Faculty

William T. Bluhm
Nora Bredes
Kevin Clarke
Richard Dees
John Duggan
Richard Fenno
Mark Fey
Edward Fiandach
Gerald Gamm

Hein Goemans
Gretchen Helmke
Thomas Jackson
Bruce Jacobs
James Johnson
Stuart Jordan
Tasos Kalandrakis
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

  David Primo
Associate Professor of Political Science

david.primo@rochester.edu
Harkness Hall 318
585-273-4779
homepage

PhD, Stanford, 2002. American political institutions, positive political theory, game theory, political bargaining, and public policy. Current research focuses on the value of legislative “pork” for reelection, the politics of judicial appointments, and the connection between formal models and data analysis. He has published articles in American Journal of Political Science, Business and Politics, Economics & Politics, Election Law Journal, Independent Review, Journal of Law, Economics, & Organization, Journal of Politics, Perspectives on Politics, Public Choice, and State Politics & Policy Quarterly, as well as several edited volumes. His first book, The Plane Truth: Airline Crashes, the Media, and Transportation Policy (Brookings Institution Press, 2003), examines governmental responses to plane crashes and was co-authored with Roger Cobb of Brown University. His second book, Rules and Restraint: Government Spending and the Design of Institutions (University of Chicago Press, 2007), focuses on the design and enforcement of budget rules and received the 2008 Alan Rosenthal Prize awarded by the Legislative Studies Section of the American Political Science Association. He is currently working on his third book, tentatively titled Models with Meaning: Reimagining the Science of Politics (under contract, Oxford University Press), with co-author Kevin Clarke. Member of the American Politics Research Editorial Board. Teaches courses in American politics, public policy, and positive political theory. Recipient of a 2005 Goergen Award for Distinguished Achievement and Artistry in Undergraduate Education, as well as a 2005 Undergraduate Professor of the Year Award given by the University of Rochester Students’ Association.
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Courses:
PSC 107 Introduction to Positive Political Theory
PSC 231 Money in Politics
PSC 238 Business and Politics
PSC 239 The Nature of Entrepreneurship
PSC 523 American Politics Field Seminar
PSC 540 Models in American Politics: Theory & Data