|
|
 |
|
Faculty (in Alphabetical Order)
A
- John R. Alford - Associate Professor. Ph.D. (1981) University of Iowa. Major areas of research include American politics, particularly elections, and the biological and evolutionary basis of political behavior.
- John S. Ambler - Emeritus Professor. Ph.D. (1964) University of California at Berkeley. Major research interests include the politics of education in Europe, and particularly in France.
B
- Earl Black - Herbert S. Autrey Professor. Ph.D. (1968) Harvard University. Major areas of research and teaching are southern politics and American politics.
- Paul Brace - Clarence L. Carter Professor, Political Science. Ph.D. (1982) Michigan State University. Major areas of research include state and intergovernmental politics, judicial decision making, and the presidency.
- Regina P. Branton - Assistant Professor. Ph.D. (2000) University of Arizona. Major areas of research include American elections, minority politics, and public opinion.
C
- Royce A. Carroll - Assistant Professor. Ph.D. (2007) University of California at San Diego. Major areas of research include comparative politics, coalition government, legislative studies and electoral systems.
- Gilbert M. Cuthbertson - Professor. Ph.D. (1963) Harvard University. Current research is on Texas politics and Texas political history.
H
- Keith E. Hamm - Edwards Professor. Ph.D. (1977) University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee. Current research focuses on American political institutions, the politics of state legislatures, and the impact of campaign finance laws.
- William P. Hobby - Adjunct Professor. 278 Baker Hall, (713) 348 5195, hobby@rice.edu.
J
- Mark P. Jones - Professor. Ph.D. (1994) University of Michigan. Major areas of research include comparative politics, electoral systems, Latin American politics, legislatures, and public opinion.
K
- Ozge Kemahlioglu - Visiting Assistant Professor. Ph.D. (2006) Columbia University. Major areas of research include formal and informal institutions of developing democratic countries.
- Ranan D. Kuperman - Alexander Visiting Professor. Ph.D. (1999) Tel Aviv University. Major research interests include foreign policy analysis, asymmetric warfare and political economic aspects of conflict.
L
- Brett Ashley Leeds - Albert Thomas Associate Professor. Ph.D. (1998) Emory University. Major areas of research include international conflict and cooperation, international institutions, and the influence of domestic politics on international relations.
M
- Melissa J. Marschall - Associate Professor. Ph.D. (1998) State University of New York at Stony Brook. Major areas of research include public policy, particularly education politics and reform; political behavior, with an emphasis on minority participation and the effects of social and institutional context; and urban politics.
- Lanny W. Martin - Associate Professor. Ph.D. (2000) University of Rochester. Major areas of research include comparative politics, legislative institutions, and political methodology.
- T. Clifton Morgan - Albert Thomas Professor. Ph.D. (1986) University of Texas at Austin. Current research interests include the application of formal models to the study of bargaining in international crises and quantitative analyses of the causes of war.
- Karoline Mortensen - Assistant Professor of the Practice. Ph.D. (2006) University of Michigan. Current research interests involve health policy and health economics.
R
- Lyn Ragsdale - Radoslav A. Tsanoff Chair of Public Affairs and Professor of Political Science, Dean of the School of Social Sciences. Ph.D. (1982) University of Wisconsin at Madison. Major areas of research include American politics, the Presidency, and electoral behavior.
- William Reed - Associate Professor. Ph.D. (1998) Florida State University. Major areas of research include the causes of war, bargaining in international relations, and methods of statistical analysis.
- Jerrold G. Rusk - Professor. Ph.D. (1968) University of Michigan. Major areas of research include American elections, political behavior, and electoral reform.
S
- Robert M. Stein - Lena Gohlman Fox Professor, Political Science. Ph.D. (1977) University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee. Major areas of research include state and urban politics, public policy, elections, and voting behavior.
- Randolph T. Stevenson - Associate Professor. Ph.D. (1996) University of Rochester. Major areas of research include comparative democratic institutions, party competition and organization, comparative political economy, and political methodology.
- Richard J. Stoll - Professor. Ph.D. (1979) University of Michigan. Current research interests include the quantitative study of international conflict and American defense policy.
V
- Fred R. von der Mehden - Emeritus Professor. Ph.D. (1957) University of California at Berkeley. Major research interests include the politics of Southeast Asia and Islam.
W
- Rick K. Wilson - Herbert S. Autrey Professor of Political Science and Professor of Statistics and Psychology. Ph.D. (1982) Indiana University. Major areas of research include the historical evolution of Congressional institutions and experimental studies of strategic behavior.
|
|