Nolan McCarty

Last updated
McCarty, Nolan; Lee, Frances, eds. (2019). Can America Govern Itself?. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN   978-1-108-49729-9.
  • (2016). Polarization: What Everyone Needs to Know. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN   978-0-19-086777-5.
  • Selected publications

    • The Ideological Mapping of American Legislatures (with Boris Shor) (American Political Science Review 105(3): 530–551, 2011)
    • Political Fortunes: On Finance and Its Regulation (with Keith Poole, Thomas Romer and Howard Rosenthal) (Daedalus 139(4): 61–73, 2010)
    • Does Gerrymandering Cause Polarization? (with Keith Poole and Howard Rosenthal) (American Journal of Political Science 53(3): 666–680, 2009)
    • Presidential Vetoes in the Early Republic: Changing Constitutional Norms or Electoral Reform (Journal of Politics 71(2): 369–384, 2009)
    • Bureaucratic Capacity, Delegation, and Political Reform (with John Huber) (American Political Science Review 98(3): 481–494, 2004)
    • The Hunt for Party Discipline (with Keith Poole and Howard Rosenthal (American Political Science Review 95(3): 673–687, 2001)
    • The Politics of Blame: Bargaining before an Audience (with Timothy Groseclose) (American Journal of Political Science 45(1): 100–119, 2000)
    • Advice and Consent: Senate Response to Executive Branch Nominations, 1885–1996 (with Rose Razaghian (American Journal of Political Science 43(3): 1122–43, 1999)

    Related Research Articles

    Political polarization is the divergence of political attitudes away from the center, towards ideological extremes.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Walzer</span> American philosopher (born 1935)

    Michael Laban Walzer is an American political theorist and public intellectual. A professor emeritus at the Institute for Advanced Study (IAS) in Princeton, New Jersey, he is editor emeritus of Dissent, an intellectual magazine that he has been affiliated with since his years as an undergraduate at Brandeis University. He has written books and essays on a wide range of topics—many in political ethics—including just and unjust wars, nationalism, ethnicity, Zionism, economic justice, social criticism, radicalism, tolerance, and political obligation. He is also a contributing editor to The New Republic. To date, he has written 27 books and published over 300 articles, essays, and book reviews in Dissent, The New Republic, The New York Review of Books, The New Yorker, The New York Times, Harpers, and many philosophical and political science journals.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Angus Deaton</span> British-American economist (born 1945)

    Sir Angus Stewart Deaton is a British-American economist and academic. Deaton is currently a Senior Scholar and the Dwight D. Eisenhower Professor of Economics and International Affairs Emeritus at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs and the Economics Department at Princeton University. His research focuses primarily on poverty, inequality, health, wellbeing, and economic development.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Keohane</span> American academic

    Robert Owen Keohane is an American academic working within the fields of international relations and international political economy. Following the publication of his influential book After Hegemony (1984), he has become widely associated with the theory of neoliberal institutionalism in international relations, as well as transnational relations and world politics in international relations in the 1970s.

    John Waterbury is an American academic and former president of the American University of Beirut.

    Robert Hinrichs Bates is an American political scientist specializing in comparative politics. He is Eaton Professor of the Science of Government in the Departments of Government and African and African American Studies at Harvard University. From 2000–2012, he served as Professeur associé, School of Economics, University of Toulouse.

    Public Opinion Quarterly is a peer-reviewed academic journal published by Oxford University Press for the American Association for Public Opinion Research, covering communication studies, political science, current public opinion, and survey research and methodology. It was established in 1937 and according to the Journal Citation Reports, the journal has a 2022 impact factor of 3.4.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Keith Dowding</span> British political scientist

    Keith Martin Dowding is Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Political Philosophy, School of Politics and International Relations, Research School of Social Sciences at the Australian National University, Canberra, Australia. He was in the Government Department at the London School of Economics, UK in 2006, and has published widely in the fields of public choice, public administration, public policy, British politics, comparative politics, urban political economy, positive political theory and normative political philosophy. His work is informed by social and rational choice theories. He edited the SAGE Publishing Journal of Theoretical Politics from 1996 to 2012.

    Sophie Meunier is a senior research scholar in Public and International Affairs at Princeton University's School of Public and International Affairs. She is the Director of Princeton's Program in Contemporary European Politics and Society and the Co-director of the European Union Program at Princeton, which she founded with Andrew Moravcsik. She also served as Acting Director of the Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination at Princeton (2023-2024). She was elected Chair of the European Union Studies Association, the world's premier scholarly association for the study of the European Union and the process of European integration (2023-2024). A Franco-American political scientist, she is an expert in European integration, the politics of European trade and investment policy, and the politics of anti-Americanism. Meunier is a faculty fellow in Yeh College at Princeton University.

    Kenneth P. Miller is a professor of Government at Claremont McKenna College, specializing in state politics, policy, and law. Miller is the Director of the Rose Institute of State and Local Government, a research institute known for its expertise in redistricting, elections, demographic research, polling, and public policy analysis. He has written extensively on state politics and policy, direct democracy, constitutional law, courts, and political polarization.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">NOMINATE (scaling method)</span>

    NOMINATE is a multidimensional scaling application developed by US political scientists Keith T. Poole and Howard Rosenthal in the early 1980s to analyze preferential and choice data, such as legislative roll-call voting behavior. In its most well-known application, members of the US Congress are placed on a two-dimensional map, with politicians who are ideologically similar being close together. One of these two dimensions corresponds to the familiar left–right political spectrum.

    The term issue voting describes when voters cast their vote in elections based on political issues. In the context of an election, issues include "any questions of public policy which have been or are a matter of controversy and are sources of disagreement between political parties.” According to the theory of issue voting, voters compare the candidates' respective principles against their own in order to decide for whom to vote.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Jane Mansbridge</span> American political scientist

    Jane Jebb Mansbridge is an American political scientist. She is the Charles F. Adams Professor of Political Leadership and Democratic Values in the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

    Partisan sorting is an effect in politics in which voters sort themselves into parties that match their ideology. Partisan sorting is distinct from political polarization, which is where partisans subscribe to increasingly extreme positions. As political scientist Nolan McCarty explains, "party sorting can account for the increased differences across partisans even if the distribution of...attitudes in the population remains unchanged or moves uniformly in one direction or the other." As an example given by McCarty, the gap between the Democratic Party and Republican Party on views towards immigrants strengthening the country with hard work and talents has widened from a 2-point gap in 1994 to a 42-point gap in 2017. A reasonable explanation is that of partisan sorting: those who are pro-immigrant shifted into the Democratic party and immigration-restrictions have shifted towards the Republican party. According to McCarty, this explains the widening gap between the two parties, considering how pro-immigration viewpoints between the two surveys have increased by 35% since 1994.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Howard Rosenthal (political scientist)</span> American political scientist (1939–2022)

    Howard Lewis Rosenthal was an American political scientist who was professor of politics at New York University. He also taught at Carnegie-Mellon University and Princeton University, where he was the Roger Williams Straus professor of social sciences.

    Jennifer Lucy Hochschild is an American political scientist. She serves as the Henry LaBarre Jayne Professor of Government, Professor of African and African American Studies and Harvard College Professor at Harvard University. She is also a member of the faculty at Harvard's Graduate School of Education and John F. Kennedy School of Government.

    Frances E. Lee, an American political scientist, is currently a professor of politics and public affairs at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. She previously taught at Case Western Reserve University and the University of Maryland, College Park. Lee specializes in American politics focusing on the U.S. Congress. From 2014 to 2019, Lee was co-editor of Legislative Studies Quarterly and is the first editor of Cambridge University Press's American Politics Elements Series. Her 2009 book Beyond Ideology has been cited over 600 times in the political science literature. Lee is also a co-author of the seminal textbook Congress and Its Members, currently in its eighteenth edition.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Keith T. Poole</span> American political scientist

    Keith T. Poole is an American political scientist and the Philip H. Alston Jr. Distinguished Professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Georgia. He has compiled and maintained datasets related to the United States Congress for forty years, and he has made them available on his website, Voteview, since 1995. Poole originally developed Voteview as a DOS program with Howard Rosenthal at Carnegie-Mellon University from 1989 to 1992. He also worked with Rosenthal on the development of the NOMINATE multidimensional scaling method to assess the voting behavior of members of Congress along a given dimension. He was inducted into the American Academy of Arts & Sciences in 2006. In 2016, he received the Society for Political Methodology's Career Achievement Award, and in 2018, the journal Public Choice published a special issue in his honor.

    <span class="mw-page-title-main">Political polarization in the United States</span> Divisions among people with different political ideologies in the United States

    Political polarization is a prominent component of politics in the United States. Scholars distinguish between ideological polarization and affective polarization, both of which are apparent in the United States. In the last few decades, the U.S. has experienced a greater surge in ideological polarization and affective polarization than comparable democracies.

    Keith E. Whittington is an American political scientist. He has been the William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Politics at Princeton University since 2006. In July 2024, he will join the Yale Law School faculty. Whittington's research focuses on American constitutionalism, American political and constitutional history, judicial politics, the presidency, and free speech and the law.

    References

    1. 1 2 3 Saxon, Jamie (September 5, 2018). "#TellUsTigers Q&A: Nolan McCarty". Princeton University. Retrieved February 8, 2024.
    2. "Junior highs' best students are recognized". The Odessa American . July 17, 1983. p. 74.
    3. "ECISD students receive awards". The Odessa American . June 15, 1986. p. 69.
    4. "Nolan McCarty graduates first in Odessa High School". The Odessa American . June 8, 1986. p. 73.
    5. "'If I were president...'". The Odessa American . May 21, 1984. p. 25.
    6. 1 2 3 Curriculum Vitae Princeton University. Retrieved February 8, 2024.
    7. 1 2 "Nolan McCarty". Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. Retrieved February 8, 2024.
    8. 1 2 "Nolan McCarty". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. February 6, 2024. Retrieved February 8, 2024.
    9. "Changes approved to Woodrow Wilson School undergraduate program". Princeton University. April 21, 2011. Retrieved February 8, 2024.
    10. "Helen Marie (Thomas) Davis". The Odessa American . October 23, 2016. pp. B3.
    Nolan Matthew McCarty
    BornDecember 10, 1967
    Occupation(s)Author, academic, professor
    Academic background
    Alma mater University of Chicago (BA)
    Carnegie Mellon University (MS, PhD)