Robert Franzese

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Professor Rob Franzese

Professor

Office Location(s): 6658 Haven Hall
734.615.9139
franzese@umich.edu
Institute for Social Research
View Curriculum Vitae

  • Affiliation(s)
    • President, The Society for Political Methodology
    • Research Professor, Center for Political Studies
  • Fields of Study
    • Comparative Politics
    • Political Economy
    • Research Methods
  • About

    Professor Franzese's research interests center on the comparative and international political economy (C&IPE) of developed democracies and related aspects of empirical methodology. In C&IPE, his work has focused on how political and economic (a) institutions (e.g., electoral & governmental systems, central bank independence, labor-market organization, etc.), (b) structure (e.g., income distribution, party-system polarization and fractionalization), and (c) circumstances/events (e.g., elections, terms-of-trade shocks, etc.) affect macroeconomic policymaking: its character and its efficacy. His approach to this substantive area is interdisciplinary (with economics), positive (i.e., as opposed to normative), and empirically minded. To date, this research agenda has produced several journal articles and conference and working papers on the monetary- and fiscal-policy effects of, for example, participation, representation, veto actors, delegation, central bank independence, wage bargaining institutions, and international context and institutions.

    Professor Franzese’s research and pedagogical agendas in empirical methodology, which arise from this substantive agenda in C&IPE, have produced a book and numerous articles and chapters on (a) interactions and modeling strategies for complex context-conditionality more generally, (b) on empirical methodology for comparative politics broadly, (c) on multilevel modeling, and, most recently and extensively, (d) on spatial-econometric models of interdependence, that is of contexts where the outcomes in some units affect those in other. 

  • Education
    • Harvard University, Ph.D. (Government)
    • Harvard University, A.M. (Government, Economics)
    • Cornell University, B.A. with distinction and Phi Beta Kappa (Government, Economics)
  • Awards
    • Spatial-Econometric Models of Interdependence (book m.s.)
    • Empirical Modeling of Comparative Democratic Budgeteering: The Context-Conditionality of Policymakers’ Incentives and Capacities for Policy Manipulation
  • Grants
    • NSF Grant: Support for Conferences and Mentoring of Underrepresented Groups in Political Methodology (2011-2013)
    • NSF Grant & Supplement: EITM (Empirical Implications of Theoretical Models) Summer Training Institute (2005-2008)
    • NSF Grant: “Diagnosing, Modeling, Interpreting, and Leveraging Spatial Relationships in Time-Series Cross-Section Data (2003-2008)
  • Presentations
    • An Empirical Model of Comparative Democratic Budgeteering: The Context-Conditionality of Policymakers’ Incentives and Capacities for Policy Manipulation (APSA Annual Meeting, 2011)
    • Multiple Policymakers: Veto Actors Bargaining in Common Pools (MPSA Annual Meeting, 2009)
  • Courses Taught
    • Comparative Politics of Developed Democracies
    • Comparative Developed-Democratic Political Economy
    • Statistical Methods for Political Science Research II
    • Graduate Seminar in Political Economy
  • Selected Publications:
  • Books
  • Articles