John Aldrich (Duke University, Political Science): One D is Not Enough: Measuring Conditional Party Government, 1887-2002 (with David W. Rohde and Michael W. Tofias). 2-17-05.

Margo Anderson (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, History): History, Myth Making and Statistics: A Short Story about the Reapportionment of Congress and the 1990 Census (with Stephen E. Fienberg); Numbers for What? (included with History, Myth Making, and Statistics file); more background available in To Sample or Not to Sample? The 2000 Census Controversy, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Summer 1999 (with Stephen E. Fienberg). 2-25-00.

Sarah Binder (George Washington University, Political Science): The Institutionalization of Senatorial Courtesy. 2-13-04.

Amy Bridges (University of California, San Diego, Political Science): Creating a Place for Themselves: Writing Constitutions in Colorado, Arizona, and New Mexico. 12-11-03.

Barry Burden (University of Wisconsin, Political Science) and Christopher Berry and William Howell (University of Chicago, Harris School of Public Policy): After Enactment: The Lives and Deaths of Federal Programs, 1971-2003. 11-19-07.

Andrea Campbell (Harvard University, Government): How Policies Make Citizens: Senior Political Activism and the American Welfare State (chapter 4). 11-5-04.

David T. Canon (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Renewing the Voting Rights Act: Retrogression, Influence, and the Georgia v. Ashcroft Fix. 9-10-07.

David Canon and Martin Sweet (University of Wisconsin, Political Science), Informational and Demand-Side Theories of Congressional Committees: Evidence from the Senate, 1816-1993. 12-11-98.

Amnon Cavari (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Talking to the Nation, Leading the Party: The Party Politics of President Bush's Actions on Stem Cell Research. 2-11-08.

Elisabeth Clemens (University of Arizona, Sociology): The Encounter of Civil Society and the States: Legislation, Law, and Association, 1900-1920. 3-2-01.

Elizabeth Cohen (Syracuse University, Maxwell School): Contracted Out: LGBT Marriage and Citizenship. 5-03-04.

John Milton Cooper (University of Wisconsin, History): 'The Leaving It': Election 2000 at the Bar of History. 9-21-01.

Nina Eliasoph (University of Wisconsin, Sociology): Is Conversation the Soul of Democracy? America's Child-Centered Civic Life, a Civic Culture that Defies All Theories of Civil Society. 1-28-00.

Morris Fiorina (Stanford University, Hoover Institution): Culture War? 10-25-04.

Paul Frymer (University of California-Santa Cruz): Racism Revised: Courts, Labor Law, and the Institutional Construction of Racial Animus. 4-21-05.

Jess Gilbert (University of Wisconsin, Rural Sociology), Agrarian Intellectuals in a Democratizing State (paper 1 and cover memo), paper 2. 9-11-98.

Richard Hall (Michigan, Political Science, Ford School of Public Policy): Campaign Contributions and Lobbying on the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 (with Robert Van Houweling). 2-9-07.

Melissa Harris-Lacewell (University of Chicago, Political Science): Liberation to Mutual Fund: The Political Consequences of Differing Conceptions of Christ in the African American Church. 2-17-06.

Anna Harvey (NYU, Politics): The Evolution of Partisan Conventions, 1880-1940. 12-7-02.

Christopher Howard (William & Mary, Government): Racial Diversity and Social Policy in the American States. 10-5-01.

Bryan Jones (University of Washington, Political Science): Attention Allocation in the Public Policy Process. 3-7-03.

Ken Kersch (Princeton University, Politics): Situating the Supreme Court in Time as a Distinctive Political Institution. 9-30-05.

Donald Kettl (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): The Next Government of the United States. 1-26-04.

Desmond King (Oxford): 'The Fire of Patriotism': Americanization, U.S. Identity and American Political Development. 10-1-99.

Ronald King (Tulane, Political Science): Hayes Wins: A Revisionist Account of the Presidential Vote in 1876. 5-4-01.

Daniel Kryder (Brandeis University, Politics): Constitution as Clockwork: The Temporal Foundations of American Politics (paper removed at author's request). 10-22-07.

Robert Lieberman (Columbia University, Political Science): Legacies of Slavery?: Race and Historical Causation in American Political Development. 12-9-05.

Benjamin Marquez (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Mexican American Liberals Break the Color Line in Texas Politics, 1950-1970. 9-25-06.

Rick Matland (Loyola University Chicago, Political Science) and Adrian Shepherd (University of Houston, Political Science): The Effect of Candidate Race on Voters' Evaluations of Judicial Candidates: Experimental Evidence.

Kenneth R. Mayer (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Executive Orders and Civil Rights in the 20th Century. 2-19-99.

Kenneth R. Mayer (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Comparative Election Administration: Can We Learn Anything from the Australian Electoral Commission? 1-28-08.

Tali Mendelberg (Princeton University, Politics): The Deliberative Citizen: Theory and Evidence. 5-9-03.

Richard Merelman (University of Wisconsin, Political Science), Performing Pluralism: Script and Play at Yale, 1955-1970. 10-9-98.

Suzanne Mettler (Syracuse, Political Science): Policy Feedback and Political Participation: Effects of the G.I. Bill for World War II Veterans Over the Life Course. 4-4-02.

Jennifer Mittelstadt (Penn State University, History and Women's Studies): From Welfare to Workfare (Introduction); FWTW (Chapter 3). 4-28-06.

Ilia Murtazashvili (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): The Origins of the Land-Transfer Welfare State. 12-3-07.

Diana Mutz (University of Pennsylvania, Political Science and Communication): Hearing the Other Side: Deliberative versus Participatory Democracy (no paper for this talk). 10-8-07.

Bruce Oppenheimer and Christian Grose (Vanderbilt University, Political Science) and Neil Malhotra (Stanford University, Political Science): Issue Voting, Iraq War Casualties, and the 2006 Election: Who Gets the Blame and Who Gets the Credit? 4-28-08.

Michael Pisapia (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Women Educators Transforming the Public Sphere, 1860-1920. 4-14-08.

Marc Ratkovic and David Weimer (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Information Provision and Bias in the Face of Uncertainty: The Case of America's Regional Fish Councils. 11-5-07.

Lex Renda (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, History): 'A White Man's State in New England': Race, Party, and Suffrage in Civil War Connecticut. 4-23-99.

Gretchen Ritter (University of Texas at Austin, Government): Women's Citizenship and the Problem of Legal Personhood in the United States in the 1960s and 1970s. 3-27-03.

Gina Sapiro (University of Wisconsin, Political Science and Women's Studies), A History of Political Action. 4-29-98.

Kenneth Scheve (Yale, Political Science): Political Institutions, Partisanship, and Inequality in the Long Run (the APD Workshop cosponsored this Political Economy Colloquium event). 3-19-07.

Howard Schweber (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Back to the Future: the Revival of Sovereignty-Based Federalism in the Rehnquist Court (diagram mentioned on page 12 will be distributed at the workshop). 4-21-00.

Howard Schweber (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Ecological Harms and the Public Dimensions of Pregnancy. 2-9-01.

Gary Segura (University of Iowa, Political Science): Estimating the Mobilizing Effect of Overlapping Majority-Minority Districts on Latino Turnout. 4-24-03.

Byron Shafer (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Economic Development, Legal Desegregation, and Partisan Change in the Postwar South. 10-10-02.

Adam Sheingate (Johns Hopkins University, Political Science): Progressive Publicity and the Origins of Political Consulting. 10-16-06.

Theda Skocpol (Harvard, Government and Sociology), Civic America, Then and Now (paper available in Reading Room, 3rd floor North Hall). 11-18-98.

Stephen Skowronek (Yale University, Political Science): Political Development: The Definition (from The Search for American Political Development, with Karen Orren). 11-7-03.

Mark Smith (University of Washington, Political Science): The Right Talk: How Conservatives Transformed the Great Society into the Economic Society. 11-20-06.

Joe Soss (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): The Promise of a Public Transformed: Welfare Reform as Policy Feedback. 10-19-06.

Charles Stewart (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Political Science): U.S. Senate Elections before 1914. 11-11-06.

Sean Theriault (University of Texas, Government): Procedural Polarization in the U.S. Congress (primary paper for discussion); An Integration Explanation for Party Polarization in the U.S. Congress (optional supplementary paper). 3-24-06.

Daniel Tichenor (Rutgers, Political Science): Presidential Prerogatives: Liberty and Leadership in Wartime. 3-19-07.

David Vogel (Berkeley, Haas School of Business): The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Environmentalism: A Cross-National Comparison. 2-5-99.

Timothy Werner (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): Business Vulnerability and Self-Regulation: Gay Politics Inside the Fortune 1000. 9-24-07.

Alan E. Wiseman and Craig Volden (The Ohio State University, Political Science): Legislative Effectiveness in Congress. 3-31-08.

Graham Wilson (University of Wisconsin, Political Science): US Farm Groups and Images of the American State. 10-24-03.

Christina Wolbrecht (University of Notre Dame, Political Science): Incorporating Women Voters After Suffrage. 2-27-04.

Susan Yackee (University of Wisconsin, Political Science and Public Affairs): The Hidden Politics of Regulation. 3-10-08.