Presidents and Executive Politics Award Recipients
More on the Presidents and Executive Politics section
George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award
Undergraduate Paper Award
Founders Best Graduate Student Paper Award
Founders Best Paper Award
Presidential Research Group Career Service Award
Presidential Research Group Reference Book Award
Richard E. Neustadt Award
Emerging Scholar Award
The Legacy Award
George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award
The George C. Edwards III Dissertation Award is given annually for the best dissertation in presidency research completed and accepted during the calendar year prior to the Annual Meeting. The recipient will receive a $250 award.
| 2025 | Julian Michel, University of California, Los Angeles “The Subnational Roots of Democratic Stability.” |
| 2024 | Benjamin Noble, University of California, San Diego “Three Essays on Presidential Power, Persuasion, and Interbranch Conflict.” Ph.D. Dissertation, Washington University. |
| 2023 | Robert E. Thompson, Wayne State University “Emotional Intelligence and the Intensification of Impeachment Threats to US Presidents, 1789-2021.” Ph.D. Dissertation, Wayne State University. |
| 2022 | Nathan Gibson, Princeton University “Presidential Use of Centralization and Politicization.” |
| 2021 | David R. Miller, East Tennessee State University |
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2020
| Christina M. Kinane, Yale University |
| 2020 | John A. Dearborn, Yale University “The Representative Presidency: The Ideational Foundations of Institutional Development and Durability.” |
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2019 | Matthew Zarit, University of Pittsburgh “Lost in Translation: How Bureaucratic Hierarchies Limit Presidential Control Over Distributive Policymaking in U.S. Federal Agencies. ” |
| 2017 | Elizabeth Mann, University of Michigan “Presidential Policymaking at the State Level: Revision Through Waivers?” |
| 2016 | Rachel Augustine Potter, University of Michigan “Writing the Rules of the Game: The Strategic Logic of Agency Rulemaking” |
| 2015 | Ian Ostrander, Texas Tech University “Winning the Waiting Game: Senatorial Delay in Executive Nominations.” Washington University in St. Louis 2013 |
| 2013 | John Hudak, University of Vanderbilt “The Politics of Federal Grants: Presidential Influence Over the Distribution of Federal Funds” |
| 2012 | William Resh, Indiana University, Bloomington Rethinking the Administrative Presidency: Trust, Intellectual Capital, and Appointee-Careerist Relations (completed at American University; advised by Robert F. Durant) |
| 2011 | Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison “The Party Politics of Presidential Rhetoric” |
| 2010 | Lyn Ragsdale, Rice University Vital Statistics on the Presidency |
| 2009 | Jose Villalobos, Texas A & M University Presidential Bureaucratic Management an dPolicy Making Success in Congress |
Best Undergraduate Paper Award
The Best Undergraduate Paper Award on executive politics recognizes the best undergraduate paper completed in the previous two academic years. One copy of each essay should be sent directly to each committee member of the committee.
| 2014 | Aaron Goodman, Dartmouth College “Presidential Delegation of Foreign Policy Powers.” |
| 2013 | Lisa McAlister, University of North Texas “Roles of the White House Chief of Staff” |
| 2012 | Andrew Keene, United States Naval Academy Exploration of Ticket Splitting: The Battleground State Effect |
| 2011 | Alexander Gibbons, University of Maryland College Park “Keeping Time for Skowronek: A Quantification of Secular and Political Time” |
| 2009 | Adam Aliano, United States Naval Academy From the New Frontier to Change You Can Believe In: The Issues of Person and the Cmpaigns of 1960 and 2008 |
| 2008 | Brett Amelkin, Princeton University “Fit to Print: Trends in New York Times Election Coverage, 1960-2006” |
| 2007 | Carrie Roush, Dickinson College Best Undergraduate Paper Award for ” ‘Great Writ,’ Great Power: Habeas Corpus and Prerogative in the Lincoln and Bush II Presidencies” |
| 2006 | Andrew Kaufman, Carleton College “Historical Continuities in the 2004 Presidential Debates” |
| 2005 | Rebecca Stark, Carleton College “The Influence of Foreign Affairs in Presidential Elections: 1992-2004” |
Founders Best Graduate Student Paper Award
The Founders Award honoring James Sterling Young is given for the best paper on executive politics presented by a Graduate Student at either the preceding year’s APSA Annual Meeting or at any of the regional meetings in the two year’s preceding the APSA Annual Meeting. One copy of each essay should be sent directly to each member of the committee.
| 2025 | Benjamin Goehring, University of Michigan “Partisan Departures from the Administrative States.” |
| 2024 | Nicholas R. Bednar, University of Minnesota “Administrative Policymaking Amid Vacancies and Actings.” Presented at the Midwest Political Science Association Conference. Christopher Piper, Vanderbilt University “Administrative Policymaking Amid Vacancies and Actings.” Presented at the Midwest Political Science Association Conference. |
| 2023 | Benjamin S. Noble, Washington University in St. Louis “How Presidents Persuade: Facts, Feelings, and the Language of Presidential Power.” Presented at the 2022 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2022 | Christopher W. Blair, University of Pennsylvania “The Gendered Peace Premium.” Presented at 2021 APSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, WA. |
| 2022 | Joshua A. Schwartz, University of Pennsylvania and Harvard Kennedy School “The Gendered Peace Premium.” Presented at 2021 APSA Annual Meeting in Seattle, WA. |
| 2021 | Nicholas G. Napolio, University of Southern California “Executive Coalition Building.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2020 | Justin Pottle, Harvard University “Party Teamsmanship and Presidential Polarization.” |
| 2019 | Christina M. Kinane, University of Michigan “Control Without Confirmation: The Politics of Vacancies in Presidential Appointments or Administration Without Confirmation: The Value of Absent and Interim Appointees.” |
| 2018 | John A. Dearborn, Yale University “The ‘Proper Organs’ for Presidential Representation: A Fresh Look at the Budget and Accounting Act of 1921.” Honorable Mention Christina M. Kinane, University of Michigan “The Politics of Vacancies and Interim Appointments in Bureaucracy.” |
| 2017 | Elizabeth Mann, University of Michigan “Presidential Policymaking at the State Level: Revision Through Waivers?” |
| 2016 | Kenneth Lowande, University of Virginia “Delegation or Unilateral Action?” |
| 2015 | Christopher A. Martinez, Loyola University Chicago “Surviving the Presidency in South America: Rethinking the Role of Democracy” |
| 2014 | Janna Rezaee, University of California, Berkeley “OIRA: The Other Edge of the Sword.” |
| 2013 | Rachel Potter, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor “Strategic Transparency in Agency Rulemaking” |
| 2011 | Presented in honor of Martha Joynt Kumar John Hudak, Vanderbilt University The Politics of Federal Grants: Presidential Influence Over the Distribution of Federal Funds |
| 2010 | Presented in honor of Stephen Wayne Amnon Cavari, University of Wisconsin, Madison “The Presidential Rhetoric and the Economic Policy Image of the Parties,” |
| 2009 | Cari Hennessy, Northwestern University The Effect of Public Opinion on Policy Outcomes in Sequential Veto Bargaining |
| 2008 | Curtis Nichols, University of Texas, Austin “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly: Exploiting the Opportunity for Reconstructive Leadership” |
| 2008 | Adam Myers, University of Texas, Austin “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly: Exploiting the Opportunity for Reconstructive Leadership” |
| 2007 | Kevin Parsneau, University of Minnesota Politicizing Priority Departments: Presidential Policy Priorities and Subcabinet Nominations |
| 2006 | Michael Cutrone, Princeton University “Parties, Pivots, and the Patients’ Bill of Rights” |
| 2003 | Elvin Lim, Nuffield College University of Oxford “The Lion and The Lamb: De-Mythologizing Franklin Roosevelt’s Fireside Chats” |
| 2002 | Casey Dominguez, University of California at Berkeley “Is it a Honeymoon? An Empirical Investigation of the President’s First Hundred Days.” |
| 2001 | Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, Texas A&M University “Anticipating Agendas: Dynamics of Presidential Policy” |
| 2000 | Kevin Price, University of Wisconsin-Madison “The Partisan Legacies of Preemptive Leadership: Assessing the Eisenhower Cohorts in the U.S. House” |
| 1999 | David Lewis, Stanford University “The Presidential Advantage in the Design of Bureaucratic Agencies” |
| 1997 | Richard Powell, Northwestern University “Taking the Show on the Road: The Politics of Presidential Travel in the Modern Era” |
| 1996 | David Cohen, University of South Carolina “President Bush’s Chiefs of Staff: Sununu and Skinner in the White House” |
| 1991 | Bartholomew Sparrow, University of Texas-Austin “Raising Taxes and Going into Debt: A Resource Dependence Model of U.S. Public Finance in the 1940s” |
Founders Best Paper Award
The Founders Award honoring Peri Arnold is given for the best paper on executive politics authored by a PhD holding scholar presented at the previous year’s annual meeting. One copy of each essay should be sent directly to each committee member.
| 2025 | Anna Callis, CIPR & Tulane University Christopher Carter, University of Virginia “Balancing Bossism: Education Expansion in the Face of Elite Capture.” |
| 2025 | John Dearborn, Vanderbilt University “Contesting the Reach of the Rights Revolution: The Reagan Administration and the Unitary Executive.” |
| 2023 | Joshua B. Kennedy, Georgia Southern University “Executive Orders and the Administrative State: Formulation, Implementation, and Regulation.” Presented at the 2022 APSA Annual Meeting |
| 2023 | Andrew Rudalevige, Bowdoin College “Executive Orders and the Administrative State: Formulation, Implementation, and Regulation.” Presented at the 2022 APSA Annual Meeting |
| 2022 | Kyuwon Lee, New York University “Bureaucratic Revolving Doors and Interest Group Participation in Policymaking.” Presented at the 2021 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2022 |
Hye Young You, New York University |
| 2021 | Kevin M. Baron, Austin Peay State University “Informal and Private: Veto Threats Over the Freedom of Information Act.” Paper presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2020 |
Kenneth Lowande, University of Michigan |
| 2020 | Charles R. Shipan, University of Michigan “Where is Presidential Power? Measuring Discretion With Experts and Laypersons.” |
| 2020 | George A. Krause, University of Georgia “Confirmation Dynamics: Distinguishing Between Informational Versus Procedural Delay in the Appointment of U.S. Federal Agency Leaders, 1981-2008.” |
| 2020 | Jason S. Byers, University of North Georgia “Confirmation Dynamics: Distinguishing Between Informational Versus Procedural Delay in the Appointment of U.S. Federal Agency Leaders, 1981-2008.” |
| 2019 | Julia Azari, Marquette University “The Party Decides (Who the Vice President Will Be).” |
| 2019 | William D. Adler, Northeastern Illinois University “The Party Decides (Who the Vice President Will Be).” |
| 2018 | Aaron R. Kaufman, Harvard University “Interbranch Conflict, Unilateral Action, and the Presidency.” |
| 2018 | Jon C. Rogowski, Harvard University “Interbranch Conflict, Unilateral Action, and the Presidency.” |
| 2017 | Larry Rothenberg, University of Rochester “Analyzing Agency Choice with Text Analysis: The Case of the NLRB.” |
| 2017 | Matthew Sweeten, University of Rochester “Analyzing Agency Choice with Text Analysis: The Case of the NLRB.” |
| 2016 | Jasmine Farrier, University of Louisville “Judicial Restraint and the New War Powers” |
| 2015 | Magna Ignacio, Universidade Federal de Minas “The Institutional Presidency in Latin America: A Comparative Analysis |
| 2015 | Mariana Llanos, GIGA Institut fur Latinamerika-Studien “The Institutional Presidency in Latin America: A Comparative Analysis |
| 2014 | Andrew Rudalevige, Bowdoin College “Bargaining with the Bureaucracy: Executive Orders and the Transaction Costs of Unilateral Action.” |
| 2013 | Stephen Weatherford, University of California, Santa Barbara “Obama and the Economy:The Financial Crisis, the Fed, and the Inequality Agenda” |
| 2012 | Presented in honor of Erwin Hargrove Brendan Doherty, United States Naval Academy The President as Party-Builder-in-Chief: Presidential Fund-raising, 1977-2011 |
| 2011 | Presented in honor of Fred Greenstein Matthew Beckmann, University of California, Irvine “Opportunism in Polarization: Presidential Success in Senate Key Votes, 1953 – 2008 |
| 2011 | Presented in honor of Fred Greenstein Vimal Kumar, Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur “Opportunism in Polarization: Presidential Success in Senate Key Votes, 1953 – 2008 |
| 2010 | Kevin McMahon, Trinity College “Richard Nixon, the Supreme Court, and the Politics of Desegregation in the Urban North” |
| 2009 | Jeffrey Cohen, Fordham University The Congressional Roots of Presidental Approval |
| 2008 | B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University “Presidential Saber Rattling and the Economy” |
| 2007 | Jeffrey Cohen, Fordham University Change and Stability in the President’s Legislative Policy Agenda, 1789-2002 |
| 2007 | Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas Change and Stability in the President’s Legislative Policy Agenda, 1789-2002 |
| 2006 | Andrew Rudalevige, Dickinson College “Parsing the Politicized Presidency: Centralization and Politicization as Presidential Strategies for Bureaucratic Control” |
| 2006 | David Lewis, Princeton University “Parsing the Politicized Presidency: Centralization and Politicization as Presidential Strategies for Bureaucratic Control” |
| 2005 | Lawrence Jacobs, University of Minnesota “Lumpers and Splitters: The Public Opinion Information that Politicians Collect and Use” |
| 2005 | James Druckman, University of Minnesota “Lumpers and Splitters: The Public Opinion Information that Politicians Collect and Use” |
| 2004 | Martin Cohen, UCLA Co-Authored with Hans Noel, and John Zaller, “Constant Rules, Changing Game: A General Model of Presidential Primaries, 1972-2000” |
| 2004 | Hans Noel, UCLA Co-Authored with Marty Cohen and John Zaller, “Constant Rules, Changing Game: A General Model of Presidential Primaries, 1972-2000” |
| 2004 | John Zaller, UCLA “Constant Rules, Changing Game: A General Model of Presidential Primaries, 1972-2000” |
| 2003 | Andrew Rudalevige, Dickenson College “The Structure of Leadership: Information, Organization, and Presidential Decision Making” |
| 2002 | B. Dan Wood, University of California-Los Angeles “The Politics of Administrative Design” |
| 2002 | John Bohte, Oakland University “The Politics of Administrative Design” |
| 2001 | Matthew Baum, University of California, Los Angeles “Who Rallies? The Constituent Foundations of the Rally-Round-the-Flag Phenomena” |
| 2000 | Keith Whittington, Princeton University “Institutional Development in a System Separation of Powers” |
| 2000 | Daniel Carpenter, University of Michigan “Institutional Development in a System Separation of Powers” |
| 1999 | John Frendreis, Loyola University of Chicago “Predicting Legislative Output in the First ‘100 Days,’ 1897-1995” |
| 1999 | Raymond Tatalovich, Loyola University of Chicago |
| 1999 | Jon Schaff, Loyola University of Chicago “Predicting Legislative Output in the First ‘100 Days,’ 1897-1995” |
| 1998 | Bruce Buchanan, University of Texas, Austin “Presidential Campaign Quality: What the Variance Implies” |
| 1996 | Robert Spitzer, SUNY-Cortland “‘It’s My Constitution and I’ll Cry if I Want to: Veto Dispute” |
| 1995 |
Richard Forshee, University of Michigan |
PEP Career Service Award
Every four years during a presidential election year, the division shall form a committee to give an award to recognize career service to the study of the presidency. The committee shall be chaired by the division’s Vice President, and the criteria for the award shall be determined by the Steering Committee or its designees.
| 2024 | Samuel Kernell, University of California, San Diego |
| 2021 | Martha Joynt Kumar, Towson University |
| 2021 | Tom Cronin, Colorado College |
| 2017 | Louis Fisher, The Constitution Project |
| 2012 | Karen Hult, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University |
| 2008 | George Edwards III, Texas A&M University, College Station |
| 2004 | Fred Greenstein, Princeton University |
| 2003 |
Richard E. Neustadt, Harvard University |
Presidential Research Group Reference Book Award
The Presidential Research Group Reference Book Award is given once every three years for the best reference book on the US presidency published during the past three years.
| 2017 | John T. Woolley, University of California, Santa Barbara The American Presidency Project |
| 2017 | Gerhard Peters, Citrus College The American Presidency Project |
| 2010 | Lyn Ragsdale, Rice University Vital Statistics on the Presidency, Third Edition (Washington, DC: CQ Press 2009) |
| 2010 | George Edwards III, Texas A&M University The Oxford Handbook of the American Presidency |
| 2010 | William Howell, University of Chicago The Oxford Handbook of the American Presidency |
Richard E. Neustadt Best Book Award
The Richard E. Neustadt Award given for the best book on executive politics published during the year. One copy of each book should be sent directly to each member of the committee.
| 2025 | Kenneth Lowande, University of Michigan False Front: The Failed Promise of Presidential Power in a Polarized Age. University of Chicago Press, 2024. |
| 2024 | Charles M. Cameron, Princeton University Making the Supreme Court, the Politics of Appointments, 1930-2020. Oxford University Press, 2023. Jonathan P. Kastellec, Princeton University Making the Supreme Court, the Politics of Appointments, 1930-2020. Oxford University Press, 2023. |
| 2023 | Alexander D. Bolton, Emory University Checks in the Balance: Legislative Capacity and the Dynamics of Executive Power. Princeton University Press, 2022. |
| 2023 | Sharece Thrower, Vanderbilt University Checks in the Balance: Legislative Capacity and the Dynamics of Executive Power. Princeton University Press, 2022. |
| 2022 | John Dearborn, Vanderbilt University Power Shifts: Congress and Presidential Representation. University of Chicago Press, 2021. |
| 2022 | Andrew Rudalevige, Bowdoin College By Executive Order: Bureaucratic Management and the Limits of Presidential Power. Princeton University Press, 2021. |
| 2021 | Paul M. Collins, Jr., University of Massachusetts Amherst The President and the Supreme Court. Cambridge University Press, 2019. |
| 2021 | Matthew Eshbaugh-Soha, University of North Texas The President and the Supreme Court. Cambridge University Press, 2019. |
| 2020 | Rachel Augustine Potter, University of Virginia Bending the Rules: Procedural Politicking in the Bureaucracy. |
| 2019 | Lynn Vavreck, University of California, Los Angeles Identity Crisis: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America. Princeton University Press, 2018. |
| 2019 | Michael Tesler, University of California, Irvine Identity Crisis: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America. Princeton University Press, 2018. |
| 2019 | John Sides, George Washington University Identity Crisis: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America. Princeton University Press, 2018. |
| 2018 | Trygve Throntveit, University of Minnesota Power Without Victory: Woodrow Wilson and the American Internationalist Experiment. University of Chicago, 2017. |
| 2018 | Amnon Cavari, IDC Herzliya The Party Politics of Presidential Rhetoric. Cambridge University Press, 2017. |
| 2017 | Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University Investigating the President: Congressional Checks on Presidential Power. Princeton University Press, 2016. |
| 2017 | Eric Shickler, University of California, Berkeley Investigating the President: Congressional Checks on Presidential Power. Princeton University Press, 2016. |
| 2016 | Douglas L. Kriner, Boston University The Particularistic President: Executive Branch Politics and Political Inequality, Cambridge University Press, 2015 |
| 2016 | Andrew Reeves, Washington University in St. Louis The Particularistic President: Executive Branch Politics and Political Inequality, Cambridge University Press, 2015 |
| 2015 | Rebecca Thorpe, University of Washington The American Warfare State: The Domestic Politics of Military Spending. University of Chicago Press, 2014. |
| 2015 | Michael Nelson, Rhodes College Resilient America: Electing Nixon in 1968, Channeling Dissent, and Dividing Government. Kansas University Press, 2014 |
| 2014 | Mariah Zeisberg, University of Michigan War Powers: The Politics of Constitutional Authority. Princeton University Press, 2013 |
| 2013 | Jean Yarbrough, Bowdoin College Theodore Roosevelt and the American Political Tradition (University Press of Kansas, 2012) |
| 2012 | Michael Korzi, Towson University Presidential Term Limits in American History (Texas A&M University Press, 2011) |
| 2011 | Jeffrey Cohen, Fordham University Going Local: Presidential Leadership in the Post-Broadcast Age |
| 2010 | B. Dan Wood, Texas A&M University The Myth of Presidential Representation |
| 2009 | David Lewis, Vanderbilt University The Politics of Presidential Appointments: Political Control and Bureaucratic Performance (Princeton University Press, 2008) |
| 2008 | Martha Kumar, Towson University Managing the President’s Message: The White House Communications Operation (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2007) |
| 2008 | William Howell, University of Chicago While Dangers Gather (Princeton University Press, 2007) |
| 2008 | Jon Pevehouse, University of Wisconsin, Madison While Dangers Gather (Princeton University Press, 2007) |
| 2007 | Brandice Canes-Wrone, Princeton University Who Leads Whom? Presidents, Policy, and the Public (University of Chicago Press 2005) |
| 2006 | Louis Fisher, Library of Congress, Law Division Military Tribunals and Presidential Power: American Revolution to the War on Terrorism (University Press of Kansas, 2005) |
| 2006 | Joel Aberbach, University of California, Los Angeles The Executive Branch (Oxford University Press, 2005) |
| 2006 | Mark Peterson, University of California, Los Angeles The Executive Branch (Oxford University Press, 2005) |
| 2005 | Kevin McMahon, Trinity College Reconsidering Roosevelt on Race: How the Presidency Paved the Road to Brown (University of Chicago Press). |
| 2004 | Janet Martin, Bowdoin College The Presidency and Women: Promise, Performance and Illusion (Texas A&M University Press, 2003) |
| 2003 | Andrew Rudalevige, Dickenson College Managing the Presidents Program: Presidential Leadership and Legislative Policy Formation (Princeton University Press, 2002) |
| 2002 | Kenneth Mayer, University of Wisconsin-Madison With the Stroke of a Pen: Executive Orders and Presidential Power (Princeton University Press, 2001) |
| 2002 | Patricia Conley, Northwestern University Presidential Mandates: How Elections Shape the National Agenda (University of Chicago Press, 2001) |
| 2002 | Honorable Mention Larry Berman, University of California Washington Center “No Peace, No Honor: Nixion, Kissenger, and Betrayal in Vietnam” (Free Press, 2001) |
| 2001 | Robert Shapiro, Columbia University Politicians Don’t Pander: Political Manipulation and the Loss of Democratic Responsiveness (University of Chicago Press, 2000) |
| 2001 | Lawrence Jacobs, University of Minnesota Politicians Don’t Pander: Political Manipulation and the Loss of Democratic Responsiveness (University of Chicago Press, 2000) |
| 2000 | David Yalof, University of Connecticut Pursuit of Justices: Presidential Politics and the Selection of Supreme Court Nominees (University of Chicago Press, 1999) |
| 1999 | Keith Krehbiel, Stanford University Pivotal Politics: A Theory of U.S. Lawmaking (University of Chicago Press, 1998) |
| 1998 | Jeffrey Cohen, University of Kansas Presidential Responsiveness and Public Policy-Making: The Public and the Policies That Presidents Choose (University of Michigan Press, 1997) |
| 1997 | Stanley Renshon, CUNY-Graduate Center High Hopes: The Clinton Presidency and the Politics of Ambition (New York University Press, 1996) |
| 1996 | Karen Hult, Virginia Tech University Governing the White House: From Hoover through LBJ (University of Kansas, 1995) |
| 1996 | Charles Walcott, Virginia Tech University Governing the White House: From Hoover through LBJ (University of Kansas, 1995) |
| 1995 | Charles Jones, University of Wisconsin The Presidency in a Separated System (Brookings Institution, 1994) |
| 1994 | Stephen Skowronek, Yale University The Politics Presidents Make: Leadership from John Adams to George Bush (Harvard University Press, 1993) |
| 1992 | David Mayhew, Yale University Divided We Govern (Yale Univ Press, Reprint Edition:1993) |
| 1991 | Harold Koh, Yale University The National Security Constitution (Yale Univ Press, 1990) |
| 1990 | John Burke, University of Vermont How Presidents Test Reality (Russell Sage Foundation, 1989) |
| 1990 | Fred Greenstein, Princeton University How Presidents Test Reality (Russell Sage Foundation, 1989) |
| 1990 | Larry Berman, University of California-Davis FOR COLLABORATION ON: How Presidents Test Reality (Russell Sage Foundation, 1989) |
| 1989 | Erwin Hargrove, Vanderbilt University Jimmy Carter as President (Louisiana State University Press, 1988) |
Emerging Scholar Award
Emerging Scholar Award will be given to an early career scholar (10 years from date of award of PhD) that has made a significant contribution to the intellectual development of the fields of presidency and executive politics.
| 2025 | Kenneth Lowande, University of Michigan |
| 2023 | John A. Dearborn, Vanderbilt University |
The Legacy Award
The Legacy Award will be given to a living author for a book, essay, or article, published at least 10 years prior to the award year that has made a continuing contribution to the intellectual development of the fields of presidency and executive politics. Letters of nominations should provide a rationale for the work receiving the award.
| 2024 | David E. Lewis, Vanderbilt University The Politics of Presidential Appointments. Princeton University Press, 2008. |
| 2022 | Mary E. Stuckey, Pennsylvania State University Defining Americans: The Presidency and National Identity. University Press of Kansas, 2004. |
| 2022 | George Edwards III, Texas A&M University Emeritus |
| 2021 | James P. Pfiffner, George Mason University The Strategic Presidency: Hitting the Ground Running, 2d. ed. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1996. |
| 2020 | Terry M. Moe, Stanford University |
| 2019 | Shirley Anne Warshaw, Gettysburg College Powersharing: White House-Cabinet Relations in the Modern Presidency. SUNY Press, 1996. |
| 2018 | Jeffrey Tulis, University of Texas at Austin |
Lyn Ragsdale Mentorship Award
The Lyn Ragsdale Mentorship Award recognizes outstanding mentorship in the field of presidency and executive politics. Nominations should include a letter outlining the ways in which the nominee has mentored individuals in the Presidency and Executive Politics section.
| 2025 | Nancy Kassop, SUNY New Paltz |
