NICHOLAS R. MILLER

Department of Political Science
University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC)
1000 Hilltop Circle
Baltimore, MD 21250
Voice: 410- 455-2187
Fax: 410- 455-1021
Email: nmiller@umbc.edu

I am Professor of Political Science at UMBC. I have been a member of the UMBC faculty since 1971 and served as Chairman of the Political Science Department from 1985 to 1991.
 

Education

I graduated in government from Harvard in 1963 and did my graduate work in political science at the University of California at Berkeley, receiving my Ph.D. in 1973.

Teaching and Courses

I teach undergraduate and graduate courses in the areas of formal political theory, game theory and politics, parties and elections, political participation, research methods, and American politics.   I have a webpage for each course I teach.  Courses for the current and next semesters are shown below.    

        
           Fall 2008

                POLI 300
                POLI 423  (The Electoral College and Presidential Elections)


           Spring 2009

               
POLI 100  (two sections)
                POLI 300
           
For information on the most recent and/or prospective offerings of my other courses,  click here.

Research

My principal research, some of which has been supported by the National Science Foundation, lies in the area of formal political theory and public choice; it deals with collective decision making and, in particular, formal theories of voting processes. I have written articles on logrolling and vote trading, majority voting, coalition formation, power, social choice, information pooling, agenda control, and spatial voting models, which have appeared in such journals as American Political Science Review, American Journal of Political Science, Public Choice, Mathematical and Computer Modelling, Theory and Decision, and Journal of Theoretical Politics, as well as in a number of edited books. I have written a monograph on Committees, Agendas, and Voting (Harwood Academic Publishers, 1995). 

Current work on the Yolk, Covering, and the Uncovered Set in Spatial Voting Games using CyberSenate software

Current work on the Electoral College 

Current Work on A Priori Voting Power

Other Working Papers, Notes, and Unpublished Research 

Recent and Representative Publications  


Principal UMBC Service

I was Chair of the Faculty Affairs Committee from 1980 to 1983, Chair of the Political Science Department from 1985 to 1991, Chair of the Undergraduate Council from 1994 to 1997, and Chair of the University Faculty Review Committee in 2003.
 

Professional Activities

I was a member of the Editorial Board of  The Journal of Politics from 1976 through 1981.  From December 1995 through January 2002, I served as the receiving editor for the Journal of Theoretical Politics  and I remain on the journal's Editorial Board. I am now the editor of the “eJournal” Games and Political Behavior (which includes public choice topics) in the new PSN (Political Science Network) division of  SSRN (Social Science Research Network). I am a member of the  American Political Science Association and of the Public Choice Society, and I am the current President of the latter.  From 1997 through 2001, I served as UMBC's Official Representative to the Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR).

Complete CV

Resources for Political Science Research on Voting and Elections

Prestigious Scholarship Opportunities  [for UMBC Undergraduates]   (Nancy L. Miller)

Diana Miller's website (School of Architecture, Carnegie Mellon University)

Information concerning my grandfather, Alec Miller (click on Decorative Carvings - Thomas Library  to see second page, then click on the photo on the top of the second page)     Also see this and this

Tour the entire California coast (except for the thirty miles between Point Conception and Point Sal [Vandenberg Air Force Base])