Nicholas Nicoletti
Ph.D. in Leadership
Interim Director
Political Science
Associate Professor of Political Science
Sustainability
Faculty
- Francis Hall #227
- 610-796-8355
Biography
Dr. Nicoletti received his Ph.D. in Political Science from the University at Buffalo (SUNY) in August of 2013. His research focuses on the interaction between domestic politics and international relations. He also conducts research analyzing the effects of moral reasoning on political behavior. Dr. Nicoletti's dissertation was entitled Politicizing War: Information, Democracy, and Public Opinion. This project had two goals: (1) to explore if citizens can make better decisions by solving a stylized formal model that makes normatively favorable assumptions; and (2) to develop a novel theory of citizen belief formation over war that combines both rational expectations and elite opinions models.
This project is based on a model of citizens鈥 belief formulation about conflict and the incumbent鈥檚 reelection during a wartime election. Belief formation is modeled as a function of two distinct signals; the first is from an unbiased but possibly inaccurate actor (I call the media). The second is from an informed but biased actor (I call the opposition). The model suggests the existence of equilibria where biased signals are dominant. A primary finding is the possibility that citizens choose to elect the opposition party, which subsequently ends an otherwise successful war campaign. Dr. Nicoletti's other research interests include interstate conflict, public policy, public opinion, direct democracy, game theory, experimental political science, moral psychology, and causal inference.
Ph.D. Political Science, University at Buffalo, SUNY M.B.A., St. John FIssher College M.S. International Studies, St. John Fisher College B.S. Political Science and Criminal Justice, SUNY Brockport
POS 111 American Democratic Government
POS 221 American Political Parties
POS 317 The Presidency
POS 425 Research Seminar
POS 290 People Power: How Civil Resistance Changed the World
PHD 853: Advanced Quantitative Research - Design and Analysis
Nicholas P. and William K. Delehanty (2018) 鈥(Im)Morality in Political Discourse? The Effects of Moral Psychology in Politics.鈥 In Moral Psychology: A Multidisciplinary Guide. Eds. Benjamin G. Voyer and Tor Tarantola. Springer International. ISBN: 978-3-319-61849-4. Arena, Phil, and Nicholas P. Nicoletti. (2014). 鈥淪electorate Theory, the Democratic Peace, and Public Goods Provision.鈥 International Theory. 6(3): 391-416.