2023 |
Ji Yeon Hong, University of Michigan
“In Strongman We Trust: The Political Legacy of the New Village Movement in South Korea.” American Journal of Political Science 2022. |
2023 |
Sunkyoung Park, Incheon National University
“In Strongman We Trust: The Political Legacy of the New Village Movement in South Korea.” American Journal of Political Science 2022. |
2023 |
Hyunjoo Yang, Sogang University
“In Strongman We Trust: The Political Legacy of the New Village Movement in South Korea.” American Journal of Political Science 2022. |
2022 |
Agustina S. Paglayan, University of California, San Diego
“The Non-Democratic Roots of Mass Education: Evidence from 200 Years,” American Political Science Review 115:1 (2021) |
2021 |
Vilde Lunnan Djuve, University of Oslo
"Patterns of Regime Breakdown Since the French Revolution," Comparative Political Studies, 2020. |
2021 |
Carl Henrik Knutsen, University of Oslo
"Patterns of Regime Breakdown Since the French Revolution," Comparative Political Studies, 2020. |
2021 |
Tore Wig, University of Oslo
"Patterns of Regime Breakdown Since the French Revolution," Comparative Political Studies, 2020. |
2021 |
Matthew Graham, George Washington University
"Democracy in America? Partisanship, Polarization, and the Robustness of Support for Democracy in the United States." American Political Science Review, 2020.
|
2021 |
Milan Svolik, Yale University
"Democracy in America? Partisanship, Polarization, and the Robustness of Support for Democracy in the United States." American Political Science Review, 2020. |
2021 |
Honorable Mention
Sharan Grewal, College of William and Mary
"From Islamists to Muslim Democrats: The Case of Tunisia’s Ennahda." American Political Science Review, 2020. |
2021 |
Honorable Mention
Robin Harding, University of Oxford
"Who Is Democracy Good For? Elections, Rural Bias, and Health and Education Outcomes in Sub-Saharan Africa." Journal of Politics, 2020.
|
2020 |
Francisco Garfias, University of California, San Diego
"Elite Coalitions, Limited Government, and Fiscal Capacity Development: Evidence from Bourbon Mexico." Journal of Politics 81(1): 94-111.
|
2020 |
Honorable Mention
Guillermo Trejo, University of Notre Dame
"High-Profile Criminal Violence: Why Drug Cartels Murder Government Officials and Party Candidates in Mexico." British Journal of Political Science 1-27. |
2020 |
Honorable Mention
Sandra Ley, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
"High-Profile Criminal Violence: Why Drug Cartels Murder Government Officials and Party Candidates in Mexico." British Journal of Political Science 1-27.
|
2019 |
Fiona Shen-Bayh, University of California, Berkeley
"Strategies of Repression." World Politics 70(3): 321-357.
|
2019 |
Aditya Dasgupta, University of California, Merced
"Technological Change and Political Turnover." American Political Science Review, 112(4): 918-938.
|
2018 |
Michael Albertus, University of Chicago
“Landowners & Democracy: The Social Origins of Democracy Reconsidered.” World Politics 69(2): 233–276. |
2018 |
Honorable Mention
Bryn Rosenfeld, University of Southern California
“Reevaluating the Middle-Class Protest Paradigm: A Case-Control Study of Democratic Protest Coalitions in Russia.” American Poltical Science Review 111(4): 637–652. |
2017 |
Kurt Weyland, University of Texas at Austin
“Crafting Counterrevolution: How Reactionaries Learned to Combat Change in 1848.” American Political Science Review 110(2): 215–31. |
2017 |
Honorable Mention
Ashlea Rundlett, University of Illinois and Milan Svolik, Yale University
“Deliver the Vote! Micromotives and Macrobehavior in Electoral Fraud.” American Political Science Review 110(1): 180–97. |
2016 |
Daniel Treisman, University of California, Los Angeles
“Income, Democracy, and Leader Turnover.” American Journal of Political Science Volume 59, Issue 4, pages 927–942, October 2015 |
2015 |
Jordan Gans-Morse, Northwestern University
“Varieties of Clientelism: Machine Politics During Elections” American Journal of Political Science 58, 2 (2014): 415-432 |
2015 |
Sebastian Mazzuca, Universidad Nacional de San Martín and CIAS
“Varieties of Clientelism: Machine Politics During Elections” American Journal of Political Science 58, 2 (2014): 415-432 |
2015 |
Simeon Nichter, University of California, San Diego
“Varieties of Clientelism: Machine Politics During Elections” American Journal of Political Science 58, 2 (2014): 415-432 |
2014 |
Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University
"The Feudal Revolution and Europe’s Rise: Political Divergence of the Christian West and the Muslim World before 1500 CE." American Political Science Review, February 2013 |
2014 |
Eric Chaney, Harvard University
"The Feudal Revolution and Europe’s Rise: Political Divergence of the Christian West and the Muslim World before 1500 CE." American Political Science Review, February 2013 |
2013 |
Robert Woodberry, National University of Singapore
The Missionary Roots of Liberal Democracy (American Political Science Review 106, 2) |
2012 |
Carles Boix, Princeton University
Democracy, Development and the International System (November 2011 American Political Science Review) |
2012 |
Honorable Mention
Susan Hyde, Yale University
Catch Us If You Can: Election Monitoring and International Norm Diffusion (April 2011 American Journal of Political Science) |
2011 |
Ben Ansell, University of Minnesota Twin Cities
Inequality and Democratization: A Contractarian Approach |
2011 |
David Samuels, University of Minnesota
Inequality and Democratization: A Contractarian Approach |
2010 |
Dan Slater, University of Chicago
Revolutions, Crackdowns, and Quiescence: Communal Elites and Democratic Mobilization in Southeast Asia |
2010 |
Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University
Shaping Democratic Practice and the Causes of Electoral Fraud: The Case of Nineteenth-Century Germany |
2009 |
Dan Slater, University of Chicago
"Can Leviathan Be Democratic?:Competitive Electins, Robust Mass Politics, and State Infrastructural Power," Studies in Comparative International Development (December 2008) |
2009 |
Honorable Mention
Ellis Goldberg, University of Washington, Seattle
"Lessons from Strange Cases: Democracy, Development, and the Resource Curse in the U.S. States", Comparative Political Studies (2008) |
2009 |
Honorable Mention
Erik Wibbels, Duke University
"Lessons from Strange Cases: Democracy, Development, and the Resource Curse in the U.S. States", Comparative Political Studies (2008) |
2009 |
Honorable Mention
Eric Mvukiyehe, Columbia University
"Lessons from Strange Cases: Democracy, Development, and the Resource Curse in the U.S. States", Comparative Political Studies (2008) |
2007 |
Richard Snyder, Brown University
Does Lootable Wealth Breed Disorder? |
2007 |
Honorable Mention
Michael Coppedge, University of Notre Dame |
2007 |
Honorable Mention
Daniel Brinks, University of Texas, Austin |
2006 |
Lucan Way, University of Toronto
"Authoritarian Statebuilding and the Sources of Regime Competitiveness in the Fourth Wave World Politics," World Politics 57, 2 (January 2005): 231-61 |
2006 |
Philip Roessler, University of Maryland
"Liberalizing Electoral Outcomes in Competitive Authoritarian Regimes" |
2005 |
Lisa Baldez, Dartmouth College
"Elected Bodies: The Gender Quota Law for Legislative Candidates in Mexico," Legislative Studies Quarterly, Vol. 29, No. 2. (May 2004), pp. 231-258 |
2004 |
Quan Li, Pennsylvania State University
Co-Authored with Rafael Reuveny, Indiana University, "Economic Globalization and Democracy: An Empirical Analysis" (British Journal of Political Science, January, 2003) |
2004 |
Rafael Reuveny, Indiana University
Co-Authored with Quan Li, Pennsylvania State University, "Economic Globalization and Democracy: An Empirical Analysis" (British Journal of Political Science, January, 2003) |
2003 |
Anirudh Krishna, Duke University
Mandates and Democracies: Neoliberalism by Surprise in Latin America (Cambridge University Press, 2001) |
2003 |
James Mahoney, Brown University
Legacies of Liberalism: Path Dependence and Political Regimes in Central America (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001) |