User ID Password  
New user? Forgot password or login?

 
Join APSA
Donate
Donate
Donate

Small Research Grant
Past Recipients
2006 Small Research Grant Recipients
2005 SRG Recipients
2004 SRG Recipients
2003 SRG Recipients
2002 SRG Recipients
2001 SRG Recipients
2000 SRG Recipients
2007 Small Research Grant Recipients
 
 

home › Programs  › Small Research Grant 

2003 SRG Recipients
Small Research Grant

Printer-friendly format

Peter Burns, Loyola University of New Orleans, "State Government, Urban Regimes, and the Politics behind State Takeovers of Urban Education"

Anne Marie Choup, Mills College, "The Dynamics of Social Identities within Civic Associations: An Opportunity for Democracy"

Terry Clark, Creighton University, "Presidentialism and the Effect of Electoral Law: Regime Type Matters"

Kevin C. Dunn, Hobert and William Smith Colleges, "Human Security, Develpoment and the National Parks of Uganda and Rwanda"

Cora Sol Goldstein, California State University, Long Beach, "State-Building Campaigns and Democratic Deficit: The American Occupation of Germany and the Issue of Race"

Jay Goodliffe, Brigham Young University, "Explaining the Relationships Between Candidate Spending and Votes"

Jefferey Lewis, Oklahoma State University, "The Socialization of Central and Eastern European Member-States to the Organizational Culture of European Union Decision-Making"

Baodong Liu, University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh, "Getting The White Vote"

M. Anne Pitcher, Colgate University, "The Political Economy of Neoliberal Reform: A Comparative Study of Four African Countries"

Matthew Potoski, Iowa State University, "Congressional Parties and Campaign Finance: Improving Democratic Performance"

Diane-Michele Prindville, New Mexico State University, "A Comparative Study of Women's Political Participation in Traditional and Ira-Style Tribal Governments"

Sarah Elise Wiliarty, University of Denver, "Party Organization and Policy Making: Women's Auxiliary Organizations in Christian Democratic Parties"

The APSA Small Research Grant Program supports scholarly research in all fields of political science. The intent of these grants is to support the research and help further the careers of political scientists who are employed at non-Ph.D.-granting institutions.