About

   

I am an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science at Duke University. I am also an associate member of Nuffield College, University of Oxford. I currently serve as an Associate Editor at Political Science Research and Methods. My research interests lie at the boundary of political economy, political behavior, and political sociology. 

You can reach me at: daniel.stegmueller[at]duke.edu

Publications

Book

Who wants What? Preferences for Redistribution in Comparative Perspective (with David Rueda). 2019. Cambridge Studies in Comparative Politics series, Cambridge University Press. [Publisher website] [Amazon]


Peer-review journal articles

Proportional Representation and Right-Wing Populism: Evidence from Electoral System Change in Europe [with Michael Becher and Irene Menendez]. British Journal of Political Science, forthcoming 2022. [link] [pdf]

Ideology and compliance with health guidelines during the COVID-19 pandemic: A comparative perspective [with Michael Becher, Sylvain Brouard, and Eric Kerrouche]. Social Science Quarterly 102 (5), 2021. [pdf] [link]

Face-Saving Strategies Increase Self-Reported Non-Compliance with COVID-19 Preventive Measures: Experimental Evidence from 12 Countries [with J.F. Daoust, E. Bélanger, R. Dassonneville, E. Lachapelle, R. Nadeau, M. Becher, S. Brouard, M. Foucault, and C.Hönnige]. PLOS One 16 (4), 2021. [link]

Reducing Unequal Representation: The Impact of Labor Unions on Legislative Responsiveness in the US Congress [with Michael Becher]. Perspectives on Politics 19 (1), 2021. [link] [preprint]

The Political Geography of the Eurocrisis [with Pablo Beramendi]. World Politics 72(4), 2020. [preprint] [link]

Local Union Organization and Lawmaking in the U.S. Congress [with Michael Becher]. Journal of Politics 80(2), 2018. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

Models of Other-Regarding Preferences, Inequality and Redistribution [with Matthew Dimick and David Rueda]. Annual Review of Political Science 21, 2018. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

The Altruistic Rich? Inequality and Other-Regarding Preferences for Redistribution in the US [with Matthew Dimick and David Rueda]. Quarterly Journal of Political Science 11(4), 2016. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

The Externalities of Inequality: Fear of Crime and Preferences for Redistribution in Western Europe [with David Rueda]. American Journal of Political Science 60(2), 2016. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

Religion and Redistributive Voting in Western Europe, Journal of Politics 75(4), 2014. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

Bayesian hierarchical age-period-cohort models with time-structured effects. An application to religious voting in the US, 1972-2008. Electoral Studies 33, 2014. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

Modeling changing preferences. A Bayesian robust dynamic latent ordered probit model. Political Analysis 21(3), 2013. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

Religion and Preferences for Redistribution in Western Europe. Assessing the role of religion. European Sociological Review 28(4), 2012. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

Apples and Oranges? The Problem of Equivalence in Comparative Research Political Analysis 19(4), 2011. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

The Individual Level Dynamics of Bounded Partisanship [with A. Neundorf and T. Scotto] Public Opinion Quarterly 75(3), 2011. [link] [preprint] [bibtex]

Work in progress

Resilient Democracies [with Pablo Beramendi and Carles Boix].

Inequality and support for taxing the rich in times of crisis [with Michael Becher].

Endogenous benchmarking and government accountability: Experimental evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic [with M. Becher and S. Brouard]. Latest version: February 2022. [SSRN]

Exploring Effects of Race and Differential Item Functioning on Stigma Experiences: Implications for Stigma Measurement in Racially and Sexually Diverse Populations [with A. Maragh-Bass, A. Siegler, K. Mayer, A. Dulin, and J. Sales].

Covid-19, Government Performance, and Democracy: Survey Experimental Evidence from 12 Countries [with Michael Becher et al]. NBER Working Paper 29514. [NBER WP]

Organized Interests and the Mechanisms Behind Unequal Representation in Legislatures [with Michael Becher]. Latest version: December 2021. Forthcoming chapter in ``Unequal Democracies'' volume, edited by Noam Lupu and Jonas Pontusson. [pdf]

Tax Progressivity and Redistribution [with Matthew Dimick and Pablo Beramendi]. Latest version: October 2020. [PDF]

Global Economic Shocks, Local Institutions, and Political Responsiveness [with Michael Becher] [PDF]

Cognitive Ability, Union Membership, and Turnout [with Michael Becher]. January 2019. [PDF]

Demand for Redistribution and Left Parties in Industrialized Democracies: The Influence of Income and Risk on Voting [with David Rueda]. Latest version: August 2018. [PDF]

Rational mobilization of ideological group members in elections. Theory and Evidence [with Michael Becher]. [PDF]

Curriculum Vitae

Latest CV here

Teaching

Upcoming courses

POLSCI 748 Causal Inference. Duke, Fall 2022..

Current Courses

Past Courses

POLSCI 690. Models for Hierarchical and Time Series Cross Section Data. Duke, Fall 2019.

POLSCI 745 Political Economy Core. Duke, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022. [syllabus]

POLSCI 748 Introduction to Causal Inference. Duke, Fall 2018.

POLSCI 146 Politics and Economics. Duke, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021.

POLSCI 733 Advanced Regression. Duke, 2017, 2018, 2020.

Advanced Bayesian Models. University of Mannheim.

Regression designs and their applications. University of Mannheim.

Quantitative Methods in Political Science. University of Mannheim.

Models for Categorical Data. University of Mannheim.

Introduction to Missing Data. University of Mannheim.

Modeling heterogeneity in cross-sectional and panel data. Essex Summer School.