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The following Cardiff and Klein article appearing in Critical Reivew is the latest on voter-registration investigations of faculty partisanship. (It pretty much subsumes the Klein and Western study of Berkeley and Stanford.)
Christopher F. Cardiff and Daniel B. Klein:
Faculty Partisan
Affiliation in All Disciplines: A Voter-Registration Study
Critical Review: An
Interdisciplinary Journal of Politics and Society, Vol 17, Nos. 3-4, (dated 2005, though actually appeared June 2006). Erratum: In the printed version (Table 6, 252), Asst and Assoc Prof D:R ratios were transposed in the case of Berkeley and Stanford. That is, the D:R for Assoc at Berkeley should be 64.0, not 30.0, and likewise for Stanford. The correction is made in the linked Excel sheet below.
Link to master Excel
file (names redacted, with correction noted immediately above)
Abstract of Cardiff and Klein: The
party registration of tenure-track faculty at 11 California universities,
ranging from small, private, religious-affiliated institutions
to large, public, elite schools, shows that the “one-party campus” conjecture
does not extend to all institutions or all departments. At
one end of the scale, U.C. Berkeley has an adjusted Democrat:Republican
ratio of almost 9.1, while Pepperdine University has a ratio of nearly
1:1. Academic discipline also makes a tremendous difference,
with the humanities averaging a 10:1 D:R ratio and business schools
averaging 1.3:1, and with departments ranging from sociology (44:1)
to management (1.5:1). Across all departments and institutions,
the D:R ratio is 5:1, while, in the “soft” liberal-arts
fields, the ratio is higher than 8:1. These results are generally
in line with previous studies.
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In the same issue, Critical Review published the latest, greatest article on the Klein-Stern policy-views/voting survey of six scholarly disciplines. It is here.
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Here is material on Klein-Western, which, again, really is superceded by Cardiff-Klein:
How Many Democrats
per Republican at UC-Berkeley and Stanford?
Voter Registration Data across 23 Academic Departments
by
Daniel B. Klein
Professor
Department of Economics
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030
Tel. 1-703-993-1130
Email: dklein@gmu.edu
Andrew Western
Undergraduate student
Economics and Political Science major
Santa Clara University
Santa Clara, CA 95053
Tel. 1-602-790-8359
Email: awestern@scu.edu
Academic Questions, 2005
(Link to pdf below)

In the interest of furthering public
awareness, we encourage viewers to copy and use any of the 32 figures
found in Excel file below.
Abstract: Using the records
of the seven San Francisco Bay Area counties that surround University
of California, Berkeley and Stanford University, we conducted a
systematic and thorough study of the party registration of the
Berkeley and Stanford faculty in 23 academic departments. The
departments span the social sciences, humanities, hard sciences,
math, law, journalism, engineering, medicine, and the business
school. Of the total of 1497 individual names on the cumulative
list, we obtained readings on 1005, or 67 percent. The findings
support the “one-party campus” conjecture. For
Stanford, we found an overall Democrat to Republican ratio of 7.6
to 1. For UC-Berkeley, we found an overall D to R ratio of
9.9 to 1. Moreover, the breakdown by faculty rank shows that
Republicans are an “endangered species” on the two
campuses. This article contains a link to the complete data
(with individual identities redacted).
Links to materials:
Pdf link to the complete academic working
paper, to appear in Academic Questions:
How
Many Democrats per Republican at UC-Berkeley and Stanford? Voter
Registration Data across 23 Academic Departments
By Daniel B. Klein and Andrew Western
Data and figures, in Excel: The
complete data (names redacted) and all figures
Dan Klein PowerPoint presentation "Ideology
of Faculty" (in PDF)
Related work by Daniel Klein and
coauthors:
Professors and Their Politics: The Policy Views of Social Scientists by Daniel B. Klein and Charlotta Stern, Critical Review.
Sociology and Classical Liberalism by Daniel B. Klein and Charlotta Stern, The Independent Review
How
Politically Diverse Are the Social Sciences and Humanities? Survey
Evidence from Six Fields
by Daniel B. Klein and Charlotta Stern, to appear in Academic Questions
Survey
of Academics’ Policy Views/Voting Homepage
The
Social Science Citation Index: A Black Box—with an Ideological
Bias?
by Daniel B. Klein with Eric Chiang, Econ Journal Watch.
Institutional
Ties of Journal of Development Economics Authors
and Editors
by Daniel B. Klein with Therese DiCola, Econ Journal Watch.
Daniel
Klein’s Personal Homepage
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