|
FACULTY PROGRAMS
American Politics Reading Group
Faculty Fellowships
Occasional Paper Series
Speaker Series
STUDENT PROGRAMS
Graduate Student Fellowships
Undergraduate Quarter in Washington
Program
CAPPP Home |
Faculty Research Fellowships
As a part of its commitment to
promoting significant research, CAPPP supports a Faculty
Research Fellows program. The fellowships are awarded for one
academic year in order to assist ladder faculty in initiating,
conducting, or completing research on political and policy
processes and institutions of the U.S. Fellowships are generally
awarded in support of research that has substantial empirical
content. We welcome applications from UCLA ladder faculty in all
disciplines. The CAPPP Fellowship Policy Statement document
describes the fellowship program in full and lays out the
obligations of the fellows.
Applications for the 2007-08 Academic Year are due on Monday,
April 23,2007.
| 2008-2009 Faculty Fellows | 2008-2009 Kenneth L. Sokoloff Fellow, Asst. Prof. Sarah J. Reber, Dept. of Public Policy, School of Public Affairs Evaluating the Evaluators: Using Subjective Measures of Teacher Quality to Pay for Performance
Professor John Manuel de Figueiredo, Policy Area, Anderson School of Management Politicization, Bureaucratic Expertise, and Agency Performance
|
| 2007-2008 Faculty Fellows | Assistant Professor Lynn Vavreck, Department of Political Science "Assessing the Turnout Effects of Get Out the Vote Television Commercials: A Series of Randomized Field Experiments"
Professor of Law Katherine Van Wezel Stone, UCLA School of Law "Globalization and Flexibilization: How the Changing Nature of Work is Reshaping Employment Regulation"
Assistant Professor Leah Platt Boustan, Department of Economics "Escape from the City?: The Role of Political Autonomy and Public Goods in Suburbanization"
|
| 2006-2007 Faculty Fellows | Professor James L. Gelvin, Department of History The United States and the Middle East: A Global Economic Framework
Assistant Professor Abigail C. Saguy, Department of Sociology Reporting on the "Obesity Epidemic": Media Representations of Medical Research
Professor Kirk J. Stark, School of Law Rich States, Poor States: American Federalism and the Politics of Fiscal Equalization
|
| 2005-2006 Faculty Fellows | Associate Professor Jessica Wang, History Knowledge and Policy: Social Science and the Making of the American State
Assistant Professor Greta Krippner, Department of Sociology Finance and Social Conflict in US Society, 1970-2000
Professor Roger Waldinger, Department of Sociology From Foreigners to Nationals: A Comparitive Study of Immigrant Policy
|
| 2004-2005 Faculty Fellows | Professor Rebecca Emigh, Department of Sociology The Politics of US Censuses
Professor Stuart Banner, School of Law How the Indians Lost Their Land: Law, Power, and Everything Between
|
| 2003-2004 Faculty Fellows | Assistant Professor Andrew Sabl, Department of Political Science Racial Classification: A Normative Study
Assistant Professor Matthew Baum, Department of Political Science 2000 Presidential Election and the Entertainment Media
|
| 2002-2003 Faculty Fellows | Assistant Professor Barbara Koremenos, Department of Political Science Is the United States Exceptional? An Empirical Analysis of International Agreements Signed by the United States
Assistant Professor Sandra Black, Department of Economics Understanding College Enrollment Decisions
|
| 2001-2002 Faculty Fellows | Assistant Professor Amy Zegart, Department of Policy Studies Out of the Shadows: The Institutional Obstacles to Intelligence Reform
Assistant Professor Eric Patashnik, Department of Policy Studies After the Public Interest Prevails: The Political Durability of Policy Reform
Assistant Professor Matthew Baum, Department of Political Science The Impact of Domestic Political Incentives on Presidential Decision-Making in International Conflict Situations
|
| 2000-2001 Faculty Fellows | Professors Naomi Lamoreaux and Kenneth Sokoloff, Department of Economics Intellectual Property and the Market for Technology in the United States, 1840-1940: A Long-Term Perspective on the Sources of Inventive Activity
Assistant Professor Michael Stoll, Department of Policy Studies The Effect of Firms' Contact with Welfare-to-Work Agencies on the Hiring, Starting Wages, and Job Tenure of Welfare Recipients
Professor Mark Peterson, Department of Policy Studies A Government of Tangles: Opportunities, Gambles, and Miscalculations in Health Policy Innovation
|
| 1999-2000 Faculty Fellows | Professor Jeff Grogger, Department of Policy Studies Analyzing the Effects of Time Limits on Welfare Utilization and the Age Distribution of Children Receiving Welfare
Assistant Professor J. R. De Shazo, Department of Policy Studies Legislative Control of Public Agencies: An Empirical Analysis of the Endangered Species Act
Professor Peter Baldwin, Department of History The Influence of History and Tradition on Public Health Strategies: The American Response to the AIDS Epidemic in Comparative Perspective
|
| 1998-1999 Faculty Fellows | Assistant Professor Min Zhou, Department of Sociology and Asian American Studies How Community Matters for Immigrant Children? Structural Supports and Constraints in Inner-City Neighborhoods
Assistant Professor Laura F. Edwards, Department of History The Politics of Private Life: Law, Culture, and Power in the 19th Century South
|
| 1997-1998 Faculty Fellows | Professor Vilma Ortiz, Department of Sociology The Mexican American People: A Generation Later
Professor Franklin Gilliam, Department of Political Science The Race Script: Crime and Welfare in the 1990s
|
| 1996-1997 Faculty Fellows | Assistant Professor Hilary Sigman, Department of Economics The Pace of Progress at Superfund Sites
Professor John Petrocik, Department of Political Science Presenting a Speaker Series on the 1996 Elections
Assistant Professor Julia Henly, Department of Social Welfare The Workplace Experiences of Welfare Recipients
|
| 1995-1996 Faculty Fellows | Professor Ellen Carol DuBois, Department of History Votes for Women: Reappraising the Impact
Assistant Professor Andrew R. Dick, Department of Economics Did U.S. Policies Create the High-Technology Trade Deficits?
|
| 1994-1995 Faculty Fellows | Professor Janet Currie, Department of Economics Universal Health Insurance and Child Health: Lessons from Recent Expansions of the Medicaid Program
Professor George Tsebelis, Department of Political Science Congress Begins with "C", not "H": Bicameral Influences on Committee Power
|
| 1993-1994 Faculty Fellows | Professor Kathleen Bawn, Department of Political Science Congressional Choices about Bureaucratic Structure: Political Control vs. Expertise in the Adminstration of the Clean Air Acts
Professors Lynne G. Zucker and Michael R. Darby, Sociology; Anderson School of Management Seminar Series: Science Policy and Technology Transfer in California and the U.S.
|
| 1992-1993 Faculty Fellows | Assistant Professor Simon M. Potter, Department of Economics The Empirical and Policy Significance of Asymmetries in Gasoline Prices
Associate Professor Jeffry A. Frieden, Department of Political Science The Domestic Politics of American Policy Toward International Monetary and Financial Issues
|
| 1990-1991 Faculty Fellows | Assistant Professor Shoshanna Sofaer, School of Public Health Passage and Repeal of the Medicare Catastrophic Coverage Act of 1988: Interest Groups, Political Context and Analysis in the Policy Making Process
Assistant Professor Bruce Chelminsky Fallick, Department of Economics Advance Notification and Quit Behavior
|
| 1989-1990 Faculty Fellows | Professor William G. Gale, Department of Economics Individual Retirement Accounts and National Savings
Assistant Professor Vilma Ortiz, Department of Sociology Poverty Among Puerto Ricans
|
|