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Donald Green

Columbia University
EducationPhD, University of California, Berkeley
Areas of ExpertiseVoting Behaviour; partisanship; media effects; campaign finance; hate crimes; research methods

 

Donald Green is J. W. Burgess Professor of Political Science at Columbia University. His research interests span a wide array of topics: voting behavior, partisanship, media effects, campaign finance, hate crime, and research methods. Much of his current work uses field experimentation to study the ways in which political campaigns mobilize and persuade voters.

Author of five books and more than one hundred essays, he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2023 and awarded the Heinz I. Eulau Award for the best article published in the American Political Science Review during 2009. In 2010, he founded the experimental research section of the American Political Science Association and served as its first president.

Recent Publications

Green, D.P., Eko, R., Ong, L., Paskuj, B., Godfrey, A., Garg, A., & Rea, H. (2024). Changing minds about climate change in Indonesia through a TV drama (external link) . Frontiers in Communication, 9, 1366289.

Rahmani, B., Emmanuel, S., Green, D.P., Groves, D.W., & Montano, B. (2024).  (PDF file) Radia dramas can build political support for environmental protection: Experimental evidence from rural Tanzania (external link) .

Green, D.P., Hamel, B.T., & Miller, M.G. (2023). Macropartisanship revisited (external link) . Perspectives on Politics, 22(3), 599-608.