

inderjeet-parmar-80x108Inderjeet Parmar – City, University of London

Inderjeet Parmar is a professor of international politics at City, University of London, and a columnist at The Wire. His twitter handle is @USEmpire.

Read articles by Inderjeet Parmar.

Fernando Parro 80x108Fernando Parro – Federal Reserve Board

Fernando Parro is an Economist at the Federal Reserve Board. His research focuses on trade and welfare effects from trade integration, on the effects of international trade openness on income inequality, and on the macroeconomic impact of the regional distribution of economic activity.  He worked at the Central Bank of Chile as Research and Economic Policy Assistant to the Governor. He was Lecturer at the Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile.

Read articles by Fernando Parro.

Mark E. Parry – University of Missouri–Kansas City

Mark E. Parry holds the Ewing Marion Kauffman/Missouri Endowed Chair in Entrepreneurial Leadership and is professor of marketing in the Bloch School at the University of Missouri–Kansas City. Prior to joining the Bloch School, he was a professor of business administration in the Darden School at the University of Virginia. His research has won several awards, including the 2005 Excellence in Global Marketing Research Award from the American Marketing Association. His current research interests include innovation strategy, opportunity assessment, new product adoption, and word-of-mouth marketing.

Read articles by Mark E. Parry.

Florin Pasatoiu – University of Craiova, Romania

Florin Pasatoiu is a Lecturer at the University of Craiova, Romania. He is also Director of the Centre for Foreign Policy and Security Studies (CFPSS).

Read articles by Florin Pasatoiu. 

Josh Pasek 80x108Josh Pasek – University of Michigan

Josh Pasek is Assistant Professor of Communication Studies at the University of Michigan. His research explores how new media and psychological processes each shape political attitudes, public opinion, and political behaviors. Josh also examines issues in the measurement of public opinion including techniques for reducing measurement error and improving survey design. Author photo credit:  University of Michigan Photo Services, Austin Thomason.

Read articles by Josh Pasek.

Daniele Paserman 80x108Daniele Paserman – Boston University

Daniele Paserman is a Professor of Economics at Boston University, a Research Associate at the NBER and a Research Affiliate at the CEPR. His research spans a number of areas in labor economics and applied microeconomics: gender differences in the labor market; immigration and its effects on the host country’s educational system and its labor markets; the effect of the childhood environment on long term socioeconomic outcomes; models of search, with applications to job markets and marriage markets; and a number of issues related to the dynamics of violence and the political economy of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. He currently serves as Co-Editor of the Journal of the European Economic Association.

Read articles by Daniele Paserman.

Frank-Pasquale-80x108Frank Pasquale University of Maryland

Frank Pasquale is a Professor of Law at the University of Maryland’s Francis King Carey School of Law. His research interests focus on challenges posed to information law by rapidly changing technology, particularly in the health care, internet, and finance industries.

Read articles by Frank Pasquale.

Meet Patel – Butler University

Meet Patel is an undergraduate student at Butler University.

Read articles by Meet Patel.

Megha Patnaik 80x108Megha Patnaik – Stanford University

Megha Patnaik is a third year PhD candidate at the Department of Economics at Stanford University. Her research is focused on the internal organization of firms, including decision making and business uncertainty, ownership and control and managerial practices.

Read articles by Megha Patnaik.

Megan Patrick 80x108Megan E. Patrick – University of Michigan

Megan Patrick is a Research Assistant Professor at the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research. Her research focuses on the development and consequences of adolescent and young adult risk behaviors, including alcohol use, drug use, and risky sexual behaviors. Her interests include event-specific risk behaviors, motivation and decision-making, the prevention of health risk behaviors, statistical methods for modeling behavior and behavior change, and web-based survey methodology. 

Read articles by Megan E. Patrick.

John H. Patterson – Small Arms Data Observatory

John H. Patterson is a Research Affiliate of the Small Arms Data Observatory (SADO). 

Read articles by John H. Patterson.

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Zachary-Patterson-80x108Zachary Patterson- Concordia University, TRIP Lab

Zachary is Tier-II Canada Research Chair in Transportation and Land Use Linkages for Regional Sustainability at Concordia University. His research focuses on the modeling of transportation, the environment, land-use and their linkages. He is currently a member of the Transportation Research Board’s Planning Applications Committee (ADB50), its Land Development Committee (ADD30), the Global Environmental and Climate Change Centre (GEC3) and of the Interuniversity Research Centre on Enterprise Networks, Logistics and Transportation (CIRRELT).

Read articles by Zachary Patterson.

Rob-Patton-80x108Rob Patton – University of Idaho

Rob Patton is a digital marketing and social media strategist. Rob has spent several years as a new media consultant developing online advocacy and mobilization plans for political candidates and issue-oriented campaigns across the U.S. He currently serves as the Marketing Communications Manager for the College of Engineering at the University of Idaho.

Read articles by Rob Patton.

Newly Paul 80x108Newly Paul – Appalachian State University

Newly Paul is Assistant Professor in Communication at Appalachian State University. Her research focuses on political advertising, and race and gender in politics. Her work has appeared in PS: Political Science & Politics and Political Research Quarterly.

Read articles by Newly Paul.

Michelle Pautz 80x108Michelle C. Pautz – University of Dayton

Michelle C. Pautz is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Dayton. Her research interests are environmental policy and regulation, government reform and accountability, and film and politics.  She can be contacted at mpautz1@udayton.edu.

Read articles by Michelle Pautz.

paul a pavlouPaul A. Pavlou – Temple University

Paul A. Pavlou is the Milton F. Stauffer Professor of Information Technology and Strategy at the Fox School of Business at Temple University. He is also the Associate Dean of Research, Doctoral Programs, and Strategic Initiatives. He was ranked first in the world in publications in the two top MIS journals (MIS Quarterly and Information Systems Research) for 2010–2014; his work has been cited over 17,000 times by Google Scholar. He was recognized among the “World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds” by Thomson Reuters based on analysis of “Highly Cited” authors. He has won several best paper awards for his research, including the ISR Best Paper award in 2007.

Read articles by Paul A. Pavlou. 

Andrew Payne – Merton College, Oxford

Andrew Payne is a DPhil Candidate in International Relations at the University of Oxford. His current research examines the impact of electoral politics on American decision-making in the wars in Korea, Vietnam and Iraq. He is the author of a forthcoming article in International Security exploring the role played by electoral constraints in decision-making during the Iraq War.

Read articles by Andrew Payne.

Kathryn Pearson – University of Minnesota

Kathryn Pearson is an Associate Professor specializing in American politics; her research focuses on the United States Congress, congressional elections, political parties, and women and politics. 

Read articles by Kathryn Pearson.

Shanna Pearson 80x108Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz – University of Rhode Island

Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz is an associate professor at the University of Rhode Island. Her academic work has been published in the Journal of Politics, the American Journal of Political ScienceState Politics and Policy Quarterly, and elsewhere. Prior to entering academia, she worked in state and local government.

Read articles by Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz.

P.C. PeayUniversity of Oklahoma

P.C. Peay is a doctoral student at the University of Oklahoma in American Politics and Public Policy. His research agenda focuses on the impact of Race on American institutions and policy with specific concentrations on racial identity caucuses in Congress, electoral policy, and education policy. He tweets at @pcpeay

Read articles by P.C. Peay.

Effie G. H. Pedaliu– LSE IDEAS

Effie G. H. Pedaliu is a Visiting Fellow at LSE IDEAS and co-editor of the Palgrave book series, Security Conflict and Cooperation in the Contemporary World. She is the author of  ‘Transatlantic Relations at a Time When “More Flags” Meant “No European Flags”: The US, its European Allies and the War in Vietnam, 1964-1974’ in International History Review (2013) and co-editor of The Greek Junta and the International System: A Case Study of Southern European Dictatorships, 1967-1974 (London: Routledge, 2020).

Read articles by Effie Pedaliu.

David Pedulla 80x108David Pedulla – Stanford University

David Pedulla is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Stanford University. His research interests include race and gender stratification, labor markets, economic and organizational sociology, and experimental methods. His research has appeared in American Sociological ReviewAmerican Journal of SociologySocial Forces, and other academic journals. He received his Ph.D. in Sociology and Social Policy from Princeton University. 

Read articles by David S. Pedulla.

Eyal Peer – Bar-Ilan University, Israel

Eyal Peer is a senior lecturer at the Graduate School of Business Administration, Bar-Ilan University, Israel. His research focuses on the psychological aspects of consumer judgment and decision-making in everyday situations and areas such as online privacy.

Read articles by Eyal Peer.

dursun-peksenDursun Peksen – University of Memphis

Dursun Peksen is Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, University of Memphis.

Read articles by Dursun Peksen.

Ben Pelzer – Radboud University

Ben Pelzer  is an Assistant Professor of Quantitative Research Methods at the Department of Sociology / Social Science Research Methods of Radboud University. 

Read articles by Ben Pelzer.

 

Anita Alves Pena 80x108Anita Alves Pena – Colorado State University

Dr. Anita Alves Pena is an Associate Professor of Economics at Colorado State University. Her research interests are in public sector economics, labor economics, and economic development and her current research relates to undocumented and documented immigration, public policy, poverty, and agricultural labor markets.

Read articles by Anita Alves Pena.

Robin R. Pennington – North Carolina State University

Robin R. Pennington is an associate professor of accounting at the Poole College of Management at North Carolina State University. She researches and teaches in the area of accounting information systems. She completed her Ph.D. at the University of South Carolina. Her research has been published in several journals and she serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Information Systems and International Journal of Accounting Information Systems. She is a past president of the Accounting Information Systems Section of the American Accounting Association, and a member of the AICPA and ISACA organisations.

Read articles by Robin R. Pennington.

Efren Perez 80x108Efrén PérezVanderbilt University

Efrén Pérez is Assistant Professor of Political Science and Sociology (by courtesy) at Vanderbilt University. He is also Co-Director of its Research on Individuals, Politics, and Society (RIPS) experimental lab. He conducts research on group identity, language and political choice, and implicit political cognition. He is the author of Unspoken Politics: Implicit Attitudes and Political Thinking, which is forthcoming at Cambridge University Press.

Read articles by Efrén Pérez.

Giovanni-Peri80x108Giovanni Peri – University of California Davis

Giovanni Peri is Professor of Economics at the University of California, Davis and a Research Associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He is also Editor of Regional Science and Urban Economics. His research focuses on the impact of international migrations on labor markets and productivity of the receiving countries and on the determinants of international migrations.

Read articles by Giovanni Peri.

Ariel Perkins – LSE Department of Government

Ariel Perkins is a PhD Candidate in the LSE Department of Government. Her doctoral research focuses on armed social groups in the United States.

Read articles by Ariel Perkins.

Jeffrey M Perloff 80x108Jeffrey M. Perloff – University of California, Berkeley

Jeffrey M. Perloff is a professor in the Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics at the University of California at Berkeley. His economic research covers industrial organization, marketing, labor, trade, and econometrics. His textbooks are Modern Industrial Organization (with Dennis Carlton), MicroeconomicsMicroeconomics: Theory and Applications with CalculusEstimating Market Power and Strategies (with Larry Karp and Amos Golan), and Managerial Economics and Strategy (with James Brander).

Read articles by Jeffrey M. Perloff.

Britanny Perry 80x108Brittany N. PerryTexas A&M University

Brittany Perry is an Instructional Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Texas A&M University. Her research interests include racial politics in the U.S., the evolution of congressional institutions, Latino political representation, Latino immigration, and the effects of geography on political attitudes and participation rates.

Read articles by Brittany N. Perry.

randolph-b-persaud-80x108Randolph B. PersaudAmerican University

Randolph B. Persaud is Associate Professor of International Relations at American University in Washington D.C., He specializes in the areas of human security, foreign policy, postcolonialism, and the politics of identity.

Read articles by Randolph B. Persaud.

imageMikael Persson – University of Gothenburg

Mikael Persson is a researcher and lecturer at the Department of political science, University of Gothenburg.

Read articles by Mikael Persson.

 

Aaron B. Perzigian – Western Washington University

Aaron B. Perzigian is an assistant professor in the Department of Special Education and Education Leadership at Western Washington University, in Bellingham, Washington. He is a former special education teacher with experience in behavior–focused schools and residential treatment centers. His research interests include alternative education and social-emotional experiences of students with disabilities.

Read articles by Aaron B. Perzigian.

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Zachary Peskowitz 80x108Zachary Peskowitz Emory University

Zachary Peskowitz is an assistant professor at Emory University’s Department of Political Science.

Read articles by Zachary Peskowitz.

 

Joao Paulo PessoaJoão Paulo Pessoa – São Paulo School of Economics

João Paulo Pessoa is an assistant professor at the São Paulo School of Economics at Fundação Getulio Vargas and a research associate in CEP’s growth programme.

Read articles by João Paulo Pessoa.

George Pesta – Florida State University

George Pesta is the director of the Center for Criminology and Public Policy Research in the College of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Florida State University (FSU). For the past 20 years, his research and professional experience has primarily focused upon juvenile justice and corrections. His publications have focused upon correctional education, schools and delinquency, and the effectiveness of juvenile justice programs. 

Read articles by George Pesta.

Racheal Pesta – Eastern Connecticut State University

Racheal Pesta is a faculty member in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology, Criminology, and Social Work at Eastern Connecticut State University.  Her research interests include criminological theory, interpersonal violence, gender, and race.  Her current research explores the impact of informal and formal sanctions on future life outcomes across race.

Read articles by Racheal Pesta.

Bridgette Peteet 80x108Bridgette PeteetUniversity of Cincinnati

Dr. Bridgette J. Peteet is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Cincinnati. Her research focuses on the impact of psychological barriers and substance abuse on achievement in underprivileged populations including ethnic minorities and first generation college students.

Read articles by Bridgette Peteet._

Michael Bang Petersen 80x108Michael Bang Petersen – Aarhus University, Denmark

Michael Bang Petersen is a Professor at the Department of Political Science and Government, Aarhus University. His primary research focuses on how human evolutionary history influences the way people reason about modern mass politics. Specific topics he has published on include attitudes about social welfare, immigration, redistribution, criminal justice and political parties. His academic affiliations include the Center for Evolutionary Psychology at UCSB and the Interacting Minds Centre at Aarhus University. Together with Lene Aarøe, he co-directs The Politics and Evolution Lab.

Read articles by Michael Bang Petersen.

Nick Petersen – University of Miami

Nick Petersen is an assistant professor of Sociology and Law at the University of Miami. He holds a PhD from the University of California, Irvine in Criminology, Law, and Society. His research focuses on racial stratification within criminal justice institutions.

Read articles by Nick Petersen.

Brenton Peterson 80x108Brenton D. Peterson – University of Virginia

Brenton D. Peterson is a PhD candidate in the Department of Politics at the University of Virginia, where he studies African politics, and a Research Affiliate at Strathmore University in Nairobi. His research primarily focuses on ethnic politics and the formation of ethnic identities in East Africa; he is also interested in quantitative methods for causal inference and developing experimental measures of social attitudes.

Read articles by Brenton D. Peterson.

David Peterson 80x108David A. M. Peterson – Iowa State University

David A. M. Peterson is a Professor in the Department of Political Science at Iowa State University and editor of Political Behavior. His work focuses on many different aspects of American politics. He has also done work in political psychology and attitude strength, public opinion and elections, and state politics. 

Read articles by David A.M. Peterson.

Jordan Carr Peterson – Texas Christian University

Jordan Carr Peterson is an assistant professor of political science at Texas Christian University. He studies American legal and political institutions and their relative capacity as sites for policy formulation, development, and implementation.

Read articles by Jordan Carr Peterson.

 

Rolfe Peterson 80x108Rolfe Peterson – Mercyhurst University

Rolfe Daus Peterson is Associate Director and methodologist at the Center for Applied Politics at Mercyhurst University. His research interests include American political behavior, survey research methods, public opinion, political psychology, and campaigns and elections.

Read articles by Rolfe Peterson.

Timothy M. Peterson 80x108Timothy M. Peterson – University of South Carolina

Timothy M. Peterson is an Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the Department of Political Science at the University of South Carolina. His research links the fields of international political economy, foreign policy, international conflict, and human rights.

Read articles by Timothy M. Peterson.

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Barbara Petrongolo – Queen Mary University

Barbara Petrongolo is professor of economics at Queen Mary University, director of the CEPR labour economics programme and research associate at the Centre for Economic Performance of the LSE. Her main area of interest is labour economics. She has worked extensively on the performance of labour markets with job search frictions, with applications to unemployment dynamics, welfare policy and interdependencies across local labour markets. She has also carried out research on the causes and characteristics of gender inequalities in labour market outcomes, in a historical perspective and across countries, with emphasis on the role of employment selection mechanisms, structural transformation, and interactions within the household.

Read articles by Barbara Petrongolo.

Samantha Pettey – Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts

Samantha Pettey is an Assistant Professor of Political Science in the department of History, Political Science and Public Policy at Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts. Her research interests are a blend of gender politics and US institutions. Specifically, she is interested in how state legislatures’ institutional factors help and/or hinder women’s emergence and success in office. At the Congressional level, her research and interests focus more broadly on campaigns and elections. Her latest work appears in Political Research Quarterly and Electoral Studies.

Read articles by Samantha Pettey.

Ann Pettifor 80x108Ann Pettifor – PRIME

Ann Pettifor is Director of Policy Research in Macroeconomics (PRIME), and an Honorary Research Fellow at the Political Economy Research Centre of City University, London. She is also a fellow of the new economics foundation (nef), London. Her latest publication is Just Money: How Society Can Break the Despotic Power of Finance,published by Commonwealth Publishing in January, 2014.

Read articles by Ann Pettifor.

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Stephen Pettigrew 80x108

Stephen Pettigrew – Harvard University

Stephen Pettigrew is a third year graduate student in the Harvard Government Department. His primary research interests are in the fields of American politics and political methodology. Within American politics he studies elections, Congress, political institutions, voting behavior, electoral administration, and American political development.

Read articles by Stephen Pettigrew.

David Pettinicchio – University of Toronto

David Pettinicchio is assistant professor of Sociology and affiliated faculty in the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy at the University of Toronto. His new book, Politics of Empowerment: Disability Rights and the Cycle of American Policy Reform (Stanford University Press, 2019), investigates how and why seemingly entrenched policies like the ADA succumb to retrenchment efforts and the important role of both political elites and everyday citizens in mobilizing against these political threats.

Read articles by David Pettinicchio.

Katherine Pettus – Advocacy Officer, International Association for Hospice and Palliative Care

Katherine Pettus (@kpettus) is Advocacy Officer, International Association for Hospice and Palliative Care.

Read articles by Katherine Pettus.

 

Steven Pevar 80x108Stephen L. Pevar – American Civil Liberties Union

Stephen L. Pevar is the author of The Rights of Indians and Tribes, Fourth Edition. He is a senior staff counsel of the American Civil Liberties Union. Mr. Pevar worked for Legal Services on the Rosebud Sioux Reservation from 1971-1974, and taught Federal Indian Law at the University of Denver School of Law from 1983-1999. He has litigated numerous Indian rights cases and has lectured extensively on the subject.

Read articles by Stephen Pevar.

José-Luis Peydró – UPF

José-Luis Peydró is ICREA professor of economics at UPF, research professor at the Barcelona GSE and the Bundesbank, CREI research associate, CEPR research fellow, advisor of the Bank of Spain, consultant in several central banks and international organisations and an independent board member at the Catalan Finance Institute (ICF).

Read articles by José-Luis Peydró. 

Rebecca Pfeffer – University of Houston – Downtown

Dr. Pfeffer is an assistant professor of criminal justice at the University of Houston – Downtown. Her research focuses generally on the victimization of vulnerable populations, including victims with special needs and victims of human trafficking and hate crimes. Her current research focuses on public policies addressing prostitution, both in terms of the buying and selling of sex, and specifically investigates effective law enforcement response to the problem of prostitution.

Read articles by Rebecca Pfeffer.

Deirdre Pfeiffer 80x108Deirdre Pfeiffer – Arizona State University

Deirdre Pfeiffer is an Assistant Professor in the School of Geographical Sciences and Urban Planning at Arizona State University. Her research interests include housing strategies to meet the needs of America’s aging and diversifying population, the outcomes of the recent U.S. Great Recession and foreclosure crisis, and the relationship between urban growth and racial equity. Her current research appears in Urban Studies, Housing Policy Debate,and Journal of Urbanism. 

Read articles by Deirdre Pfeiffer.

Brian Phelan – Driehaus College of Business

Brian Phelan is an assistant professor of economics at DePaul University’s Driehaus College of Business. His research and teaching interests include labour economics, demographic economics and applied econometrics. He is currently working on projects related to the costs and consequences of mid-career job losses, the spillover effects of minimum wage laws and the effects of welfare reform on household formation.

Read articles by Brian Phelan.

Michelle Phelps 80x108Michelle S. Phelps – University of Minnesota

Michelle S. Phelps is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Minnesota and a Faculty Affiliate at the Robina Institute, University of Minnesota Law School, and Minnesota Population Center. Her research is in the sociology of punishment, focusing in particular on the punitive turn in the U.S.

Read articles by Michelle S. Phelps.

scott-w-phillips-80x108Scott W. Phillips – State University of New York (SUNY) Buffalo State

Scott W. Phillips is an associate professor in the Criminal Justice Department at SUNY Buffalo State. He earned a PhD from SUNY Albany and his research focuses on empirical examinations of police officer decision-making and organizational influences on officer’s behavior. He has worked as the Futurist Scholar in Residence with the Behavioral Science Unit at the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s National Academy in Quantico, Virginia.

Read articles by Scott W. Phillips.

robin-phinney-80x108Robin PhinneyUniversity of Minnesota

Robin Phinney is a Research Associate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Minnesota. Her research focuses on American politics and public policy, with an emphasis on interest groups and social movements, the policymaking process at state and national levels, social welfare policy, and the well-being of low-income families. Her forthcoming book from Cambridge University Press examines collaboration among organized interests in social policymaking in the United States. She is currently working on several new projects involving interest group collaboration in American national politics and residential mobility among low-income families in the United States.

Read articles by Robin Phinney.

Jaclyn Piatak 80x108Jaclyn Schede Piatak – University of North Carolina at Charlotte

Jaclyn Schede Piatak is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte.  Her research interests include public and nonprofit management, volunteering, philanthropy, and social policy.  Her work appears in the Journal of Public Administration Review and Theory and a co-authored book, Occupational Labor Shortages: Concepts, Causes, Consequences, and Cures. You can follow Jaclyn on Twitter @JaclynPiatak.

Read articles by Jaclyn Schede Piatak.

HeadshotVictor Pickard – Annenberg School for Communication

Victor Pickard is an Associate Professor at the Annenberg School for Communication where he researches the history and political economy of media institutions, media activism, and the politics and normative foundations of media policy. He is the author of America’s Battle for Media Democracy: The Triumph of Corporate Libertarianism and the Future of Media Reform. He tweets @VWPickard.

Read articles by Victor Pickard.

Douglas Pierce 80x108Douglas Pierce – American University

Douglas Pierce is a Professorial Lecturer in the Department of Government at the School of Public Affairs at American University. His research focuses on public opinion, attitudes, and voting preferences.

Read articles by Douglas Pierce.

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Ashley-Piggins-80x108Ashley Piggins- National University of Ireland Galway

Ashley Piggins is Senior Lecturer in Economics at the National University of Ireland Galway. His research interests are in social choice theory and issues on the boundary of economics and philosophy.

Read articles by Ashley Piggins.

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Thomas Piketty – Paris School of Economics

Thomas Piketty is professor of economics at the Paris School of Economics, of which he was the founder and first director. He is the author of numerous journal articles and a dozen books. He has done major empirical and theoretical work on the interplay between economic development and the distribution of income and wealth. He is the initiator of the recent literature on the historical evolution of top income shares (now available in the World Top Incomes Database).

Read articles by Thomas Piketty.

Katharina Pijnenburg 80x108Katharina Pijnenburg – DIW Berlin

Katharina Pijnenburg is a research associate in the forecasting and economic policy department of the German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin). Her research focuses on spatial econometric methods, regional economic development and entrepreneurship.

Read articles by Katharina Pijnenburg.

Deborah Pinals 80x108Debra A. Pinals, MD – Massachusetts Department of Mental Health

Debra A. Pinals, MD is Assistant Commissioner for Forensic Services at the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health. Dr. Pinals is a psychiatrist who, in addition to serving as Assistant Commissioner for Forensic Mental Health Services for the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health, is also an associate professor of psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School and is Director of Forensic Education in the department’s Law & Psychiatry Program. (Note: The views expressed in this paper do not necessarily represent those of the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health.

Read articles by Debra A. Pinals.

Gillian Pinchevsky 80x108Gillian M. PinchevskyUniversity of Nevada, Las Vegas

Dr. Gillian Pinchevsky’s research focuses on intimate partner violence, criminal justice system responses to violence and victimization (including specialized domestic violence courts), and the relationship between adolescent victimization and delinquency.  

Read articles by Gillian Pinchevsky.

Fabio Pinna 80x108Fabio Pinna – Deutsche Asset Management

Fabio Pinna is an associate at Deutsche Asset Management and holds a PhD in economics from LSE.

Read articles by Fabio Pinna.

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Francisco J Pino 80x108Francisco J Pino – Université Libre de Bruxelles

Francisco Pino is a post-doctoral researcher at the European Center for Advanced Research in Economics and Statistics (ECARES) of the Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB). He holds a B.S. in Electrical and Industrial Engineering from the University of Chile, an M.A. in Political Economy from Boston University and a PhD in Economics from Boston University. His main fields of interest are political economy, development economics and economic history.

Read articles by Francisco J Pino.

Alex Piquero 80x108Alex R. PiqueroUniversity of Texas at Dallas

Alex R. Piquero is Ashbel Smith Professor of Criminology and Associate Dean for Graduate Programs in the School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences at the University of Texas at Dallas. His research interests include criminal careers, criminological theory, and quantitative research methods. He has received several research, teaching, and service awards and is Fellow of both the American Society of Criminology and the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. In 2014, he received The University of Texas System Regents’ Outstanding Teaching Award.

Read articles by Alex R. Piquero.

christopher-pissaridesSir Christopher Pissarides LSE Economics

Sir Christopher Pissarides is the Regius Professor of Economics at the London School of Economics, a Professor of European Studies at the University of Cyprus and Chairman of the Council of National Economy of the Republic of Cyprus, and the Helmut & Anna Pao Sohmen Professor-at-Large of the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. He was educated at the University of Essex and the London School of Economics (LSE), and he spent the bulk of his career at the LSE. He had long visits in the US Universities of Harvard, Princeton and California at Berkeley. Sir Christopher specialises in the economics of labour markets, macroeconomic policy, economic growth and structural change. He was awarded the 2010 Nobel Prize in Economics, jointly with Dale Mortensen of Northwestern University and Peter Diamond of MIT, for his work in the economics of markets with frictions. Prior to that, in 2005, he became the first European economist to win the IZA Prize in Labor Economics, sharing it again with his collaborator Dale Mortensen.

Read articles by Sir Christopher Pissarides.

Spencer Piston – Boston University

Spencer Piston is Assistant Professor in Political Science at Boston University. His scholarship, which examines the impact of attitudes toward social groups on public opinion and political behavior, has been published in such journals as The Journal of Politics, Public Opinion Quarterly, Political Behavior, Political Communication, and Political Psychology. He was named a Distinguished Junior Scholar by the Political Psychology Section of the American Political Science Association, and his research has won numerous awards, including the LGBT Caucus Bailey Award and the State Politics and Policy Award.

Read articles by Spencer Piston.

David Pithan – University of Wuppertal

David Pithan is a PhD student at the Institute of Sociology at the University of Wuppertal. His research interests include qualitative and quantitative research methods, network analysis, neo-institutional theory, and historical discourse analysis.

Read articles by David Pithan.

Eric L. Piza – John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York

Dr. Eric L. Piza is an Associate Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York. Eric’s previous professional positions include GIS Specialist of the Newark, NJ Police Department, Research Director for Crime Analytics of the Rutgers Center on Public Security, and Research Program Coordinator of the Police Institute. Dr. Piza is involved in a number of applied research projects focusing on the spatial analysis of crime patterns, problem-oriented policing, crime control technology, and the integration of academic research and police practice.

Read articles by Eric L. Piza.

Michael Plante– Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Michael Plante received his Ph.D. in economics from Indiana University in 2009 and joined the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas in July 2010. He is currently a senior economist in the research department and the project manager of the Dallas Fed Energy Survey. His research interests include macroeconomics, energy markets, and the connections between energy and the economy.

Read articles by Michael Plante.

Mattias PolbornVanderbilt University

Professor Polborn’s research interests lie in political economy, specifically in the formal and empirical analysis of American Politics. He is particularly interested in understanding candidate competition in elections and political polarization.

Read articles by Mattias Polborn.

Robert Pollak 2 80x108Robert A. Pollak – Washington University in St. Louis

Robert A. Pollak is the Hernreich Distinguished Professor of Economics at Washington University in St. Louis. His current research interests include the economics of the family and demography. Pollak is the author of numerous articles in professional journals and of three books: From Parent to Child: Intrahousehold Allocations and Intergenerational Relations in the United States (1995, with J. Behrman and P. Taubman), Demand System Specification and Estimation (1992, with T. Wales), and The Theory of the Cost-of-Living Index(1989).

Read articles by Robert A. Pollak.

Robert Pollin 80x108Robert Pollin – University of Massachusetts-Amherst

Robert Pollin is Distinguished Professor of Economics at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst and Co-Director of the Political Economy Research Institute (PERI). He is the co-author of “Does high public debt consistently stifle economic growth? A critique of Reinhart and Rogoff” (available to read for free for a limited time) with Thomas Herndon and Michael Ash in the Cambridge Journal of Economics.

Read articles by Robert Pollin.

Vyacheslav_Polonski_Profile_PictureVyacheslav Polonski – Oxford Internet Insitute

Vyacheslav Polonski is a network scientist at the Oxford Internet Institute, researching complex social networks, the emergence of collective behaviours and the role of digital identity in technology adoption. He has previously studied at Harvard University, Oxford University and the London School of Economics and Political Science. Vyacheslav is actively involved in the World Economic Forum and its Global Shapers community, where he is the Vice-Curator of the Oxford Hub. He writes about the intersection of sociology, network science and technology on Medium and Twitter.

Read articles by Vyacheslav Polonski.

Kristen Pondel 80x108Kristin Pondel Miami University

Kristin Pondel is a Research Director at GfK. She earned her BA in Political Science from Miami University in 2009.

Read articles by Kristin Pondel.

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Daniel Ponder 80x108Daniel Ponder – Drury University

Daniel Ponder is L.E Meador Professor of Political Science at Drury University.  His research focuses on American national institutions with special emphasis on the presidency.  He is the author numerous articles and essays, and of Good Advice: Information and Policy Making in the White House (Texas A&M University Press, 2000).  He is currently completing a book on presidential leverage. 

Read articles by Daniel Ponder.

Veronika K. Pool – Indiana University

Veronika K. Pool is an associate professor of finance and the ArcelorMittal Finance Faculty Fellow at Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business.  Her research interests include investor behavior, hedge funds and mutual funds, and retirement plans.  Her work focuses on the factors that drive the behavior of financial intermediaries, with an emphasis on the role of incentives in financial decision making.

Read articles by Veronika K. Pool.

Jeremy Pope 80x108Jeremy C. Pope – Brigham Young University

Jeremy C. Pope is Co-Director of the Center for the Study of Elections and Democracy (CSED) and Associate Professor of Political Science at Brigham Young University.  His interests include elections, public opinion, legislatures, methods and the American founding.

Read articles by Jeremy C. Pope.

Diana Popescu 80x108Diana PopescuLSE Government

Diana Popescu is a doctoral candidate and Fellow in Government at the LSE. Her research is on theories of justice, discrimination, social exclusion and the Romani minority in Europe.

Read articles by Diana Popescu.

Susan Popkin 80x108Susan J. Popkin – The Urban Institute

Susan J. Popkin is both director of the Urban Institute’s Program on Neighborhoods and Youth Development and a senior fellow in the Metropolitan Housing and Communities Policy Center. A nationally recognized expert on public and assisted housing, Popkin directs a research program that focuses on the ways neighborhood environments affect outcomes for youth, and in assessing comprehensive community-based interventions. A particular focus is gender differences in neighborhood effects and improving outcomes for marginalized girls.

Read articles by Susan J. Popkin.

Igor Popov 80x108Igor Popov – Stanford University

Igor Popov is a PhD candidate at the Department of Economics at Stanford University. 

Read articles by Igor Popov.

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 Lauren Porter 80x108Lauren C. Porter – University of Maryland

Lauren Porter is an Assistant Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Maryland. She is largely interested in topics that revolve around punishment. In particular, she investigates questions related to incarceration, including the collateral consequences of imprisonment and how population dynamics shape incarceration trends. Her current work also explores how offenders interact with neighborhood environments to choose crime locations and targets.

Read articles by Lauren C. Porter.

Stephen Post 80x1108Stephen G. Post – Stony Brook University

Stephen G. Post is Professor of Family, Population and Preventive Medicine & Founding Director of the Center for Medical Humanities, Compassionate Care, and Bioethics. He is the author of over 200 articles in journals such as Science, American Journal of Psychiatry, and JAMA. His best-selling books include The Hidden Gifts of Helping and Why Good Things Happen to Good People.

Read articles by Stephen G. Post.

Natacha Postel-Vinay 80x108Natacha Postel-Vinay – LSE Economic History

Natacha Postel-Vinay is a final-year PhD student in the Department of Economic History at LSE. Her thesis focuses on the role of mortgage lending and liquidity risk in the U.S. Great Depression and their implications for bank failures and bank regulation more generally.

Read articles by Natacha Postel-Vinay.

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Andrei Potlogea 80x108Andrei Potlogea – Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona

Andrei Potlogea is a PhD student in Economics at Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona.

Read articles by Andrei Potlogea.

 Joshua Potter 80x108Joshua D. Potter – Louisiana State University
Joshua D. Potter is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Louisiana State University. His research interests include campaign finance, party systems, and electoral politics; his work in these areas has been published in the American Journal of Political Science, British Journal of Political Science, and Journal of Politics, among others.

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Phillip Potter 80x108Philip B. K. Potter – University of Michigan

Philip Potter is an assistant professor of public policy and political science at the University of Michigan. His ongoing research explores the influence of domestic politics on foreign policy and international relations. He also conducts research in the area of international terrorism and is a principal investigator for a Department of Defense Minerva Initiative project to map and analyze collaborative relationships between terrorist organizations.

Read articles by Philip B. K. Potter.

Chris D. Poulos – University of Illinois at Chicago

Chris D. Poulos is the Chief of Staff to Chicago City Council Member Rossana Rodriguez and PhD student in sociology at the University of Illinois at Chicago. His current research examines the ways elites discursively and materially wield austerity to promote financialization.

Read articles by Chris D. Poulos.

Lauge Poulsen 80x108Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen – Nuffield College, University of Oxford

Lauge N. Skovgaard Poulsen is a Postdoctoral Fellow at Nuffield College, University of Oxford, and a Senior Research Fellow at the University of London SOAS. At the University of Oxford, he is also a Research Associate at the Global Economic Governance Programme. His recent publications are listed here.

Read articles by Lauge Poulsen.

Stavros Poupakis – UCL

Dr. Stavros Poupakis (@StavrosPoupakis) is a Lecturer in Economics at the University College London. He holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Essex. Before joining UCL, he worked at the University of Oxford, University of Essex, and the World Bank.

Read articles by Stavros Poupakis.

Anne Power thumbAnne Power – LSE Social Policy

Anne Power is Professor of Social Policy at the London School of Economics and Head of LSE Housing and Communities. She is also Chair of the National Communities Resource Centre at Trafford Hall.

Read articles by Anne Power.

sam powerSam Power – Sussex University

Sam Power is a doctoral researcher and Associate Tutor at the Sussex Centre for the Study of Corruption, University of Sussex. He is currently a visiting researcher at the Center for the Study of Democracy, University of California, Irvine.

Read articles by Sam Power.

 

susan pozo 80x108Susan Pozo – Western Michigan University

Susan Pozo is a professor in the Department of Economics at Western Michigan University. Her research interests include Asset accumulation, Currency crises, Exchange rate uncertainty, Immigrants’ remittances, Returns to international human capital, Statistical properties of exchange rates.

Read articles by Susan Pozo.

Andrea Prat – Columbia Business School 

Andrea Prat is the Richard Paul Richman Professor of Business at Columbia Business School and Professor of Economics at the Department of Economics, Columbia University. After receiving his PhD in Economics from Stanford University in 1997, he taught at Tilburg University and the London School of Economics. He joined Columbia in 2012. Professor Prat’s work focuses on organisational economics and political economy. His current research in organisational economics explores – through theoretical modelling, field experiments, and data analysis – issues such as incentive provision, corporate leadership, employee motivation, and organisational language. Professor Prat is a principal investigator of the Executive Time Use Project. His current research in political economy attempts to define and measure the influence of the media industry on the democratic process.

Read articles by Andrea Prat.

jessica-robinson-preece-80x108Jessica Robinson PreeceBrigham Young University

Jessica Robinson Preece got her PhD in Political Science at the University of California, Los Angeles and is an assistant professor at Brigham Young University.  She studies candidate emergence and recruitment, with an emphasis on gender.  Her work has been featured or is forthcoming in journals such as the American Journal of Political Science, the Quarterly Journal of Political Science, Political Behavior, and Legislative Studies Quarterly.

Read articles by Jessica Robinson Preece.

 Robert J. Pressel – Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Robert J. Pressel is a senior research support associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He received his dual BA/MA in Political Science from Boston University in 2016. His research interests include political parties and primaries, elite behavior, and state and local politics.

Read articles by Robert J. Pressel.

Jeremy Pressman – University of Connecticut

Jeremy Pressman is an associate professor of political science and director of Middle East Studies at the University of Connecticut. He is co-director of the Crowd Counting Consortium at crowdcounting.org. Pressman is on twitter @djpressman.

Read articles by Jeremy Pressman.

Klaus Prettner – University of Hohenheim

Klaus Prettner is professor of economics at the University of Hohenheim and speaker of the research network Inequality and Economic Policy Analysis (INEPA). His research is primarily concerned with the interrelations between economic growth and inequality, the economic consequences of automation, and the impact of demographic change on long-run economic growth in industrialised economies.

Read articles by Klaus Prettner.

William Pridemore 80x108William Alex Pridemore – Georgia State University

William Alex Pridemore is Distinguished University Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice & Criminology at Georgia State University, where he is also senior researcher in the Evidence-Based Policy Cluster. His main criminological research interests include social structure and violence, alcohol and violence, and cross-national homicide rates. He also carries out research on alcohol epidemiology, the Russian mortality crisis, the sociology of health and illness, and domestic terrorism. His articles have appeared in the leading journals of several disciplines, including criminology, sociology, public health, and substance abuse.

Read articles by William Alex Pridemore.

Soledad Artiz Prillaman Fig 2Soledad Artiz Prillaman – Harvard University

Soledad Artiz Prillaman is a third year graduate student in the Department of Government at Harvard University. Her research focuses on comparative political economy, the politics of the welfare state, and economic development. She is interested in the effects of global development initiatives on public policy, and in particular on the provision of public social services and redistribution. 

Read articles by Soledad Artiz Prillaman.

Igor Primoratz – Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Igor Primoratz is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. His research areas are moral, political, and legal philosophy. His most recent book isTerrorism: A Philosophical Investigation (Polity, 2013). He is editor of Terrorism: ThePhilosophical Issues (Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), Civilian Immunity in War (Oxford UP, 2007), and Terror from the Sky: The Bombing of German Cities in World War II (Berghahn, 2010).

Read articles by Igor Primoratz.

kira-pronin-80x108Kira Pronin University of Pittsburgh

Kira Pronin is a PhD candidate in political science at the University of Pittsburgh.  Her research interests are in comparative politics and judicial politics.

Read articles by Kira Pronin.

Jan-Willem van Prooijen – VU University Amsterdam / NSCR

Jan-Willem van Prooijen is an Associate Professor in the department of Social and Organizational Psychology at VU University Amsterdam, and a Senior Researcher at the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR).

Read articles by Jan-Willem van Prooijen.

Geoffrey Propheter – University of Colorado Denver

Geoffrey Propheter is an Assistant Professor in the School of Public Affairs at the University of Colorado Denver. His research covers local public finance, land and economic development, and sports and urban affairs.

Read articles by Geoffrey Propheter.

Doris Provine 80x108Doris Marie Provine – Arizona State University

Doris Marie Provine is Professor Emerita of Justice Studies at Arizona State University.  Her scholarly interests focus on immigration, law, and race.  Most recently she co-editedLaw and the Quest for Justice (Quid Pro Quo, 2013).  She is also the author of Unequal Under Law: Race and the War on Drugs (University of Chicago Press, 2007).

Read articles by Doris Marie Provine.

Ron Pruessen 80x108Ron Pruessen – University of Toronto

Ronald W. Pruessen has served as the Munk School of Global Affairs’ Director for International Partnerships & Research and is former Chair of the Department of History, University of Toronto. His primary research and teaching interests are in 20th century U.S. foreign policy and international relations. Early work focused on the Cold War (e.g., John Foster Dulles: To the Threshold, 1888-1952) and he recently co-edited (with Soraya Castro) Fifty Years of Revolution: Perspectives on Cuba, the United States, and the World.  He is currently writing a study of the way Barack Obama’s foreign policies relate to deeply rooted American views and behavior.

Read articles by Ron Pruessen.

Scott Pruysers – Ryerson University

Scott Pruysers is a Postdoctoral Fellow at Ryerson University and an Adjunct Research Professor at Carleton University. His research interests include party organization, intra-party democracy, and political psychology. His research has appeared in journals such as Political Research Quarterly, Party Politics, Canadian Journal of Political Science, and Politics & Gender. He is the co-author of The Promise and Challenge of Party Primary Elections: A Comparative Perspective (McGill-Queens University Press, 2016) and the co-editor of The Personalization of Democratic Politics and the Challenge for Political Parties (ECPR Press, 2018).

Read articles by Scott Pruysers.

Cynthia Puddu – MacEwan University

Cynthia Puddu, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor at MacEwan University in Edmonton, Alberta in the Faculty of Health and Community Studies. Her research examines the experiences of homeless youth in downtown Edmonton and how higher-level socio-political systems such as neoliberalism and settler colonialism shape those experiences. Using Institutional Ethnography and community-based participatory research methods, she works closely with homeless youth in Edmonton, sharing their stories of difficulty and success. Cynthia is interested in using her research to work as an ally and advocate for populations that have been historically silenced.

Read articles by Cynthia Puddu.

Joseph Pugliese – Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia

Joseph Pugliese is Research Director of the Department of Media, Music, Communication and Cultural Studies, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia. Selected publications include the edited collection Transmediterranean: Diasporas, Histories, Geopolitical Spaces (Peter Lang, 2010) and the monograph Biometrics: Bodies, Technologies, Biopolitics (Routledge, 2010). His most recent book is State Violence and the Execution of Law: Biopolitical Caesurae of Torture, Black Sites, Drones (Routledge, 2013).

Read articles by Joseph Pugliese.

Christopher Putney – The Graduate Center, CUNY

Christopher Putney is a graduate student in American political development and political theory at the CUNY Graduate Center, and a lecturer at Hunter College’s Deptartment of Political Science.

Read articles by Christopher Putney.

Thitima-Puttitanun-80X108Thitima Puttitanun – San Diego State University

Thitima Puttitanun is an Associate Professor at the Department of Economics, San Diego State University, California. Her research interests include the study international technology transfer, international trade issues, and migration.

Read articles by Thitima Puttitanun.

Yuriy Pylypchuk – Social and Scientific Systems

Yuriy Pylypchuk is a health economist at Social and Scientific Systems and an adjunct professor at Georgetown University, McCourt School of Public Policy. His research interests include several aspects of health economics such as preventive care, health disparities, health care work force, and immigration issues.

Read articles by Yuriy Pylypchuk.

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David Pyrooz Fig 1David Pyrooz – Sam Houston State University

David Pyrooz, PhD, is an assistant professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at Sam Houston State University. He studies gangs and deviant networks, developmental and life course criminology, and violent offending and victimization. He is the author of Confronting Gangs: Crime and Community (2014, Oxford University Press).

Read articles by David Pyrooz.

Yue Qian – University of British Columbia

Yue Qian is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of British Columbia.

Read articles by Yue Qian.

 

Feng Qiu 80x108Feng Qiu – University of Alberta

Feng Qiu is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology at the University of Alberta. Her research interests include agricultural policy, price analysis, risk and insurance modeling, applied spatial statistics, and applied econometrics.

Read articles by Feng Qiu.

tara_lai.quinlanTara Lai Quinlan – University of Sheffield

Tara Lai Quinlan is lawyer and Lecturer in Law & Diversity at the University of Sheffield. You can watch Tara discuss her research here. She tweets as @QuinlanTL.

Read articles by Tara Lai Quinlan.

adam-quinn-80x108Adam Quinn – University of Birmingham

Adam Quinn is Senior Lecturer in International Politics at the Department of Political Science and International Studies and the Institute for Conflict, Cooperation and Security, University of Birmingham.

Read articles by Adam Quinn.

Stanislav Rabinovich – Amherst College

Stanislav Rabinovich is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Amherst College. He received his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania. His research interests are at the intersection of macroeconomics and labor economics, especially the development of search models and their application to labor markets and policy design. His recent work has focused on monetary theory, unemployment insurance, and jobless recoveries.  

Read articles by Stanislav Rabinovich.

John D. Rackey – University of Oklahoma

John D. Rackey is a doctoral student and teaching assistant at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Oklahoma. His main areas of study are legislative politics and procedures with special focus on filibusters and the U.S. Senate. He tweets at @JDRackey

Read articles by John D. Rackey. _

Thomas Rabovsky 80x108Thomas Rabovsky – Indiana University, Bloomington

Thomas Rabovsky is an assistant professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University, Bloomington, where he teaches public management. His research largely focuses on accountability, performance management, managerial values and decision making, and higher education policy.

Read articles by Thomas Rabovsky.

Benjamin Radcliff – University of Notre Dame

Benjamin Radcliff is Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame.

Read articles by Benjamin Radcliff.

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Jordan Ragusa – College of Charleston

Jordan Ragusa is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the College of Charleston.

Read articles by Jordan Ragusa.
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Jon Rahbek-Clemmensen – Royal Danish Defence College

Jon Rahbek-Clemmensen is an Associate Professor at the Royal Danish Defence College and he holds a PhD from the LSE. His research interests include Arctic politics, Danish foreign and security policy, and transatlantic relations. Among his publications is ‘Greenland and the International Politics of a Changing Arctic’ (Routledge, 2017, with Kristian Kristensen).

Read articles by Jon Rahbek-Clemmensen.

Zoe Rahwan – Max Planck Institute for Human Development

Zoe Rahwan is a research scientist in the Center for Adaptive Rationality at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development.

Read articles by Zoe Rahwan.

 

Carslisle Rainey 80x108Carlisle Rainey – The University at Buffalo

Carlisle Rainey is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at UB. His work addresses the interaction between institutions and behavior and develops and refines statistical tools to address these substantive issues.

Read articles by Carlisle Rainey.

Kumar Ramanathan – Northwestern University

Kumar Ramanathan PhD candidate in political science at Northwestern University. His research agenda explores the relationship between the policy process and social inequalities in the United States, with a focus on civil rights, social policy, and immigration policy. 

Read articles by Kumar Ramanathan.


Rubén Ruiz Ramas  
UNED, Madrid

Rubén Ruiz Ramas is a Research and Teaching Fellow in Political Science at UNED University (Madrid), specialised in political dynamics in the post-Soviet space. He co-edits the Eurasianet.es blog @EurasianetES

Read articles by Rubén Ruiz Ramas.

Megha Ramaswamy 80x108Megha Ramaswamy – University of Kansas School of Medicine

Megha Ramaswamy is an Assistant Professor of Preventive Medicine and Public Health at University of Kansas School of Medicine.  Dr. Ramaswamy’s current work addresses the social context of sexual health risk among incarcerated women and is funded by the National Institutes of Health (National Cancer Institute) and American Cancer Society.  The work described in this article was also funded by the National Institutes of Health (National Institute on Drug Abuse).

Read articles by Megha Ramaswamy.

adam-ramey-80x108Adam J. RameyNew York University Abu Dhabi

Adam J. Ramey is an Assistant Professor of Politics, New York University Abu Dhabi. 

Read articles by Adam J. Ramey.

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Octavio Ramirez 80x108Octavio A. Ramirez– University of Georgia

Octavio A. Ramirez is a Professor and Department Head in the Agricultural and Applied Economics Department at The University of Georgia. His research interests include analysis of select government policies and programs related to the US agricultural sector.

Read articles by Octavio A. Ramirez.

Luis Enrique Ramos-Santiago 80x108Luis Enrique Ramos-Santiago – Florida State University

Luis Enrique Ramos-Santiago is a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Urban and Regional Planning at Florida State University. His research interests include the evolution of inner-ring suburbs, multidisciplinary social-ecological urban research, sustainable transportation, determinants of transit ridership, and multimodal transportation/ land-use interactions. 

Read articles by Luis Enrique Ramos-Santiago.

vinuri-ranaweera-80x108Vinuri RanaweeraBaruch College, City University of New York

Vinuri Ranaweera is a freshman majoring in economics at Baruch College as a Dean’s Scholar. She previously was a research intern in clinical machine learning at the Computer Science Department, New York University for two years.

Read articles by Vinuri Ranaweera.

Jennifer M. Randles – California State University

Jennifer M. Randles is author of Proposing Prosperity: Marriage Education Policy and Inequality in America (Columbia University Press, Publication Date: December 27, 2016). She is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at California State University, Fresno. Her research explores how inequalities affect American family life and how policies address family-formation trends.

Read articles by Jennifer M. Randles.

Ronald Ranta – Kingston University

Ronald Ranta is a senior lecturer in politics and international relations as well as the politics department’s postgraduate programme coordinator and course leader for the MSc in international relations. 

Read articles by Ronald Ranta.

stig-hebbelstrup-rye-rasmussen-80x108Stig Hebbelstrup Rye RasmussenUniversity of Southern Denmark

Stig Hebbelstrup Rye Rasmussen is a post.doc at the Centre for Political Psychology at the University of Southern Denmark. His primary research interests are political psychology with a special focus on individual differences such as personality traits and intelligence as well as behavioral genetic research methods.

Read articles by Stig Hebbelstrup Rye Rasmussen.

Mark Ratchford – Tulane University

Mark Ratchford is visiting assistant professor of marketing at Tulane University’s Freeman School of Business. His research broadly focuses on how “boundedly rational” managers and consumers form judgments and make decisions. Research domains include inter-firm strategic alliance formation, financial investment decisions, choice deferral (the decision not to choose), asking for money, and new technology adoption.

Read articles by Mark Ratchford.

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Caroline Ratcliffe 80x108Caroline Ratcliffe – The Urban Institute

Caroline Ratcliffe is an economist and expert in the asset building and poverty fields. Her research focuses on low-income families and underserved consumers, and she has published extensively on the role of emergency savings, homeownership, poverty dynamics, and welfare receipt.

Read articles by Caroline Ratcliffe.

Jason Rathje – AFVentures

Jason Rathje is a graduate of the Stanford Technology Ventures Program and currently serves as the Director of AFVentures. His research focuses on the overlap of government funding, entrepreneurship, and technical innovation, with special attention on how firms form research and development relationships with government agencies. 

Read articles by Jason Rathje.

Ferdinand Rauch – University of Oxford

Ferdinand Rauch is Associate Professor of economics at the University of Oxford and an Associate at the LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance. 

Read articles by Ferdinand Rauch.

Ringa Raudla 80x108Ringa RaudlaTallinn University of Technology

Ringa Raudla is professor of public finance and governance at Ragnar Nurkse School of Innovation and Governance, Tallinn University of Technology, Estonia. Her research interests include fiscal governance, fiscal policy, public budgeting, institutional economics, and public management reforms. Her most recent publications have appeared in Public Administration Review, Policy Studies Journal and Governance.

Read articles by Ringa Raudla.

Jonathan Rauh 80x108Jonathan Rauh 

Jonathan Rauh works in Government Affairs addressing issues of educational policy and accountability.   He previously worked in State Regulatory Affairs for Aflac Group Insurance in the US.  He received his PhD from the University of South Carolina where he focused on public sector ethics/accountability and educational policy.  His current research examines the intersection between public and private organizations and differences in the design of accountability systems.

Read articles by Jonathan Rauh.

Hans Rawhouser – UNLV

Hans Rawhouser is an associate professor of entrepreneurship at UNLV’s Lee Businesses School. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management. He investigates how market intermediaries help entrepreneurs, how entrepreneurs gain resources, and the measurement of social impact.

Read articles by Hans Rawhouser.

Georgia Rawhouser-Mylet

Georgia Rawhouser-Mylet is a graduate of Grinnell College Class of 2021. She is a research assistant for the Grinnell College National Poll.

Read articles by Georgia Rawhouser-Mylet.

 

John L. Ray – University of California, Los Angeles

John Ray is a PhD Candidate in the Department of Political Science, at the University of California-Los Angeles.

Read articles by John L. Ray.

 

Christopher D. Raymond – Queen’s University Belfast

Christopher D. Raymond is Lecturer in Politics at Queen’s University Belfast.

Read articles by Christopher D. Raymond.

 

Matthew J. Razzano
Matthew J. Razzano (@MattRazzano) is an attorney who writes about consumer and financial regulatory issues. He graduated from Notre Dame Law School and received a master’s degree from LSE. In addition, he spent three years in the financial services industry before attending graduate school.

Read articles by Matthew J. Razzano.

James B. Rebitzer 80x108James B. Rebitzer – Boston University’s Questrom School and NBER

James B. Rebitzer is a professor of management, economics and public policy at Boston University’s School of Management where he chairs the Markets, Public Policy and Law Department. He is also a professor of economics (by courtesy) in the College of Arts and Sciences Economics Department. He is a Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and the Levy Economics Institute, a research fellow at the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) and Cornell’s Compensation Research Institute and also an Affiliate of the Sloan Industry Centers Project.

Read articles by James B. Rebitzer.

Stephen Redding – Princeton University

Stephen Redding is Harold T. Shapiro ’64 professor in economics at Princeton University. He is an associate in the trade programme at LSE’s CEP and director of NBER‘s international trade and investment programme, and is affiliated with a number of other institutions. His research interests include productivity growth at the firm and industry level, international trade and economic geography.

Read articles by Stephen Redding.

David P. Redlawsk – University of Delaware

David P. Redlawsk is James R. Soles a professor and chair of the Department of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Delaware in Newark, His research focuses on the role of information in voter decision-making and on emotional responses to campaigns. He is co-author (with Kyle Mattes) of The Positive Case for Negative Campaigning.

Read articles by David Redlawsk.

Margarete Redlin 80x108Margarete Redlin – University of Paderborn, Germany

Dr. Margarete Redlin is a Research Associate at the Department of Economics of the University of Paderborn. Her primary research interests include Economics of Conflict and Development Economics.

Read articles by Margarete Redlin.

shane-redman-80x108Shane Redman University of Pittsburgh

Shane Redman is a PhD candidate in political science at the University of Pittsburgh.  His research interests are in judicial politics and political behavior.

Read articles by Shane Redman.

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Shana Redmond 80x108Shana L. Redmond – University of Southern California

Shana L. Redmond is Associate Professor of American studies and ethnicity at the University of Southern California and the author of Anthem: social movements and the sound of solidarity in the African diaspora (NYU Press, 2014), which examines the sonic politics performed amongst and between organized Afro-diasporic publics in the twentieth century. She tweets @ShanaRedmond.

Read articles by Shana L. Redmond.

Karen Reece – City of Madison’s Task Force on Equity in Music and Entertainment

Karen Reece holds a Ph.D. in Physiology granted from the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health. She migrated to the world of social science when she saw her analytical skills could complement non-profits struggling to quantify impact. As a founding member and President of Urban Community Arts Network, Karen develops programming and facilitates community organizing in the Hip-Hop community. Karen was recently elected chair of the City of Madison’s Task Force on Equity in Music and Entertainment. When she’s not doing research and/or organizing events, Karen enjoys the local music scene (particularly Hip-Hop), playing the cello and singing, and fighting for social justice.

Read articles by Karen Reece.

Isaac Ariail Reed – University of Virginia

Isaac Ariail Reed is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Virginia. He is the author of Interpretation and Social Knowledge: On the Use of Theory in the Human Sciences, the co-editor, with Monika Krause and Claudio Benzecry, of Social Theory Now, and the author of Power in Modernity: Agency Relations and the Creative Destruction of the King’s Two Bodies, forthcoming with University of Chicago Press.

Read articles by Isaac Ariail Reed.

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John van Reenen 80x108John Van Reenen – LSE, Centre for Economic Performance

John Van Reenen is Director of the Centre for Economic Performance at the London School of Economics.

Read articles by John van Reenen.

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Laura Reese 80x108Laura A. Reese – Michigan State University

Laura A. Reese is Professor of Political Science and Director of the Global Urban Studies Program at Michigan State University. Her main research and teaching areas are urban politics and public policy, economic development, and local governance and management in both Canada and the US.

Read articles by Laura Reese.

Andrée E. Reeves – University of Alabama in Huntsville

Andrée E. Reeves, Ph.D. is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Alabama in Huntsville. Her academic interests include American national institutions and politics, state and local government, intergovernmental relations, and public policy. She wrote Congressional Committee Chairmen: Three Who Made an Evolution (University Press of Kentucky, 1993) and a number of research reports and articles. Dr. Reeves earned her BA from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and her MA and PhD from Rice University.

Read articles by Andrée E. Reeves.

Andrew Reeves 80x108Andrew Reeves – Washington University in St. Louis

Andrew Reeves is an assistant professor of political science at Washington University in St. Louis and a research fellow at the Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government, and Public Policy. His substantive interests focus on the interchange between institutions and behavior. Specifically, he studies electoral accountability of presidents and members of Congress.

Read articles by Andrew Reeves.

Aidan Regan – University College Dublin

Aidan Regan is Lecturer in European political economy at the School of Politics and International Relations (SPIRe) in University College Dublin (UCD), and Co-Director of the Dublin European Institute (DEI).

Read articles by Aidan Regan.

Tommaso Reggiani – Masaryk University

Tommaso Reggiani is research associate at Masaryk University, department of Public Economics – MUEEL lab, and research fellow at IZA. His research interests include behavioural economics, experimental economics, public economics. Email: tommaso.reggiani@econ.muni.cz

Read articles by Tommaso Reggiani. 

Simon Reich – Rutgers University

Simon Reich is a Professor in the Division of Global Affairs and Department of Political Science at Rutgers Newark. He is the author/editor of ten books and over fifty articles and book chapters. He is also the former director of Research and Analysis at the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London and publishes a regular column on foreign affairs entitled ‘Beyond the Beltway’ at The Conversation.

Read articles by Simon Reich.

shachar reichmanShachar Reichman  – MIT Sloan School of Management

Shachar Reichman is a Post-Doctoral Associate at the MIT Sloan School of Management,The MIT Center for Digital Business. He received my PhD in 2011, from Recanati Graduate School of Business Administration, Tel Aviv University. His research focuses on how businesses can effectively use social networks, social media and E-commerce.

Read articles by Shachar Reichman.

Rebecca Reid – University of Texas at El Paso

Rebecca Reid is an assistant professor of Political Science at the University of Texas at El Paso. Her research interests include judicial politics, comparative courts, international law, and human rights. 

Read articles by Rebecca Reid.

Robert J. Reid – Montclair State University

Robert J. Reid is a professor in Family Science and Human Development at Montclair State University, Montclair, NJ. Dr. Reid’s research focuses on the development, coordination, and testing of community-wide prevention initiatives to reduce risk and to promote protective factors associated with various health behaviors, such as adolescent substance abuse, sexual risk, and youth violence. Dr. Reid also serves as Primary Investigator (PI) on two federally funded prevention-intervention grants, funded through the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).

Read articles by Robert J. Reid.

Benjamin Reilly – The University of Western Australia

Benjamin Reilly is a political scientist at The University of Western Australia. His work focuses on democratization and electoral reform in ethnically divided societies.

Read articles by Benjamin Reilly.

Paul Reilly – University of Sheffield

Paul Reilly is a Senior Lecturer in Social Media & Digital Society in the Information School at the University of Sheffield. His research focuses on the study of online political communication.

Read articles by Paul Reilly. 

Ling Ren 80x108Ling Ren – Sam Houston State University

Ling Ren is an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice & Criminology in the College of Criminal Justice at Sam Houston State University. Dr. Ren’s primary research interests include policing, comparative criminal justice, and quantitative methodology.  Her recent work has appeared in such journals as Justice Quarterly, Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, and Crime & Delinquency 

Read articles by Ling Ren.

Andres Rengifo 80x108Andres F. Rengifo – Rutgers University & Harvard University

Andres Rengifo is an Associate Professor at Rutgers University and Research Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School. His research focuses primarily on the intersection between sentencing policies and imprisonment. He also studies social networks, and policing and urban crime in the United States and overseas.

Read articles by Andres F. Rengifo.

laura-rennerLaura Renner – University of Freiburg

Laura Renner is a research associate at the Department of Economics at the University of Freiburg. Her research focuses on the economics of migration, development economics and the economics of conflict.

Read articles by Laura Renner.

Tyler Reny – UCLA

Tyler Reny is a PhD Candidate in political science at UCLA. His research examines the political impacts of demographic change and the origins of racial attitudes in the United States and has work published or forthcoming in several academic journals including the American Political Science Review, Comparative Political Studies, Social Sciences Quarterly, and Aztlan. You can find more information on his website www.tylerreny.com and follow him on Twitter @tylerreny.

Read articles by Tyler Reny.

Hilde Restad 80x108Hilde Eliassen Restad – Bjorknes University College

Hilde Eliassen Restad is an Associate Professor in International Studies at Bjorknes University College, Oslo, Norway.

Read articles by Hilde Restad.

 

Kevin Reuning – Miami University

Kevin Reuning (@KevinReuning)  is an assistant professor of political science at Miami University. His research and teaching focus on political parties and social movements in the United States as well as latent variable modeling and social network analysis.#

Read articles by Kevin Reuning.

 

Nick revington 80x108Nick RevingtonUniversity of Waterloo

Nick Revington is a PhD student in the School of Planning at the University of Waterloo. He holds a Master’s degree in Geography, Urban and Environmental Studies from Concordia University in Montreal. His research interests include housing, gentrification, and urban change.

Read articles by Nick Revington.

Sarina Rhinehart – University of Oklahoma

Sarina Rhinehart is a political science PhD candidate at the University of Oklahoma and graduate fellow at the Carl Albert Congressional Research and Studies Center. Her research focuses on gender and politics, representation, and elections.

Read articles by Sarina Rhinehart.

Laurie Rhodebeck 80x108Laurie RhodebeckUniversity of Louisville

Laurie Rhodebeck is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Louisville. Her current research focuses on public opinion, media framing, political values, and partisan discourse. Her work has appeared in Journal of Politics, Public Opinion Quarterly, Political Research Quarterly, Political Behavior, Gender & Society, Journal of Homosexuality, Journal of Black Studies, and Micropolitics, as well as in various edited books. She is a co-editor of Ethnic and Racial Minorities in the Advanced Industrial Democracies.

Read articles by Laurie Rhodebeck.

Jesse Rhodes 80x108Jesse H. Rhodes – University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Jesse H. Rhodes is associate professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He is the author of An Education in Politics: The Origins and Evolution of No Child Left Behind, published by Cornell University Press; as well as of articles published in Political Behavior, Perspectives on Politics, Presidential Studies Quarterly, Publius: The Journal of Federalism, and other journals. Rhodes’ research interests include education politics, civil rights and voting rights, the American presidency, and political parties.

Read articles by Jesse Rhodes.

William Rhodes 80x108William Rhodes – Abt Associates

William Rhodes is a principal scientist at Abt Associates, a public policy consulting firm in Cambridge, Massachusetts. An economist, he specializes in program evaluation and quantitative analysis. He is co-principal investigator for the Bureau of Justice Statistics’ (BJS) National Corrections Reporting Program.

Read articles by William Rhodes.

CurtRiceCurt Rice – University of Tromsø

Curt Rice is a professor at the University of Tromsø. He is also the head of the board for Current Research Information System in Norway (CRIStin), which works to promote open access in Norway. He also leads Norway’s Committee on Gender Balance and Diversity in Research.

Read articles by Curt Rice.

Peter Rich 80x108Peter Rich – New York University

Peter Rich is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology at New York University. His research investigates how selection in school and housing markets interacts with policies to affect social outcomes. His dissertation examines parents’ residential decisions in the context of school district desegregation policy, evaluating the degree to which white parental avoidance of racially diverse schools has affected neighborhood segregation in the post-Civil Rights era.

Read articles by Peter Rich.

Andrew Richards 80x108Andrew Richards –Carlos III-Juan March Institute

Andrew Richards is at the Center for Advanced Study in the Social Sciences (CEACS) of the Juan March Institute in Madrid. He has been a Visiting Professor at the Department of Government, Dartmouth College, and the Institute of Political Studies at the University of Heidelberg, teaching courses on Comparative and European Politics, and a Visiting Scholar at the Wissenschaftszentrum, Berlin.

Read articles by Andrew Richards.

Julia Richardsons – Curtin Business School

Julia Richardsons is a professor and head of the School of Management at Curtin Business School (Perth, Australia).She is an expert in careers and human resources management and former chair of the careers division of the Academy of Management. She has enjoyed a global career in both the private and public sectors in the UK, Singapore, Japan, Indonesia, New Zealand and Canada. Professor Richardson is a member of the New Zealand Expert Business Performance Panel working with the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment. She is also an associate editor of two top tier academic journals. She has  won multiple awards for her research and teaching.

Read articles by Julia Richardsons. 

Sean Richey 80x108Sean RicheyGeorgia State University

Sean Richey is Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at Georgia State University. He teaches and researches political communication and political behavior.

Read articles by Sean Richey.

Alexander Richter – Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

Alexander Richter joined the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas as senior economist in May 2016. He received his PhD from Indiana University in May 2012. Prior to joining the bank, Richter was an assistant professor in the Department of Economics at Auburn University for four years. His research interests include monetary policy, fiscal policy, computational economics and Bayesian econometrics. His recent work focuses on the macroeconomic effects of uncertainty and the Fed’s zero interest rate policy.

Read articles by Alexander Richter.

Travis N. Ridout – Washington State University

Travis N. Ridout is a Thomas S. Foley distinguished professor of Government and Public Policy in the School of Politics, Philosophy and Public Affairs at Washington State University and co-director of the Wesleyan Media Project. His broad areas of research include political communication, voting, elections and campaigns, political participation and presidential nominations. 

Read articles by Travis Ridout.

Andrew Riely – Winsor School

Andrew Riely teaches US and European History at the Winsor School in Boston, Massachusetts. His research interests include Urban History and Sociology.

Read articles by Andrew Riely.

HaukeHauke Riesch – Brunel University

Hauke Riesch is Lecturer in Sociology and Communications at Brunel University.

 Read articles by Hauke Riesch.

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David Rigby 80x108David Rigby – UCLA

David Rigby is Professor of Geography and Statistics at UCLA. Trained in analytical political economy, his early work examined historical geographies of technology and economic performance.  Interests in the heterogeneity of economic agents prompted a shift to exploration of plant and firm-level microdata and theoretical work in evolutionary economic geography. His current research explores geographies of knowledge production and knowledge flow.

Read articles by David Rigby.

Elizabeth Rigby 80x108Elizabeth Rigby – George Washington University

Elizabeth Rigby is an Associate Professor in the Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration at George Washington University. Her research examines the interplay of politics, policy, and social inequality. In current projects, Dr. Rigby studies the representation of the poor across state legislatures, public opinion regarding health disparities, and other forms of social inequality, and the political dynamics surrounding enactment and implementation of federal health care reform.

Read articles by Elizabeth Rigby.

Alessandro Rigolon – University of Utah

Alessandro Rigolon is an Assistant Professor in the Department of City & Metropolitan Planning at the University of Utah. His research centers on planning for urban green space and health equity, covering three related areas: planning and policy determinants of (in)equitable park provision, drivers and resistance to green gentrification, and the health impacts of urban green space on marginalized communities. His research has appeared in Urban StudiesLandscape and Urban Planning, the Journal of Planning Education and ResearchCities, and Urban Geography. He co-authored Urban Green Spaces: Public Health and Sustainability in the United States.

Read articles by Alessandro Rigolon.

Luke Riley – Quant Network

Luke Riley is Head of Innovation in Quant Network.

Read articles by Luke Riley.

 

jennifer-ring-80x108Jennifer RingUniversity of Nevada, Reno

Jennifer Ring has been at the University of Nevada, Reno since 1996 when she was appointed director of Women’s Studies and professor of political science. Ring’s teaching fields include political theory (ancient Greek and modern European), race and gender in American politics, identity politics in the United States, political theory and political action, and the politics of sports. Her most recent books are: “A Game of Their Own: Voices of Contemporary Women in Baseball” (University of Nebraska Press, 2015) and “Stolen Bases: Why American Girls Don’t Play Baseball” (University of Illinois Press, 2009).

Read articles by Jennifer Ring.

Eve Ringsmuth 80x108

Eve M. Ringsmuth – Oklahoma State University

Eve M. Ringsmuth is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Oklahoma State University.  Her research focuses on the U.S. Supreme Court and the separation of powers.

Read articles by Eve M. Ringsmuth.

Joseph T. Ripberger – University of Oklahoma

Joseph Ripberger is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science and the Deputy Director for Research at the Center for Risk and Crisis Management at the University of Oklahoma. 

Read articles by Joseph T. Ripberger.

Ben Rissing 80x108Ben A. Rissing – Brown University

Ben A. Rissing is the Pearson Visiting Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at Brown University. His research interests are in the areas of organizations, work, and employment. His most recent work has been published in the American Sociological Review, British Journal of Industrial Relations, and Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration. Ben received his doctorate in management from the Institute for Work and Employment Research (IWER) at the MIT Sloan School of Management and previously he conducted research as a Postdoc with the Brown University Watson Institute for International Studies and as a Wertheim Fellow with the Harvard Law School Labor and Worklife Program.

Read articles by Ben A. Rissing.

Mark Ritchey 80x108Mark Ritchey – University of Missouri

Mark Ritchey is a doctoral candidate in political science at the University of Missouri. His research focuses on federalism and state policy.

Read articles by Mark Ritchey.

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Donald Ritchie 80x108Donald A. Ritchie – United States Senate

Donald A. Ritchie is historian of the US Senate, where he conducts an oral history program. A past president of the Oral History Association, he has also served on the councils of the International Oral History Association and the American Historical Association. He is the author of many books, including Doing Oral History: A Practical Guide (OUP, 2003), Reporting from Washington (OUP, 2005) and The U.S. Congress: A Very Short Introduction (OUP, 2010). He is also the editor of The Oxford Handbook of Oral History (OUP, 2012).

Read articles by Donald A. Ritchie.

emily-ritter-80x108Emily Hencken RitterUniversity of California, Merced

Emily Hencken Ritter is an assistant professor of political science at the University of California, Merced. Her research centers on the effects of international and comparative legal institutions on the strategic relationship between state repression and popular dissent activity. She has published articles in the American Political Science Review, the Journal of Politics, the Journal of Peace Research, the Journal of Conflict Resolution, and other major political science journals. Her book manuscript exploring the effects of international human rights treaties on repression and dissent, co-authored with Courtenay Conrad, is currently under review.

Read articles by Emily Hencken Ritter.

Gary W. RitterUniversity of Arkansas.

Gary W. Ritter is professor and holder of the Endowed Chair in Education Policy at the University of Arkansas. His research interests include teacher compensation, racial segregation in schools, and evaluating programs in economically disadvantaged schools. His research has been published in journals such as Phi Delta Kappan, Review of Educational Research, Education Finance & Policy, Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, and Education Next.

Read articles by Gary W. Ritter.

Carlos Riumallo-Herl 80x108Carlos Riumallo-Herl – LSE Health and Social Care

Carlos Riumallo-Herl is a Research Assistant at LSE Health and Social Care, and a Research Assistant at the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies.

Read articles by Carlos Riumallo-Herl.

Glyn Robbins – LSE Department of Sociology

Glyn Robbins was born in London and has worked in housing since 1991, when he was a student of Professor Anne Power on the LSE’s housing Masters course. In 2013 he completed a Ph.D in planning and urban policy. Since 2017, he has helped support students on the LSE’s Cities Programme and became an LSE Visiting Fellow in 2019 and a Fulbright Scholar in 2020/21. He also manages a north London council estate. Glyn’s writing about housing and urban policy has been widely published and he has frequently been interviewed by the media on the subject. In addition to his professional and academic involvement, Glyn is a long-time housing campaigner.

Read articles by Glyn Robbins.

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Scott Robinson 80x108Scott E. Robinson – University of Oklahoma

Scott E. Robinson is the Henry Bellmon Chair of Public Service and Associate Professor at the Department of Poltiican Science at the University of Oklahoma. His research focuses on the management and politics of public agencies and the dynamics of public policy, with special attention to emergency management and administrative networking

Read articles by Scott E. Robinson.

Nicole Roberts 80x108Nicole A. Roberts – Arizona State University.

Nicole Roberts is an Associate Professor of psychology in the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Arizona State University. She earned her doctoral degree in clinical psychology from the University of California, Berkeley, and completed her clinical internship and post-doctoral training at the Northern California Veterans Administration Health Care System and University of California, Davis Department of Psychiatry. She is the director of the Emotion, Culture, and Psychophysiology Laboratory and studies how cultural and biological forces intersect to shape emotion and emotion regulation. Her research has been published in outlets such as Family Process, Psychophysiology, and Emotion.

Read articles by Nicole A. Roberts.

Frédéric Robert-Nicoud 1 80x108Frédéric Robert-Nicoud – University of Geneva, CEPR and SERC

Professor Frédéric Robert-Nicoud was a lecturer of Economic Geography and the London School of Economics and Political Science (2005-2008) He did his PhD in Economics at the LSE. His research interests include urban economics, international trade, and political economics.

Read articles by Frédéric Robert-Nicoud.

David Robertson 80x108David Brian Robertson – University of Missouri – St Louis

David Brian Robertson is Curators’ Teaching Professor at the University of Missouri – St. Louis. He is the author of seven books, including The Original Compromise: What the Constitution’s Framers Were Really Thinking (Oxford University Press, 2013). A frequent commentator on current politics, he is the political analyst for KSDK-TV (NBC).

Read articles by David Brian Robertson.

David G. Robertson – Open University

David G. Robertson is Lecturer in Religious Studies at the Open University. His work applies critical theory to the study of alternative and emerging religions, and to “conspiracy theory” narratives. He is the author of UFOs, the New Age and Conspiracy Theories: Millennial Conspiracism (Bloomsbury 2016) and co-editor of Handbook of Conspiracy Theory and Contemporary Religion (Brill 2018).

Read articles by David G. Robertson.

Joanne Ford Robinson 80x108Joanne Ford-Robertson – University of Texas

Joanne Ford-Robertson, M.S., is currently a Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of Texas at San Antonio.  She is the advisor for the Undergraduate Sociology Program and has specialties in the area of social stratification, inter-group relations, and organizational change.

Read articles by Joanne Ford-Robertson.

Michael A. Robinson – University of Georgia

Michael A. Robinson, PhD, MSSW, is currently an assistant professor at the University of Georgia School of Social Work. His research interests address the wellbeing of African Americans. He also coedited a special issue of the Journal of Human Behavior in the Social Environment, which focused on the shooting of unarmed African Americans by police.

Read articles by Michael A. Robinson.

Jessica Robinson Preece – Brigham Young University

Jessica Robinson Preece is an Assistant Professor in Political Science at Brigham Young University.  Her research focuses on using experiments to learn how to close the gender gap in political participation and representation.

Read articles by Jessica Robinson Preece.

Ruthann Robson 80x108Ruthann Robson – City University of New York (CUNY)

Ruthann Robson is Professor of Law and University Distinguished Professor at City University of New York (CUNY) School of Law and the author of Dressing Constitutionally: Hierarchy, Sexuality, and Democracy – From Our Hairstyles to Our Shoes (Cambridge University Press 2013).

Read articles by Ruthann Robson.

Michael S. Rocca – University of New Mexico

Michael S. Rocca is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of New Mexico. Professor Rocca’s subfield is American politics and his primary research and teaching interests relate to American national institutions, particularly the US Congress, as well as campaign spending US elections.

Read articles by Michael S. Rocca.

Philip Rocco – Marquette University

Philip Rocco is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Marquette University. He received his PhD in political science from the University of California, Berkeley and was a postdoctoral associate at the University of Pittsburgh Health Policy Institute. He is a co-author of Obamacare Wars: Federalism, State Politics, and the Affordable Care Act (University Press of Kansas, 2016). His published research has been featured in the Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and LawJournal of Aging and Social Policy, and the Journal of Public Policy, among other venues.

Read articles by Philip Rocco.

 

Daniel RockmoreDartmouth College
Daniel Rockmore is a professor of mathematics and computer science at Dartmouth College.

Read articles by Daniel Rockmore.

Juliette Roddy 80x108Juliette Roddy The University of Michigan-Dearborn

Dr. Juliette Roddy is an economist with research that is focused on the Detroit Metropolitan area. Her current projects focus on rational behavior and individual response to policy. She partners with a variety of community agencies including Detroit Health and Wellness Promotion, investigating the economic effects of interventions on individual behavior and health.

Read articles by Juliette Roddy.

Yana van der Meulen Rodgers – Rutgers University

Professor Yana van der Meulen Rodgers (@YanaRodgers) is a Professor at Rutgers University and Faculty Director of the Center for Women and Work. Yana is the author of the new book The Global Gag Rule and Women’s Reproductive Health: Rhetoric versus Reality.Yana served as President of the International Association for Feminist Economics in 2013-14, and she has served as an associate editor for Feminist Economics since 2005.

Read articles by Yana van der Meulen Rodgers.

Toni Rodon – Universitat Pompeu Fabra

Toni Rodon is an Assistant Professor at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra’s Department of Political and Social Sciences. His research interests include electoral participation, political geography, comparative politics, and historical political economy.

Read articles by Toni Rodon.

Frank Rodriguez 80x108Frank A. RodriguezNorth Carolina Central University

Frank A. Rodriguez is an assistant professor of criminal justice at North Carolina Central University. He has published on a number of issues including immigration, contemporary policing and law enforcement. His research interests include juvenile justice, immigration, race & ethnicity, immigration, and terrorism.

Read articles by Frank A. Rodriguez.

Olga Rodriguez 80x108Olga Rodriguez – University of Florida

Olga Rodriguez is an undergraduate senior at the University of Florida studying anthropology and health disparities. She plans to pursue an MD/PhD in medical anthropology.

Read articles by Olga Rodriquez.

Andrés Rodríguez-Pose  LSE Department of Geography and Environment

Andrés Rodríguez-Pose is a Professor of Economic Geography at the London School of Economics, where he was previously Head of the Department of Geography and Environment. He is the Acting President of the Regional Science Association International, where he served as Vice-President in 2014. He has also been Vice-President (2012-2013) and Secretary (2001-2005) of the European Regional Science Association. He is a regular advisor to numerous international organizations, including the European Commission, the European Investment Bank, the World Bank, the Cities Alliance, the OECD, the International Labour Organization, the Food and Agriculture Organization, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the Development Bank of Latin America. 

Read articles by Andrés Rodríguez-Pose.

Dani Rodrik – Institute for Advanced Study

Dani Rodrik is the Albert O. Hirschman Professor of Social Science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, NJ, USA. He was previously the Rafiq Hariri Professor of International Political Economy at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He has published widely in international economics and globalization, economic growth and development and political economy.

Read articles by Dani Rodrik,

jonathan-rogers-80x108Jonathan RogersNew York University Abu Dhabi

Jonathan Rogers is an Instructor of Political Science at New York University Abu Dhabi.  His research focuses on the negative aspects of voting and economic behavior: frustration, cheating, spite, and discrimination.  His recent publications appear in Political Science Research and Methods, Electoral Studies, and Economic Inquiry.

Read articles by Jonathan Rogers.

Jon Rogowski 80x108

Jon Rogowski – Washington University, St Louis

Jon Rogowski is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Washington University in St. Louis.

Read articles by Jon Rogowski.

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Jessica Smith Rolston 80x108Jessica Smith Rolston – Colorado School of Mines

Jessica Smith Rolston is the Hennebach Assistant Professor of Energy Policy in the Division of Liberal Arts and International Studies at the Colorado School of Mines. She is the author of Mining Coal and Undermining Gender: Rhythms of Work and Family in the American West (Rutgers University Press, 2014). Her anthropological research on mining, gender, labor, and corporate social responsibility appears in the journals American Anthropologist, Signs: Journal of Women in Labor and Society, Anthropology Today, and WorkingUSA: The Journal of Labor and Society.

Read articles by Jessica Smith Rolston.

Caterina G. Roman 80x108Caterina G. Roman – Temple University

Caterina Roman is an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice at Temple University. Her research interests include the relationship between neighborhood characteristics, fear, violence, and health; the social networks of high risk and gang youth, and evaluation of innovative violence reduction programs. Dr. Roman is particularly interested in how the physical and social environment intersects with personal characteristics to influence how people use public spaces, and in turn, how physical activity is associated with individual and community health.

Read articles by Caterina G. Roman.

David W. Romero

David W. Romero is a retired Associate Professor of Political Science, specializing in American Electoral Behavior. His work has appeared in journals including Political Behavior and Presidential Studies Quarterly.

Read articles by David W. Romero.

Francine Sanders Romero  University of Texas at San Antonio

Francine Sanders Romero is an Associate Professor and Chair of the Public Administration Department at the University of Texas at San Antonio. She is a political scientist with areas of interest bridging political behavior and institutions. Her recent publications have appeared in State and Local Government Review and Journal of Social Science History.

Read articles by Francine Sanders Romero.

David Romney 80x108David Romney – Harvard University

David Romney is a Ph.D. student at Harvard University. His primary research interests are the psychology of intergroup relations, ethnic and religious conflict, and the Middle East. His interests also include experimental political science, social media and text analysis, and Southeast Asia. 

Read articles by David Romney.

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Barbara Romzek 80x108Barbara Romzek – American University

Barbara Romzek is dean of the School of Public Affairs at American University; she received her Ph.D. in government from the University of Texas at Austin.  Dr. Barbara Romzek is internationally recognized for her expertise in the area of public management and accountability with emphases on government reform, contracting, and network service delivery. Her research has encompassed complex work settings, including NASA, Congress, and the Air Force, as well as state agencies, local governments, and nonprofit agencies.  Dr. Romzek, a Fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration, has received research awards from the American Society for Public Administration and the American Political Science Association.  She currently serves on the Executive Council of the National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration.

Read articles by Barbara Romzek.

Matthijs Rooduijn 80x108Matthijs Rooduijn – Utrecht University

Matthijs Rooduijn (@mrooudijn) is assistant professor of sociology at Utrecht University. 

Read articles by Matthijs Rooduijn.
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Mary Rose 80x108Mary Rose – University of Texas at Austin

Mary Rose is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Texas at Austin. Her scholarship examines lay participation in the legal system and perceptions of justice, and she has written on a variety of topics including the effects of jury selection practices on jury representativeness, citizen reactions to jury selection questioning, jury damage awards, and public views of fairness in sentencing.

Read articles by Mary Rose.

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Max Rose 80x108Max Rose – Durham

Max Rose is a Program Associate at MDC, a Durham, North Carolina-based non-profit that helps organizations and communities of the United States South close the gaps that separate people from opportunity.

Read articles by Max Rose.

Nikolas Rose 80x108Nikolas Rose – King’s College London

Nikolas Rose is a Professor of Sociology and Head of the Department of Social Science, Health and Medicine at King’s College London. His work explores how scientific developments have changed conceptions of human identity and governance and what this means for our political, socio-economic and legal futures. From 2002 to 2011, Professor Rose was Professor of Sociology at the LSE, and founding director of the BIOS Centre for the Study of Bioscience, Biomedicine, Biotechnology and Society.

Read articles by Nikolas Rose.

Ira J. Roseman – Rutgers University

Ira J. Roseman is a professor of Psychology at the Rutgers University campus in Camden, NJ. His model of the emotion system encompasses 17 emotions, including anger and contempt. His publications in political psychology include studies of emotions as predictors of responses to persuasive communications as well as voting and theories of ideological structure and individual attachment to strongly-held beliefs.

Read articles by Ira J. Roseman.

Rachel E. Rosenbloom – Northeastern University School of Law

Rachel E. Rosenbloom is Professor of Law at Northeastern University School of Law and co-director of Northeastern’s Immigrant Justice Clinic. She teaches courses on immigration law, refugee and asylum law, and administrative law. Her recent scholarship has focused on the intersection of criminal law and immigration law, the possibilities and limits of transnational legal advocacy in advancing the rights of deportees, and the role of race and immigration enforcement in the construction of U.S. citizenship.

Read articles by Rachel. E Rosenbloom.

Emily Rosenman 80x108Emily RosenmanUniversity of Toronto

Emily Rosenman is a postdoctoral fellow in the Geography & Planning Department at the University of Toronto. As of July 2019 she is an assistant professor in the Department of Geography at Penn State University. Her research focuses on the intersections between finance, urbanization, and impoverishment in North America.

Read articles by Emily Rosenman.

Amanda Ross 80x108Amanda Ross – West Virginia University

Amanda Ross is an Assistant Professor in the College of Business and Economics at West Virginia University. She conducts research in urban economics, public finance, real estate economics and the economics of crime.

Read articles by Amanda Ross.

 

Joe Ross 80x108Joseph V. Ross – Florida Gulf Coast University

Joseph V. Ross is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at Florida Gulf Coast University.  His research deals with opinion-writing in state supreme courts and the effects of campaign finance restrictions in judicial elections.

Read articles by Joseph V. Ross.

Grégoire Rota-Graziosi – CERDI-CNRS-UCA

Grégoire Rota-Graziosi is professor in economics, director of the Centre d’Etudes et de Recherche en Développement International (CERDI-CNRS-UCA), co-editor of the Revue Economique du Développement and in charge of the research program on Domestic Revenue Mobilization (DRM) of the Fondation pour les études et recherches sur le développement international (FERDI). He is also alternate member of the French committee for Tax Abuse. From 2010 to 2015, he was senior economist in the Tax Policy Unit of the Fiscal Affairs Department at the International Monetary Fund (IMF). He is working mainly on tax policy issues in developing countries.

Read articles by Grégoire Rota-Graziosi.

Duncan Roth – Employment Research

Duncan Roth is a senior researcher at the Institute for Employment Research (IAB).

Read articles by Duncan Roth.

 

Philip Roth – Clemson University

Philip Roth is Trevillian distinguished professor of management at Clemson University. Phil’s research interests involve employee selection, political affiliation, and social media in organisations. He is a fellow of the Society for Industrial and Organizational Psychology and the American Psychological Society. Phil is past chair of the Research Methods Division of the Academy of Management and has served seven years on the executive committee of the Human Resources Division of the Academy of Management. He earned his PhD from the University of Houston.

Read articles by Philip Roth.

Sefi Roth – LSE Geography and Environment

Sefi Roth is an Assistant Professor of Environmental Economics in the Department of Geography and Environment at the LSE. He is also an Associate of the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment. His research concentrates on environmental economics, economics of education, labour economics and health economics.

Read articles by Sefi Roth.

Lawrence-Rothenberg-80x108Lawrence S. Rothenberg – University of Rochester

Lawrence Rothenberg is the Corrigan-Minehan Professor of Political Science at the University of Rochester. His current research focuses on focuses on interest groups, legislative politics, and environmental and public policy.

Read articles by Lawrence S. Rothenberg.

Ilana Rothkopf – University of Notre Dame

Ilana is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame. Her research fields are international relations and comparative politics with interests in international and comparative law, negotiations, non-state actors, international organizations, and post-conflict reconstruction. 

Read articles by Ilana Rothkopf.

Jacob Rothschild – Northwestern University

Jacob Rothschild is a Ph.D. Candidate in Political Science at Northwestern University.

Read articles by Jacob Rothschild.

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Jesse Rothstein 80x108Jesse Rothstein – University of California, Berkeley

Jesse Rothstein is Professor of Public Policy and Economics and the Director of the Institute for Research on Labor and Employment (IRLE) at the University of California, Berkeley.His research focuses on education and tax policy, and particularly on the way that public institutions ameliorate or reinforce the effects of children’s families on their academic and economic outcomes.  

Read articles by Jesse Rothstein.

Richard Rothstein 80x108Richard Rothstein – Economic Policy Institute

Richard Rothstein is a research associate of the Economic Policy Institute.

 

Read articles by Richard Rothstein.

Brandon Rottinghaus 80x108Brandon Rottinghaus – University of Houston

Brandon Rottinghaus is an Associate Professor and the Senator Don Henderson Scholar at the University of Houston.  His research interests include the presidency, executive-legislative relations and public opinion.  He is author of The Provisional Pulpit:  Modern Presidential Leadership of Public Opinion (Texas A&M University Press).  He is also the co-director of the Presidential Proclamations Project.

Read articles by Brandon Rottinghaus.

Heather Rouse 80x108Heather L. RouseUniversity of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Arkansas Center for Health Improvement

Heather L. Rouse is the Director of Health Policy Research at the Arkansas Center for Health Improvement and is an assistant professor in the College of Medicine –Center for Applied Research and Evaluation at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences.

Read articles by Heather L. Rouse.

Aaron Roussell – Portland State University

Aaron Roussell is an associate professor of sociology at Portland State University. He studies policing, drug policy, racial capitalism, and state violence. He is the co-author of The Limits of Community Policing: Civilian Power and Police Accountability in Black and Brown Los Angeles.

Read articles by Aaron Roussell.

Ian Rowe 80x108Ian Rowe – University of Kent at Canterbury

Ian Rowe is a Ph.D. candidate and Assistant Lecturer from the University of Kent at Canterbury. His research is funded by the UK Economic and Social  Research Council (ESRC) and focuses on the relationship between social network site (SNS) use and political behaviour. He is currently investigating how SNSs shape the way their users discuss politics online.

Read articles by Ian Rowe.

Carmela M. Roybal  University of New Mexico

Carmela M. Roybal is a Doctoral Candidate in the Department of Sociology at the University of New Mexico.

Read articles by Carmela M. Roybal.

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Kristen Roy-Bujnowski 80x108Kristen Roy-Bujnowski – University of Massachusetts Lowell

Kristen Roy-Bujnowski is a PhD candidate in the School of Criminology and Justice Studies at the University of Massachusetts Lowell.  . Her main research interest is in the intersection of the criminal justice and mental health systems. She was a Research Associate in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Massachusetts Medical School while working on this project.

Read articles by Kristen Roy-Bujnowski.

Meghan Rubado – Cleveland State University

Meghan Rubado is Assistant Professor of Urban Studies in the Levin College of Urban Affairs, Cleveland State University. She specializes in the study of state and local politics in the United States, environmental policy, and the politics of urban service provision. Other recent research focuses on inter-local collaboration and conflict in the context of sustained regional decline.

Read articles by Meghan Rubado. 

Yona Rubinstein 80x108Yona Rubinstein – LSE Department of Management

Yona Rubinstein is an Associate Professor of Managerial Economics and Strategy at the LSE’s Department of Management, and a research associate in CEP’s labour markets and community programmes.

Read articles by Yona Rubinstein.

Enrique Rueda-Sabater 80x108Enrique Rueda-Sabater – The Boston Consulting Group/ Center for Global Development

Enrique Rueda-Sabater is a Senior Adviser to The Boston Consulting Group and a Visiting Fellow at the Center for Global Development. His earlier career at the World Bank spanned two decades, including four years as Director for Corporate Strategy.

Read articles by Enrique Rueda-Sabater.

Martin Ruef 80x108Martin RuefDuke University

Martin Ruef is the Jack and Pamela Egan Professor in the Department of Sociology at Duke University. His most recent book, Between Slavery and Capitalism, address the organizational transformation of the American South following the Civil War, with a particular emphasis on the role of economic uncertainty. His current research projects examine the historical evolution of racial segregation, labor market institutions, and entrepreneurship.

Read articles by Marin Ruef.

Anirudh Ruhil 80x108Anirudh Ruhil – Ohio University

Anirudh Ruhil is an Associate Professor at Ohio University and the Associate Director of Research and Graduate Programs. He has published widely on issues of race and representation in local America, state politics and policy and education policy.

Read articles by Anirudh Ruhil.

Nicholas Rupp 80x108Nicholas G. Rupp – East Carolina University

Nicholas G. Rupp is an Associate Professor of Economics at East Carolina University. His primary research areas are industrial organization, financial economics, and economics of crime.

Read articles by Nicholas G. Rupp.

Wanda Rushing – University of Memphis

Wanda Rushing is Professor Emerita of Sociology at the University of Memphis. She is author of Memphis and the Paradox of Place:  Globalization in the American South (2009) and editor of Urbanization, Volume 15 of the New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture (2010), both published by The University of North Carolina Press. She has published numerous articles on social inequality and the American South, most recently in Urban Studies (2016) and Urban Education (2017).

Read articles by Wanda Rushing.

Annelise Russell – University of Texas at Austin

Annelise Russell is a PhD Candidate in Government at the University of Texas at Austin. Her research interests include public policy within US institutions, specifically Congress and the media, with an emphasis on how new media platforms serve elite interests.

Read articles by Annelise Russell.

Kelly L. Russell – University of Michigan

Kelly L. Russell is a PhD candidate in sociology at the University of Michigan. She studies the American political economy, with a focus on the politics of social policy and state-market relationships in welfare provision.

Read articles by Kelly L. Russell.

Jennifer Ruth – Portland State University 

Jennifer Ruth is Associate Professor of English at Portland State University and former chair of the English department. She is the author of Novel Professions: Interested Disinterest and the Making of the Professional in the Victorian Novel  (2006).

 Read articles by Jennifer Ruth.

Matt Ruther – University of Louisville

Matt is an Assistant Professor of Urban and Public Affairs at the University of Louisville. His research focuses on population estimation and forecasting, neighborhood growth and change, and spatial methods and analysis.

Read articles by Matt Ruther.

Amanda Rutherford – Indiana University Bloomington

Amanda Rutherford is an Assistant Professor in the School of Public and Environmental Affairs at Indiana University Bloomington. 

Read articles by Amanda Rutherford.

John Ryan 80x108John Barry Ryan – Florida State University

John Barry Ryan is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Florida State University.  His work on campaigns and voter behavior has appeared in the American Journal of Political Science, Political Behavior, and Political Communication.  The research this piece is based on was co-authored with Kerri Milita, a PhD. Candidate at Florida State University, and Elizabeth Simas, Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Houston.  Beginning in 2014, Ryan will be on faculty at Stony Brook University and Milita will be on faculty at Illinois State University.

Read articles by John Barry Ryan.

Josh M. Ryan – Utah State University
Josh M. Ryan is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Utah State University in Logan, Utah. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Colorado at Boulder. His research interests in American institutions include Congress, the president, state legislatures, executives, and electoral institutions, with a focus on how rules structure representation and elite behavior. He is the author of the forthcoming book, The Congressional End Game: Interchamber Bargaining and Compromise and his work has been published in The Journal of Politics, Legislative Studies Quarterly, Political Research Quarterly, and American Politics Research, among other outlets.

Read articles by Josh Ryan.

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