Curriculum Vitae Tse-min Lin December 2012

Curriculum Vitae Tse-min Lin December 2012 Office Address The University of Texas at Austin Government Department 1 University Station A1800 Austin, T...
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Curriculum Vitae Tse-min Lin December 2012 Office Address The University of Texas at Austin Government Department 1 University Station A1800 Austin, TX 78712 Tel: (512)232-7248, (512)471-5121 Fax: (512)471-1061 E-Mail: [email protected] Education Graduate: Undergraduate:

Ph.D. in Political Science, University of Minnesota, 1990 M.A. in Political Science (Honor), University of Kansas, 1983 B.S. in Electrical Engineering, National Taiwan University, 1975

Academic Positions Associate Professor of Government, University of Texas at Austin, 1999-present Visiting Associate Professor, National Taiwan University, May-August 2012 Visiting Associate Research Fellow, Academia Sinica, December 2003-May 2004 Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Michigan State University, 1998-1999 Assistant Professor of Government, University of Texas at Austin, 1991-1999 Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Duke University, Fall, 1995 Visiting Scholar, Asian/Pacific Studies Institute, Duke University, Fall, 1995. Lecturer of Political Science, State University of New York at Stony Brook, 1989-1991 Research Associate and Data Analysis Consultant, Strategic Management Research Center, Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota, 1987-1989 Administrative Positions Graduate Adviser, Department of Government, UT Austin, 2000-2003 Chair, Graduate Studies Committee, Department of Government, UT Austin, 2000-2003 Acting Chair, Department of Government, UT Austin, June-July, 2002 Assistant Graduate Adviser, Department of Government, UT Austin, 1999-2000 Professional Service Advisory Board, EITM Summer Institute, Hobby Center for Public Policy, 2012-present Nominations Committee, Midwest Political Science Association, 2011-present Editorial Board, American Journal of Political Science, 2010-present Research Fellow, Center for Prediction Markets, National Cheng Chi University, 2011-present 1

Consultation Committee, Elections and Citizen Participation (ECP) Project, Election Studies Center, National Cheng Chi University, 2011-present Award Committee, Career Achievement Award, Society for Political Methodology (the Methodology Section of the American Political Science Association), 2009-2011 Delegation, Taiwanese American Political Scientists, Invited by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of China (Taiwan), to meet with President Ma, Prime Minister Wu, President Wang of the Legislative Yuan, and other cabinet ministers, June 27 – July 3, 2010. Instructor, Summer Statistical Institute, University of Texas at Austin, 2008-2009 Award Committee, John T. William’s Award for the Best Dissertation Proposal in the Area of Political Methodology, 2007-2008 Editorial Board, Chinese Political Science Review, 2006-present Editorial Board, Taiwan Journal of Democracy, 2005-present Editorial Board, Taiwanese Political Science Review, 2004-present Editorial Board, Issues & Studies, 2004-present Section Co-Head, Public Opinion and Political Participation Section, 62nd Annual National Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, April 15-18 2004, Chicago, IL Advisory Panel, National Science Foundation, 2003 Editor, CGOTS Working Papers in Taiwan Studies, 1999-2004 Co-PI, Taiwan Election and Democratization Study (TEDS) 2003-2004 Methodological Consultant, East Asia Barometer: A Comparative Survey of Democratization and Value Changes, 2003-present Board of Directors, American Association for Chinese Studies, 2002-present Co-Organizer and Instructor, Summer Institute of Social Science Quantitative Methodology, Academia Sinica, 2002-present Teaching and Research Interests American Government and Politics: political behavior; public opinion; political parties Comparative Politics: Taiwan and China studies; comparative political behavior Methodology: time series analysis; spatial econometrics; spatial analysis; event count analysis; event history analysis; maximum likelihood estimation; mathematical methods Formal Modeling: social and collective choice theory; spatial modeling; dynamic modeling Analytic Political Theory: political concepts; philosophy of natural and social science Courses Taught Undergraduate:

Concepts and Methods of Political Inquiry Human Behavior as Rational Action Research Methods in Government Statistical Analysis in Political Science

Graduate:

Statistical Analysis in Political Science I & II Mathematical Methods for Political Analysis Advanced Statistical Analysis Time Series Analysis

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Covariance Structure Models Maximum Likelihood Estimation Introduction to Political Methodology Quantitative Methods for Public Policy and Political Science Publications Peer-Reviewed Articles “Information and Ideological Structure in Spatial Voting.” Taiwan Journal of Democracy, Vol. 7, No. 1, 2011, 1-24. “The Spatial Organization of Elections and the Cube Law” (Tse-min Lin and Feng-yu Lee). Issues & Studies, Vol. 45, No. 2, 2009, 61-98. “The Structure of Taiwan’s Political Cleavages toward the 2004 Presidential Election: A Spatial Analysis” (Tse-min Lin and Yun-han Chu). Taiwan Journal of Democracy, Vol. 4, No. 2, 2008, 133-154. “Markets and Politics: The 2000 Taiwanese Presidential Election” (Tse-min Lin and Brian Roberts). In Melvin Hinich and William A. Barnett, eds., Topics in Analytical Political Economy (International Symposia in Economic Theory and Econometrics Volume 17). Amsterdam, The Netherlands: Elsevier. 2007, 139-162. (Refereed) “Neighborhood Influence on the Formation of National Identity in Taiwan: Spatial Regression with Disjoint Neighborhoods” (Tse-min Lin, Chin-En Wu, and Feng-yu Lee). Political Research Quarterly, Vol. 59, No. 1, 2006, 35-46. “The Dynamics of the Partisan Gender Gap” (Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier, Suzanna DeBoef, and Tse-min Lin), American Political Science Review, Vol. 98, No. 3, 2004, 515-528. “The Historical Significance of Economic Voting: 1872-1996.” Social Science History, Vol. 23, No. 4, Winter 1999 (January-March 2000), 561-591. “Equilibrium in Multicandidate Probabilistic Spatial Voting” (Tse-min Lin, James M. Enelow, and Han Dorussen). Public Choice, Vol. 98, 1999, 59-82 “The Rising Hazards of Party Incumbency: A Discrete Renewal Analysis” (Tse-min Lin and Montserrat Guillen). Political Analysis (An Annual Publication of the Methodology Section of the American Political Science Association), Vol. 7, 1999, 31-57. “Cross-Cutting Issues and the Consolidation of Democracy in Taiwan” (Tse-min Lin and Baohui Zhang). Democratization, Vol. 5, Issue 4, Winter 1998, 118-143. “Elite Settlement and Democratic Consolidation in Taiwan” (John Higley, Tongyi Huang, and Tse-min Lin). Journal of Democracy, Vol. 9, No. 2, April 1998, 148-63. “Conflict Displacement and Regime Transition in Taiwan: A Spatial Analysis” (Tse-min Lin, Yun-han Chu, and Melvin Hinich). World Politics, Vol. 48, No. 4, July 1996, 453-81. “A Dynamic Model of Campaign Spending in Congressional Elections” (Jan Box-Steffensmeier and Tse-min Lin). Political Analysis (An Annual Publication of the Methodology Section of the American Political Science Association), Vol. 6, 1996, 37-66. “Political Corruption and Presidential Elections, 1929-1992” (Tim Fackler and Tse-min Lin). The Journal of Politics, Vol. 57, No. 4, November 1995, 971-93. “Vector Autoregression and the Study of Politics” (John Freeman, John Williams, and Tse-min Lin). American Journal of Political Science, Vol. 33, No. 4, November 1989, 842-77.

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Commissioned Editorial Commentary “In Memoriam: Melvin J. Hinich, 1939-2010” (Peter Ordeshook, Michael Munger, Tse-min Lin, and Bryan Jones). Public Choice, Vol. 146, Nos. 1-2, 2011, 1-8. Book Chapters “Elite Settlement and Democratic Consolidation in Korea and Taiwan” (Jungug Choi, John Higley, Tong-yi Huang, and Tse-min Lin). In Chung-in Moon and Jongryn Mo, eds., Democratization and Globalization in Korea: Assessments and Prospects. Seoul, Korea: Yonsei University Press, 1999, 89-110. “The Process of Democratic Consolidation in Taiwan: Social Cleavage, Electoral Competition, and the Emerging Party System” (Yun-han Chu and Tse-min Lin). In Hung-mao Tien, ed., Taiwan's Electoral Politics and Democratic Transition: Riding the Third Wave. Armonk, N.Y.: M.E. Sharpe, 1996, 79-104. “Innovation Outcomes, Learning, and Action Loops” (Bright M. Dornblaser, Tse-min Lin, and Andrew H. Van de Ven). In Research on the Management of Innovation, New York: Harper & Row, 1989, 193-217. Recent Conference Papers “A Bayesian Time Series Approach to the Comparison of Conflict Dynamics.” (with Patrick T. Brandt, John R. Freeman, and Phillip A. Schrodt). Prepared for presentation at the 2012 Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association, New Orleans, Louisiana, August 31-September 2, 2012. “Partisanship and Institutional Trust: Comparative Analysis of Emerging Democracies in East Asia.” (with Kai-ping Huang and Feng-yu Lee). Presented at the conference on “How the Public Views Democracy and its Competitors in East Asia: Taiwan in Comparative Perspective” sponsored by the Taiwan Democracy Program, Center on Democracy, Development and Rule of Law, Stanford University, and co-Sponsored by the Program for East Asia Democratic Studies, Institute for the Advanced Studies for Humanities and Social Sciences, National Taiwan University; Stanford University, May 24-26, 2012. “A Comparative Study of Approval Voting, Borda Count, and Single Transferable Vote in Committee Elections.” (with Brian Roberts). Prepared for presentation at the 70th annual meetings of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, April 12-15, 2012. “Event Count Models in Survey Research” (with Ariel Helfer and Dorothy Morgan). Presented at the 2011 Annual National Conference of the American Political Science Association, Seattle, Washington, September 1-4, 2011. “The Stability of STV in Committee Elections: An Empirical Investigation” (with Brian Roberts and the Assistance of Peter Keane). Presented at the 69th Annual National Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, March 31 - April 3, 2011.

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“Spatial Regression, Increasing Returns, and Regionalism” (with Matthew Cohen). Presented at the Path Dependence Conference, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, June 4-5, 2010. “Analyzing the Stability of Public Opinion Time Series with Wavelets” (with Etsuhiro Nakamura). Presented at the 68th Annual National Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, April 22-25, 2010. “Analyzing the Stability of Public Opinion Time Series with Wavelets” (with Etsuhiro Nakamura). Presented at the Annual National Conference of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, George, January 6-9, 2010. “Modeling Rebellion Intensity with a Zero-Inflated Ordered Probit Model” (with Feng-yu Lee). Presented at the 2009 Annual National Conference of the American Political Science Association, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, September 3-6, 2009. “The Spatial Organization of Elections and the Cube Law” (with Feng-yu Lee). Presented at the 67th Annual National Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, April 2-5, 2009. “The Spatial Organization of Elections and the Cube Law” (with Feng-yu Lee). Presented at the Conference on Electoral Politics in Taiwan: Origins and Consequences of the Electoral Reform, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina, February 6-8, 2009. “The Spatial Organization of Elections and the Cube Law” (with Feng-yu Lee). Presented at Taiwan’s Election and Democratization Study (TEDS) International Conference, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, January 17-18, 2009,. “Spatial Regression, Increasing Returns, and Regionalism” (with Matthew Cohen). Presented at the 66th Annual National Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, April 3-6, 2008. “Taiwan’s Democratization and China Policy: 1987-2004” (with Eugene Hung-chang Kuan). Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Taiwanese Political Science Association, Taipei, Taiwan, November 17-18, 2007. “Comparative Risk Attitudes in the Taiwanese Electorate: The 2004 Election” (with Feng-yu Lee and Chin-en Wu). Presented at the 2007 Taiwan’s Election and Democratization Study International Conference, Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan, Oct. 20-21, 2007. “The Minimum-Sum Point as a Solution Concept in Spatial Voting.” Presented at the 65th Annual National Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, Illinois, April 12-15, 2007. “Neighborhood Effect in Korean Electoral Regionalism” (Mijeong Baek, So Young Lee, and Tse-min Lin). Presented at the 2004 Annual Conference of the American Political Science Association. “Symbolic Politics or Pragmatism? Public Opinion on Unification vs. Independence in Taiwan” (Tse-min Lin, Chin-En Wu, and Feng-yu Lee). Presented at the 2004 Annual Conference of the Midwest Political Science Association. Other Manuscripts “Wittgenstein and the Limitations of Formal Political Theory” “The Hazards of Incumbency: An Event History Analysis of Congressional Tenure” (Charles J. Finocchiaro and Tse-min Lin)

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“Cross-Pressures and Reinforcement: The Influence of the Presidential Race on Voters’ Decisions in Congressional Elections, 1980-1996” (Tracey K. Renner and Tse-min Lin) “Partisan Equilibrium Cycles in Presidential Elections” Master Thesis “Ideology, Symbolism, and Mobilization: Ultraleftism in China’s Cultural Revolution.” University of Kansas, 1983. (Advisor: Jaroslaw Piekalkiewicz) Doctoral Dissertation “The Equilibrium Cycle in Presidential Elections.” University of Minnesota, 1990. (Co-Supervisors: John H. Aldrich and William H. Flanigan) Doctoral Dissertations Supervised Huang, Kai-Ping. “Electoral Reform and the Transformation of Party System: Thailand in Comparative Perspective.” (In progress) Morgan, Dorothy L. “A Spatial Econometric Approach to the Study of Social Influence.” 2012. Cohen, Matthew L. “Bargaining and Fighting in the Moonlight.” University of Texas at Austin, 2011. Lee, So Young. “Information Heterogeneity and Voter Uncertainty in Spatial Voting: The U.S. Presidential Elections, 1992-2004.” University of Texas at Austin, 2007. Kuan, Hung-chang. “Taiwan in Cross-Strait Relations: 1987- 2004.” University of Texas at Austin, 2007. Lee, Feng-yu. “Political Institutions, Contexts, and Ethnic Conflict in Comparative Perspectives.” University of Texas at Austin, 2007. Choi, Eunjung. “What’s in Voters’ Minds? Economic Conditions and Identity Issues in Korean and Taiwanese Elections.” University of Texas at Austin, 2007. Renner, Tracey K. “A Theory of Cross-pressures and Reinforcement: The Impact of Presidential Evaluations and Party Identification on Voter Turnout and Choice in Congressional Elections.” University of Texas at Austin, 1999. Chen, Lu-huei. “The Formation of Party Identification among the Electorate in Taiwan, 1987-1996.” Michigan State University, 1999. Huang, Tong-yi. “Elite Transformation and Democratization in Taiwan.” University of Texas at Austin, 1998. Fackler, Timothy Ignatius. “News of Corruption in American Politics: A Study of the Sources and Effects of Valence Information in Democratic Politics.” University of Texas at Austin, 1997. Yuan, Hao-lin, “The Political Economy of Direct Foreign Investment: The Case of Taiwan.” University of Texas at Austin, 1994. Honors, Grants, and Awards Grant for Taiwan-Related Research, Program of Taiwan Studies, Sponsored by the Ministry of

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Education, Republic of China (Taiwan) 2009-2010. International & Inter-University Collaborative Research Project, National Taiwan University, “Single-Member District Systems and the 7th Legislative Elections in Taiwan” (with Feng-yu Lee and Chin-en Wu), 2008-2009. Special Research Grant, College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin, 2004. Keynote Speaker, Annual Meeting of the Taiwanese Political Science Association, 2003. Outstanding Graduate Adviser Award, University of Texas at Austin, 2003. Visiting Fellowship, National Science Council, Republic of China, December 2003-May 2004. Dean’s Fellowship, College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin. Spring 2004. Nominated for Outstanding Graduate Teaching Award (University of Texas), 2004-2005. Who’s Who in the ROC-Taiwan 2002, Government Information Office, Republic of China. Dean’s Fellowship, College of Liberal Arts, University of Texas at Austin. Spring 1997. Visiting Scholarship, Asian/Pacific Studies Institute, Duke University. Summer-Fall, 1995. Ford Foundation Area Studies-Social Science Competition in Government. 1994. Summer Research Award. University of Texas at Austin. 1993. Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange. “A Spatial Analysis of Electoral Competition in Taiwan” (with Melvin J. Hinich and Yun-han Chu). 1992-1993. Memberships in Learned Societies American Political Science Association Midwest Political Science Association American Association for Chinese Studies Taiwanese American Political Scientists Association (Founding Member) Academic/Institutional Reviews The Institute of Political Science at Academia Sinica, Taiwan, 2008 Manuscript/Proposal Reviews American Journal of Political Science, American Political Science Review, Asian American Review, British Journal of Political Science, Cambridge University Press, Chinese Political Science Review, Comparative Political Studies, Comparative Politics, Electoral Studies, Electoral Studies (Taiwan), International Interactions, International Journal of Public Opinion Research, International Studies Quarterly, Issues & Studies, Journal of Humanities and Social Sciences, Journal of Politics, Journal of Social Science and Philosophy, Journal of Theoretical Politics, Journal of Women, Politics & Policy, Legislative Studies Quarterly, National Science Council, National Science Foundation, Political Analysis, Political Behavior, Public Choice, Social Science History, Taiwan Democracy Quarterly, Taiwan Journal of Democracy, Taiwanese Political Science Review Conferences Organized

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“Taiwan Studies at the Millennium,” August 17-18, 2001, University of Texas at Austin

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