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322-6238
312 Calhoun
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Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP)
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Latin American Politics; Survey Research
Mitchell A. Seligson
Centennial Professor
Professor of Sociology (by courtesy)
Director, Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP)
Mitchell A. Seligson is the Centennial Professor of Political Science and Professor of Sociology at Vanderbilt University. He founded and directs the Latin American Public Opinion Project (LAPOP), which conducts the AmericasBarometer surveys that currently cover over 20 countries in the Americas. LAPOP has conducted over 100 surveys of public opinion, mainly focused on democracy, in many countries in Latin America, but has also included projects in Africa and the Balkans. For details, see www.LapopSurveys.org. Prior to joining the faculty at Vanderbilt, he held the Daniel H. Wallace Chair of Political Science at the University of Pittsburgh, and also served there as director of the Center for Latin American Studies. He has been a Fulbright Fellow and has received grants and fellowships from the Rockefeller Foundation, the Ford Foundation, the National Science Foundation, The Mellon Foundation, The Howard Heinz Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education, USAID and others, and has published over 140 articles, 14 books and more than a 35 monographs and occasional papers. He served on the National Academy of Sciences panel studying the impact of foreign assistance and democracy, and is an appointed member of the Organization of American States (OAS) Advisory Board of Inter-American Program on Education for Democratic Values and Practices, and is a founding member of the International Advisory Board (IAB) of the AfroBarometer, and of the editorial board of the European Political Science Review (Cambridge University Press) and the Journal of Democracy en Español. He also serves on the Editorial Board of Comparative Political Studies.
Representative publications
- John Booth and Mitchell Seligson, The Legitimacy Puzzle in Latin America: Democracy and Political Support in Eight Nations (Cambridge University Press, 2009
- Development and Underdevelopment, the Political Economy of Global Inequality (Fourth Edition, Lynne Reinner Publishers, co-edited with John Passé-Smith, 2008).
- "Personality and Civic Engagement: An Integrative Framework for the Study of Trait Effects on Political Behavior." American Political Science Review,Volume 104, No. 1, February, 2010, pp. 1-26 , with Jeff Mondak et al
- Mitchell A. Seligson and John A Booth, "Trouble in Central America: Crime, Hard Times and Discontent," Journal of Democracy, April, 2010, Volume 21. No. 2, pp. 123-135.
- Abby Córdova and Mitchell A. Seligson, "Economic Shocks and Democratic Vulnerabilities in Latin America and the Caribbean," Latin American Politics and Society, Volume 52, 2 (Summer, 2010), pp. 2-32.
- "The Participatory Personality: Evidence from Latin America," British Journal of Political Science, forthcoming, with Jeff Mondak et al.