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Professor
of
Politics; Chair of Politics B.A. 1967, University of Rochester; M.A. 1969, Yale; M. Phil. 1972, Yale; Ph.D. 1977, Yale.
Email:
Phone:
(212) 998-8535
Office Address:
NYU Department of Politics, 19 W. 4th Street, New York, NY 10012
Office Room Number:
407
Personal Homepage
For a full list of my work, see my
Vita.
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Areas of Research/Interest: Political Methodology; International Relations; Political Economy.
Select Publications:
Current Issues and Accomplishments in
(portions of) Political Methodology (paper given at IPSA Montreal 2008
Conference) Random coefficient models for time-series--cross-section data (with Jonathan Katz, Political Analysis, 2007)
Alternative models of dynamics in binary time-series--cross-section models: the example of state failure (with David Epstein, Simon Jackman and Sharyn O'halloran)
Event history, binary probit, markov chains: when should we care with applications to comparative politics and international relations (overheads) Theory and Evidence in International Conflict: A Response to de Marchi, Gelpi, and Grynaviski (with Gary King and Langche Zeng) - all neural nets were not created equal, but the better ones are quite good and one should judge the technology by looking at the good ones (APSR, 2004)
Space is more than geography: Using Spatial Econometrics in the Study of Political Economy (with Kristian Gleditsch and Kyle Beardsley, ISQ, 2006 )
Time Series Cross Section Issues: Dynamics, 2004 (with Jonthan Katz) (Sept. 2004)
Is Causal-Process Observation an Oxymoron (Political Analysis, 2006)
Time-Series--Cross-Section Methods (Forthcoming , Oxford Handbook of Political Methodology)
Causal Process "Observation": Oxymoron or Old Wine? (Dec. 2006)
The Special Issue of Political Analysis on Time-Series--Cross-Section data that I edited is Volume 15, #2 (Spring, 2007)
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