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The Warren Miller Prize

Oxford University Press has agreed to endow the Miller Prize for the best article published in Political Analysis. This prize of US $500 will be awarded at the Annual Meeting of the American Political Science Association and will go to the best article published in the most recently completed volume (so the prize awarded in September 2008 will go to the best article in Volume 15, and so on).

The Miller Prize for the best article published in Volume 15 of Political Analysis has been awarded to Daniel E. Ho, Kosuke Imai, Gary King, and Elizabeth A. Stuart for "Matching as Nonparametric Preprocessing for Reducing Model Dependence in Parametric Casual Inference" (Vol 15: 199-236).

View the winning article for free here.

  • 2007 Frederick J. Boehmke, University of Iowa, for "The Influence of Unobserved Factors on Position Timing and Content in the NAFTA Vote." (Vol 14: 430-446)
  • 2006 Robert J, Franzese, Jr., University of Michigan, for "Empirical Strategies for Various Manifestations of Multilevel Data." (Vol 13: 430-446)
  • 2005 David W. Nickerson, University of Notre Dame, for "Scalable Protocols Offer Efficient Design for Field Experiments." (Vol 13: 233-252)
  • 2004 David K. Park, Andrew Gelman, Columbia University, and Joseph Bafumi, Columbia University for "Bayesian Multilevel Estimation with Poststratification: State-Level Estimates from National Polls." (Vol 12: 375-385)
  • 2003 Jeffrey B. Lewis and Kenneth A. Schultz, UCLA, for "Revealing Preferences: Empirical Estimation of a Crisis Bargaining Game with Incomplete Information." (Vol 11: 345-367)
  • 2002 Patrick Heagerty, University of Washington, Michael D. Ward, University of Washington, and Kristian Skrede Gleditsch, UCSD, for "Windows of Opportunity: Window Subseries Empirical Variance Estimators in International Relations." (Vol 10: 304-317)
  • 2001 Keith T. Poole, University of Houston, for "The Geometry of Multidimensional Quadratic Utility in Models of Parliamentary Roll Call Voting." (Vol 9: 211-226)
  • 2000 John Londregan, UCLA, for "Estimating Legislator's Preferred Points." (Vol 8: 35-56)