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Faculty
William T. Bluhm
Nora Bredes
Kevin Clarke
Alexandre Debs
Richard Dees
John Duggan
Richard Fenno
Mark Fey
Edward Fiandach
Gerald Gamm
Hein Goemans
Ewa Hauser
Gretchen Helmke
Thomas Jackson
Bruce Jacobs
James Johnson
Stuart Jordan
Tasos Kalandrakis
Mark Kayser
Bonnie Meguid
Richard Niemi
Michael Peress
Charles Phelps
G. Bingham Powell
Lynda Powell
David Primo
Peter Regenstreif
Lawrence Rothenberg
Joel Seligman
Curtis Signorino
Valeria Sinclair-Chapman
Randall Stone
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| PhD, Michigan, 2001. Political methodology, international relations, and philosophy of science. Current research focuses on model discrimination and specification. Publications include "Democracy and the Logic of Political Survival" (with Randy Stone), American Political Science Review (forthcoming), "Modernizing Political Science: A Model-Based Approach" (with David Primo), Perspectives on Politics (2007), "A Simple Distribution-Free Test for Nonnested Hypotheses," Political Analysis (2007), "The Necessity of Being Comparative: Theory Confirmation in Quantitative Political Science," Comparative Political Studies (2007), "The Phantom Menace: Omitted Variable Bias in Econometric Research," Conflict Management and Peace Science (2005), "Nonparametric Model Discrimination in International Relations," Journal of Conflict Resolution (2003), "The Reverend and the Ravens," Political Analysis (2002), and "Testing Nonnested Models of International Relations: Reevaluating Realism," American Journal of Political Science (2001). Teaches courses in political methodology and international relations. |
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Courses:
| PSC 201 |
Political Inquiry |
| PSC 204 |
Research Design |
| PSC 272 |
Theories of International Relations |
| PSC 404 |
Probability and Inference |
| PSC 405 |
Linear Models |
| PSC 505 |
Maximum Likelihood Estimation |
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