Andy Rudalevige studies American political institutions, with an emphasis on the modern presidency, the executive branch, and interbranch relations. In 2016-17, he was president of the American Political Science Association’s section. He is an honorary professor at University College London affiliated with UCL's , a senior fellow at the at the University of Virginia, and an elected fellow of the .
Rudalevige's most recent book is (Princeton University Press), which tracks the role of the wider executive branch in the formulation of directives normally thought of as “unilateral” and the challenge posed to presidential management as a result. In 2022 By Executive Order won the Richard E. Neustadt Prize from the American Political Science Association honoring the best book on the presidency as well as the Louis Brownlow Prize as best book in public administration from the National Academy of Public Administration.
His first book, (Princeton University Press), examines the formulation and success of presidents' legislative programs in the postwar era from an informational transaction costs vantage. It was awarded the American Political Science Association's Neustadt Prize as best book on the presidency published in 2002. (University of Michigan Press), examines the post-Watergate growth of executive authority, not least in the "global war on terror," and was described by Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., as "a grand sequel for my own The Imperial Presidency." He has co-authored a textbook on the for Sage/CQ Press (the 11th edition was released in 2024) and edited a series of volumes on the Bush and Obama presidencies. (Next up: The Trump Legacy, currently under contract.) Current research centers on presidents' ongoing efforts to control the executive bureaucracy, including an institutional history of the Office of Management and Budget.
Rudalevige is the host of “Founding Principles,” an acclaimed video series on American government and civics, available on the 含羞草研究室 website as well as on the national . You may also find his commentary on ongoing political events and their relation to political science research on the Washington Post's blog and its successor site, .
From 1989-96 Rudalevige worked in state and local politics — as a staffer in the and as an elected Town Councilor and appointed charter commissioner in his hometown of In 2004-05 he was a visiting scholar at the at Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School, and from 2007-09 a visiting professor at the in Norwich, England (home of the sometimes-Premier-League ). Rudalevige has also served as a visiting professor at the ("Sciences-Po") at the University of Lyon, France (in Fall 2011) and in the Department of Government at the during the 2023-24 academic year.
, ed. with Meena Bose (Brookings Institution Press, 2020)
, with John Anthony Maltese and Joseph A. Pika (Sage/CQ Press, 11th ed., 2024)
, ed. with Bert Rockman (University Press of Kansas, 2019)
, edited with Bert A. Rockman and Colin Campbell (Sage/CQ Press, 2012)
, edited with Colin Campbell and Bert A. Rockman (CQ Press, 2008)
(Univ. of Michigan Press, 2005)
(Princeton Univ. Press, 2002)
BOWDOIN COLLEGE, Brunswick, Maine Thomas Brackett Reed Professor of Government and Legal Studies, July 2012-present; Department Chair, July 2019-present
DICKINSON COLLEGE, Carlisle, Pennsylvania Walter E. Beach ’56 Distinguished Chair in Political Science, July 2008-June 2012 Associate Professor of Political Science (with tenure), July 2004-June 2012; Department Chair, 2006-07 Assistant Professor of Political Science, July 2000 - June 2004
UNIVERSITY OF LYON, Lyon, France Visiting Professor, Institut d’Études Politiques (Sciences Po Lyon), Fall 2011.
UNIVERSITY OF EAST ANGLIA, Norwich, England Visiting Professor and Director, Dickinson Humanities Program, London and Norwich, England, July 2007-July 2009 Resident director and professor for Dickinson students studying in the United Kingdom, with responsibility for program, budget, and administration, as visiting member of UEA’s School of American Studies. Visiting professor of American politics in UEA’s School of Political, Social, and International Studies.
PRINCETON UNIVERSITY, Princeton, New Jersey Visiting Scholar, Center for the Study of Democratic Politics, Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, September 2004-June 2005.
HARVARD UNIVERSITY, Cambridge, Massachusetts Assistant Senior Tutor and Tutor in Government, Lowell House, September 1997 - June 2000 Assistant Head Tutor and Teaching Fellow, Department of Government, September 1996 - June 1999 Three-time winner of university citation for undergraduate teaching excellence; in-residence administrator and adviser in 400-student undergraduate dormitory; academic counselor to undergraduate departmental concentrators