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This is a book about the importance of collegiality and contact written by former officemates.
The three of us met as Ph.D. students in the Department of Political Science at Washington University in St. Louis where we spent three years working on coursework, meeting with students, and writing our dissertations as Graduate Student Associates of Andrew Martin’s Center for Empirical Research in the Law (CERL). This experience taught us the importance of collegial relationships as we edited each other’s papers, debugged each other’s R code, troubleshot student issues, and coauthored with each other.
We didn’t begin work on this project until after we had completed our Ph.D.s and moved on to our new academic homes, Hazelton at Saint Louis University, Hinkle at the University at Buffalo, and Nelson at Penn State. We first planned this project in the lobby of the Palmer House—a place where interpersonal contact among political scientists is all too common—and what started as a single paper (now Chapter 3) became several conference papers as helpful discussants and audience members pushed us to explore collegiality in different ways. Before we knew it, we realized that we were well on the way to writing a book.
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