top

 

Home

Research

People

Courses

Undergraduates

Graduate Program

MGIMO Program

Related Sites

Contact Us

 

FACULTY

David L.Cingranelli
David Clark

Mikhail Filippov

Benjamin Fordham

William B. Heller

Jennifer Jensen

Jonathan Krasno

Ricardo R Larémont

Wendy L. Martinek

Ali A. Mazrui

Michael McDonald

John McNulty

Solomon Polachek

Patrick Regan

Greg Robinson

Olga Shvetsova

Katri K. Sieberg

Eduard Ziegenhagen



AFFILIATED FACULTY

Seifuden Adem

Yoonkyung Lee

STAFF

Sandy Glemby

Graduate Secretary
sglemby@binghamton.edu

Trudy Weeks

Undergraduate Secretary
tweeks@binghamton.edu



GRADUATE STUDENTS     

Graduate Students Directory    

MIKHAIL FILIPPOV
Assistant Professor of Political Science
Ph.D., California Institute of Technology

picture of MFilippov

Department of Political Science
Binghamton University (SUNY)
Binghamton, NY 13902-6000, USA
Voice: (607) 777-6236
Fax: (607) 777-2675
Email:
filippov@binghamton.edu


Professor Filippov studies comparative federalism, intergovernmental relations, and European politics. His research focuses on contractual aspects of federal arrangements, selection and implementation of jurisdictional delineation in democratic federations, and the role of political agency in federal survival. His particular interest is the evolution of the institutions of the European Union and the EU's potential for developing into a federal polity. A new area of research in which he is currently involved is the institutional effects on specific areas of policy implementation that affect the quality of democracy, such as the protection of individual rights and freedoms and fighting political corruption. He also has expertise and interest in the politics of East-Central Europe and post-Soviet countries and the theory of democratic transitions. His work has appeared in Public Choice , Communist and Post-communist Studies, Constitutional Political Economy, and other journals. His book Designing Federalism: A Theory of Self-Sustainable Federal Institutions, co-authored with Peter Ordeshook and Olga Shvetsova, was published by Cambridge University Press and received an Honorable Mention for the William H. Riker Prize of the Political Economy Section of the American Political Science Association in 2005.

Professor Filippov teaches courses in the politics of the European Union, comparative federalism, democratic transitions, methods of quantitative analysis , and Marxist political theory .

Professor Filippov holds an M.A. in Political Science from the University of California at Riverside, an M.S. in Economics and Political Science from the California Institute of Technology, and a Ph.D. in Economics and Political Science from the California Institute of Technology. He has previously taught at Washington University in St. Louis.