Archived News

Archived News

Archived News

Latest News

PhD alumni Carlos Algara's and Jonathan Colner's models correctly forecast Trump taking the electoral college and popular vote

PhD alumni Carlos Algara (Assistant Professor, Claremont Graduate University) and Jonathan Colner (Faculty Fellow, NYU) each co-authored an article as part a PS: Political Science & Politics journal symposium on the 2024 presidential election. Their models were the only ones in the symposium to correctly forecast former President Trump taking both the electoral college and popular vote.

PhD student Menglin (Miley) Liu launches new large language model (LLM) python package

PhD candidate Miley Liu recently launched a python package called PoliPrompt that streamlines the process of text classification using LLMs, addressing some of the key limitations researchers face in this domain. PoliPrompt uses automatic prompt optimization to significantly improve the accuracy and scalability of LLM classification tasks while reducing the manual effort required from researchers. You can find the package on PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/PoliPrompt/

Associate Prof Josephine Andrews and PhD candidate Yu-Shiuan Huang have published their work in Party Politics

Professor Josephine Andrews and PhD candidate Yu-Shiuan Huang have co-authored an article, “Winners, Losers, and Affective Polarization,” in Party Politics. They analyze the winner-loser gap in affective polarization and find that winners’ affective polarization is significantly greater than losers’, and the difference is due to winners’ consistently higher in-party favoritism. https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/13540688241292556

Prof Brandon Kinne and recent PhD Nahrain Bet Younadem publish research on verbal attacks and extremist violence in PNAS Nexus

Professor Brandon Kinne and recent PhD Dr. Nahrain Bet Younadem, along with coauthor Iliyan Iliev, recently published an article in the journal PNAS Nexus examining whether verbal attacks by governments on violent extremist groups deter or exacerbate violence. They find that while verbal attacks seem intended to deter extremists, they are actually often followed by increases in violent attacks. They argue that this pattern is driven by a credibility deficit, as extremists use violence to signal that they have the capabilities and willingness to inflict harm.

Recent PhD Dr. Jonathan Colner publishes on ranked choice voting in the American Journal of Political Science

Jonathan Colner (UCD PhD 2024) recently published some of his dissertation research in the AJPS. Proponents of ranked choice voting (RCV) have argued that it can increase candidate entry, quality, and diversity. Using a pre-registered difference-in-difference design that covers 273 American cities over 30 years, Colner finds that RCV has short-term effects on candidate entry but does not increase quality or increase the proportion of under-represented groups like women and minorities. Other policies may be needed to more fundamentally change the candidate pipeline.

UCD PhD student and undergrad alumni Anya Stewart wins UC IGCC dissertation fellowship

PhD candidate Anya Stewart was named a dissertation fellow by the UC Institute for Global Cooperation and Conflict in 2024-2025. Her dissertation research focuses on the uses and abuses of martial law, a situation in which governments replace local civilian authority with military authority following an explicit declaration by the central government. Anya is also a UC Davis undergraduate alumni - go Aggies! https://ucigcc.org/people/anya-stewart/

Enrico La Viña wins a $15,000 UC IGCC grant to fund his dissertation research

PhD candidate Enrico La Viña was named a dissertation fellow by the UC Institute for Global Cooperation and Conflict in 2024-2025. His dissertation project asks why, despite safeguards like civil society, professional bureaucracies, international organizations, and elections, democratic governments evade repercussions and even profit from state repression. He shows that in situations of democratic backsliding, democratic processes and institutions could, paradoxically, fuel rather than curb state repression.

Andrew Roskos-Ewoldsen wins an APSA Doctoral Dissertation Improvement award

PhD candidate Andrew Roskos-Ewoldsen won a doctoral dissertation research improvement grant (DDRIG) to support his research on reciprocity in international relations. His research project explores the process by and the conditions under which the norm of reciprocity affects security decision-making. https://politicalsciencenow.com/meet-andrew-roskos-ewoldsen-2023-apsa-doctoral-dissertation-research-improvement-grantee/

Associate Prof Lauren Young's articles published in 2023 win three awards

Associate Professor Lauren Young's recently published articles won multiple awards at the American Political Science Association this year. Her article "Repression and dissent in moments of uncertainty", coauthored with Adrienne LeBas and published in 2023 in the APSR, won honorable mention for the best article from the Democracy and Autocracy Section. "Mobilization under threat" won the award for the best article published in Political Behavior in 2023 from the Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior Section of APSA.

Recent PhD Dr. Rizwan Asghar publishes article on nuclear weapons and interstate conflict in CMPS

UCD political science PhD Dr. Rizwan Asghar, currently a postdoctoral fellow at Trinity College Dublin, recently published some of his dissertation research on nuclear weapons and interstate conflict behavior in the journal Conflict Management and Peace Science. Dr. Asghar argues that civil-military relations moderate the effect of nuclear weapons on interstate war.

Professor Tellez wins UC Davis Advising and Mentoring Award

Congratulations to Professor Juan Tellez for receiving the 2024 UC Davis Graduate Program Advising and Mentoring Award, which recognizes faculty providing outstanding service in advising and mentoring at the program level.

Professor Scheiner Shortlisted for Major Book Award

Professor Ethan Scheiner's book Freedom to Win has been nominated and shortlisted for the 43rd Annual Northern California Book Award (NCBA) in General Nonfiction, as one of the best works by a northern California author published in 2023. Professor Scheiner is one of just 5 finalists, along with bestselling author Michael Lewis. Freedom to Win tells the captivating story of how, during the height of the Cold War, politics played out in the hockey rink between the underdog team from Czechoslovakia and the juggernaut team from the Soviet Union.

Ph.D. Student Receives Multiple Awards to Support Research

Congratulations to Ph.D. candidate Alice Malmberg who has received multiple awards to support her current research project examining whether Americans engage in geographic sorting in response to state-level culture-war policies, including a grant from the Institute for Humane Studies and exclusive survey access from the Civic Health and Institutions Project (CHIP50). In September she will also be attending Cornell's Thought Summit on the Future of Survey Science as one of five graduate students funded to attend. And if that wasn't enough, she has also been named an Early Career Fellow for the Elections, Public Opinion, and Voting Behavior Section of the American Political Science Association.