European Politics and Society Section Award Recipients
More on the European Politics and Society section
Best Article Award
Best Book Award
Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award
Best Paper Award
Peter Mair Award
This award is given for the best article dealing with European Politics & Society published in the last year.
| 2023 | Ben Ansell, University of Oxford “Sheltering Populists? House Prices and the Support for Populist Parties.” Journal of Politics, 2022. |
| 2023 | Frederik Hjorth, University of Copenhagen “Sheltering Populists? House Prices and the Support for Populist Parties.” Journal of Politics, 2022. |
| 2023 | Jacob Nyrup, University of Oslo “Sheltering Populists? House Prices and the Support for Populist Parties.” Journal of Politics, 2022. |
| 2023 | Martin Vinaes Larsen, Aarhus University “Sheltering Populists? House Prices and the Support for Populist Parties.” Journal of Politics, 2022. |
| 2022 | Florian Foos, London School of Economics “Tabloid media campaigns and public opinion: Quasi-experimental evidence on Euroscepticism in England ,” American Political Science Review, 2022. |
| 2022 | Daniel Bischof, Aarhus University “Tabloid media campaigns and public opinion: Quasi-experimental evidence on Euroscepticism in England ,” American Political Science Review, 2022. |
| 2022 | Honorable Mention Lukas Haffert, University of Zurich “The Long-Term Effects of Oppression: Prussia, Political Catholicism, and the Alternative für Deutschland,” American Political Science Review, 2022. |
| 2021 | Nan Zhang, Max Planck Institute of Collective Goods “Literacy and State–Society Interactions in Nineteenth-Century France.” American Journal of Political Science, 64(6) 1001–1016. |
| 2021 | Melissa Lee, Princeton University “Literacy and State–Society Interactions in Nineteenth-Century France.” American Journal of Political Science, 64(6) 1001–1016. |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention Carles Boix, Princeton University, IPERG-UB “From Political Mobilization to Electoral Participation: Turnout in Barcelona in the 1930s.” Journal of Politics 82(4). |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention Jordi Muñoz, University of Barcelona, IPERG-UB “From Political Mobilization to Electoral Participation: Turnout in Barcelona in the 1930s.” Journal of Politics 82(4). |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention Toni Rodon, Universitat Pompeu Fabra “From Political Mobilization to Electoral Participation: Turnout in Barcelona in the 1930s.” Journal of Politics 82(4). |
| 2020 | Rahsaan Maxwell, University of North Carolina Cosmopolitan Immigration Attitudes in Large European Cities: Contextual or Compositional Effects. American Review of Political Science. |
| 2019 | Melissa Carlson, University of California, Berkeley “Rumors and Refugees: How Government-Created Information Vacuums Undermine Effective Crisis Management.” International Studies Quarterly 62(3): 671-685. |
| 2019 | Laura Jakli, University of California, Berkeley “Rumors and Refugees: How Government-Created Information Vacuums Undermine Effective Crisis Management.” International Studies Quarterly 62(3): 671-685. |
| 2019 | Katerina Linos, University of California, Berkeley “Rumors and Refugees: How Government-Created Information Vacuums Undermine Effective Crisis Management.” International Studies Quarterly 62(3): 671-685. |
| 2019 | Honorable Mention Paul Castañeda Dower, University of Wisconsin-Madison |
| 2019 | Honorable Mention Evgeny Finkel, Johns Hopkins University “Collective Action and Representation in Autocracies: Evidence from Russia’s Great Reforms.” American Political Science Review 112(1): 125-147. |
| 2019 | Honorable Mention Scott Gehlbach, University of Chicago “Collective Action and Representation in Autocracies: Evidence from Russia’s Great Reforms.” American Political Science Review 112(1): 125-147. |
| 2019 | Honorable Mention Steven Nafziger, Williams College “Collective Action and Representation in Autocracies: Evidence from Russia’s Great Reforms.” American Political Science Review 112(1): 125-147. |
| 2018 | Christopher Wratil, Harvard University “Government Responsiveness in the European Union: Evidence from Council Voting.” Comparative Political Studies 50(6): 850–876. |
| 2018 | Sara B. Hobolt, London School of Economics “Government Responsiveness in the European Union: Evidence from Council Voting.” Comparative Political Studies 50(6): 850–876. |
| 2018 | Sara Hagemann, London School of Economics “Government Responsiveness in the European Union: Evidence from Council Voting.” Comparative Political Studies 50(6): 850–876. |
| 2017 | Lisa Blaydes, Stanford University “The Impact of Holy Land Crusades on State Formation: War Mobilization, Trade Integration, and Political Development in Medieval Europe.” International Organization 70(3). |
| 2017 | Christopher Paik, NYU Abu Dhabi “The Impact of Holy Land Crusades on State Formation: War Mobilization, Trade Integration, and Political Development in Medieval Europe.” International Organization 70(3). |
| 2017 | Robert Braun, Northwestern University “Religious Minorities and Resistacne to Genocide: The Collective Rescue of Jews in the Netherlands during the Holocaust” American Political Science Review 110(1). |
| 2016 | Evgeny Finkel, George Washington University “Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence from Russia’s Emancipation of the Serfs,” Comparative Political Studies, 2015, Vol. 48 (8), 984–1019. |
| 2016 | Scott Gehlbach, University of Wisconsin-Madison “Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence from Russia’s Emancipation of the Serfs,” Comparative Political Studies, 2015, Vol. 48 (8), 984–1019. |
| 2016 | Tricia D. Olsen, University of Denver “Does Reform Prevent Rebellion? Evidence from Russia’s Emancipation of the Serfs,” Comparative Political Studies, 2015, Vol. 48 (8), 984–1019. |
| 2015 | Lenka Bustikova, Arizona State University “Revenge of the Radical Right” Comparative Political Studies 47:12 October 2014 pp.1738-1765 |
| 2014 | Rafaela Dancygier, Princeton University Sectorial Economics, Economics Contexts, and Attitudes Toward Immigration (The Journal of Politics 75(1), January 2013, pp.17-35) |
| 2014 | Michael Donnelly, European University Institute Sectorial Economics, Economics Contexts, and Attitudes Toward Immigration (The Journal of Politics 75(1), January 2013, pp.17-35) |
| 2013 | Sara Goodman, University of California, Irvine Fortifying Citizenship: Policy Strategies for Civic Integration in Western Europe (World Politics, 64(4), 2012, pp. 659-698) |
The Best Book Award is given for the best book on European Politics and society published in the previous year
| 2023 | Tommaso Pavone, University of Arizona |
| 2023 | Isabela Mares, Yale University Protecting the Ballot: How First-Wave Democracies Ended Electoral Corruption. Princeton University Press, 2022. |
| 2022 | David Fortunato, University of California, San Diego The Cycle of Coalition: How Parties and Voters Interact under Coalition Governance, Cambridge University Press, 2021. |
| 2022 | Honorable Mention Deborah Boucoyannis, George Washington University Kings as Judges: Power, Justice and the Origins of Parliaments, Cambridge University Press, 2021. |
| 2021 | Isabela Mares, Yale University Conditionality and Coercion: Electoral Clientelism in Eastern Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2019. |
| 2021 | Lauren Young, University of California, Davis Conditionality and Coercion: Electoral Clientelism in Eastern Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2019. |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention Stefanie Walter, University of Zurich The Politics of Bad Options: Why the Eurozone's Problems Have Been So Hard to Resolve. Oxford University Press, 2020. |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention Ari Ray, European University Institute The Politics of Bad Options: Why the Eurozone's Problems Have Been So Hard to Resolve. Oxford University Press, 2020. |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention Nils Redeker, University of Zurich The Politics of Bad Options: Why the Eurozone's Problems Have Been So Hard to Resolve. Oxford University Press, 2020. |
| 2020 | Co-Winner |
| 2020 | Co-Winner |
| 2019 | Jennifer Fitzgerald, University of Colorado Boulder Close to Home: Local Ties and Voting Radical Right in Europe. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018. |
| 2019 | Honorable Mention Zsofia Barta, The State University of New York at Albany In the Red: The Politics of Public Debt Accumulation in Developed Countries. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2018. |
| 2018 | Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University “Conservative Parties and the Birth of Democracy.” Cambridge University Press, 2017. |
| 2017 | Zeynep Bulutgil, Tufts University The Roots of Ethnic Cleansing in Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2016. |
| 2016 | Anna Grzymala-Busse, University of Michigan Nations under God: How Churches Use Moral Authority to Influence Policy. Princeton University Press, 2015 |
| 2015 | Kathleen Thelen, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Varieties of Liberalization and the New Politics of Social Solidarity. Cambridge University Press, 2014 |
| 2015 | Sara Goodman, University of California, Irvine Immigration and Membership Politics in Western Europe. Cambridge University Press, 2014 |
| 2014 | Amel Ahmed, University of Massachusetts, Amherst Democracy and the Politics of Electoral System Choice (Cambridge University Press) |
| 2013 | Pablo Beramendi, Duke University The Political Geography of Inequality: Regions and Redistribution (Cambridge University Press, 2012) |
| 2012 | David Stasavage, New York University States of Credit: Size, Power, and the Development of European Politics (Princeton University Press, 2011) |
| 2010 | Grigore Pop-Eleches, Princeton University From Economic Crisis to Reform: IMF Programs in Latin America and Eastern Europe |
| 2010 | Mareike Kleine, London School of Economics All Roads Lead Away From Rome. A Liberal Theory of International Regimes |
| 2009 | Raymond Duch, University of Oxford The Economic Vote (Cambridge University Press 2008) |
| 2007 | Julia Lynch, University of Pennsylvania Age in the Welfare State: The Origins of Social Spending on Pensioners, Workers, and Children |
| 2007 | Daniel Ziblatt, Harvard University Structuring the State: The Formation of Italy and Germany and the Puzzle of Federalism |
| 2006 | Giovanni Capoccia, University of Oxford Defending Democracy: Reactions to Extremism in Interwar Europe (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005) |
| 2006 | Torben Iversen, Harvard University Capitalism, Democracy, and Welfare (Cambridge University Press, 2005) |
| 2005 | Chip Gagnon, Ithaca College The Myth of Ethnic War: Serbia and Croatia in the 1990s. (Cornell University Press, 2004). |
| 2004 | Marc Howard, Georgetown University The Weakness of Civil Society in Post-Communist Europe (Cambridge University Press, 2003) |
| 2004 | Honorable Mention Isabela Mares, Stanford University “The Politics of Social Risk” (Cambridge University Press, 2003) |
| 2004 | Honorable Mention Margaret Kohn, University of Florida, Gainesville “Radical Space” (Cornell University Press, 2003) |
| 2003 | Mark Beissinger, University of Wisconsin-Madison Nationalist Mobilization and the Collapse of Soviet State (Cambridge University Press, 2002) |
| 2001 | Stefano Bartolini The Political Mobilization of the European Left, 1860-1980: The Class Cleavage (Cambridge University Press 2000) |
Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award
The Ernst B. Haas Best Dissertation Award is given for the best dissertation on European Politics and Society filed during the previous year.
| 2023 | Tine Paulsen, University of Southern California “Building States and Parties: The Causes and Consequences of Local Electoral Reforms.” New York University, 2022. |
| 2023 | Honorable Mention Nina Obermeier, University of Pennsylvania “The New Internationalists: How the Populist Radical Right drives support for International Economic Integration.” Cornell University, 2022. |
| 2022 | Sivaram Cheruvu, University of Texas at Dallas “Courts, Constraints, and Public Opinion in Europe,” Emory University, 2021. |
| 2021 | Laura Jakli, University of California, Berkeley “Estimating Extremism: New Measures of Extreme Party Preferences and Issue Positions?” |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention Diane Bolet, London School of Economics “’All Politics is Local’: How Local Context Explains Radical Right Voting.” |
| 2021 | Honorable Mention Jan P. Vogler, University of Virginia “The Political Economy of Public Bureaucracy: The Emergence of Modern Administrative Organizations.” |
| 2020 | Maayan Mor, University of Wisconsin “Rethinking the Origins of Electoral Cleavages: How States Create Cleavages Through Policies?” |
| 2020 | Honorable Mention Tommaso Pavone, Princeton University “The Ghostwriters: Lawyers and the Politics Behind the Judicial Construction of Europe” |
| 2019 | Andreas Wiedemann, Princeton University “Indebted Societies: Modern Labor Markets, Social Policy, and Everyday Borrowing.” PhD diss., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. |
| 2019 | Honorable Mention Martijn Mos, University of Leiden “Normative Ties That Bind? Contesting National and Sexual Minority Rights in a Post-Enlargement Europe.” |
| 2019 | Honorable Mention Elsa Massoc, Goethe University Frankfurt “Banking on States? The Divergent Trajectories of European Finance after the Crisis.” PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley. |
| 2018 | Volha Charnysh, Massachusetts Institute of Technology “Migration, Diversity and Economic Development: Post-WWII Displacement in Poland.” |
| 2018 | Honorable Mention Marie De Somer, European Policy Center T“Autonomy from Precedent: A Longitudinal Analysis of the EU Court of Justice’s Case Law on Family Reunification Immigration.” |
| 2017 | Robert Braun, Northwestern University “Religious Minorities and Resistance to Genocide: Christian Protection of Jews In The Low Countries During The Holocaust” Cornell University, 2016. |
| 2017 | Honorable Mention Osman Balkan, Swarthmore College Death on The Move: Burial, Repatriation, and The Politics of Belonging Among Muslims in Germany” University of Pennsylvania, 2016. |
| 2016 | Dawn Langan Teele, University of Pennsylvania “The logic of women's enfranchisement: A comparative study of the United States, France, and the United Kingdom” Yale University, 2015 |
| 2015 | Scott F. Abramson, Princeton University “The Economic Origins of the Territorial State.” |
| 2014 | Amanda Garrett, Harvard University “When Cities Fight Back” |
| 2013 | MaryBeth Altier, Pennsylvania State University “Voting for Violence” |
| 2012 | Jordan Gans-Morse, Northwestern University Building Property Rights: Capitalists and the Demand for Law in Post-Soviet Russia (Completed at the University of California, Berkeley; advised by John Zysman) |
| 2011 | Quinton Mayne, Princeton University “The Satisfied Citizen: Participation, Influence, and Public Perception of Democratic Performance” |
| 2009 | Timo Weishaupt, University of Wisconsin, Madison “The Emergence of a New Labor Market Policy Paradigm? Analyzing Continuity and Change in an Integrating Europe” |
| 2006 | Deborah Boucoyannis, Harvard University “Land, Courts, and Parliaments: The Hidden Sinews of Power in the Emergence of Constitutionalism” |
| 2005 | Uwe Puetter, Central European University “The Eurogroup as a Forum for Informal Deliberation Among Ministers,” defended at Queens University, Belfast |
| 2004 | Conor O'Dwyer, University of California, Berkeley “Runaway State-Building: How Parties Shape States in Post-Communist Eastern Europe,” 2003 |
| 2004 | Honorable Mention Riccardo Pelizzo, Johns Hopkins University “Cartel Parties and Cartel Party Systems” |
| 2004 | Honorable Mention Gail McElroy, University of Rochester “In Pursuit of Party Discipline: Committees and Cohesion in the European Parliament” |
| 2003 | Daniel Ziblatt, University of California, Berkeley “Constructing a Federal State: Poitical Development, Path Dependence, and the Origins of Federalism in Modern Europe, 1815-1871” |
The Best Paper Award is given for the best paper presented at a panel sponsored by the section at the most recent meeting
| 2023 | Rafael Di Tella, Harvard University “Keep your Enemies Closer: Strategic Candidate Adjustments in U.S. and French Elections.” |
| 2023 | Randy Kotti, Harvard University “Keep your Enemies Closer: Strategic Candidate Adjustments in U.S. and French Elections.” |
| 2023 | Caroline Le Pennec, HEC Montreal “Keep your Enemies Closer: Strategic Candidate Adjustments in U.S. and French Elections.” |
| 2023 | Vincent Pons, Harvard University “Keep your Enemies Closer: Strategic Candidate Adjustments in U.S. and French Elections.” |
| 2023 | Hans Lueders, Princeton University |
| 2022 | Anil Menon, University of Michigan “The Political Legacy of Forced Migration: Evidence from Post-WWII Germany,” APSA, 2021 |
| 2022 | Alexander Wuttke, University of Mannheim “Making the Case for Democracy,” APSA, 2021 |
| 2022 | Florian Foos, London School of Economics “Making the Case for Democracy,” APSA, 2021 |
| 2021 | Donghyun Danny Choi, University of Pittsburgh “The Hijab Penalty: Feminist Backlash to Muslim Immigrants.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2021 | Mathias Poertner, University of Texas A&M “The Hijab Penalty: Feminist Backlash to Muslim Immigrants.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2021 | Nicholas Sambanis, University of Pennsylvania “The Hijab Penalty: Feminist Backlash to Muslim Immigrants.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
| 2021 | Gemma Dipoppa, University of Pennsylvania “How Criminal Organizations Expand to Strong States: Migrant Exploitation and Political Brokerage in Northern Italy.” Presented at the 2020 APSA Annual Meeting. |
