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1 Maxwell Faculty Publications Report 2011 Summary Data Department Page Books and Monographs Articles Book Chapters Book Reviews Anthropology 2-6 4 9 16 4 Economics 7-10 2 24 4 Geography 11-13 12 6 2 History 14-17 4 4 8 11 Political Science 18-22 4 12 16 4 Public Administration & International Affairs 23-29 2 41 9 Public Affairs 30 3 Sociology 31-34 17 12 Totals 16 122 71 21

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    Maxwell Faculty Publications Report 2011

    Summary Data

    Department Page Books and Monographs

    Articles Book Chapters Book Reviews

    Anthropology 2-6 4 9 16 4

    Economics

    7-10

    2 24 4

    Geography

    11-13

    12 6 2

    History

    14-17

    4 4 8 11

    Political Science

    18-22

    4 12 16 4

    Public Administration & International Affairs

    23-29

    2 41 9

    Public Affairs 30 3

    Sociology

    31-34

    17 12

    Totals

    16 122 71 21

  • 2

    Anthropology

    Douglas Armstrong – Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Professor Book (Co-Editor): Out of Many One People: Historical Archaeology in Jamaica. Co-Edited with James Delle and Mark Hauser. University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa, 332pp. Book Chapters: “Excavating Inspiration: Archaeology of the Harriet Tubman Home”. In The Materiality of Freedom: Archaeologies of Post-Emancipation Life, Jodi Barnes, editor. University of South Carolina Press:Columbia, pp. 263-276. “The Magens House, Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas, Danish West Indies: Archaeology of an Urban House Compound and its Relationship to Local Interactions and Global Trade”. In Islands at the Crossroads: Migration, Seafaring, and Interaction in the Caribbean, L. A. Curet and M. W. Hauser, editors. The University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa, pp. 137-163 (with Christian Williamson). “Historical Archaeology in Jamaica: An Introduction”. In Out of Many One People: Historical Archaeology in Jamaica, James Delle, Mark Hauser and Douglas V. Armstrong, editors. University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa, pp. 1-20 (with Mark Hauser and James Delle). “Reflections on Seville: Rediscovering the African Jamaican Settlements at Seville Plantation, St. Ann’s Bay”. In Out of Many One People: Historical Archaeology in Jamaica, James Delle, Mark Hauser and Douglas V. Armstrong, editors. University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa, pp. 77- 101. “Identity and Opportunity in Post-Slavery Jamaica”. In Out of Many One People: Historical Archaeology in Jamaica, James Delle, Mark Hauser and Douglas V. Armstrong, editors. University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa, pp. 243-257 (with Kenneth Kelley and Mark Hauser). “The Epilogue: Explorations in Jamaican Historical Archaeology”. In Out of Many One People: Historical Archaeology in Jamaica, James Delle, Mark Hauser and Douglas V. Armstrong, editors. University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa, pp. 258-271. John Burdick – Professor Article: “Are Black Gospel Singers Organic Intellectuals? Music, Religion and Racial Identity in São Paulo, Brazil”. Afro-Hispanic Review, 28(2): 211-222.

  • 3

    A.H. Peter Castro – Associate Professor Article: "Viewpoint," Natural Resource Forum, 35(4):335. Book Review: Review of “Introduction to International Development: Approaches, Actors, and Issues”. Paul A. Haslam, Jessica Schafer, and Pierre Beaudet, editors. Oxford University Press: Ontario, 2009. Journal of International and Global Studies, 2(2):102-104. Christopher DeCorse – Professor and Chair Article: “An Archaeological Appraisal of Early European Settlement in The Gambia.” Nyame Akuma, 73:55-64 (with Liza Gijanto, William Roberts, and Bakary Sanyang). Azra Hromadzic – Assistant Professor Article: “Bathroom Mixing: Youth Negotiate Democracy in Postconflict Bosnia and Herzegovina,” PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, 34(2):268-289. Book Review: Review of “Sarajevo under Siege: Anthropology in Wartime” by Ivana Maček. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009. Ethnopolitics, 10(3-4):474-475. Shannon Novak – Associate Professor Books: Archaeology of Desperation: Exploring the Donner Family Camp at Alder Creek, Kelly Dixon, Julie Schablitsky, and Shannon A. Novak, editors. University of Oklahoma Press: Norman. Paperback edition of, House of Mourning: A Biocultural History of the Mountain Meadows Massacred. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press Book Chapters: “Introduction.” In Archaeology of Desperation, Kelly Dixon, Julie Schablitsky, and Shannon A. Novak editors., University of Oklahoma Press: Norman, pp. 1-27 (with Kelly Dixon). “(Wo)man and Beast.” In Archaeology of Desperation, Kelly Dixon, Julie Schablitsky, and Shannon A. Novak editors., University of Oklahoma Press: Norman, pp. 185-218.

  • 4

    Article: “The Signature of Starvation: A Comparison of Bone Processing at a Chinese Encampment in Montana and the Donner Party Camp in California.” Journal of Historical Archaeology 45(2):97-112 (with Meredith Ellis, Christopher Merritt, and Kelly Dixon). Book review: Review of “Excavating Nauvoo: The Mormons and the Rise of Historical Archaeology in America” by Benjamin C. Pykles. University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln. Journal of Anthropological Research, 67:128-129. Deborah Pellow – Professor Article: “Internal Transmigrants: A Dagomba Diaspora”. American Ethnologist, 38(1):132- 47 Robert Rubinstein – Professor Book: Dangerous Liaisons: Anthropologists and the National Security State. Laura

    McNamara and Robert A. Rubinstein, editors. SAR Press:Santa Fe. Book Chapters: “Ethics, Engagement and Experience: Anthropological Excursions in Culture and the National Security State,” in Dangerous Liaisons: Anthropologists and the National Security State. Laura McNamara and Robert A. Rubinstein, editors. SAR Press:Santa Fe, pp. 145-165. “Introduction: Scholars, Security, Citizenship: Anthropology and the State at War,” in Dangerous Liaisons: Anthropologists and the National Security State. Laura McNamara and Robert A. Rubinstein, editors. SAR Press: Santa Fe, NM, pp. xiii-xxxiv (with Laura McNamara). “Ethical Considerations from the Study of Peacekeeping,” in Anthropologists in the SecurityScape. Robert Albro, George Marcus, Laura McNamara, and Monica Schoch-Spana, editors. Left Coast Press:Walnut Creek, CA, pp. 183- 195. “Representation and Response: Culture and Conflict Transformation,” in Conflict and Culture: Fostering Peace through Cultural Initiatives. Joint Research Institute for International Peace and Culture, Aoyama Gakuin University, editor. The Japan Foundation:New York, NY, pp. 65-73.

  • 5

    Article: “Action Anthropology and Pedagogy: University-Community Collaborations in Setting Policy”. Human Organization, 70(3):289-299 (with Sandra D. Lane, Lutchmie Narine, Inga Back, Caitlin Cornell, Alexander Hodgens, Monique Brantley, Rachel Kramas, Kathleen Keough, Brandon O’Conner, William Suk, Eric Morrissette, and Mary Benson). Theresa Singleton – Associate Professor Book Chapter: “Reflections on Archaeologies of Post-Emancipation from a Student of Slavery”, in The Materiality of Freedom: Archaeologies of Post-emancipation Life. Jodi Barnes, editor. University Press of South Carolina: Columbia, pp. 277-282. Book Review: Review of Cabin, Quarter, Plantation: Architecture and Landscapes of North American Slavery. Clifton Ellis and Rebecca Ginsburg, editors. Yale University Press: New Haven. Journal of Southern History, 77(4):950-951. John Townsend – Professor Article: "Sexual Hookups among College Students: Sex Differences in Emotional Reactions." Archives of Sexual Behavior, 40(6):1173-1181 (with T. Wasserman). Cecilia Van Hollen – Associate Professor Book Chapters: “Birth in the Age of AIDS: Local Responses to Global Policies and Technologies in South India”. In Reproduction, Globalization, and the State: New Theoretical and Ethnographic Perspectives. Carolyn Sargent and Carole Browner, editors. Duke University Press: Durham, pp. 83–95. “HIV/AIDS: Global Policies, Local Realities” In Companion to the Anthropology of India. Clark-Deces, editor. Blackwell and Wiley Publishers, pp. 464–481. Article: “Breast or Bottle? HIV-Positive Women’s Responses to Global Health Policy on Infant Feeding in India”. Medical Anthropology Quarterly, 25(4): 499-518.

  • 6

    Susan Wadley – Ford Maxwell Professor of South Asian Studies

    Book Chapter: ”Raja Nal’s Purana and the Jat Kingdoms of Braj”. In Damayaniti and Nala: The Many Lives of a Story. Susan Wadley, editor. New Delhi: Chronicle Books, 352 pp.

  • 7

    Economics Badi Baltagi – Distinguished Professor Book:

    Econometrics, 5th edition, Springer, Berlin. Book Chapters: “Spatial Panels,” in The Handbook of Empirical Economics and Finance. Aman Ullah and David E.A. Giles, editors. Chapman and Hall, pp. 435-454. "Autocorrelation in Regression," in International Encyclopedia of Statistical Science. Miodrag Lovric, editor. Springer: Heidelberg, pp. 76-77.

    Edited Special Issues of Journals:

    Panel Data Econometrics, Badi H. Baltagi and Joerg Breitung, editors. Special issue of Empirical Economics, (40). New Perspectives on Finance and Development, Badi H. Baltagi and Panicos Demetriades, editors. Special issue of Empirical Economics, (41).

    Journal Articles:

    “Maximum Likelihood Estimation and Lagrange Multiplier Tests for Panel Seemingly Unrelated Regressions with Spatial Lag and Spatial Errors: An Application to Hedonic Housing Prices in Paris,” Journal of Urban Economics, 69: 24–42 (with Georges Bresson). “Editors’ Introduction: Panel Data Econometrics,” Empirical Economics, 40: 1-4 (with Joerg Breitung). “Seemingly Unrelated Regressions with Spatial Error Components,” Empirical Economics, 40: 5-49 (with Alain Pirotte). “Testing for Sphericity in Fixed Effects Panel Data Models,” Econometrics Journal, 14: 25–47 (with Qu Feng and Chihwa Kao). “Instrumental Variable Estimation of a Spatial Autoregressive Panel Model with Random Effects,” Economics Letters, 111: 135-137 (with With Long Liu). “Editors’ Introduction: New Perspectives on Finance and Development,” Empirical Economics, 41: 1-5 (with Panicos Demetriades).

  • 8

    “An Improved Generalized Moments Estimator for a Spatial Moving Average Error Model,” Economics Letters, 113: 282-284 (with Long Liu).

    “Test of Hypotheses in Panel Data Models When the Regressor and Disturbances are Possibly Non-Stationary," Advances in Statistical Analysis, 95(4): 329-350 (with Chihwa Kao and Sanggon Na).

    Donald Dutkowsky – Professor Articles: “Interest on Bank Reserves and Optimal Sweeping,” Journal of Banking and Finance, 35: 2491-2497 (with David D. VanHoose). “What Determines Consumption in the Very Short-Run? Evidence from Checking Account Data,” Journal of Macroeconomics, 33: 542-552 (with Marc Anthony Fusaro). Gary Engelhardt – Professor Articles: “Medicare Part D and the Financial Protection of the Elderly,” American Economic

    Journal: Economic Policy, 3(4): 1-27 (with Jonathan Gruber). “Pensions and Household Wealth Accumulation,” Journal of Human Resources 46(1): 203-236 (with Anil Kumar).

    Jerry Evensky – Professor Article: “Adam Smith’s Essentials: On Trust, Faith, and Free Markets”. Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 33(2): 249-268 William Horrace – Professor

    Book Chapter: “Did New Deal Grant Programs Stimulate Local Economies? A Study of Federal Grants and Retail Sales during the Great Depression,” in The Seminal Works of the Great Depression. Randall E. Parker, editor. Edward Elgar Publishing (with Fishback, PV and Kantor, SE).

    Article: “The Influence of the Home Owners' Loan Corporation on Housing Markets During the 1930's”. Review of Financial Studies, 24(6): 1782-1813 (with Fishback PV, Flores-Lagunes A, Kantor SE, Treber J.).

    http://jhr.uwpress.org/

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    Chihwa (Duke) Kao – Professor and Chair Articles: “Test of Hypotheses in Panel Data Models When the Regressor and Disturbances are Possibly Nonstationary,’’ Advances in Statistical Analysis, 95(4): 329-350 (with Badi Baltagi and Sanggon Na). “Testing for Sphericity in a Fixed Effects Panel Data Model,” Econometrics Journal, 14:25- 47 (with Kao, C., and Qu, F.). Jerry Kelly – Distinguished Professor Article: “Majority Selection of One Alternative from a Binary Agenda,” Economics Letters, 110(3): 272-273 (with Donald Campbell). Thomas Kneisner – Krisher Professor Article:

    “Social Interactions in the Labor Market,” Foundations and Trends® in Microeconomics, 6(4): 265-366 (with Andrew Grodner and John A. Bishop).

    Jeffrey Kubik – Associate Professor Article: “The Disability Screening Process and the Labor Market Behavior of Accepted and Rejected Applicants: Evidence from the Health and Retirement Study,” Journal of Labor Research, 32: 237-253 (with Seth Giertz). Derek Laing – Associate Professor

    Book: “Introduction to Classic and the New Labor Economics,” W.W. Norton and Company, pp. 899.

    Mary Lovely – Professor and Chair, International Relations (UG) Article: “Trade, Technology and the Environment: Does Access to Technology Promote Environmental Regulation?” Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 61: 16-35 (with David Popp).

  • 10

    Devashish Mitra – Professor Book Chapter: “Social Protection in Labor Markets Exposed to External Shocks” in Making Globalization Socially Sustainable. Marc Bacchetta and Marion Jansen, editors. ILO-WTO Co-Publication, 199-231 (with Priya Ranjan). Lourenço Paz – Assistant Professor Articles: “Narrow Replication of Yogo (2004) Estimating the Elasticity of Inter-temporal

    Substitution When Instruments are Weak”. Journal of Applied Econometrics, 26(7): 1215-1216 (with Fábio Gomes).

    “Tariffs versus VAT in the Presence of Heterogeneous Firms”, International Tax and

    Public Finance, 18: 533-554 (with Ronald Davies). Christopher Rohlfs – Assistant Professor Article: “Optimal Bail and the Value of Freedom: Evidence from the Philadelphia Bail Experiment,” Economic Inquiry, 49(3):750-70 (with David S. Abrams). Op Ed: “What academia can do for DoD: with access to data, outside researchers can help guide

    costcutters,” Armed Forces Journal, November 2011. Perry Singleton – Assistant Professor Article: “The Effect of Taxes on Taxable Earnings: Evidence from the 2001 and Related US Federal Tax Acts.” National Tax Journal, 64(2, part 1): 323-352.

  • 11

    Geography Peng Gao – Associate Professor Articles: “An equation for bed-load transport capacities in gravel-bed rivers.” Journal of

    Hydrology, 402(3-4):297-305. Matthew Huber – Assistant Professor Book Chapter:

    “The Richest Hole on Earth? Labor, Nature and the Politics of Metabolism at the Bingham Canyon Copper Mine”. In Engineering Earth: The Impacts of Megaengineering Projects, S.D. Brunn, A. Wood editors. Springer, pp. 353-366

    Articles:

    “Enforcing Scarcity: Oil, Violence, and the Making of the Market”. Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 101(4): 816-826.

    “Intervention: Gusher in the Gulf and the Despotism of Capital”. Antipode 43(2): 195-198. “Toward a Radical Conjunctural Politics”. Antipode, 43(4): 935-36.

    “Oil, Life and the Fetishism of Geopolitics”. Capitalism, Nature, Socialism 22(3): 32-48. “Extracting sovereignty: Territory, Capital, and Gold Mining in Tanzania”. Political Geography, 30(2): 70-79 (with J. Emel and M.H. Makene).

    Mark Monmonier – Distinguished Professor

    Book Chapters: “Maps as Graphic Propaganda for Public Health.” In Imagining Illness: Public Health and Visual Culture, David Serlin, editor. University of Minnesota Press: Minneapolis, pp. 108–25. “Reflection Essay: ‘Strategies for the Visualization of Geographic Time-Series Data’.” In Classics in Cartography: Reflections on Influential Articles from Cartographica, Martin Dodge, editor. John Wiley & Sons: London, pp. 71–79.

  • 12

    “A Century of Cartographic Change, from Technological Transition in Cartography.” In The Map Reader: Theories of Mapping Practice and Cartographic Representation, Martin Dodge, Rob Kitchin, and Chris Perkins, editors. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK, pp. 122–28. [Reprinted from Mark Monmonier, Technological Transition in Cartography, (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1985), 4–14.] “Strategies for the Visualisation of Geographic Time-Series Data.” In The Map Reader: Theories of Mapping Practice and Cartographic Representation, Martin Dodge, Rob Kitchin, and Chris Perkins, editors. Wiley-Blackwell: Chichester, UK, pp. 231–43. [Reprinted from article by the same name in Cartographica 27, no. 1 (1990): 30–45.] Articles: “Hubris Came Before the Times Atlas’s Fall,” New Scientist, 18 October, 2011, online at http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn21058-hubris-came-before-the-times-atlass-fall.html. “Borrowed Borders: Cartographic Leverage from Empires to Zip Codes,” Glimpse: the art + science of seeing, 8:14–21.

    Tom Perreault – Associate Professor Book chapter: “Las contradicciones estructurales y sus implcaciones para la justicia hídrica: pensamientos incompletos,” in Justicia Hídrica: Acumulación, Conflicto y Acción Social, Rutgerd Boelens, Leontien Cremers and Margreet Zwarteveen, editors. Lima: Instituto de Estudios Peruanos/PUCP, pp. 67-77. Book review: Review of Indigenous Development in the Andes: Culture, Power and Transnationalism by Robert Andolina, Nina Laurie and Sarah Radcliffe. Duke University Press: Durham. Geographical Review, 101(2): 294-297.

    Jane Read – Associate Professor Articles: “Foliar Nitrogen Responses to the Environmental Gradient Matrix of the Adirondack Park, New York.” Annals of the Association of American Geographers, 102(1):1-16 (with B.E. McNeil and C.T. Driscoll)

  • 13

    “Large-scale environmental monitoring by indigenous peoples”. Bioscience, 61: 771-781 (with J. Luzar, K.M. Silvius, J.P.M. Overman, S.T. Giery, and J.M.V. Fragoso)

    John Western – Professor

    Book Review: Review of “Badlands of the Republic: Space, Politics and Urban Policy” by Mustafa Dikeç, The Geographical Review, 101(1):127-29

    Robert Wilson – Associate Professor

    Article: "Landscapes of Promise and Betrayal: Homesteading, Reclamation, and Japanese American Incarceration During the Second World War." Annals of the Association of American Geographers 101(2): 424-44.

    Jamie Winders – Associate Professor Articles: “Commentary: New Directions in the Nuevo South.” Southeastern Geographer 51(2): 327-340. “Re-Placing Southern Geographies? The Role of Latino Migration in Transforming the South, Its Identities, and Its Study.” Southeastern Geographer 51(2): 342-358. Commentary: “Author Meets Critics for Ladelle McWhorter’s Racism and Sexual Oppression in Anglo-America: A Genealogy.” Social and Cultural Geography 12(3): 320-321.

  • 14

    History

    Craige Champion – Associate Professor Book Chapter: “Polybius and the Punic Wars.” In A Companion to the Punic Wars, B.D. Hoyos, editor. Wiley-Blackwell Publishers: Oxford and Malden, Massachusetts, pp. 95-110. Andrew Cohen – Associate Professor

    Article: “There was a Crooked History,” LABOR: Studies in Working Class History, 8(2):59-64.

    Albrecht Diem – Associate Professor Article: “Columbans gestohlener Handschuh – ein (Anti-)Fetisch?” Fetisch als heuristische

    Kategorie. Geschichte – Rezeption – Interpretation. Christina Antenhofer, editor. Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag, pp. 145-165.

    Book Chapters: “Das Ende des monastischen Experiments. Liebe, Beichte und Schweigen in der

    Regula cuiusdam ad virgines (mit einer Übersetzung im Anhang). ” In Female vita religiosa between Late Antiquity and the High Middle Ages. Structures, developments and spatial contexts. Vita Regulars, Abhandlungen. Gert Melville and Anne Müller, editors. Münster/Berlin: LIT-Verlag, 47: 81-136.

    “Disimpassioned Monks and Flying Nuns. Emotion Management in Early Medieval

    Rules.” In Funktionsräume, Wahrnehmungsräume, Gefühlsräume. Mittelalterliche Lebensformen zwischen Kloster und Hof. Veröffentlichungen des Instituts für Österreichische Geschichtsforschung. Christina Lutter, editor. Vienna/Munich: Oldenbourg/Böhlau, 59: 17-39.

    “Inventing the Holy Rule: Some Observations on the History of Monastic Normative

    Observance in the Early Medieval West.” In Western Monasticism ante litteram. The Spaces of Monastic Observance in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. Disciplina Monastica. Hendrik Dey and Elizabeth Fentress, editors. Turnhout: Brepols, 7: 53-84.

  • 15

    Carol Faulkner – Associate Professor and Chair Books: Lucretia Mott’s Heresy: Abolition and Women’s Rights in Nineteenth-Century America, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. Women in American History: A Documentary Reader. Wiley-Blackwell: Malden, MA. Book Chapter: “Dangerous Tendencies: Slavery, Sex, and Authority in the Transatlantic Correspondence of Lucretia Mott,” in Exchanges and Correspondence: The Construction of Feminism. Claudette Fillard and Françoise Orazi, editors, Cambridge Scholars Publishing: Newcastle-upon-Tyne, UK. Book Review: Review of “Hearts Beating for Liberty: Abolitionist Women in the Old Northwest”, by Stacey Robertson. Slavery & Abolition, 32(4): 596-598. Paul Hagenloh – Associate Professor

    Book Review: Review of “The Soviet Dream World of Retail Trade and Consumption in the 1930s” by Amy Randall, Palgrave Macmillan, 2008. Europe–Asia Studies, 63(2):344-347.

    Samantha Herrick – Associate Professor

    Book Review: Review of “The Virgin of Chartres: Making History through Liturgy and the Arts” by Margot E. Fassler. Yale University Press: New Haven. The American Historical Review, 116: 1179.

    Amy Kallander – Assistant Professor Book Review: Review of “Between Arab and White: Race, Nation, and Ethnicity in the Early Syrian

    American Diaspora”, by Sarah Gualtieri. University of California Press: Berkeley, 2009. Journal of American Ethnic History, 31(1):117-119.

    George Kallander – Assistant Professor

    Book Reviews: Review of “From Herdsman to Statesman: The Autobiography of Jamsrangiin Sambuu”. Translated by Mary Rossabi. Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 2011. Asian Politics and Policy, 3(3): 481-483.

  • 16

    Review of “How East Asians View Democracy”, by Yunhan Zhu, et al. Columbia University Press: New York, 2009. Asian Politics and Policy, 3(2): 302-304.

    Chris Kyle – Associate Professor

    Book: Theater of State: Parliament and Political Culture in Early Stuart England, Stanford University Press, 288 pp. Book Review: Review of The Elizabethan World, Susan Doran and Norman Jones, editors. Parliamentary History, 30(3): 441-42

    Andrew Lipman – Assistant Professor

    Article: “Murder on the Saltwater Frontier: The Death of John Oldham,” Early American Studies, 9(2): 268-294. Book Review: Review of “Red Bretheren: The Brothertown and Stockbridge Indians and the Problem of Race” by David Silverman. The Journal of American History, 93(3): 812-813.

    Laurie Marhoefer – Assistant Professor Article: “Degeneration, Sexual Freedom, and the Politics of the Weimar Republic, 1918- 1933,” German Studies Review, 34 (3): 529-550.

    Book Review: Review of “Selling Sex in the Reich: Prostitutes in German Society, 1914-1945” by Victoria Harris. German Studies Review, 34(1): 185-186.

    Dennis Romano – Dr. Walter Montgomery and Marian Gruber Professor Book Reviews: Review of “Trading Places: The Netherlandish Merchants in Early Modern Venice” by Maartje Van Gelder. Renaissance Quarterly, 64: 289-91. Review of “Commerce before Capitalism in Europe, 1300 to 1600” by Martha Howell, The Journal of Social History, 45: 316-18.

  • 17

    Martin Shanguhyia – Assistant Professor Book Chapters: “Elijah Masinde”, in Dictionary of African Biography. Emmanuel K. Akyeampong and Henry Louis Gates Jr, editors. New York: Oxford University Press: New York. “Leopold II (1835-1909)”, in Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression. Junius P. Rodriguez, editor. ABC-LIO: Santa Barbara, pp. 388-390. “Tippu Tip (ca. 1835-1905)” in Slavery in the Modern World: A History of Political, Social, and Economic Oppression. . Junius P. Rodriguez, editor. ABC-LIO: Santa Barbara, pp. 521-523.

    Junko Takeda – Assistant Professor

    Book: Between Crown and Commerce: Marseille and the Early Modern Mediterranean. Johns Hopkins University Press, 258 pp.

  • 18

    Political Science

    Mehrzad Boroujerdi – Associate Professor Articles:

    “Cheshmposhi Vazife-ye Rowshanfehran Nist [To Ignore Is not Among the Responsibilities of Intellectuals],” Shahrvand Emrouz, no. 84 (22 Mordad 1390/13 August), pp. 12-13.

    “Asr-e Gharbzadegi Ra Posht-e Sar Gozashtehim [We Have Passed the Era of Westoxification],” Mehr Nameh, no. 15 (Shahrivar 1390/October), pp. 181-182.

    Book Review: Combined review of Said Amir Arjomand, “After Khomeini: Iran Under His Successors”; Mehran Kamrava, “Iran’s Intellectual Revolution”; and Ali Mirsepassi, “Democracy in Modern Iran: Islam, Culture, and Political Change”. In Perspectives on Politics, 9(3): 729-731.

    Keith Bybee – Paul E. and Hon. Joanne F. Alper ’72 Judiciary Studies Professor Book Chapter:

    “The Rule of Law is Dead! Long Live the Rule of Law!,” in What’s Law Got To Do With It?, Ed. Charles Gardner Geyh, Stanford University Press: Stanford CA, 306-27.

    Article:

    “Efficient, Fair, and Incomprehensible: How the State ‘Sells’ its Judiciary.” Law & Policy, 33:1-26 (with Heather Pincock). Law Review: “Will the Real Elena Kagan Please Stand up? Conflicting Public Images in the Supreme Court Confirmation Process,” Wake Forest Journal of Law and Policy, 1:101-119.

    Matthew Cleary – Associate Professor Book Reviews: Review of Judicial Power and Strategic Communication in Mexico, by Jeffrey K. Staton. Comparative Political Studies, 44(10): 1439-1442.

  • 19

    Review of Religious Pluralism, Democracy, and the Catholic Church in Latin America, Frances Hagopian, ed. Perspectives on Politics, 9(1): 203-4.

    Elizabeth Cohen – Associate Professor Article: “Reconsidering US Immigration Reform: The Temporal Principle of Citizenship” Perspectives on Politics, 9(3): 575-583 Bruce Dayton – Assistant Professor

    Book Chapter: “Track Two Diplomacy and the Transfer of Peacebuilding Capacity.” Transnational

    Transfers and Global Development. Stuart Brown, editor. Palgrave Macmillan: New York, pp: 167 – 181.

    Article: “The Social Psychology of Identity and Intergroup Conflict: From Theory to

    Practice.” International Studies Perspective, 12:273-293 (with Esra Cuhadar). Gavan Duffy – Associate Professor

    Book Chapter: “Authentic Methods for Emancipatory Peace Research: Alker’s Legacy in Relatus and Pragmatic Analysis.” In Alker and IR: Global Studies in an Interconnected World Renee Marlin-Bennett, ed. Routledge: New York, pp. 162-177. Colin Elman – Associate Professor Article: “Boot Camp: Ten Years of Qualitative and Multi-method Research,” Qualitative & Multi-Method Research, 9(2):2-6. Margarita Estevez-Abe – Associate Professor

    Book Chapter: “Gendered Consequences of Vocational Training,” in The Political Economy of Skill Formation. Marius Busmeyer and Christina Tampesch, editors. Oxford University Press. Article: “Gender Bias of Education Systems,” Femina Politica, Vol. 2.

  • 20

    Shana Gadarian – Assistant Professor Book Chapter: “Campaign Ads: What Can We Learn from Experimentation?” In The Handbook of Experimental Political Science. James Druckman, Donald Green, James Kuklinski, and Arthur Lupia, editors. Cambridge University Press: New York, pp. 214 - 227 (with Richard R. Lau). Book Review: Review of “Selling Fear: Counterrorism, Media and Public Opinion” by Brigette Nacos, Yaeli Block-Elkon and Robert Shapiro, University of Chicago Press. Political Communication, 28(4): 468 – 471. Jongwoo Han – Assistant Professor Book: Networked Information Technologies, Elections, and Politics: Korea and the United States. Lexington Books, 222 pp. Book Chapter: “Notes on the SU-KCUT Research Collaboration and Exchange Program”. U.S.-DPRK Educational Exchanges: Assessment and Future Strategy. Eds. Gi Wook Shin and Karin Lee, APARC: Stanford University, pp. 81-92 (with Frederick Carriere, Thomas Harblin and Stuart Thorson). Margaret Hermann – Gerald B. and Daphna Cramer Professor of Global Affairs

    Book Chapters: “The Experiment and Foreign Policy Decision Making.” In The Handbook of Experimental Political Science. James Druckman, Donald Green, James Kuklinski, and Arthur Lupia, editors. Cambridge University Press: New York, pp. 430 – 444. “The Study of American Foreign Policy”. In Handbook of American Foreign Policy. Christopher Jones and Steve Hook, editors. New York: Routledge. “Learning Democracy: International Education and Political Socialization” in Transnational Transfers and Global Development. Stuart Brown, editor. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 148 – 162 (with Bandita Sijapati) “Policymakers and Their Interpretations Matter”. From the Mind to the Feet: Assessing the Perception-to-Intent-to-Action Dynamic. Eds. Strategic Multilayer

  • 21

    Assessment Group, Washington, DC: Air University Press (with Binnur Ozekecci-Taner). Article: Leadership, Terrorism, and the Use of Violence. Dynamics of Asymmetric Conflict, 4(2): 124-136 (with Azamat Sakiev).

    Glyn Morgan – Associate Professor

    Book Chapter: “Global and European Inequality” in Social Justice, Global Dynamic: Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives. Ayelet Banai, Miriam Ronzoni, and Christian Schemmel, editors. Routledge: London and New York, pp. 153 – 169.

    Article: “Europe, Europeanism, and European Nationalism.” European Political Science, 10:501-507. Sarah Pralle – Associate Professor

    Article: “Framing Trade-offs: The Politics of Nuclear Power and Wind Energy in the Age of Global Climate Change,” Review of Policy Research, 28(4): 323-346 (with Jessica Boscarino).

    Grant Reeher – Professor; Director, Campbell Institute Book (editor): The Trusted Leader: Building the Relationships That Make Government Work, CQ Press (Sage). Hans Peter Schmitz – Associate Professor

    Book Chapter: “Transnational NGOs and Human Rights in a post-9/11 World”, in Human Rights in the 21st Century. Continuity and Change since 9/11, Michael Goodhart and Anja Mihr eds., Houndmills: Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 203-221 Article: “A Gap Between Ambition and Effectiveness” Journal of Civil Society, 7(3): 287-292 (with Tosca Bruno-van Vijfeijken).

    .

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    Jeff Stonecash – Maxwell Professor

    Book: Counter-Realignment: Political Change in the Northeast, Cambridge University Press: New York (with Howard L. Reiter), 208 pp. Book Chapters: “New York: A Protest Opportunity Squandered,” in Pendulum Swing, Larry Sabato, editor. Pearson Longman: New York, pp. 335 - 342. “Political Parties: The Tensions between Unified Party Images and Localism.” in New Directions in Campaigns and Elections, Stephen Medvic, editor. Routledge: New York, pp. 115 - 128. Article: “The 2010 Mid-Term Elections: Coping with a Split-Outcome in 2008.” in PS: Political Science & Politics, 44(2):312-324.

    Brian Taylor – Associate Professor

    Book: State Building in Putin’s Russia: Policing and Coercion after Communism. Cambridge University Press, 392 pp.

    Stuart Thorson – Donald P. and Margaret Curry Gregg Professor Book Chapter: “Notes on the SU-KCUT Research Collaboration and Exchange Program”. U.S.-DPRK

    Educational Exchanges: Assessment and Future Strategy. Gi Wook Shin and Karin Lee, editors. APARC: Stanford University, pp. 81-92 (with Frederick Carriere, Jongwoo Han, and Thomas Harblin).

    Hongying Wang – Associate Professor Book Chapter:

    “Global Civil Society and Third Sector Development.” Transnational Transfers and Global Development, Stuart Brown, editor. Palgrave, pp. 101-124.

    https://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=PSChttps://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=PSC

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    Public Administration and International Affairs Shena Ashley – Assistant Professor

    Articles: “From Solicitation to Search: A Study of Monitoring Costs as a Driver of Donor

    Giving Behavior in Online Portal Websites”. International Journal of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Marketing, 16(4):409-420 (with Clarence Wardell, III).

    “The Family Difference? Exploring the Congruence in Grant Distribution Patters Between Family and Independent Foundations.” The Foundation Review, 3(4):74-81 (with Jasmine McGinnis).

    Robert Bifulco – Associate Professor Book Chapter:

    “Legally Viable Desegregation Policies: The Case of Connecticut.” In Integrating Schools in a Changing Society: New Policies and Legal Options of a Multiracial Generation. Editors, Erica Frankenberg and Elizabeth Debray. The University of North Carolina Press, pp. 131-147 (with C. Cobb and C. Bell). Article: “The Effect of Classmate Characteristics on Post-Secondary Outcomes: Evidence from the Add Health.” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy, pp. 25-53 (with J. Fletcher & S. Ross).

    Stuart Bretschneider – Maxwell Professor

    Book Chapter: “Technology and Public Management Information Systems: Where we have been and where we are going.” In The State of Public Administration: Issues, Challenges, and Opportunities. Menzel, D. C. and White, H. J., editors. M.E. Sharpe: Armonk, NY (with Ines Mergel).

    Article: “Politics of E-Government: E-Government and the Political Control of Bureaucracy.” The Public Administration Review, 71(3):414-424 (with Ahn, M.J.). Stuart Brown – Professor

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    Book (Editor): Transnational Transfers and Global Development, Palgrave Macmillan; pp. 256.

    Book Chapters: “Introduction: Toward a Theory of Transnational Transfers” in Transnational

    Transfers and Global Development. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 1-24. “Conclusion: This Volume and Future Study” in Transnational Transfers and Global Development. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 225-230

    Leonard Burman – Daniel Patrick Moynihan Professor

    Article: “Tax Expenditures, the Size and Efficiency of Government, and Implications for Budget Reform,” NBER Working Paper No. 17268, August 2011(with Marvin Phaup). Senate Testimony: “Tax Reform Options: Marginal Rates on High-Income Taxpayers, Capital Gains, and Dividends,” testimony before Senate Finance Committee, September 14, 2011.

    Renee deNevers – Associate Professor

    Book Chapters:

    “Private Military Contractors and Changing Norms for the Laws of Armed Conflict” in New Battlefields/Old Laws: Critical Debates on Asymmetric Warfare, William C. Banks, editor. Columbia University Press, pp. 150 – 170.

    “Private Security Companies and Private Transnational Transfers,” in Transnational Transfers and Global Developments, Stuart Scott Brown, editor. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 202 – 224. Article: “Military Contractors and the American Way of War” Daedalus, (140)3: 88-99 (with

    Deborah Avant) William Duncombe - Professor

    Articles: “School District Responses to Matching Aid Programs for Capital Facilities: A Case Study of New York’s Building Aid Program.” National Tax Journal, 64(3): 759-794 (with Wen Wang and John Yinger).

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    “Are Education Cost Functions Ready for Prime Time? An Examination of Their Validity and Reliability.” Peabody Journal of Education, 86(1):28-57 (with John Yinger).

    "Making Do: State Constraints and Local Responses in California's Education Finance System." International Tax and Public Finance, 18: 337-368 (with John Yinger).

    Soon Hee Kim – Professor Articles: “Exploring the Role of Social Networks in Affective Organizational Commitment” American Review of Public Administration, 41(2): 205-223 (with Jooho Lee). “Performance Regimes amidst Governance Complexity,” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, Minnowbrook III: A special issue, 21(Suppl 1): i141-i155 (with Donald Moynihan, Suzanne Piotrowski, Kelley ReLoux, Sergio Fernandez Sergio, Brad Wright, and Kaifeng Yang). “The Future of Public Administration around the World,” PUBLIC; ESADE's Institute of Public Governance & Management (IGDP) E-Bulletin (ISSN 2013-2530), May 2011 (with Rosemary O’Leary and David Van Slyke).

    Sharon Kioko – Assistant Professor Article:

    “Structure of State Level Tax and Expenditure Limits”. Public Budgeting & Finance, 31(2):43-78.

    Harry Lambright – Professor

    Articles: “The Rise and Fall of the Space Shuttle,” The Business of Government, Fall/Winter 2011, pp. 71-77.

    “Understanding Leadership in Public Administration: The Biographical Approach,” Public Administration Review, 71(5): 782-790.

    Leonard Lopoo – Associate Professor

    Articles: “Medicaid Expansions and Fertility in the United States.” Demography 48(2): 725-

    747 (with Thomas DeLeire, Kosali I. Simon).

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    “Labor and Delivery Complications Among Teenage Mothers.” Biodemography and Social Biology, 57(2):200-220.

    Ines Mergel – Assistant Professor

    Articles: “The Multiple Institutional Logics of Innovation”. International Public Management Journal, 14(3): 311-340 (with Lazer, D., Ziniel, C., Esterling, K., Neblo, M.). “MuniGov20, A New Residency Requirement: Local Government Professionals in Second Life”. Journal of Virtual World Research, 4(2) (with Gardner, M., Broviak, P., Greeves, B.). “Crowdsourced: Ideas Make Participating in Government Cool Again” PA Times, American Society for Public Administration, 34(4):4&6.

    “Toward Open Public Administration Scholarship”. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory (J-PART), Minnowbrook III: A Special Issue, Beth Gazley and David M. Van Slyke, editors. 21(1): i175-i198 (Greenberg, J., Lazer, D., Binz-Scharf, M.). “Networks in Public Administration Scholarship: Understanding Where We Are and Where We Need To Go”. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory (J-PART), Minnowbrook III: A Special Issue, Beth Gazley and David M. Van Slyke, editors. 21(1):i157-i173 (with Isett, K., LeRoux, K., Mischen, P., Rethemeyer, K.).

    Tina Nabatchi – Assistant Professor Book Chapter: “Reconciling Managerialism and ‘Public-Centered’ Administration”. In Public Leadership and Citizen Value: The Winelands Papers 2010. J.W. Bjorkman, R. Van Eijbergen, G. Minderman, & H. Bekke, editors. Eleven International Publishing: Stellenbosch, South Africa (with Holly T. Goerdel). Articles: “Public Administration in Dark Times: Some Questions for the Future of the Field”. Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 21(S1): i29-i43 (with Holly T. Goerdel, Shelly Peffer). “Thinking about Design: Participatory Systems and Processes”. Public Administration Review, 71(1): 6-15. Monograph:

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    “Bridging the Gap between Public Officials and the Public”. Deliberative Democracy Consortium: Washington, D.C., 64 pp. (with Cynthia Farrar).

    Rosemary O’Leary – Distinguished Professor; Howard G. and S. Louise Phanstiel Chair in Strategic Management and Leadership

    Articles: “Federalist No 51: Is the Past Relevant to Today’s Collaborative Public Management?” Public Administration Review, 71(S1):s78-s82. “Minnowbrook: Tradition, Idea, Spirit, Event, Challenge.” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory, 21(S1):i1-i6.

    David Popp – Associate Professor

    Articles: “Policy vs. Consumer Pressure: Innovation and Diffusion of Alternative Bleaching Technologies in the Pulp Industry,” Research Policy, 40(9):1253-1268 (with Tamara Hafner and Nick Johnstone). “Technology and the Diffusion of Renewable Energy,” Energy Economics, 33(4): 648-662 (with Ivan Hascic and Neelakshi Medhi). “International Technology Transfer for Climate Policy,” Review of Environmental Economics and Policy, 5(1): 131-152.

    Ross Rubenstein – Associate Dean and Chair

    Article: “The Path Not Taken: How Does School Organization Affect 8th Grade Achievement?” Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, 33(3): 293-317, (with Amy Ellen Schwartz, Jeffrey Zabel and Leanna Stiefel).

    Larry Schroeder – Professor

    Book Chapter: “Budgeting in Vietnam: Decentralized Decision Making in a Unitary Budget Environment.” Comparative Budgeting: A Global Perspective, C.E. Menifield, editor. Jones & Bartlett Learning: Sudbury, MA, pp: 133-148 (with Phuong Nguyen-Hoang).

    David Van Slyke – Associate Professor

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    Co-Editor: “The Future of Public Administration: Critiques from the Minnowbrook III Conference” Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory (with Beth Gazley).

    Articles: “The Energy of Minnowbrook III: Editors’ Introduction.” Journal of Public

    Administration Research and Theory, 21(Supplement 1): i7-i12 (with Beth Gazley). “The Role of Fear of Crime in Donating and Volunteering: A Gendered Analysis.”

    Criminal Justice Review, 36(4): 414-434 (with Sarah Britto and Teresa Francis). Book Chapter: “Accountability Challenges in Public Sector Contracting for Complex Products” Accountable Governance: Problems and Promises. Eds. George Frederickson and Melvin Dubnick. M.E. Sharpe Publishers, pp:42-54 (with Trevor L. Brown and Matthew Potoski).

    Peter Wilcoxen – Associate Professor Article: “Comparing Climate Commitments: A Model-Based Analysis of the Copenhagen Accord,” Climate Change Economics, 2(2):79-103, (with Adele Morris and Warwick J. McKibbin). Douglas Wolf – Professor

    Articles: “Fertility History, Health and Health Trajectories in Later Life: A Study of Older Women and Men in the British Household Panel Survey.” Population Studies, 65:201-215 (with S. Read, E. Grundy). PubMed Central ID: PMC 21614727 “Validation of New Measures of Disability and Functioning in the National Health and Aging Trends Study.” Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences, 66A: 1013-1021 (with V.A. Freedman, J.D. Kasper, J.C. Cornman, E.M. Agree, K. Bandeen-Roche, V. Mor, B.C. Spillman, R.Wallace). PubMed Central ID: PMC 21715647 “Fiscal Externalities of Becoming a Parent.” Population and Development Review, 37: 241-266 (with R. Lee, T. Miller, G. Donehower, and A. Genest). PubMed Central ID: PMC 21760651

    John Yinger – Trustee Professor Articles:

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    “School District Responses To Matching Aid Programs For Capital Facilities: A Case Study of New York’s Building Aid Program” National Tax Journal, 64(3):759-794 (with W. Duncombe and W. Wang)

    “Making Do: State Constraints and Local Responses in California’s Education Finance System”. International Tax and Public Finance, 18(3):337-368 (with W. Duncombe).

    “The Capitalization of School Quality into House Values: A Review”. Journal of Housing Economics, 20(1):30-48 (with P. Nguyen-Hoang). “Are Education Cost Functions Ready for Prime Time? An Examination of their Validity and Reliability”. Peabody Journal of Education, 86(1): 28-57 (with William Duncombe). “Introduction to the Special Issue on Costing Out” Peabody Journal of Education, 86(1): 1-2 (with William Duncombe).

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    Public Affairs William Coplin – Professor; Chair

    Article: “Skills for Career, College and Citizenship: Five Steps to Improve High School Education,” Impact on Instructional Improvement, Journal of the New York States Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development, 36(1) (with Jeff Craig and Adam Patrick).

    Allan Mazur – Professor

    Articles: “Does Increasing Energy or Electricity Consumption Improve Quality of Life in Industrial Nations?” Energy Policy, 39: 2566-2572. “Why Were ‘Starvation Diets’ Promoted for Diabetes in the Pre-insulin Period?” Nutrition Journal, 10(23).

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    Sociology

    Steve Brechin – Professor Book Chapter: “Corporate Contributions to Transnational Conservation NGOs: Private

    International Transfers or Transactions?” In Transnational Transfers and Global Development. Ed. Stuart Brown. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 125 - 147 (with A. Jamboric).

    Journal Editor: “Networking for Nature: Network Forms of Organization in Environmental

    Governance.” Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research, 3(3) (with C. Benjamin and C.A. Thorns)

    Articles: “Perceptions of Climate Change Worldwide.” Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate

    Change, 2(6): 871–885 (with M. Bhandari). “Introduction: Organizational Networks and Environmental Governance: Network

    Function and Dysfunction” Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research, 3(3): 211-222 (with C. Benjamin and C.A. Thorns).

    “Government-NGO Networks for Nature Protection in Belize, Central America:

    Examining the Theory of the Hollow State in a Developing Country Context.” Journal of Natural Resources Policy Research, 3(3): 263 – 274 (with O. Salas).

    Book Review: Review of “Global Commons, Domestic Decisions: The Comparative Politics of

    Climate Change” Kathryn Harrison and Lisa McIntosh Sundstrom, editors. Perspectives on Politics 9(1): 132-133.

    Marjorie DeVault – Professor

    Book Chapters: “Dorothy E. Smith” The Wiley- Blackwell Companion to Major Social Theorists: Vol. II,

    Contemporary Social Theorists, George Ritzer and Jeffrey Stepnisky, editors. Wiley-Blackwell Publishers (with Marie Campbell).

    “Feminist Qualitative Interviewing: Experience, Talk, and Knowledge”. Handbook of

    Feminist Research (2nd ed.), Sharlene Nagy Hesse-Biber, editor. Sage, pp. 206-236 (with Glenda Gross).

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    Article: “Mediated Communication in Context: Narrative Approaches to Understanding

    Encounters Between Health Care Providers and Deaf People”, Disability Studies Quarterly, 31(4) (with Michael A. Schwartz and Rebecca Garden)

    Cecilia Green – Associate Professor Article: “‘Abandoned Lower Class of Females’: Class, Gender and Penal Discipline in Barbados, 1875-1929,” Comparative Studies in Society and History, 53(1): 144- 179. Chris Himes – Maxwell Professor Book Chapters: “The Demography of Obesity.” In Oxford Handbook of the Social Science of Obesity. John Cawley, editor, pp. 35-47. Oxford University Press: New York. “Relationships Among Health Behaviors, Health, and Mortality.” In International Handbook of Adult Mortality. Richard Rodgers and Eileen Crimmins, editors, pp. 289- 310. Springer: New York. “Obesity: A Sociological Examination.” In Handbook of Sociology of Aging. Richard A. Settersten and Jacqueline L. Angel, editors, pp. 513-532. Springer: New York (with Valerie Episcopo). Andrew London – Professor; Chair Book Chapter: “Aging Veterans: Needs and Provisions”, in Handbook of Sociology of Aging. Richard

    A. Settersten, Jr. and Jacqueline L. Angel, editors. Springer: New York, (with Janet Wilmoth).

    Articles: “Work-Related Disability, Veteran Status, and Poverty: Implications for Family Well-

    Being.” Journal of Poverty, 15(3): 330-349 (with Colleen M. Heflin and Janet M. Wilmoth).

    “Sex Differences in the Relationship between Military Service Status and Functional

    Limitations and Disabilities.” Population Research and Policy Review, 30(3): 333-354 (with Janet Wilmoth and Wendy M. Parker).

    “Mitigating Material Hardship: The Strategies Low-Income Families Employ to

    Reduce the Consequences of Poverty.” Sociological Inquiry, 81(2): 223-246.

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    “Racial Differences in U.S. Family Structure: A Study of Multigenerational Living Arrangements in 1910.” Social Science History, 35(3): 275-322 (with Cheryl Elman).

    “Complementary and Alternative Medicine and Healthy Living” ACHIEVE, Fall: 13-16. Yingyi Ma – Assistant Professor

    Book Chapter: “The New Second Generation in Postsecondary Education” in Is Becoming an American a Developmental Risk? Cynthia Garía Coll and Amy Marks, editors. APA Publishing (with Hao, Lingxin)

    Articles: “Gender Differences in the Paths of Leading to a STEM Baccalaureate.” Social Science

    Quarterly, 92(5):P1169-1190. “Math and Reading Achievement Gaps—New Insights to Old Problems” for Sociological Studies of Children and Youth, 14:51-74 “Chinese Rural Women in Agriculture and Urban Work” American Review of China Studies, 12(1):1-12. “College Major Choice, Occupational Structure and Demographic Patterning by Gender, Race and Nativity” The Social Science Journal, 48(1): 112-129

    Madonna Harrington Meyer – Laura J. and L. Douglas Professor for Teaching Excellence Book Chapters: “Policy Issues for Families.” Handbook of Aging and the Family, 2nd Edition. Rosemary Blieszner and Victoria Hikevitch Bedford, editors. Greenwood Press (with Chantell Frazier)

    “The Changing Worlds of Family and Work.” Handbook of Sociology of Aging. Richard A. Settersten, Jr. and Jacqueline L. Angel, editors. Springer: New York (with Wendy Parker). “Gender, Aging, and Social Policy.” Handbook of Aging and the Social Sciences, 7th Edition. Robert Binstock and Linda K. George, editors. Elsevier, pp: 323-335 (with Wendy Parker).

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    Margaret Usdansky – Assistant Professor Article: “How Money Matters: College, Motherhood, Earnings and Wives’ Housework.” Journal of Family Issues, 32(11): 1449-1473 (with Wendy Parker). Janet Wilmoth – Professor

    Book Chapter: “Aging Veterans: Needs and Provisions”, in Handbook of Sociology of Aging. Richard A. Settersten, Jr. and Jacqueline L. Angel, editors. Springer: New York, (with Andrew London). Articles: “Work-Related Disability, Veteran Status, and Poverty: Implications for Family Well-Being.” Journal of Poverty, 15(3): 330-349 (with Colleen Heflin and Andrew London). “Sex Differences in the Relationship between Military Service Status and Functional Limitations and Disabilities.” Population Research and Policy Review, 30(3): 333-354 (with Andrew London and Wendy Parker).

    Articles:“Narrow Replication of Yogo (2004) Estimating the Elasticity of Inter-temporal Substitution When Instruments are Weak”. Journal of Applied Econometrics, 26(7): 1215-1216 (with Fábio Gomes).“Tariffs versus VAT in the Presence of Heterogeneous Firms”, International Tax and Public Finance, 18: 533-554 (with Ronald Davies).Book chapter:“Las contradicciones estructurales y sus implcaciones para la justicia hídrica: pensamientos incompletos,” in Justicia Hídrica: Acumulación, Conflicto y Acción Social, Rutgerd Boelens, Leontien Cremers and Margreet Zwarteveen, editors. Lima: Instituto...Book Chapter:“Reconciling Managerialism and ‘Public-Centered’ Administration”. In Public Leadership and Citizen Value: The Winelands Papers 2010. J.W. Bjorkman, R. Van Eijbergen, G. Minderman, & H. Bekke, editors. Eleven International Publishing: Stellenbosch, Sou...Monograph:Articles: “Does Increasing Energy or Electricity Consumption Improve Quality of Life in Industrial Nations?” Energy Policy, 39: 2566-2572.