BRYAN W. MARSHALL
Curriculum Vitae 12/2006

Department of Political Science
214 Harrison Hall
Oxford, OH 45056-2807
Office Phone: (513) 529-0161
Fax: (513) 529-1709
E-Mail: marshabw@muohio.edu
Webpage: www.miamiu/~polbmarsh/will.htm
Ph.D. June
1999
Department of Political Science
M.A. June
1992
Department of Political Science
B.A. December 1989
Department of Political Science
TECHNICAL TRAINING
EITM 2003
Empirical
Implications of Theoretical Models
(Formal
Theory, Bayesian & Classical Econometrics, Modeling Agents &
Institutions)
Methods 1995 The
ICPSR (Time Series and
MLE)
Political Psychology The
SIPP (Political Behavior
and Research Design)
Assistant Professor,
· Introductory Quantitative Methods for Political Scientists, POL 606 (Graduate).
· Intermediate Quantitative Methods, POL 607 (Graduate).
·
· American Political System, POL 141 (Undergraduate).
· Seminar
on the Presidency & Congress, POL 650 (Graduate).
· Politics and National Issues, POL 101
(Undergraduate).
Assistant Professor,
Instructor
·
$305 Faculty Research PREP Grant,
·
$600 USS Faculty Mentoring Award,
·
$1513 Faculty Research Grant,
·
$4000 Research Grant, Arts & Sciences,
·
$24,988
·
$1,000 University of
· $250 Edward Artinian Travel Award from Southern Political Science Association (awarded 11/00).
·
$10,740 University of
·
$750 University of
·
$250 Research Grant from
(American Review of Politics, Fall, Vol. 25, 265-84.
(American
Politics Research, Vol. 33, no.
1: 81-105).
(2003) “Controlling the Agenda with Special
Rules: A House/Senate Comparison of
Legislation in the Postreform Congress” (Politics and Policy, Vol.
31, no.4: 672-693).
(2003) “Presidential Success in the Realm of Foreign Affairs: Institutional Reform and the Role of House Committees” (Social Science Quarterly, Vol. 84, no. 3: 685-703).
(2002) “The Pendulum
of Congressional Power: Agenda Change,
Partisanship and the Demise of the Post-World War II Foreign Policy
Consensus” with Brandon Prins. (Congress
and the Presidency, Vol. 29, no. 2:
195-212).
(2002)
"Examining Claims of Procedural Choice:
The Use of Floor Waivers in the
(2002) "Explaining the Role of Restrictive Rules in the Postreform House" (Legislative Studies Quarterly, Vol. 27, no.1: 61-85).
(2001) "Explaining Partisanship on Special Rules in the Postreform House" with William Hixon.
(Journal of
Legislative Studies, Vol. 7, no.
4: 127-140).
(2001) "Congressional Support of the President: A Comparison of Foreign, Defense, and Domestic Policy Decision-Making During and After the Cold War" with Brandon Prins. (Presidential Studies Quarterly, Vol. 31, no.2: 660-78).
(2001) "Partisanship and the Purse: The Money Committees and Procedures in the Postreform Congress.” With Brandon C. Prins and David W. Rohde. (Politics and Policy, Vol. 29, no. 2: 291-315).
(Winter 1999) "Issue Domains, Conflict, and Committee Outliers: Evidence From the House and Senate Appropriations Committees" With Brandon C. Prins. American Review of Politics, Vol. 20: 309-27.
(1999) "Fighting Fire With Water: Partisan Procedural Strategies and the Senate Appropriations Committee" with Brandon C. Prins and David W. Rohde. Congress and the Presidency, Vol. 26, no. 2, Fall: 113-132.
Books
(2005) Rules for
War: Procedural Choice in the
Book Chapters
(Forthcoming 2007) “A Court of
Laws or a Super Legislature: A
Neo-Institutional Model of Supreme Court Decision Making” With Richard Pacelle. In Mark C. Miller (Editor), Rethinking
(2005) “Explaining Congressional-Executive Rivalry in International
Affairs: The Changing Role of Parties,
Committees, and the Issue Agenda.”
In Divided Power: The Presidency, Congress and the Formation of
American Foreign Policy edited by Donald R. Kelley. The Fulbright
(2000) "Majority Party Leadership, Strategic Choice, and Committee
Power: Appropriations in the House, 1995-1998" with Brandon C.
Prins and David W. Rohde. In William Bianco (Editor), Congress on
Display, Congress at Work.
2006
“International
Commitments in an Era of Unilateral Presidential Power: A Comparison of the Treaties and Executive
Agreements Made by the Administrations of George W. Bush and Theodore
Roosevelt” with Brandon C. Prins.
Presented at the Shambaugh Conference, Building Synergies: Institutions and Cooperation in World
Politics, University of
“Strategic
or Sincere: Explaining How the Supreme
Court Deals with Economic Issues” with Richard Pacelle and Brett W.
Curry. Presented at the American
Political Science Association Meeting, 9/06.
“Assessing
Presidential Power: Veto Politics and
Presidential Signing Statements as Coordinated Strategies” with
Christopher S. Kelley. Presented at the
American Political Science Association Meeting, 9/06.
“Explaining
Supreme Court Decision Making” with Richard Pacelle and Brett W.
Curry. Presented at the
“The
Last Mover Advantage: Presidential Power
and the Role of Signing Statements” with Christopher S. Kelley. Presented at the
“Modeling
Supreme Court Decision Making in Statutory Cases: Constraints or Discretion?” with
Richard Pacelle. Presented at the
Southern Political Science Association Meeting, 1/06.
2005
"Winning
in Congress: Presidential Position
Taking and Congressional-Executive
Relations" Presented at the American Political Science
Association Meetings, 8/05.
“Does Congress
Matter? Examining Presidential Decisions
to Use Force, 1950-2003” with Brandon C. Prins.
Presented at
“Keepers
of the Covenant or Platonic Guardians?
Decision Making on the
2004
“Assessing the Strategic
Effects of Presidential Vetoes and Veto Threats on Congressional Decision-Making”
with Jamie Carson. Presented at the
American Political Science Association Meetings 9/04.
“Why Do it on the Floor
when we can Do it in the Rules Committee:
The Role of House Floor Waivers in Affecting Committee Turf” with
Charles Finnochario. Presented at the
“Agendas, Side Issues and Leadership in the U.S. Senate” with William Hixon. Presented at the Southern Political Science Association Meetings, 1/04.
2003
“Staring Down the
Barrel of the Veto Pen: Veto Threats and
Presidential Influence in Congress.”
Presented at the
“Explaining
Congressional-Executive Rivalry in International Affairs: The Changing Role of Parties, Committees, and
the Issue Agenda.” Invited paper
presented for the conference on Divided Power: The Presidency, Congress and the Formation of
American Foreign Policy at the Fulbright Institute of International
Relations,
“Checking
Power with Power: A Strategic Choice Analysis
of Presidential Vetoes and Congressional Overrides” with Jamie L. Carson. Presented at the American Political Science
Association Meetings, 8/03.
2002
“Parties and Roll
Call Voting in the House” with William Hixon.
Presented at the Southern Political Science Association Meetings,
11/02.
“Examining
Presidential Influence in Congress: Testing
a Theory of Anticipated Reactions in the Realm of Foreign and Domestic Policy”
with Brandon C. Prins. Presented at the
American Political Science Association Meetings, 8/02.
“Explaining
Presidential Influence in Congress: A Unified
Model of Position Taking and Legislative Success, 1953-98” with Brandon C.
Prins and Steven A. Shull. Presented at
the
“Partisan Influences
on Roll-Call Voting in the U.S. House” with William Hixon. Presented at the
2001
"Controlling the Amendment Agenda: Partisan Politics and the Use of
Floor Waivers" with William Hixon. Presented at the
"Agenda Change, Conflict, and the Role of Congressional Committees in
Foreign Policy." Presented at the
"The Strategic Use of Executive Orders" with Richard Pacelle. Presented at the American Political Science Association Meetings.
"Strategic or Sincere?: The Supreme Court in Constitutional Decisions" with Richard Pacelle. Presented at the American Political Science Association Meetings.
"Controlling Turf: Referral and Amendment Rights in the House" with Charles Finnochario. Presented at the Southern Political Science Association Meetings.
"Modeling Supreme Court Decision Making" with Richard Pacelle. Presented at the Southern Political Science Association Meetings.
2000
"Agenda Change and Congressional-Executive Relations: Foreign and
Defense Policy Realignment in the Post-reform Era" with Brandon C.
Prins. Presented at the