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cadolph at uw dot edu



I’m a member of the faculty at the University of Washington, Seattle, where I serve as professor of political science, adjunct professor of statistics, and associate director of the Center for Statistics and the Social Sciences.

Substantive Interests

My political economy and comparative politics research explores the ways political institutions and interests jointly determine the public policies that shape our lives, including monetary policy, fiscal policy, health policy, and trade policy. I am particularly interested in the influence of career incentives and partisanship on elite behavior and policy making.

Methodological interests

I specialize in the visual display of scientific information, particularly the illustration of substantive findings from statistical models. I’m also interested in statistical inference using data whose logical bounds enable or improve estimation, as in the study of political rank; compositional data like careers, budgets, and trade portfolios; and ecological inference.

Other activities

I serve as an expert witness on the use of statistical methods to resolve contested elections. I also consult on matters relating to statistical methodology and data visualization.

COVID-19 State Policy Project

During 2020 and 2021, I served as faculty lead for a team of political science and public health researchers collecting and comparing policy responses to the COVID-19 pandemic across the US states. Data reflecting state-level social distancing policies and other non-pharmaceutical interventions issued from March 2020 through July 2021 are available at covid19statepolicy.org. See also our articles on partisan patterns in the adoption of social distancing mandates, the adoption of mask mandates, and the easing of social distancing requirements. Our data also inform IHME’s COVID-19 forecasting and modeling efforts.



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19-jan-15.  Short course offered:
I’m teaching a 9 hour course on Visualizing Model Inference and Robustness sponsored by Universität Konstanz and ETH Zürich, to be held in Konstanz, Germany, 25–27 March 2015. The syllabus can be found here. Additional short course materials can be found on my Data Visualization course page.

16-jul-14.  Bankers, Bureaucrats, and
Central Bank Politics
has won the 2014 Charles Levine Memorial Prize for best book in comparative public policy and administration, awarded by Governance and the International Political Science Association.

22-mar-14.  Book review: A long review of Bankers, Bureaucrats, and
Central Bank Politics
appears in the March issue of the Journal of Economic Literature.

9-oct-13.  New publication:
“State Government Organization of Health Services, 1990–2009: Correlates and Consequences” will appear in the Journal of Public Health Management and Practice.




University of Washington link

CSSS Center for Statistics and the Social Sciences link

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