Some of my advisees have gone on to do great things. Others have great things that lie ahead of them. Here are some completed and current advanced students.
DISSERTATION ADVISEES, COMPLETED:
Mark Jones, Ph.D. University of Michigan, 1994. Dissertation advisor.
Dissertation: "Electoral Laws and the Survival of Presidential Democracies."
Some Publications Based on Graduate Work: Electoral Laws and the Survival of Presidential Democracies. Notre Dame University Press, 1995.
Professional Appointment: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, Rice University.
Mark's webpage.
Hector Martinez, Ph.D. University of Michigan, 2000. Dissertation Chair.
Dissertation: Religion and Politics in Puerto Rico.
Professional Appointment: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Puerto Rico.
Ernesto F. Calvo, Ph.D. Northwestern University, 2001. Dissertation Chair.
Dissertation: "Disconcerted Industrialists: The Politics of Trade Reform in Latin America."
Some Publications Based on Graduate Work:
“The Governor's Backyard: A Seat-Vote model of electoral reform for multiparty races.” Journal of Politics Vol. 67, N. 4, November 2006 (Winner of the Latin American Studies Association LAPIS Award for best paper prepared at the LASA Congress in 2005).
"Who Delivers? Partisan Clients in the Argentine Electoral Market, American Journal of Political Science 48:4, 2005--Co-Winner, APSA Luebbert Award for best journal article in Comparative Politics, 2005.
"Federalism and Low Maintenance Constituencies: Territorial Dimensions of Economic Reform in Argentina." Co-authored with Edward L. Gibson. Studies in Comparative International Development, Fall 2000.
Professional Appointment: Associate Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Houston, 2002 (he declined tenure-track offer from UCSD, 2005)
. Ernesto's website.
Krista Johnson, Ph.D. Northwestern University, 2002. Dissertation Advisor.
Dissertation: "From Consensual Decision-Making to Conventional Politics: Popular Participation in Contemporary South Africa."
Professional appointment: Assistant Professor, Department of International Studies, DePaul University (2002).
Teri L. Caraway, Ph.D. Northwestern University, 2002. Dissertation Advisor.
Dissertation: "Engendering Industrialization: The Feminization of Factory Labor in Indonesia."
Grants and Awards: Social Science Research Council, Pre-Dissertation Research Fellowship; Fulbright Fellowship.
Some Publications Based on Graduate Work:
Assembling Women: The Feminization of Global Manufacturing. Cornell University Press, 2007.
"Inclusion and Democratization: Class, Gender, Race, and the Extension of Suffrage." Comparative Politics, 2003.
Professional Appointment: Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Minnesota (2002). Teri's webpage.
Tulia Falleti, Ph.D. Northwestern University, 2003. Dissertation Chair.
Dissertation: "Governing Governors: Coalitions and Sequences of Decentralization in Colombia, Argentina and Mexico."
Grants and Awards: Social Science Research Council, International Dissertation Research Fellowship; University of Notre Dame, Kellogg Institute Fellow; University of British Columbia, Killiam Fellow.
Some Publications Based on Graduate Work:
"A Sequential Theory of Decentralization: Latin American Cases in Comparative Perspective,” American Political Science Review August 2005 (Winner: APSA Luebbert Award for best journal article in Comparative Politics, 2006).
“Unity by the Stick: Regional Conflict and the Origins of Argentine Federalism” (with Edward L. Gibson). In Edward L. Gibson, ed., Federalism and Democracy in Latin America, 2004.
Professional Appointment: Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania (2003). Tulia's webpage.
Tyler Colman, Ph.D. Northwestern University, June 2003. Dissertation Chair.
Dissertation: "The Politics of Quality: Institutions and Market Stratification in the Wine Sector"
Some Publications Based on Graduate Work:
Wine Politics: How Governments, Environmentalists, Mobsters, and Critics Influence the Wines We Drink. University of California Press, Forthcoming spring 2008
"Legalization of Political Morality: Party Finance and Corruption in France," Politeia vol. 19 (1996).
Current occupation: Wine critic, industry observer, and host/author of the most successful website on wine picks and politics in the U.S.: http://www.drvino.com/
Scott Greer, Ph.D. Northwestern University, June 2003. Dissertation Chair.
Dissertation:"Self-Government: The Politics of Autonomy in Scotland and Catalonia."
Publications Based on Graduate Work : Nationalism and Self-Government: The Politics of Autonomy in Scotland and Catalonia. Albany: SUNY Press, 2007 (based on dissertation). Also: Territorial Politics and Health Policy Manchester University Press.
Questioning Geopolitics: Political Projects in a Changing World-System, co-editor (with Georgi Derlugian), Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000.
Awards: Social Science Research Council, International Dissertation Research Fellowship.
Professional Appointment: Assistant Professor, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor (2005). Scott's webpage.
Isabella Alcaniz, Ph.D. Northwestern University, 2004. Dissertation Chair.
Dissertation: "Epistemic Communities, and Regional Integration: Splitting the Atom in Argentina and Brazil."
Some Publications Based on Graduate Work:
“Defeating Welfare Retrenchment: Privatization and Conflict in the Argentine Nuclear Energy Sector” in New Political Science Journal, Special Issue, Vol. 27 No. 3 September 2005.
Awards: Graduate Fellow, Minority National Science Foundation (NSF) Award, 1997-2000.
Professional Appointment: Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Houston, 2005. Isabella's website.
Ato Kwamena Onoma, Ph.D. Northwestern University, December 2006. Dissertation advisor.
Dissertation: " Securing Property Rights in Land: Politics on the Land Frontier in Post-Colonial Africa."
Awards: Social Science Research Council, International Dissertation Research Fellowship. Fellow, Princeton University Center for Globalization and Governance, 2006-2007.
Professional Appointment: Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Yale University, 2007.
Sylvia Gaylord, Ph.D. Northwestern University, December 2006. Dissertation Advisor.
Dissertation: "The Devil is in the Details: Statutory Content and the Fine Art of Delegation in Brazil"
Professional Appointment: Assistant Professor of Political Economy, Colorado School of Mines, 2007.
Irina Alberro,Ph.D. Northwestern University, December 2006. Dissertation Chair.
Dissertation: Political Competition and theEmpowerment of the Poor: An Analysis of the Socio-Economic Composition of the Mexican Electorate, 1994-2000.
Some Publications Based on Graduate Work:
"Rivaling the PRI: The Image Management of Vicente Fox and the Use of Public Opinion Polling in the 2000 Mexican Election"(with Brandon Rottinghaus), Latin American Politics & Society - Volume 47, Number 2, Summer 2005.
Professional Appointment: Professor, Department of International Studies, Colegio de Mexico (Mexico City), 2007.
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