Henry A. Kim
“There are two possible outcomes: If the result confirms the hypothesis, then you've made a measurement. If the result is contrary to the hypothesis, then you've made a discovery.” —Enrico Fermi
Henry Kim is a PhD candidate in political science at UC San Diego.
Dissertation Chapters on Line
Partisan Deadlocks and Agenda Setting in American State Legislatures
Agenda Setting, Clout, and Logrolls in the U.S. House
Papers in Progress
Presidential Veto Threat as a Negotiating Instrument with the Bicameral Congress (with Samuel H. Kernell)
How Much is Majority Status Worth in American State Legislatures? (With Justin H. Phillips)
Overhang Seats and Strategic Voting under Mixed Member Proportional Electoral System (With Nathan F. Batto)
Were the Boll Weevils Punished?: Agenda Setting as Disciplinary Device
Ideas in Progress
Sunk Cost, Media Industry Structure, and Political News
Endogenous Growth Theory, Firm Location Decision, and Developmental Politics
Resource Curse and Party Politics in Venezuela
Sustainability of Speculative Equilibrium in an Asset Market with Rational Expectations
The Faces in Background
Hara Kei (Japan)
Sam Rayburn (United States)
Giovanni Giolitti (Italy)
Ikeda Hayato (Japan)