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School of Public Policy, Contributing to a Livable World



















Catherine Rudder
Catherine Rudder
Professor of Public Policy

Publications & Research

“The Politics of Taxing and Spending in Congress: Ideas, Strategy, and Policy,” in Congress Reconsidered, Eighth Edition, Lawrence C. Dodd and Bruce I. Oppenheimer, eds. Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 2004.
“ The Ethics of Public Policy Making by Private Bodies: The Case of Independence of the Accounting Industry in the U.S.,” A paper prepared for the Triennial World Congress of the International Political Science Association, June 28-July 4, 2003, Durban, South Africa.
“ Scholarly Societies and Their Members: Incentives, Motives and Strategies,”
paper prepared for Conference of Administrative Officers, American Council of Learned Societies, New York, November 2002. Substantially revised for presentation at the Midwest Political Science Association, April 2003. Published on the ACLS website, www.acls.org.

“The State of Scholarly Societies: An Analysis,” Conference of Administrative Officers, American Council of Learned Societies, Annual Fall Conference, Boise, Idaho, November 2, 2001.

“Is Authority a Four-Letter Word?” Phi Beta Kappa Lecturer, Induction
Ceremony for Gamma Chapter at Emory University, April 2, 2001.

“Challenges Facing the University and Political Science in the United States,”
Guest Lecture, School for International Organization, Potsdam University,
December 2, 1999.

“Lehre online: Informationstechnologien veraendern die Strukturen des akademischen Lebens,” Der Tagesspiegel, September 26, 1999, p.A2.

“Whatever Happened to the Republican Revolution?” George S. Parthemos
Lecture, University of Georgia, Athens, May 19, 1997.

“The Current Political Climate and Prospects for the Humanities,” Keynote
Speaker, Annual Meeting, National Humanities Alliance, Philadelphia,
Spring, 1997 meeting.

“ A Tribute to the House Committee on Ways and Means,” [featured speaker with
U.S. Rep. Bill Archer, Chair, House Committee on Ways and Means] presented
for the Capitol Historical Society to the Committee on Ways and Means and
invited guests, Washington, D.C., October, 1996.

“Beyond the Tax Code: Federal Restrictions on Lobbying by Nonprofit
Organizations,” presented at the Philanthropy and the Law Conference,
New York University Law School, New York, October, 1995.