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William Bianco

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William T. Bianco, (Ph.D., University of Rochester, 1987)

210 Woodburn Hall
Phone: 856-0940
Fax: 855-2027
Email: wbianco@indiana.edu
Curriculum vitae


  • Recent Publications


  •    William Bianco's research focuses on American Politics, with emphasis on Congress, legislative decision-making, representation, and positive political theory. He is the author of Trust: Representatives and Constituents (University of Michigan Press, 1994), American Politics: Strategy and Choice (W. W. Norton, 2001), editor of Congress on Display, Congress at Work (University of Michigan Press, 2000) and author or coauthor of numerous journal articles, most recently “’A Theory Waiting to Be Discovered and Used:’ A Reanalysis of Canonical Experiments on Majority Rule Decision-Making” (Journal of Politics, 2006) and “Uncovering Majority Party Influence in Legislatures” (American Political Science Review, 2005). He is also the co-recipient of two National Science Foundation Grants.

    He received his undergraduate degree in Political Science from SUNY Stony Brook (1982), and his PhD. from the University of Rochester (1987) under the direction of William Riker and Richard Fenno. He arrived at Indiana University in September 2006 after holding faculty appointments at Duke University and Penn State University, and visiting appointments at Stanford University and Harvard University. He was also a visiting scholar at The Brookings Institution.

    His teaching responsibilities at Indiana include undergraduate courses on American Politics, Legislative Politics, and Statistics, and graduate classes on Legislative Politics, Statistics, Formal Modeling, and Institutional Analysis.

    He is an Affiliated Faculty at the Workshop for Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana University, as well as a member of the Workshop’s Advisory Committee. He also serves or has served as a reviewer for several academic journals and presses, a member of various professional committees and editorial boards, and as a member of the National Science Foundation’s Political Science Advisory Committee.

    Recent Publications                     back to the top

  • A Theory Waiting to Be Discovered and Used: A Reanalysis of Canonical Experiments on Majority-Rule Decision Making


  • The Constrained Instability of Majority Rule: Experiments on the Robustness of the Uncovered Set


  • Party Campaign Committees and the Distribution of Tally Program Funds


  • Uncovering Evidence of Conditional Party Government: Reassessing Majority Party Influence in Congress and State Legisltures


  • The Uncovered Set and the Limits of Legislative Action


  • Different Paths to the Same Result: Rational Choice, Political Psychology, and Impression Formation in Campaigns

  • Last updated, January 12, 2007

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