Friday, October 27

9:30

A

Charles Boehmer, Erik Gartzke, Timothy Nordstrom, and Quan Li, IGOs: Solution or Mirror?

9:30

B

Brett Ashley Leeds and Andrew G. Long, The Price of Security: Military Alliances and Trade Agreements

10:00

A

Claudio Cioffi-Revilla, The Evolution of Collective Action

10:00

B

Emerson Niou and Guofu Tan, External Threat and Collective Action

11:00

A

William Dixon, Mark Mullenbach, and Renato Corbetta, The Evolution of the Democratic Peace

11:00

B

Michelle Benson, Shared Security Preferences, Economic Preferences, International Normative Preferences, and Institutional Preferences: Gestation Periods for Peace and Temporal Inter-Relationships

11:30

A

Dan Reiter, Temporal Dependence and International Conflict

11:30

B

Irfan Nooruddin, Modeling Selection Bias in Studies of Sanction Efficacy

12:00

A

Russell Leng and Patrick Regan, Democracy, Culture, and the Mediation of Militarized Disputes

12:00

B

Belinda Bragg, Changing the Calculus: Extended Immediate Deterrence as a Four-Player Model

14:00

A

Carlos Seiglie, Putting the "Economics" Back in International Political Economics

14:00

B

Meredith Reid Sarkees, Ethnic or Inter-Communal Conflict?

14:30

A

Rafael Reuveny and William R. Thompson, Systemic Leadership and North-South Conflict

14:30

B

Benjamin Fordham, Another Look at "Parties, Voters, and the Use of Force Abroad"

15:00

A

Brian Lai, Military Mobilization and Its Effects on International Crises

15:00

B

Stephen Shellman, Measuring the Intensity of IPI Events Data: A Modified Q-sort Scale

16:00

A

Yi Yang, Reciprocity and Norms in Absence of Militarized Conflict: Time Series Analysis of China-Taiwan-U.S. Relations 1984-1995

16:00

B

Douglas Lemke, Domestic Institutions and International Affinity

16:30

A

Mark Crescenzi, Andrew Enterline, and Kelly Kadera, Aggregating, Aggravating, and Ameliorating: A Dynamic Model of Systemic Democracy and Conflict

16:30

B

Fiona McGillivray and Alastair Smith, A Hierarchical Analysis of Dyadic Events Data

17:00

A

Catherine Lynch, Obstacles to the Implementation of Peace Agreements

17:00

B

Joshua Goldstein, War and Gender: Empirical Evidence on Gender Roles in War

17:30

A

Mark Mullenbach, Whether and When to Intervene? Explaining Third Party Interventions in Intrastate Disputes in the 20th Century

17:30

B

Bernadette Jungblut, Questioning the "Liberal Hypothesis": When Particular Interests Matter More than National Interests

Saturday, October 28

8:30

A

Paul D. Senese and John Vasquez, A Unified Model of Territorial Conflict: Controlling for Sample Selection, Contiguity, and Status

8:30

B

Frank Wayman, A Cooperative Solution to Prisoner's Dilemma

9:00

A

Christopher Sprecher, Enduring Rivals, Nuclear Weapons, and Crisis Escalation

9:00

B

David Sacko, Dimensions of Hegemony and International Leadership

9:30

A

John R. Oneal and Bruce Russett, "Causes" of Peace, 1885-1992: A VAR Analysis

9:30

B

David A. Lake, Democracy and the Size of States: Monopoly Power and the Origins of Imperialism

10:00

A

Monica Lagazio and Bruce Russett, A Neural Network Analysis of MIDs, 1885-1992: Are the Patterns Stable?

10:00

B

Archana Bhandari, Coalition Constraints on Defense Spending: An Empirical Analysis, 1948-1983

11:00

A

Murray Wolfson, Zagros Madjid-Sadjadi, and Patrick James, A Cluster Analysis of National Attributes

11:00

B

Sheldon Levy, Russian Views of Political Mass Killing

11:30

A

David Sobek and Joseph McGill, Phantom Transitions, or Why Power Transitions between the Two Leading States May Be Harmless

11:30

B

Soo Yeon Kim, Commerce, Conquest, and How States Choose

12:00

A

Charles Anderton, Economic Theorizing of Conflict: Foundational Contributions, Future Possibilities

12:00

B

Yun Ho Chung, The Combined Use of Relative Utility Analysis and Fisher's Single Negotiation Text for Conflict Mediation

14:00

A

Walter Isard, Methods of Conflict Resolution Involving the Combined Use of Key Components of Several Proposed Procedures

14:00

B

Christopher Butler, The Dynamic Properties of Demand Initiation and Escalation

14:30

A

Sean Bolks, Who Spends More? A Cross Sectional Times Series Examination of Military Expenditure Patterns

14:30

B

Carmela Lutmar, The Diversionary Use of Force and Domestic Macroeconomic Constraints

15:00

A

Harvey Starr, The "Nature" of Contiguous Borders: Ease of Interaction and Salience in the Contemporary System

15:00

B

Steven Brams, Paul Edelman, and Peter Fishburn, Paradoxes of Fair Division

16:00

A

Curtis Signorino, Strategy and Selection in International Relations

16:00

B

Robert Blanton and Shannon Blanton, Do Politics Matter? The Determinants of U.S.-Africa Trade

16:30

A

Zeev Maoz, Pacifism, Conflict Proneness, and Addiction: An Exploration of Monadic and Dyadic Patterns

16:30

B

Anne Miers, Cliff Morgan, and Glenn Palmer, Economic Sanctions and Foreign Policy Substitutability: An Application of the Two Good Theory

17:00

A

Michael W. Simon, Modeling Nuclear Proliferation

17:00

B

David Clark and Timothy Nordstrom, Bigger Isn't Always Better: Testing Conflict Hypotheses in Heterogeneous Samples

Sunday, October 29

9:00

A

Ranan Kuperman, A Regime for Protracted Conflict: Rules Governing Israeli Decisions to Use Limited Military Force Against its Arab Neighbors

9:00

B

Matthew Baum, Who Rallies? The Constituent Foundations of the "Rally-Round-the-Flag" Effect

9:30

A

Siddharth Swaminathan, A Political Economy Model of Violent Intrastate Conflict

9:30

B

Will H. Moore, Dissident-State Interaction: Evaluating Two Equation Models

10:00

A

Ray Dacey, Risk Assessment in the International System

10:00

B

J. Michael Greig, Moments of Opportunity: An Empirical Study of the Sources of Ripeness for International Mediation Among Enduring Rivals

11:00

A

Marie Besancon and Ismene Gizelis, Poverty, Ethnicity, and Gender: The Socio-economic Conditions for Conflict and Peace

11:00

B

Kristian Gleditsch and Michael Ward, Location, Location, Location: An MCMC Approach to Modeling Spatial Context with Categorical Dependent Variables

11:30

A

Jaroslav Tir, Never-Ending Conflicts? Territorial Changes as Potential Solutions for Territorial Disputes

11:30

B

Stuart Bremer and Matthew Rupert, Linguistic Similarity and Interstate Militarized Conflict: 1870-1992

12:00

A

Sara McLaughlin Mitchell, Peaceful and Coercive Means for Settling Territorial Disputes

12:00

B

Erik Gartzke, Liberalism, Information, and Peace: A Two-Level Game

12:30.

A

Resat Bayer, External Factors and Democratization: Membership in Exclusive Clubs, Living in the Right Neighborhood, and Being a Loser

12:30

B

Chad Atkinson, A Formal Model Linking Domestic Politics and Executives' Decisions to Act Towards Rivals: Conflict, Cooperation and the Domestic Context