Empirical Implications of Theoretical Models
June 24 through July 21, 2007


Institutions and Institutional Analysis

June 25-June 29, 2007

John Aldrich (Duke) and Arthur Lupia (Michigan)

This unit explores Empirical Implications of Institutional Models. It traces the origins, successful development, and potentially problematic aspects of the New Institutionalism literature, combining lectures and innovative class activities to understand modern studies of the causes and consequences of institutional choices. Activities use examples of bureaucratic performance, voter competence, Congressional organization, election laws, separation of powers, coalition bargaining, jury decision-making, political development, etc. The week also addresses (a) some constructive debates on the appropriateness to political contexts of the modern proliferation of equilibrium concepts and statistical-estimation procedures, (b) how incomplete information affects institutional efficacy, and (c) innovative data-collection methods.



Syllabus Week 1

The EITM Approach

Monday Morning ppt slides

Monday Afternoon ppt slides

Tuesday ppt slides

Tuesday Evening ppt slides

Wednesday Morning 1 ppt slides

Wednesday Morning 2 ppt slides

Sona Golder presentation slides

Thursday ppt slides

Friday ppt slides

Readings (those not available online)




Website last updated: June 25, 2007