Ken Kollman
Frederick G L Huetwell Professor, Professor of Political Science, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, Research Professor, Center for Political Studies and Center Director, Center for Political Studies, Institute for Social Research
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- (734)936-0062
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BIO
Ken Kollman’s research focuses on political parties and organizations, elections, lobbying, federal systems, formal modeling, complexity theory, American politics, and comparative politics.
- Brian K Min, Eugenio Arima, David Backer, Allen D Hicken, Kenneth W Kollman, Joel Selway. 2023. Local Partisan Biases in Allocations of Foreign Aid: A Study of Agricultural Assistance in India. 75(1):43-98.
- Yuri Zhukov, Jason S. Byers, Marty A. Davidson, Ken Kollman. 2023. Integrating Data Across Misaligned Spatial Units. Political Analysis 32(1):17-33.
- Kollman,Kenneth W. 2022. The Textbook Road Taken. The Textbook Road Taken :1-3.
- Ken Kollman, Alton B. H. Worthington. 2021. Party Systems and Political Centralization and Decentralization. The Journal of Politics 83(3):1178-1183.
- Simmons, Joel , Allen D Hicken, Ken Kollman, Nooruddin, Irfan . 2018. Party system structure and its consequences for foreign direct investment. Party Politics 24(2):141-153.
- Kollman, Kenneth W, Caramani, Daniele . 2017. Symposium on "The nationalization of electoral politics: Frontiers of research". Electoral Studies 47:51-54.
- Ken Kollman. 2017. Introduction to the Symposium on the Nationalization of Electoral Politics: Frontiers of Research. Introduction to the Symposium on the Nationalization of Electoral Politics: Frontiers of Research 47:51-54.
- Hicken, Allen D, Kollman, Kenneth W, Simmons, Joel W. 2016. Party System Nationalization and the Provision of Public Health Services. Political Science Research and Methods 4(3):573-594.
- Kollman, Kenneth W. 2016. Duverger's disciplinary and field-defining research on political parties. French Politics 14(1):131-138.
- Kollman, Kenneth W, Jackson, John E.. 2012. Modeling, Measuring, and Distinguishing Path Dependence, Outcome Dependence, and Outcome Independence. Political Analysis 20(2):157-174.