Triangle Political Methods Group

Links

TPMG Home

Directions to Workshop Events

Workshop Schedule

Political Methods Links

UNC Political Science Dept.

Duke Political Science Dept.

TPMG Workshop Schedule

(last updated 9-15-2009)

Fall, 2009

Thursday, Sept. 10, at Duke (SSRI), 5:15 p.m.

Skyler Cranmer (UNC) and Bruce Desmarais (UNC). "A General Class of Models for Inference on Network Data"

Thursday, Sept. 17, at Duke (SSRI), 5:15 p.m.

Justin Valasek (Duke Economics Dept.). "Endogenous Candidates in Pivotal-Voter Models: The Connection Between Policy and Turnout"

Thursday, Sept. 24, at UNC (Hamilton 355), 5:15 p.m.

Justin Grimmer (Harvard). "Representational Style"

Thursday, Oct. 1, at Duke (SSRI), 5:15 p.m.

Nathan Martin (Duke)

Thursday, Oct. 8, at Duke (NOTE SPECIAL TIME AND PLACE: John Hope Franklin Center - 2204 Erwin Road, Room 240). 5:30 p.m.

Michael Ward (Duke). "Global Governance and Democracy"

NOTE: please park in the Medical Center parking garage II or in the Pickents Family Clinic parking lot (open after 4 pm). Here is a map: http://www.jhfc.duke.edu/about/map.php

Thursday, Oct. 15, at UNC (Hamilton 355), 5:15 p.m.

Robert Erikson (Columbia University). "'Dirty Pool' Revisited: When Less is More" (co-authored with Pablo M. Pinto and Kelly T. Rader).

Thursday, Oct. 22, at Duke (SSRI), 5:15 p.m.

Dorren McMahon (Duke)

Thursday, Oct. 29, at UNC (Hamilton 355), 5:15 p.m.

Chris Faricy (UNC) "The Politics of Modern Social Policy in America: How Partisanship Influences Indirect versus Direct Social Spending, 1967-2006.

Thursday, Nov. 5, at Duke (SSRI), 5:15 p.m.

John Cresswell (University of Nebraska - Lincoln) "Controversies in Mixed Methods Rearch" Abstract avaiable at:

http://portal.ssri.duke.edu/NewsandEvents/default.aspx

Thursday, Nov. 12 CANCELED

 

Thursday, Nov. 19, at Duke (SSRI), 5:15 p.m.

John Dovidio (Yale) "The 'Benefits' of Common Identitity: A Matter of Perspective."

Thursday, Dec. 3, at UNC (Hamilton Hall 355), 5:15 p.m.

Chris Achen (Princeton)

Page Maintained by Tom Carsey, Department of Political Science, UNC-Chapel Hill