Political Analysis
Political Analysis is the journal of the Society for Political Methodology and the Political Methodology Section of the American Political Science Association. Chronicling the exciting development of the burgeoning discipline of political methodology, the sophisticated research and innovative methodologies that find their way into the pages of Political Analysis are raising the standard for empirical work across the diaspora of political science. The journal is edited by ISERP fellow Robert Erikson and has been hosted by the Institute since 2003.
Abstracts and articles from Political Analysis—including advance access articles—are available on the website of the publisher, Oxford Journals. A digest of the journal's latest offerings is also available below.
Spring 2007
Volume 15, Number 2
- From Statistical Nuisances to Serious Modeling: Changing How We Think About the Analysis of Time-Series–Cross-Section Data
Nathaniel Beck - A Lot More to Do: The Sensitivity of Time-Series Cross-Section Analyses to Simple Alternative Specifications
Sven E. Wilson and Daniel M. Butler - Efficient Estimation of Time-Invariant and Rarely Changing Variables in Finite Sample Panel Analyses with Unit Fixed Effects
Thomas Plümper and Vera E. Troeger - Spatial Econometric Models of Cross-Sectional Interdependence in Political Science Panel and Time-Series-Cross-Section Data
Robert J. Franzese, Jr and Jude C. Hays - A Bayesian Multilevel Modeling Approach to Time-Series Cross-Sectional Data
Boris Shor, Joseph Bafumi, Luke Keele, and David Park - Random Coefficient Models for Time-Series–Cross-Section Data: Monte Carlo Experiments
Nathaniel Beck and Jonathan N. Katz





