
Gregory Huber
Gregory Huber, Ph.D., Princeton University 2001, is Associate Professor of Political Science and resident fellow of the Institution for Social and Policy Studies and the Center for the Study of American Politics. His research interests are in American politics, including work on bureaucratic and organizational behavior, coercion and criminal justice policy, partisanship, and elections and representation. Information about his ongoing research is available here.
He is the author of The Craft of Bureaucratic Neutrality (Cambridge University Press, 2007). His recently published research examines the effect of false accusations and false exonerations on punishment and compliance behavior (Journal of Politics, 2009); the persuasive effects of campaign advertisements (American Journal of Political Science, 2007); the consequences of strategic entry into elections for models of retrospective voting (The American Political Science Review, 2007; Electoral Studies, 2009); citizen responses to different forms of racial campaign appeals (American Journal of Political Science 2006; Perspectives on Politics 2008); and the origins and consequences of methods for constraining judicial discretion (American Journal of Political Science 2004; Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization 2007; Quarterly Journal of Political Science 2007).
His undergraduate teaching includes American Political Economy, Crime and Punishment, Democracy and Bureaucracy, Introduction to United States Government, and the Politics of Crime Control. At the graduate level, he teaches American Politics II (Preference Aggregation) and American Politics III (Political Institutions). Prior to joining the faculty at Yale he held the Robert Hartley fellowship in Governmental Studies at the Brookings Institution.
Campus address: 77 Prospect Street, Room 109
Phone: 432-5731
Email: gregory.huber@yale.edu
Personal Web Page: http://huber.research.yale.edu/
Last updated 06-10-09

