Politics at New York University

Working Papers

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Cutting a Pie Is Not a Piece of Cake (with Julius B. Barbanel and Walter Stromquist)
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Theory, Political Economy
Date: 03 / 2008

Information and Pivotal Voter Models in Large Laboratory Elections
Professor: Rebecca Morton
Field(s): Political Economy, Methodology
Date: 01 / 2008

How the Delegation of Voting Rights Affects the Measurement of Voting Behavior
Professor: Morton Rebecca
Field(s): American Politics,
Date: 10 / 2007

Proportional Pie-Cutting (with Michael A. Jones and Christian Klamler)
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Economy, Political Theory
Date: 05 / 2007

Separation of Powers and Turnout
Professor: Morton Rebecca
Field(s): American Politics,
Date: 04 / 2007

Who Votes Now? And Does it Matter? (with Jan E. Leighley)
Professor: Jonathan Nagler
Field(s): American Politics
Date: 03 / 2007

Divide-and-Conquer: A Proportional, Minimal-Envy Cake-Cutting Procedure (with Michael A. Jones and Christian Klamler)
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Theory, Political Economy
Date: 02 / 2007

The Hispanic Vote in the 2004 Presidential Election: Insecurity and Moral Concerns (with Marisa A. Abrajano and R. Michael Alvarez).
Professor: Jonathan Nagler
Field(s): American Politics
Date: 02 / 2007

Efficiency, Equity, and Timing in Voting
Professor: Rebecca Morton
Field(s): American Politics, Comparative Politics, Political Theory
Date: 12 / 2006

The Swing Voter’s Curse in the Laboratory
Professor: Rebecca Morton
Field(s): American Politics, Comparative Politics, Methodology
Date: 12 / 2006

Unions and Class Bias in the U.S. Electorate, 1964-2004 (with Jan Leighley)
Professor: Jonathan Nagler
Field(s): American Politics
Date: 11 / 2006

Class Bias in the U.S. Electorate, 1972-2004 (with Jan Leighley)
Professor: Jonathan Nagler
Field(s): American Politics
Date: 08 / 2006

Dead Heat: The 2006 Public Choice Society Eletion
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Economy, Political Theory
Date: 06 / 2006

Incentives, Complexity and Motivations in Experiments
Professor: Rebecca Morton
Field(s): Methods, Political Economy
Date: 06 / 2006

The Normative Turn in Public Choice
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Economy, Political Theory
Date: 04 / 2006

Experimentation in Political Science (with Kenneth C. Williams)
Professor: Rebecca Morton
Field(s): Methodology
Date: 04 / 2006

Voting Systems That Combine Approval and Preference
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Economy, Political Theory
Date: 03 / 2006

From Nature to the Lab: Experimental Political Science and the Study of Causality (with Kenneth C. Williams)
Professor: Rebecca Morton
Field(s): Methodology
Date: 03 / 2006

The Propaganda of the Deed: Terrorism, Counterterrorism, and Mobilization. (with Ethan Bueno de Mesquita)
Professor: Eric Dickson
Field(s): Comparative Politics
Date: 02 / 2006

Directing Retribution: On the Political Control of Lower Court Judges (With Gregory A. Huber)
Professor: Sanford Gordon
Field(s): American Politics, Political Economy, Methodology
Date: 02 / 2006

Polarization and Public Deliberation
Professor: David Stasavage
Field(s): Political Economy
Date: 02 / 2006

The Effect of Electoral Competetiveness on Incumbent Behavior (With Gregory A. Huber)
Professor: Sanford Gordon
Field(s): American Politics, Political Economy, Methodology
Date: 01 / 2006

How to Elect a Representative Committee Using Approval Balloting
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Economy, Political Theory
Date: 12 / 2005

Game Theory
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Economy, Political Theory
Date: 12 / 2005

Cognition and Strategy: A Deliberation Experiment. (with Catherine Hafer and Dimitri Landa)
Professor: Eric Dickson
Field(s): Comparative Politics
Date: 12 / 2005

Challenger Entry and Voter Learning (With Gregory A. Huber and Dimitri Landa)
Professor: Sanford Gordon
Field(s): American Politics, Political Economy, Methodology
Date: 12 / 2005

Democracy and Primary School Attendance: Aggregate and Individual Level Evidence from Africa
Professor: David Stasavage
Field(s): Political Economy
Date: 12 / 2005

Cities, Constitutions, and Sovereign Borrowing in Europe, 1274-1785
Professor: David Stasavage
Field(s): Political Economy
Date: 12 / 2005

Partisan Politics and Public Debt: The Importance of the Whig Supremacy for Britain’s Financial Revolution
Professor: David Stasavage
Field(s): Political Economy
Date: 12 / 2005

Consumption or Investment? On the Political Expenditures of Corporate Executives (With Catherine Hafer and Dimitri Landa)
Professor: Sanford Gordon
Field(s): American Politics, Political Economy, Methodology
Date: 11 / 2005

Religion and Reform: The Political Economy of Social Insurance in the United States, 1910-1939 (with Kenneth Scheve)
Professor: David Stasavage
Field(s): Political Economy
Date: 11 / 2005

Religion and Preferences for Social Insurance (with Kenneth Scheve)
Professor: David Stasavage
Field(s): Political Economy
Date: 11 / 2005

The Rule of Law, Anonymity, and Elite Incentives.
Professor: Sanford Gordon
Field(s): American Politics, Political Economy, Methodology
Date: 10 / 2005

Does Transparency Make a Difference? The Example of the European Council of Ministers
Professor: David Stasavage
Field(s): Political Economy
Date: 10 / 2005

Publicity of Debate and the Incentive to Dissent: Evidence from the US Federal Reserve (with Ellen Meade)
Professor: David Stasavage
Field(s): Political Economy
Date: 06 / 2005

The Instability of Power Sharing (with D. Marc Kilgour)
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Comparative Politics, Political Economy
Date: 05 / 2005

Better Ways to Cut a Cake (with Michael A. Jones and Christian Klamler)
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Economy, Political Theory
Date: 03 / 2005

Why the Centipede Game is Important for Political Science.
Professor: Becky Morton
Field(s): Methodology
Date: 03 / 2005

Influence in Terrorist Networks: From Undirected to Directed Graphs (with Hande Mutlu and Shawn Ling Ramirez)
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): International Relations, Methodology
Date: 02 / 2005

Critical Strategies under Approval Voting: Who Gets Ruled in and Ruled out (with M. Remzi Sanver)
Professor: Steven Brams
Field(s): Political Economy, Political Theory
Date: 01 / 2005