Research
The
Department of Political Science is deeply committed to research.
Research is what most clearly defines each individual faculty member
and, collectively, the department. The output of research by the
faculty has increased to impressive levels during recent years.
This dramatic increase in both the quantity and quality of published
research distinguishes this department as one of the most active
in the nation and has generated a growing national and international
reputation. This transformation is not based just on the talent
and energy of a few faculty members (although some have been extraordinary)
but it is rather the product of the efforts of the entire faculty
across all ranks and fields of study. Ours is a dynamic and productive
faculty in all regards.
The range of our faculty research agenda is wide, reflecting the
extraordinary diversity of the field of political science as well
as the variety of ways in which our faculty seek to understand and
explain political phenomena. While diverse, one of the strengths
and unifying features of our faculty is the commitment to generating
theory-driven, broad- based, and multifaceted research on important
political phenomena. Intellectual coherence is provided to our research
efforts by multiple clusters of scholars undertaking interrelated
research projects that cut across the various traditional field
divisions of the discipline. While most faculty work at the intersection
of several fundamental sub-fields in which we have strengths, we
have worked to build and maintain quality and depth of research
in each of the four traditional major fields in the discipline of
political science: American politics, comparative politics, international
relations, and political theory. |