gregory huber

Gregory A. Huber

Associate Professor of Political Science at Yale University
Resident Fellow of the Institution for Social and Policy Studies
  & the Center for the Study of American Politics


Contact Information:

office
address:

ISPS, Room D239

77 Prospect Street

New Haven, CT 06511

(Note: My office is not wheelchair accessible. If this is a concern, I can arrange to meet elsewhere in the ISPS complex.)

mailing
address:

ISPS, 77 Prospect Street

PO Box 208209

New Haven, CT 06520-8209

telephone:

203-432-5731

facsimile:

203-432-3296

email:

gregory.huber@yale.edu

(for secure communications, my PGP public key is available here and at pgp.mit.edu)



Curriculum Vitae:

 

(PDF)


Syllabi:

 

Syllabi for American Political Economy, American Politics II (Graduate), Crime and Punishment, Introduction to US Government, Politics of Crime Control, Research and Writing (Graduate), and other recent courses are available at http://classes.yale.edu.

 

Older syllabi, including Bureaucratic Politics (Graduate), Democracy and Bureaucracy (Public Administration), and Political Organization (Graduate), are also available via email.


Book:

 
The Craft of Bureaucratic Neutrality

The Craft of Bureaucratic Neutrality:
Interests and Influence in Governmental Regulation of Occupational Safety.

Cambridge University Press, 2007.

Reviews appear here, and excerpts are here.

Click for larger size images of front and back cover.

Selected Published/Forthcoming Papers: (Abstracts, replication data, and on-line appendices are available here.)

 

Gregory A. Huber and John S. Lapinski. 2008. "Testing the Implicit-Explicit Model of Racialized Political Communication." Perspectives on Politics, 6 (March): 125-34. (PDF)

 

Gregory A. Huber. 2007. "Contingency, Politics, and the Nature of Inquiry: Why non-events matter." In Political Contingency: Studying the Unexpected, the Accidental, and the Unforeseen, eds. Ian Shapiro and Sonu Bedi. New York: NYU Press. (PDF)

 

Gregory A. Huber and Kevin Arceneaux. 2007. "Identifying the Persuasive Effects of Presidential Advertising," American Journal of Political Science, 4 (Oct.): 957-977. (PDFOn-line Journal)
[This paper previously circulated as "Uncovering the Persuasive Effects of Presidential Advertising"]

 

Gregory A. Huber and Sanford C. Gordon. 2007. "Directing Retribution: On the Political Control of Lower Court Judges," Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization, 23 (June): 386-420. (PDFOn-line Journal)

 

Sanford C. Gordon, Gregory A. Huber, and Dimitri Landa. 2007. "Challenger Entry and Voter Learning," American Political Science Review, 101 (May): 303-320. (PDFOn-line Journal)
[This paper previously circulated as "The Informational Value of Challengers"]

 

Sanford C. Gordon and Gregory A. Huber. 2007. "The Effect of Electoral Competitiveness on Incumbent Behavior," Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 2 (May): 107-138. (PDFOn-line Journal)

 

Kevin Arceneaux and Gregory A. Huber. 2007. "What to Do (and Not Do) with Multicollinearity in State Politics Research," State Politics and Policy Quarterly, 7 (Spring): 81-101. (PDFOn-line Journal)

 

Gregory A. Huber and John S. Lapinski. 2006. "The 'Race Card' Revisited: Assessing Racial Priming in Policy Contests," The American Journal of Political Science, 50 (Apr.): 421-440. (PDFOn-line Journal)

 

Gregory A. Huber and Sanford C. Gordon. 2004. "Accountability and Coercion: Is Justice Blind when It Runs for Office?" The American Journal of Political Science. 48 (Apr.): 247-263. (PDFJSTOR)

 

Sanford C. Gordon and Gregory A. Huber. 2002. "Citizen Oversight and the Electoral Incentives of Criminal Prosecutors," The American Journal of Political Science, 46 (Apr.): 334-351. (PDFJSTOR)


Working Papers/Papers Under Review: (Abstracts are available here.)

 

"Enforcement and Compliance in an Uncertain World: An Experimental Investigation," with Eric Dickson and Sanford Gordon. February 2008. (PDF)

 

"Voter Responses to Challenger Opportunity Costs," with Sanford Gordon and Dimitri Landa. April 2008. (PDF)
[This paper previously circulated as "Do Costly Challenges Make Voters Believe?"]

 

"Partisanship and Economic Behavior: Do partisan differences in economic forecasts predict real economic behavior?" with Alan Gerber. June 2007. (PDF)


Last updated 2/2008

* Some research listed on this page was supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 0318033. The NSF requires that I state "Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation."