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2007 Frank Goodnow Award Winners The Frank Johnson Goodnow Award was created by the APSA Council in 1996 to honor service to the community of teachers, researchers, and public servants who daily toil in the many fields of politics. Dr. McClain also brought this spirit of commitment to the APSA, as illustrated in her countless years of service. She was a member of the Executive Council and served two separate terms on the Administrative Committee, once as vice president. Furthermore, she co-chaired the Annual Meeting Program Committee, and chaired both the Annual Meeting Nominating Committee, and the Harold D. Lasswell Award Committee. For her service and scholarship, Dr. McClain received the Award in Recognition of Excellence in Scholarship and Service to the Profession from the APSA Committee on the Status of Blacks in the Profession; the Miriam Mills Award for Outstanding Contribution in Policy Studies and the Aaron Wildavsky Award for the Best Book in Public Policy, both from the Policy Studies Organization; and the Award for the Best Scholarship on the Subject of Intolerance in North America from the Gustavus Myers Center for the Study of Human Rights in North America. For over three decades, Frank P. Scioli has been the champion of political science at the National Science Foundation. Prior to becoming senior science advisor in the Division of Social and Economic Sciences, he was the political science program director, urban research initiative director, and section head. His dedication to the discipline has enabled hundreds of political science scholars to research original and novel topics. Dr. Scioli’s constant efforts to promote the discipline have also had positive effects on graduate education. For over three decades at the National Science Foundation, he worked to build the discipline’s instructional infrastructure. His stewardship has seen the blossom of such tools as the American National Election Studies, one of the longest running and extensively used data collections on the study of elections, parties, and politics in the world, in addition to the Time-Shared Experiments in the Social Sciences and the Virtual Library. Not only did he represent the discipline to the National Science Foundation, Dr. Scioli also fostered collaboration between the Association and the Foundation on the Methodology, Measurement, and Statistics Program and the Ralph Bunche Summer Institute. For his continued dedication and efforts, he received the Director’s Superior Accomplishment Award and the Director’s Award of Excellence for outstanding accomplishment in program management, both from the NSF. Mentor, public servant, and teacher, Lee Sigelman selflessly dedicated himself to political science for over three decades, serving his colleagues and future scholars with his incredible energy and willingness to promote the broader profession and the Association. Dr. Sigelman has also dedicated himself to the discipline in other capacities. He externally reviewed the programs of fourteen total departments, including Old Dominion, Emory, George Mason, and Vanderbilt. He has been on the APSA Council since 2001, served as program officer at the National Science Foundation, and as president of both the Midwest Political Science Association and the National Capital Area Political Science Association. He has published approximately 270 peer-reviewed articles and written five books since earning his Ph.D. In addition, his scholarship is of the highest quality and addresses an extensive range of political science issues across various subfields in the profession. For his scholarship, Dr. Sigelman received the APSA Urban Politics Section’s Best Book in 2002, the George Washington University’s Columbian College Distinguished Professor Award beginning in 1999 for a distinguished record of scholarly research or creative endeavor, and the George Washington University’s Trachtenberg Prize for Scholarship for distinguished research contributions. |