G. Bingham Powell, Jr.
- Marie C. Wilson and Joseph C. Wilson Professor Emeritus of Political Science
PhD, Stanford, 1968
- Telephone
- 585-275-4291
- Web Address
- Office Hours
- Emeritus
Profile
Fields: Comparative politics, parliamentary democracies, ideological representation
President of the American Political Science Association, 2011-2012. Managing Editor of the American Political Science Review, 1991-95. His APSA Presidential Address, "Representation in Context" was published in Perspectives in Politics in March 2013. He is co-author of the Presidential Task Force report Political Science, Election Rules and Democratic Governance (APSA 2013). Co-author and co-editor of leading undergraduate comparative politics text, , now in its 10th edition. Current research examines problems of political representation in different electoral, party, and policymaking systems. His book (Harvard, 1982) won the Woodrow Wilson Foundation Award for best book in political science in 1982. His book, (Yale, 2000), was co-winner of the 2002 Mattei Dogan Award for the year's best book in comparative politics. Recipient of the 1999 University Award for Graduate Teaching and the 2009 Goergen Award for distinguished undergraduate teaching. Teaches courses in the field of comparative politics. The Powell Graduate Mentoring Award, a bi-annual award of the Comparative Politics Section of APSA, was created by his students to honor a political scientist who demonstrates an outstanding commitment to mentoring graduate students in the field.
Courses taught
- PSCI/INTR 101 Introduction to Comparative Politics
- PSCI/INTR 250 Conflict in Democracies
- PSCI/INTR 250 Comparative Democratic Representation
- PSCI/INTR 256 Theories of Comparative Politics
- PSCI/INTR 350 Comparative Politics Field Seminar
- PSCI/INTR 355 Democratic Political Processes
- PSCI 356 Political Institutions and Behavior
- PSCI 380 Scope of Political Science
- PSCI 480 Scope of Political Science
- PSCI 550 Comparative Politics Field Seminar
- PSCI 555 Democratic Political Processes
- PSCI 556 Political Institutions and Behavior