Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science

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Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox award The Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science (Template:Langx) was established in 1995 by the Johan Skytte Foundation at Uppsala University. The foundation itself goes back to the donation in 1622 from Johan Skytte (1577–1645), politician and chancellor of the university, which established the Skyttean professorship of Eloquence and Government.

The prize, 500,000 Swedish kronor (approximately $52,000) is to be given "to the scholar who in the view of the Foundation has made the most valuable contribution to political science". Since its creation in 1995, the Johan Skytte Prize has garnered a prestigious reputation within the social science community, earning the nickname "the Nobel Prize for Political Science."[1][2] According to reputation surveys conducted in 2013–2014 and 2018, it is the most prestigious international academic award in political science.[3][4][5]

Recipients of the Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science

Year Recipient Country Rationale Affiliation
1995 File:Robert A. Dahl in the Classroom (cropped).jpg Robert A. Dahl
(1915–2014)
Template:Country data United States "for his penetrating analysis of democratic theory, characterized by deep learning and breadth of mind, combined with epochal empirical studies of the actual functioning of representative government".[6] Professor emeritus, Yale University
1996 File:No image.svg Juan José Linz
(1926–2013)
Template:Country data Spain
Template:Country data Germany
Template:Country data United States
"for his global investigation of the fragility of democracy in the face of the authoritarian threat, characterized by methodological versatility and historical and sociological breadth".[6] Professor, Yale University
1997 File:No image.svg Arend Lijphart
(b. 1936)
Template:Country data United Kingdom
Template:Country data Netherlands
Template:Country data United States
"for his theoretically and empirically pathbreaking research on the function of consensus in democratic politics in divided as well as in homogeneous societies".[6] Professor, University of California, San Diego
1998 File:No image.svg Alexander L. George
(1920–2006)
Template:Country data United States "for his pathbreaking analysis of statecraft, its possibilities and limits, performed with great sensitivity for the importance of judgement, reasoned argumentation and responsible leadership in foreign policy decision-making".[6] Professor, Stanford University
1999 File:Nobel Prize 2009-Press Conference KVA-29 (cropped).jpg Elinor Ostrom
(1933–2012)
Template:Country data United States "for her profound, empirical as well as theoretical, analysis of the nature of collective action and rational choice".[6] Professor, Indiana University Bloomington
2000 File:No image.svg Fritz W. Scharpf
(b. 1935)
Template:Country data Germany "for having analysed key concepts of political science with theoretical clarity and empirical thoroughness during an era of transnational change".[6] Professor, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne
2001 File:Brian Barry.jpg Brian Barry
(1936–2009)
Template:Country data United Kingdom
Template:Country data United States
"for his profound contribution to normative political theory performed with passion as well as clarity in the grand tradition from the Enlightenment."[6] Professor, Columbia University, London School of Economics
2002 File:No image.svg Sidney Verba
(1932–2019)
Template:Country data United States "for his penetrating empirical analysis of political participation and its significance for the functioning of democracy."[6] Professor, Harvard University
2003 File:No image.svg Hanna Pitkin
(1931–2023)
Template:Country data Germany
Template:Country data United States
"for her pathbreaking theoretical work, predominantly on the problem of representation."[6] Professor emerita, University of California, Berkeley
2004 File:Jean Blondel in 2008.jpg Jean Blondel
(1929–2022)
Template:Country data France "for his outstanding contribution to the professionalisation of European political science, both as a pioneering comparativist and an institution builder"[6] Professor, European University Institute, Florence
2005 File:Robert O. Keohane at Chatham House 2015 (cropped).jpg Robert Keohane
(b. 1941)
Template:Country data United States "for his significant contribution to our understanding of world politics in an era of interdependence, globalisation and terrorism."[6] Professor, Princeton University
2006 File:Professor RobertPutnam.png Robert D. Putnam
(b. 1941)
Template:Country data United States "for his theory of the social capital."[6] Professor, Harvard University
2007 File:Theda Skocpol 2011 (cropped).jpg Theda Skocpol
(b. 1947)
Template:Country data United States "for her visionary analysis of the significance of the state for revolutions, welfare and political trust, pursued with theoretical depth and empirical evidence."[7][6] Professor, Harvard University
2008 File:Politoloog Rein Taagepera esinemas Eesti taasiseseisvumispäeva puhul Tartu vabadussamba ees, 20. august 2012 (cropped).jpg Rein Taagepera
(b. 1933)
Template:Country data Estonia
Template:Country data United States
"for his profound analysis of the function of electoral systems in representative democracy".[6] Professor, University of Tartu and professor emeritus, University of California, Irvine
2009 File:PhilippeSchmitter (cropped).jpg Philippe C. Schmitter
(b. 1936)
Template:Country data United States "for his path-breaking work on the role of corporatism in modern democracies, and for his stimulating and innovative analysis of democratization".[6] Professorial fellow, European University Institute, Florence
2010 File:No image.svg Adam Przeworski
(b. 1940)
Template:Country data Poland
Template:Country data United States
"raising the scientific standards regarding the analysis of the relations between democracy, capitalism and economic development." Professor, New York University
2011 File:No image.svg Ronald Inglehart
(1934–2021)
Template:Country data United States "for contributing innovative ideas about the relevance and roots of political culture in a global context, transcending previous mainstream approaches of research."[8] Professor, University of Michigan
File:PippaNorris.jpg Pippa Norris
(b. 1953)
Template:Country data United Kingdom
Template:Country data United States
Professor, Harvard University
2012 File:Carole Pateman in Brazil 2015 02 (cropped).jpg Carole Pateman
(b. 1940)
Template:Country data United Kingdom
Template:Country data United States
"for in a thought-provoking way challenging established ideas about participation, sex and equality."[9] Professor emeritus, University of California, Los Angeles
2013 File:Professor RobertMAxelrod.png Robert Axelrod
(b. 1943)
Template:Country data United States "for profoundly having changed our presumptions about the preconditions for human cooperation.”[9] Professor, University of Michigan
2014 File:No image.svg David Collier
(b. 1942)
Template:Country data United States "for his contribution to the conceptual development and the re-thinking of qualitative methods in Political Science."[9] Professor, University of California, Berkeley
2015 File:Francis Fukuyama no Fronteiras do Pensamento São Paulo (28022453222) (cropped).jpg Francis Fukuyama
(b. 1952)
Template:Country data United States “for breath-taking learnedness, clarity and courage thrown new light over the growth of modern political order.”[9] Olivier Nomellini Senior Fellow, Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, Stanford University
2016 File:Jon Elster 12.2.10 (6100470902) (cropped).jpg Jon Elster
(b. 1940)
Template:Country data Norway “for incisive, penetrating, and unceasing drive to examine and reexamine that which explains human behavior.”[9] Robert K. Merton Professor in Social Sciences, Columbia University
2017 File:Amartya Sen no Fronteiras do Pensamento São Paulo 2012 (6964225214) (cropped).jpg Amartya Sen
(b. 1933)
Template:Country data India for his multifaceted achievement that “combines insights into human vulnerability with knowledge about the potential of democratic political power to redress and relieve this deprivation.”[9] Thomas W. Lamont University Professor, Harvard University
2018 File:Jane Mansbridge 2017 (cropped2).jpg Jane Mansbridge
(b. 1939)
Template:Country data United States for “having shaped our understanding of democracy in its direct and representative forms, with incisiveness, deep commitment and feminist theory.”[9] Charles F. Adams Professor of Political Leadership and Democratic Values, Harvard University
2019 File:Margaret Levi in 2022 01 (cropped).jpg Margaret Levi
(b. 1947)
Template:Country data United States for "having laid the foundations of our understanding of why citizens accept state coercion, by combining theoretical acumen and historical knowledge."[9] Director of the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences (CASBS) and professor of political science, Stanford University
2020 File:No image.svg Peter J. Katzenstein
(b. 1945)
Template:Country data Germany
Template:Country data United States
for “furthering the understanding of how history, culture, and norms shape economies, as well as national and global security policy.” Walter S. Carpenter, Jr. Professor of International Studies, Cornell University
2021 File:No image.svg David D. Laitin
(b. 1945)
Template:Country data United States for his “original and objective explanation of how politics shapes cultural strategies in heterogeneous societies." James T. Watkins IV and Elise V. Watkins Professor in the School of Humanities and Sciences, Stanford University
2022 File:Robert E. Goodin February 2006.jpg Robert E. Goodin
(b. 1950)
Template:Country data Australia
Template:Country data United States
for his impressive work in which he “with acuity and success endeavored to blend political philosophy with empirical political science to increase the understanding of how decent and dignified societies can be shaped.” Professor emeritus, Australian National University
2023 File:No image.svg Martha Finnemore
(b. 1959)
Template:Country data United States "for having formulated and empirically demonstrated the fruitfulness of constructivism, thus renewing and deepening the understanding of international politics."[10] University Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, George Washington University
File:No image.svg Alexander Wendt
(b. 1958)
Template:Country data United States Mershon Professor of International Security and Professor of Political Science, Ohio State University
2024
File:JuergenHabermas retouched.jpg
Jürgen Habermas Template:Country data Germany "for having constantly reminded us, theoretically and empirically, that the very lifeblood of democracy depends on human capacity and willingness to respect others by means of communicative action and on that basis to engage in critical argumentation and discourse.”[11] Professor emeritus, University of Frankfurt am Main
2025 File:No image.svg Herbert Kitschelt Template:Country data Germany
Template:Country data United States
for “having increased knowledge of the functioning of democratic party systems with exquisite theoretical acuity and impressive empirical breadth and depth.”[12] George V. Allen Distinguished Professor of International Relations, Duke University

References

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External links

Template:Recipients of the Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science

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