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APSA-IPSA Theodore J. Lowi First Book Award

APSA-IPSA Theodore J. Lowi First Book Award 

 Nominations are closed.


The Lowi Award honors the author of a first book in any field of political science that exemplifies qualities of broad ambition, high originality, and intellectual daring, showing promise of having a substantive impact on the overall discipline, regardless of method, specific focus of inquiry or approach to subject.

Throughout a prolific and influential career, Lowi developed new understandings of the relationship of public policy to politics, the influence of institutional arrangements to the exercise of power, the role of ideology in the development of political parties, the relationship of democracy to law, the relevance of concept analysis for theory building, and more.  The award carries a cash prize of $750.  APSA and IPSA fund the award in alternating years.  

Nomination Information

  • Eligibility: Nominees do not have to be members of APSA, affiliated with an institution in the United States, or an American citizen in order to be considered for an award. It is not compulsory that authors be political scientists.

    Books must have been published in the previous calendar year to be eligible for the current awards cycle (books for the 2026 award must have been published in 2025). Many books contain both a publication date and a copyright date, and these may differ. Eligibility is determined by the earlier of these dates that is printed with the publication information at the front of the book. Edited books are ineligible for nomination.

    Books should be single-author works to be eligible for the Lowi Award. For a book to be eligible for the Lowi Award, it must be the first book ever published by the author. If the book is the author’s first book about political science, but not the first book ever published, it is not eligible. If the author has previously co-authored a book, the first single-authored book is not eligible for the Lowi Award. 

  • Individuals: Please contact the publisher and ask to have a copy of the nominated book either be uploaded as an e-book in the application or mailed directly to each award committee member.
    Self-nominations are accepted.  If you nominate yourself for a book award, you assume responsibility for contacting your publisher and uploading the e-book or having copies of your book sent to the award committee.
  • Publishers: After completing and submitting your nomination online through the APSA application portal, please mail a copy of the nominated book directly to each member of the award committee if you are not providing an e-book in the application. 

Award Committee

Chair
Christian Phillips, University of Southern California
Member
Neil Chaturvedi, California State Polytechnic University, Pomona
Member
Stephanie Rickard, London School of Economics
Member
Min Hee Go, Ewha Woman's University
Member
Elisa Chelle, Université Paris Nanterre
YearRecipientTitlePublisher
2025Max GallienSmugglers and States: Negotiating the Maghreb at Its MarginsColumbia University Press
2024Rochelle TermanThe Geopolitics of Shaming: When Human Rights Pressure Works – and When It BackfiresUniversity of Chicago
2023Fiona Shen-BayhUndue Process: Persecution and Punishment in Autocratic CourtsThe College of William and Mary
2022Christian Dyogi PhillipsNowhere to Run: Race, Gender, and Immigration in American ElectionsUniversity of Southern California
2021Simukai ChiguduThe Political Life of an Epidemic: Cholera, Crisis and Citizenship in ZimbabweCambridge University Press
2020Rachel Augustine PotterBending the Rules: Procedural Politicking in the BureaucracyUniversity of Chicago Press
2019Stephanie J. RickardSpending to Win: Political Institutions, Economic Geography, and Government SubsidiesCambridge University Press
2018Margaret PetersTrading Barriers: Immigration and the Remaking of GlobalizationPrinceton University Press
2017Dara Kay CohenRape During Civil WarCornell University Press
2016Jennifer RubensteinBetween Samaritans and States: The Political Ethics of Humanitarian INGOsOxford University Press