Scholarly “The 2022 Midterm Results Show How the US Party Realignment is Continuing”, American Politics and Policy Blog. The U.S. Centre at the London School of Economics and Political Science (November 26, 2022). http://bit.ly/3U9Fzjf. November 2022
Scholarly A Democracy That Works: How Working-Class Power Defines Liberal Democracy in the United States (Routledge, 2022). October 2022
Scholarly “How Policy Models Change: Insurgent Narratives of Policy Authority since the Great Recession.” Polity 54/4 (October 2022). September 2022
Scholarly “One More Time: Party Convergence on Jim Crow Elections?”, CLIO 30/2 (Summer 2021). https://connect.apsanet.org/documents/clio-volume-30-issue-2-summer-2021/ June 2021
Scholarly Review of Christopher W. Shaw, Money, Power, and the People: The American Struggle to Make Banking Democratic, Journal of American History 108/1 (June 2021): 180 -81. https://doi.org/10.1093/jahist/jaab116 June 2021
Scholarly “In Donald Trump, Joe Biden and the Democrats are Challenging an Unprecedented Populist Demagogue”, American Politics and Policy Blog. The U.S. Centre at the London School of Economics and Political Science (October 16, 2020). https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog October 2020
Scholarly “In Donald Trump, Joe Biden and the Democrats are Challenging an Unprecedented Populist Demagogue”, American Politics and Policy Blog. The U.S. Centre at the London School of Economics and Political Science (October 16, 2020). https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/usappblog October 2020
Scholarly “Elite Policy Networks in the Political Transformation of the U.S.” Paper prepared for the American Political Science Association Annual Conference. August 2020. September 2020
Scholarly “Overcoming Precarious Work in the United States: Policy Elites and Social Justice Campaigns for Social Investment and Social Bargaining”. December 2019. December 2019
Scholarly “Framing Labor Market Regulation and the Reconstruction of the U.S. Welfare State”. Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics annual meeting. The New School, New York. June 27, 2019. June 2019
Scholarly “Policy Elites and Social Justice Campaigns for Democracy and Broadly Shared Prosperity in the United States”. Labor and Employment Research Association annual meeting. Cleveland, Ohio. June 14, 2019. June 2019
Scholarly “Social Investment and Social Bargaining Strategies in State and Local Labor Market Regulation”. Symposium on Federalism in U.S. Work Regulation. Rutgers School of Management and Labor Relations and the Cornell School of Industrial and Labor Relations. Rutgers University. November 2018. November 2018
Scholarly “Patterns of State and Local Reform in Labor Market Regulation in the United States: Emerging Reform Coalitions to Revive Liberal Democracy and Broadly Shared Prosperity”. DPSG Faculty Lecture Series, UTSA. October 12, 2018. October 2018
Scholarly “Negotiating New Equity Commitments in Turbulent Labor Markets”. Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics annual meeting. Kyoto, Japan. June 24, 2018. June 2018
Scholarly “Competing Political Analyses of the End of Neoliberalism”. Presentation in the DPSG Faculty Lecture Series, UTSA. March 29, 2018. March 2018
Scholarly Review of John Ehrenreich, “Third Wave Capitalism: How Money, Power, and the Pursuit of Self-Interest Have Imperiled the American Dream”, Journal of American History November 2017
Scholarly “The Electoral Politics of Evolving Neoliberal Capitalism in the U.S.”, Southwestern Social Science Association annual meeting. Austin, Texas. April 2017. April 2017
Scholarly “Constructing Industrial Order in the Center of the American Economy: How Electoral Competition and Social Collaboration Evolved in 20th Century New York”, Studies in American Political Development February 2017
Scholarly Comments on the Election CLIO The Newsletter of the Politics and History Section of the American Political Science Association Spring 2017 February 2017
Scholarly “Explanations for Labor Rights Compliance Problems: the United States Case of Labor Rights Policy Development”, paper prepared for the 27th annual conference of the Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics. London School of Economics and Politics. July 2015