Professor
Political Science
Prof. Julia Azari is Professor in the Department of Political Science at 蜜桃影像. She holds Ph.D., M.A. and M.Phil. degrees in political science from Yale University, and a B.A. in political science from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her research and teaching interests include the American presidency, American political parties, political communication and American political development. Her research has been supported by the 蜜桃影像 Regular Research Grant, the Harry Middleton Fellowship in Presidential Studies, the Gerald Ford Presidential Library Foundation Travel Grant, the Harry Truman Library Institute Scholars Award, the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, and the Library of Congress.
Prof. Azari is a regular contributor at the political science blog . Her work has also appeared in the Washington Post鈥檚 blog and in .
Education
Ph.D., Yale University, 2007
Courses Taught
- POSC 2201 American Politics | Syllabus
- POSC 4201 The American Congress | Syllabus
- POSC 4211 The American Presidency | Syllabus
- POSC 6211 Congress and the Presidency
Research Interests
Prof. Azari's research interests include the American presidency, American political development, and political parties. Her research looks at the relationship between presidents and parties, how formal and informal rules matter, and how change occurs across different institutions.
Publications
Books
- Julia R. Azari, Delivering the People鈥檚 Message: The Changing Politics of the Presidential Mandate. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2014.
- Julia R. Azari, Lara M. Brown and Zim Nwokora, eds. The Presidential Leadership Dilemma: Between the Constitution and a Political Party. Albany: SUNY Press, 2013.
Articles
- 2022. Julia R. Azari and Seth Masket, 鈥淥bama鈥檚 Party? An Examination of Whether a Reluctant Leader Transformed the Democratic Party in His Favor,鈥 The Forum, vol. 20, no. 2, 257-274. (internally reviewed)
- 2019. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the Institutions, Stupid: The Real Roots of America鈥檚 Political Crisis,鈥 Foreign Affairs 98(52). (internally reviewed)
- 2017. Andrew Gelman and Julia Azari, 鈥19 Things We Learned from the 2016 Election,鈥 Discussion Paper/Julia Azari and Andrew Gelman, Response to Discussants, Statistics and Public Policy. 4(1): 1-10. (invited, internally reviewed)
- 2016. Julia R. Azari and Marc Hetherington. 鈥淏ack to the Future? What the Politics of the Late Nineteenth Century Can Tell Us About the 2016 Election,鈥 Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences. 667: 92-109. (invited, internally reviewed)
- 2014. Julia R. Azari and Justin S. Vaughn, 鈥淏arack Obama and the Rhetoric of Electoral Logic,鈥 Social Science Quarterly. 94, no. 2, 523-540. (peer-reviewed)
- 2013. Julia R. Azari, 鈥淚nstitutional Change and the Presidential Mandate,鈥 Social Science History 37, no. 4, 483-514. (peer-reviewed)
- 2012. Jose D. Villalobos, Justin S. Vaughn, and Julia R. Azari, 鈥淧olitics or Policy? How Rhetoric Matters to Presidential Leadership of Congress,鈥 Presidential Studies Quarterly 42, no. 3 (September), 549-576. (peer-reviewed)
- 2012. Julia R. Azari and Jennifer K. Smith, 鈥淚nformal Institutions in Advanced Industrial Democracies,鈥 Perspectives on Politics 10, no. 1 (March), 37-55. (peer-reviewed)
Book Chapters and Invited Articles
- Forthcoming. Julia R. Azari and Alexis Nemecek, 鈥淧opulism, popular sovereignty, and periphery,鈥 in Popular Fictions: Popular Sovereignty in Theory and Practice, Ewa Attanassow, Thomas Bartscherer, and David Bateman, eds. Cambridge University Press. (peer-reviewed)
- 2022. Preface, Midterms and Mandates: Electoral Reassessment of Presidents and Parties, Patrick Andelic, Mark McClay, and Robert Mason, eds. University of Edinburgh Press. (invited)
- 2020. 鈥淭he Scrambled Cycle,鈥 in American Political Development and the Trump Presidency, Zachary Callen and Philip Rocco, eds. University of Pennsylvania Press. (peer-reviewed)
- 2019. 鈥淎re Parties Inherently Conservative?鈥 in The Making of the Presidential Candidates 2020, Jonathan Bernstein and Casey Dominguez, eds. Rowman and Littlefield. (invited, internally reviewed)
- 2019. 鈥淧arty Foul: How Obama Made Partisan, Not Party, Politics in a Polarized Environment,鈥 in The Obama Legacy, Bert Rockman and Andrew Rudalevige, eds. University Press of Kansas. (peer-reviewed)
- 2018. Julia R. Azari and Seth Masket, 鈥溾橳he Mandate of the People:鈥 The 2016 Sanders Campaign in Context,鈥 in The State of the Parties 2018: The Changing Role of Contemporary Political Parties, John C. Green, Daniel J. Coffey and David B. Cohen, eds. Rowman and Littlefield. (internally reviewed)
- 2017. Julia R. Azari and Seth Masket, 鈥淚ntraparty Democracy and the 2016 Election,鈥 in Conventional Wisdom, Parties, and Broken Barriers in the 2016 Election, Jennifer Lucas, Christopher Galdieri, and Tauna Starbuck Sisco, eds. Lexington Books. (internally reviewed)
- 2017. Julia R. Azari, 鈥淧residents and Political Parties,鈥 in New Directions in the American Presidency, 2nd ed., edited by Lori Cox Han. Routledge. (invited to update for the third edition)
- 2015. Julia R. Azari and Benjamin A. Stewart, 鈥淥nline Opinion Leaders and the Dynamics of Electoral Logic,鈥 chapter in Controlling the Message: Campaigning and Governing in an Information Rich Environment, Victoria A. Farrar-Myers and Justin S. Vaughn, eds. New York: NYU Press. (peer-reviewed)
- 2013. Julia R. Azari, 鈥淧residential Mandates and the Leadership Dilemma: William J. Clinton, George W. Bush and Barack H. Obama,鈥 in Julia R. Azari, Lara M. Brown and Zim Nwokora, eds. The Presidential Leadership Dilemma: Between the Constitution and a Political Party. Albany: SUNY Press. (peer-reviewed)
- 2010. Sendhil Mullainathan, Ebonya Washington, and Julia R. Azari, 鈥淭he Impact of Electoral Debate on Public Opinions: An Experimental Investigation of the 2005 New York City Mayoral Election,鈥 in Political Representation, Ian Shapiro, Susan C. Stokes, Elisabeth Jean Wood and Alexander Kirshner, eds. New York: Cambridge. (peer-reviewed)