COMPARATIVE POLITICS WORKSHOP

Spring 2005

 

January 18. Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University.“Rethinking Federalism's Origins: Puzzle, Theory, and Evidence from Nineteenth Century Europe.”

January 25. Steven Shewfelt, Yale University.“Peacebuilding Success? Understanding Peacebuilding at the Local Level.”

February 1. Nasos Roussias, Yale University.“Party System Evolution in "Transitional Democracies": Learning and Strategic Competition.”

February 8. Keith Darden, Yale University.“Resisting Occupation: Ideational Sources of Insurgency.”

February 15. David Waldner, University of Virginia. “ Democracy and Dictatorship in the Post-Colonial World.”

February 22. Philip Gorski, Yale University.“Premodern Nationalism: An Oxymoron? Evidence from England.

March 1. Vineeta Yadav, Yale University.“A Comparative Analysis of Special Interest Group Behavior.

March 22. Jennifer Smith, Yale University.“The Politics of Campaign Professionalization.

March 29. Melanie Manion, University of Wisconsin. “Official Candidate Losses and Communist Party Gains: Electorates, Selectorates, and Delegates in Mainland China.”

April 5. Laia Balcells i Ventura, Yale University.“Political Decentralization and Civil War.

April 12. David Mayhew, Yale University.“Wars and American Politics.

April 19. Jim Scott, Yale University.“Why Civilizations Can't Climb Hills: Statecraft, Flight, and Ethnicity in Mainland Southeast Asia.

April 26. Alberto Diaz-Cayeros, Stanford University.“The Centralization of Fiscal Authority: An Empirical Investigation of Popitz's Law.”