Religion and Politics Section Award Recipients
More on the Religion and Politics section
Aaron Wildavsky Dissertation Award
Weber Best Conference Paper Award
Hubert Morken Best Book Award
Politics and Religion Distinguished Reviewer Award
Kenneth D. Wald Best Graduate Student Paper Award
Ted G. Jelen Best Article Award
Susanne Hoeber Rudolph Outstanding Scholar
Aaron Wildavsky Dissertation Award
The Aaron Wildavsky Award recognizes the best dissertation on religion and politics successfully defended within the last two years.
| 2023 | Amy Lakeman, Harvard University |
| 2022 | Jessica Soedirgo, University of Amsterdam |
| 2021 | Alexandra Blackman, Cornell University “The Politicization of Faith: Settler Colonialism, Education, and Political Identity in Tunisia.” |
| 2021 | Alon Burstein, Hebrew University of Jerusalem “Terrorizing God’s Enemies: The Influence of Religion on Terror Group Activity.” |
| 2020 | Guadalupe Tuñon, University of California, Berkeley “When the Church Votes Left: The Electoral Consequences of Progressive Religion” |
| 2020 | Honorable Mention Alexandre Paquin-Pelletier, University of Toronto |
| 2019 | Jason Klocek, University of California, Berkeley “The Cult of Coercion: Religion and Strategic Culture in British Counterinsurgency.” |
| 2018 | Michael Hoffman, University of Notre Dame “Communal Religion, Sectarian Interests, and Democracy.” |
| 2017 | Robert Braun, Northwestern University “Religious Minorities and Resistance to Genocide: Christian Protection of Jews in the Low Countries During the Holocaust.” |
| 2016 | Shoaib A. Ghias, University of California, Berkeley “Defining Shari’a: The Politics of Islamic Judicial Review.” |
| 2016 | Honorable Mention Alicia D. Forster, University of Florida “American Political Behavior and the Role of Religious Context.” |
| 2016 | Honorable Mention Jonathan S. Blake, Columbia University “Ritual Contention in Divided Societies: Participation in Loyalist Parades in Northern Ireland.” |
| 2015 | Michele Margolis, University of Pennsylvania “The Intersection of Religion and Politics: A Two-Way Street.” Massachusetts Institute of Technology 2014 |
| 2014 | Christopher Hale, Northern Arizona University “Religion and Political Activism.” |
| 2013 | Michael Robbins, University of Michigan Bound by Brand: Opposition Party Support under Electoral Authoritarianism |
| 2013 | Honorable Mention Jeremy Menchik, Boston University Tolerance Without Liberalism: Islamic Institutions and Political Violence in Twentieth Century Indonesia |
| 2012 | Toby Matthiesen, University of Cambridge The Shia of Saudi Arabia: Identity Politics, Sectarianism and the Saudi State (Completed at University of London, SOAS; advised by Professor Charles Tripp) |
| 2011 | Brandon Kendhammer, Ohio University “Muslims Talking Politics: Framing Islam and Democracy in Northern Nigeria” |
| 2011 | Samuel Goldman, Harvard University “The Shadow of God: Strauss, Jacobi, and the theology-Political Problem” |
| 2010 | Karrie Koesel, University of Oregon Belief in Authoritarianism, Religious Revivials, and the Local State in Russia and China |
| 2009 | Tarek Masoud, Harvard University Why Islam Wins: Electoral Ecologies and Economies of Political Islam in Contemporary Egypt |
| 2008 | Yuksel Sezgin, University of Washington “The States Response to Legal Pluralism: The Case of Religious Law and Courts in Israel, Egypt and India” |
| 2007 | Ahmet Kuru, San Diego State University Dynamics of Secularism: State-Religion Relations in the United States, France, and Turkey |
| 2006 | Andrew March, University of Oxford “Islamic Doctrines of Citizenship in Liberal Democracies: The Search for an Overlapping Consensus” |
| 2006 | Gregory Smith, University of Virginia “Political Parishes: The Influence of Priests on the Voting Behavior and Political Attitudes of American Catholics” |
| 2004 | Carla Valle, Harvard University “Roman Catholicism in Post-War Italy: How Social Organizations React to Political Change,” Harvard University, 2003 |
| 2003 | Timothy Shah, Harvard University “A Horror of Discord: Radical Pluralism and the Invention of Liberalism in the Early Writings of Hugo Grotius” |
| 2002 | Elora Shehabuddin, Rice University “Encounters with the State: Gender and Islam in Rural Bangladesh” |
| 2001 | Nandita Aras, Columbia University “The Social Bases of Hindu Nationalism and Hindu Nationalist Parties” |
| 2001 | David Campbell, Harvard University “Acts of Faith: Strict Churches and Political Mobilization” |
| 2000 | Peter VonDoepp, Pepperdine University “Presbyterians, Catholics, and Grassroots Politics: Local Churches in Malawi's Post-Authoritarian Era” |
| 1999 | Nathalie Gagnere, University of Oklahoma “The Catholic Church and the Rebirth of Civil Society: Elite Convergence, Mobilization, and Civil Society” |
| 1998 | Andrew Murphy, University of Wisconsin “Conscience and Community: Revisiting Toleration and Dissent in Early Modern England and America” |
| 1997 | Carrie Wickham, Princeton University “Political Mobilization under Authoritarian Rule: Explaining Islamic Activity in Mubarek's Egypt” |
| 1996 | Geoffrey Layman, Vanderbilt University “Parties and Culture Wars: Conflict in the American Party System” |
| 1995 | Thomas Rourke, Texas Tech |
Weber Best Conference Paper Award
The Best Paper Award recognizes the best paper dealing with religion and politics presented at the previous years APSA Annual Meeting
| 2023 | Feyaad Allie, Stanford University “The Representation Trap: How and Why Muslims Struggle to Maintain Power in India” |
| 2023 | Honorable Mention Rajeshwari Majumdar, New York University “Reducing Prejudice and Support for Religious Nationalism Through Conversations on WhatsApp” |
| 2023 | Honorable Mention Richard Bonneau, New York University “Reducing Prejudice and Support for Religious Nationalism Through Conversations on WhatsApp” |
| 2023 | Honorable Mention Jonathan Nagler, New York University “Reducing Prejudice and Support for Religious Nationalism Through Conversations on WhatsApp” |
| 2023 | Honorable Mention Joshua A. Tucker, New York University “Reducing Prejudice and Support for Religious Nationalism Through Conversations on WhatsApp” |
| 2022 | Ahmed Ezzeldin Mohamed, Stanford University “Religious Cycles of Government Responsiveness: Why Governments Distribute in Ramadan,” Presented at the 2021 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2021 | Tugba Bozcaga, Massachusetts Institute of Technology “Imams and Businessmen: Islamist Service Provision in Turkey.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2021 | Fotini Christia, Massachusetts Institute of Technology “Imams and Businessmen: Islamist Service Provision in Turkey.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2021 | Kikue Hamayotsu, Northern Illinois University “The Political Origins of Religious Regime Formation in Southeast Asia.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2020 | Steven Brooke, University of Wisconsin “Populist Violence and Social Resistance: The Filipino Catholic Church and the Drug War.” Conference Paper presented in 2019 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2020 | David Buckley, University of Louisville “Populist Violence and Social Resistance: The Filipino Catholic Church and the Drug War.” Conference Paper presented in 2019 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2020 | Clarissa David, Ateneo School of Government “Populist Violence and Social Resistance: The Filipino Catholic Church and the Drug War.” Conference Paper presented in 2019 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2020 | Ronald Mendoza, Ateneo School of Government “Populist Violence and Social Resistance: The Filipino Catholic Church and the Drug War.” Conference Paper presented in 2019 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2019 | Carrie Lee, United States Air War College “Race, Religion, and American Support for Humanitarian Intervention.” Presented at the American Political Science Annual Meeting, 2018. |
| 2019 | Jonathan Chu, University of Pennsylvania “Race, Religion, and American Support for Humanitarian Intervention.” Presented at the American Political Science Annual Meeting, 2018. |
| 2018 | Paul Djupe, Denison University “Are the Politics of the Christian Right Linked to States of the Non-Religious?” |
| 2018 | Jacob Neiheisel, University at Buffalo “Are the Politics of the Christian Right Linked to States of the Non-Religious?” |
| 2018 | Kimberly Conger, University of Cincinnati “Are the Politics of the Christian Right Linked to States of the Non-Religious?” |
| 2016 | Sultan Tepe, University of Illinois, Chicago “The Elusive Structure of State Secularism and its Disguised Critics.” |
| 2015 | Jason A. Klocek, University of California, Berkeley “Band of Believers?: The Influence of Religion on Rebel Group Structure” |
| 2014 | Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, Northwestern University “The Religious Offensive’: The Politics of Religious Engagement.” |
| 2014 | Frank-Borge Wietzke, London School of Economics “One Nation, Two Histories: Long-Term Consequences of Colonial Institutions and Missionary Work in Madagaskar.” |
| 2012 | Ramazan Kilinc, University of Nebraska-Omaha Opportunity Junctures as Catalysts: Islam, Secularism and Democratic Consolidation in Turkey |
| 2011 | Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University “How Does Islamist Local Governance Affect the Lives of Women?: A Comparative Study of Two Cairo Neighborhoods” |
| 2009 | Kerem Kalkan, University of Maryland Will Americans Vote for Muslims? The Impact of Religious and Ethnic Identifiers on Support for Political Candidates |
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