Curriculum Vita Bradford S. Jones Contact and Personal Information Work Address:

1 Shields Avenue Department of Political Science University of California, Davis Davis, CA 95616 USA

Work Telephone: E-Mail: Homepage:

(530) 752-1649 [email protected] psfaculty.ucdavis.edu/bsjjones

Professional Experience Associate Professor of Political Science, Department of Political Science, UC-Davis. 2006-Present. Associate Professor of Political Science, Department of Political Science, University of Arizona. 2001–2006. Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Political Science, University of Arizona. 2004–2006. Research Fellow, National Centre for Research on Europe. University of Canterbury (Christchurch, New Zealand). 2005-Present. Instructor, ICPSR Summer Methodology Program, University of Michigan. Summer 2004–Present. Associate Professor of Political Science, Department of Political Science, State University of New York at Stony Brook. 2000–2001. Assistant Professor of Political Science, Department of Political Science, University of Arizona. 1994–2000. Instructor, Department of Political Science, State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1993–1994. Instructor of Computational Methods, Social Sciences Data Lab, State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1990-1993.

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Education Ph.D., Political Science. State University of New York at Stony Brook. Stony Brook, NY., 1994. Dissertation: “A Longitudinal Perspective on Congressional Careers.” Adviser: Albert D. Cover. M.A., Political Science, University of Missouri at Columbia. Columbia, MO., 1990. Masters Thesis: “Global Climate Change and the States.” Adviser: David J. Webber. B.S., Political Science, Southeast Missouri State University. Cape Girardeau, MO., 1987. B.S., English Education, Southeast Missouri State University. Cape Girardeau, MO., 1987.

Publications Books Box-Steffensmeier, Janet M. and Bradford S. Jones. 2004. Event History Modeling: A Guide for Social Scientists. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Articles Crisp, Brian, Maria Escobar-Lemmon, Bradford Jones, Mark Jones, Michelle Taylor. Forthcoming. “The Electoral Connection and Institutionalization of the Legislature in Systems with Strong Presidents.” Journal of Legislative Studies. Jones, Bradford S. and Regina P. Branton. 2006. “Beyond Logit and Probit: Cox Duration Models for State Policy Adoption.” State Politics and Policy Quarterly. Goertz, Gary, Bradford S. Jones, and Paul Diehl. 2005. “Maintenance Processes in International Rivalries.” Journal of Conflict Resolution. 49: 742–769 Branton, Regina P. and Bradford S. Jones. 2005. “Examining Racial Attitudes: The Conditional Relationship Between Diversity and the Socio-Economic Environment.” American Journal of Political Science. 49: 359–372. Crisp, Brian, Maria Escobar-Lemmon, Bradford S. Jones, Mark Jones, and Michelle Taylor-Robinson. 2004. “Vote-Seeking Incentives and Legislative Representation in Six Presidential Democracies.” Journal of Politics. 66: 823–846.

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Steenbergen, Marco R. and Bradford S. Jones. 2002. “Modeling Multilevel Data Structures.” American Journal of Political Science. 46: 218–237. Jones, Bradford S. and Michael E. Sobel. 2000. “Modeling Direction and Intensity in Semantically Balanced Ordinal Scales: An Assessment of Congressional Incumbent Approval.” American Journal of Political Science. 44: 174–185. Nederman, Cary J., Bradford S. Jones, Lisa Fitzgerald. 1998. “Lost in Cyberspace: Democratic Prospects of Computer-Mediated Communication.” Contemporary Politics. 41: 9–21. Box-Steffensmeier, Janet M., and Bradford S. Jones. 1997. “Time is of the Essence: Event History Models in Political Science.” American Journal of Political Science. 41: 1414–1461. Jones, Bradford S. and Barbara Norrander. 1996. “The Reliability of Aggregated Public Opinion.” American Journal of Political Science. 40: 295–309. Jones, Bradford, Benjamin Radcliff, Charles Taber, Richard Timpone. 1995. “Condorcet Winners and the Paradox of Voting: Probability Calculations for Weak Preference Orders.” American Political Science Review. 89: 137–144. Jones, Bradford S. 1991. “State Responses to Global Climate Change.” Policy Studies Journal. 19: 73–82. Renka, Russell D. and Bradford S. Jones. 1991. “The ‘Two Presidencies’ and the Reagan Administration.” Congress and the Presidency. 18: 16–35. Book Chapters Jones, Bradford S. 2008. “Exposure, Accessibility, and Difference: How Australians and New Zealanders Perceive Europe and the European Union.” in N. Chaban and M. Holland (eds) The European Union and the Asia-Pacific. Routledge Press. Jones, Bradford S. 2008. “Multilevel Modeling.” in J. Box-Steffensmeier, H. Brady, and D. Collier (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Political Methodology. Oxford: Oxford University Press. Holland, Martin and Bradford S. Jones. 2006. “Public Attitudes Toward the European Union in Australia and New Zealand.” in W. Gellner (ed) Politik im Netz Yearbook 2005, Baden-Baden, Nomos Publishing, 2006. Renka, Russell D. and Bradford S. Jones. 1991. “The ‘Two Presidencies’ in the Reagan and Bush Administrations.” 1991. In, The Two Presidencies: A Quarter Century Assessment, Steven A. Shull, ed. Chicago: Nelson-Hall.

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Review Essays and Book Reviews Review of Andrew Gelman and Deborah Nolan’s Teaching Statistics: A Bag of Tricks. 2003. The Political Methodologist. 11: 4–6. Jones, Bradford S. 1995. “The Differing Faces of Global Climate Change Policy.” Policy Studies Journal. 23: 540–546. Review of William R. Lowry’s The Dimensions of Federalism: State Governments and Pollution Control Policies. Durham: University of North Carolina Press. In Forum for Applied Research and Public Policy. 8: 123 (1993). Other Publications Holland, Martin and Bradford S. Jones. 2005. “Public Attitudes Toward the European Union in Australia and New Zealand.” PIN online, November 2005: http://www.politik-im-netz.com/pin_rl/global/glo_aufsatz.lasso. Holland, Martin, Natalia Chaban, Bradford S. Jones, Kenneth Chan, Pui-Ki Cheung. 2005. The EU Through the Eyes of the Asia-Pacific: Public Perceptions and Media Representations. National Centre for Research on Europe.

Grants Research Grants “Adaptive Representation and Responsiveness in the U.S. House.” 2004. SBSRI Summer Grant. ($5,000). “Variation in Legislative Entrepreneurship in Presidential Systems: A Supplemental Proposal to Study Two Additional Cases.” 1998. Co-PI with Brian Crisp, Mark Jones, and Michelle Taylor. Funded by the National Science Foundation, Grant No. SBR9708936, Amendment No. 001 ($10,973). “Variation in Legislative Entrepreneurship in Presidential Systems: Data From Beyond the U.S. Case.” 1997. Co-PI with Brian Crisp and Mark Jones. Funded by the National Science Foundation, Grant No. SBR-9708936 ($110,000). “Variation in Legislative Entrepreneurship in Presidential Systems.” 1996. SBSRI Summer Grant. Co-PI with Brian Crisp ($5,000). Conference Grants 1999 Meetings of the Political Methodology Society. Texas A&M University, College Station, TX., July. Faculty Participant.

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1998 Meetings of the Political Methodology Society. University of California, San Diego. La Jolla, CA., July. Faculty Participant. 1997 Meetings of the Political Methodology Society. The Ohio State University. Columbus, OH., July. Faculty Participant. 1996. Meetings of the Political Methodology Society. University of Michigan. Ann Arbor, MI., July. Faculty Participant. 1993. Meetings of the Political Methodology Society. Florida State University. Tallahassee, FL., July. Graduate Student Participant.

Awards/Honors Awarded University of Arizona SBS Research Professorship for AY 2000/2001.

Media Videotape: Event History Models for American Politics, Comparative Politics, and International Relations (with Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier). Political Methodology Video Short Course; is part of the Political Methodology Video Series.

Conference Presentations (Past 5 Years) Paper Presentations Jones, Bradford S. and Chad Westerland. 2006. “Order Matters(?): Alternatives to Conventional Practices for Ordinal Categorical Variables.” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, IL. April. Branton, Regina P. and Bradford S. Jones. 2006. “Race, Ethnicity, and U.S. House Incumbent Evaluations.” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Southern Political Science Association. Atlanta, GA. January. Branton, Regina P., Bradford S. Jones, and Jennifer Byrne. 2005. “Race, Ethnicity and U.S. House Incumbent Evaluations.” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, IL. April. Jones, Bradford S. and Regina P. Branton. 2003. “Beyond Logit and Probit: Some Alternative Modeling Strategies for Policy Adoption Data.” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, IL. April. Jones, Bradford S. and Regina P. Branton. 2003. “Beyond Logit and Probit: Some Alternative Modeling Strategies for Policy Adoption Data.” Paper presented at the

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Annual Meeting of the State Politics and Policy Section. Tucson, AZ. March. Goertz, Gary, Bradford S. Jones, Paul Diehl. 2002. “Maintenance Processes In International Rivalries.” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Peace Sciences Association. Tucson, AZ. October.

Chair and Discussant Discussant. 2007. “Social Network Analysis.” Annual Meetings of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, IL. April. Discussant. 2005. “Advances in Multilevel Modeling.” Annual Meetings of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, IL. April. Discussant. 2003. “The Role of Context and Sophistication in The Structure of White Racial Attitudes.” Annual Meetings of the Midwest Political Science Association. Chicago, IL. April.

Invited Talks (Past Years) “Along the Watchtower: Acculteration Fear and Immigration.” 2007. Presented at Georgetown University. November. “Along the Watchtower: Acculteration Fear and Immigration.” 2007. Presented at the University of North Carolina. April. “Order Matters(?): Some Alternative Modeling Strategies for Ordinal and Nonordinal Response Variables.” 2006. Presented at the University of California, Santa Barbara. October. “An Introduction to Event History Analysis.” 2005. Presented at Auckland University. June.

Short Courses and Seminars Short Course on Multilevel Modeling. 2007. University of Arizona. October. ICPSR Summer Program in Quantitative Methods: Maximum Likelihood Estimation and Duration Models. 2007.

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Short Course on Event History Modeling and Multilevel Analysis. 2006. University of Arizona. May. Short Course on Event History Modeling. 2005. Presented at Auckland University. June. ICPSR Summer Program in Quantitative Methods: Maximum Likelihood Estimation and Duration Models. 2005. ICPSR Summer Program in Quantitative Methods: Maximum Likelihood Estimation and Duration Models. 2004. Multilevel Models: Rice University Short Course. 2004. Presented at Rice University. Houston, TX. June. Seminar on Event History Analysis. 2002. Presented at Texas A&M University. College Station, TX. March.

Teaching Teaching Interests Undergraduate Level: Legislative Politics Race and Politics Public Opinion and Political Behavior American Government Research Design and Methods Graduate Level: Legislative Behavior Race and Politics Political Behavior Political Methodology (Introductory, Intermediate, and Advanced Methods) Specialized Methodology Seminars (Duration Models, Models for Categorical Data, Random Coefficients Models). Courses Taught at University of California, Davis Undergraduate Level POL 51: The Scientific Study of Politics Graduate Level POL 213: Maximum Likelihood POL 217: Special Topics in Methodology: Multicategory Response Variables & Duration Models POL 290G: Special Topics in Methodology: Duration Models & Multilevel Models

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Courses Taught at University of Arizona Undergraduate Level POL 102: Introduction to American Politics. POL 195A: Freshman Colloquium. POL 231: American Political Parties. POL 396H: Honors Proseminar in American Politics. POL 407: Congress and American Politics. POL 431: Political Culture and the Dynamics of Change in American Society. POL 434: Quantitative Analysis of Political Problems. Graduate Level POL 579: Research Design. POL 595A: Readings in American Politics. POL 596A: Research in American Politics. POL 582: Introduction to Research Methods. POL 601: Professionalization Seminar in Political Science. POL 681: Intermediate Research Methods. POL 682: Advanced Research Methods.

Service Professional Service Co-Program Chair for the 2009 Midwest Political Science Association Meetings. Member of Editorial Board, Political Analysis. 2006 Political Methodology Program Committee. Political Methodology Society. Section Chair for Elections and Voting Behavior Section, Southern Political Science Association Meetings. January 2006. Atlanta, GA. Section Chair for Political Methodology Section, Midwest Political Science Association Meetings. April 2003. Chicago, IL. Section Chair for Political Methodology Section, American Political Science Association Meetings. August-September 2001. San Francisco, CA. Co-Moderator of Political Methodology Listserv, H-Polmeth, for the APSA Political Methodology Section. (1998-2002). Section Chair for Political Methodology Section, Western Political Science Association Meetings, March 1998, Los Angeles.

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Manuscript Reviews for: American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Journal of Politics, Political Analysis, Political Psychology, Political Research Quarterly, Legislative Studies Quarterly, State Politics and Policy Quarterly, American Politics Quarterly, Electoral Behavior, Women and Politics, Southeastern Political Science Review, Physical Review Letters Book Reviews for: Cambridge University Press, Wadsworth Press, McGraw-Hill, Longman Publishing Grant Reviews for: National Science Foundation Professional Affiliations: American Political Science Association (Political Methodology Section), Midwest Political Science Association, Southern Political Science Association.

Department of Political Science, University of California, Davis Acting Director of Graduate Studies (July-December 2008). Chair, Search Committee for Formal Theory/Methods, 2007-2008. Member, Search Committee for American Institutions, 2007-2008. Member of Graduate Studies Committee, 2006-Present. Member, Search Committee for American Institutions/Formal Theory, 2006-2007. University-Wide Service, University of California, Davis Advisory Board, SSDS (IGA), 2007-Present. Political Science Representative to Faculty Senate, 2006-2007. University Service Department of Political Science, University of Arizona Director of Graduate Studies, 2004-2006. Member of Graduate Studies Committee, 1996-1997, 1999-2000, 2004-2006. Member of Executive Committee, 1994-1996. 2000-2002, 2004-2006. Member of Department Job Search Committee, 1997-1998, 2004. Director, Political Science Colloquium Series, 1995-1998. Paper presenter in Political Science Colloquium Series, F94, Sp95, Sp97, F98. Maintain Departmental Listserv ([email protected]) (1995-1999). Member of several Ph.D. examination, dissertation, and M.A. exam committees.

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University-Wide Service, University of Arizona Participant in Diversity Networking Expo, U.A. Hispanic Alumni Club. 2005. Dean’s Audit Committee, 2003–2004, ad hoc member 2005. Human Subjects Review Board, 2003–2004. Social and Behavioral Sciences Research Institute Director Search Committee, Fall 1999. Information Technology Assessment Committee (ITAC), 1998-1999. GIS Task Force and Search Committee, Spring 1998. Social and Behavioral Sciences Research Institute Grant Review Board, 1997-1999. Faculty Mentor, Honors College, 1995-1997. Faculty participant in Evening and Weekends Program, Spring 1997. Faculty participant in Freshman Colloquium Program, Fall 1995, Spring 1996, Fall 1996. Conferee, Rio Rico Conference on Technology in Teaching, February 1995. Department of Political Science, SUNY-Stony Brook Member of Department Job Search Committee, 2000-2001. Member of several Ph.D. examination and dissertation committees. University-Wide Service, SUNY-Stony Brook Faculty Mentor, Latin American Students Society. 2000-2001. Outside/Community Service “The Song Remains the Same: Analysis of the 2004 Election.” Presentation made to the Informed Voters Foundation. November 2004. “Maps and Legends: Voting and Turnout in National Elections.” Presentation made to the Democracy Now club at Catalina Foothills High School, Tucson, AZ. October 2004. Developed Curriculum Materials for the 1998 National Student/ Parent Mock Election. Materials were published by The New York Times for distribution to 100,000 schools across the United States. The NSPME was held October 29, 1998, with approximately 6,000,000 students participating. Outside Consulting Statistical Consultant for Mitchell Madison Group. The MMG Group is a corporate consulting firm based in New York City.

Updated 8/08

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