Professor In Song Kim

In Song Kim

Associate Professor of Political Science

CV

Political methodology; international trade; political economy; big data; machine learning; game theory; lobbying; lobbyview; visualization; dimension reduction.

Biography

In Song Kim is Associate Professor of Political Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He completed his Ph.D. in Politics at Princeton University. His research interests include International Political Economy and Formal and Quantitative Methodology. His research focuses on the political economy of lobbying and campaign donation, estimation of political preferences, and causal inference with panel data. His dissertation won the 2015 Mancur Olson Award for the Best Dissertation in political economy. An article version of this research received the 2018 Michael Wallerstein Award for the best published article in political economy. In Song Kim conducts Big Data analysis of international trade. He is developing methods for dimension reduction and visualization to investigate how the structure of international trade around the globe has evolved over time. His work has appeared and is forthcoming in various academic journals, including the American Political Science Review,  American Journal of Political Science, Annual Review of Political Science, International Organization, International Studies Quarterly, Political Analysis, and The Journal of Politics.

Research

Professor Kim is broadly interested in international political economy and political methodology. His current research interests include firm-level lobbying on trade policies, product-level trade policy-making, and the interaction between domestic political institutions and international trade. Professor Kim is also interested in the development of quantitative methods for causal inference with panel data, "big data" analysis, network models, and estimating political actors' preferred policy outcomes. He is developing a large-scale database on lobbying supported by the National Science Foundation.

Recent Publications

“Political Cleavages within Industry: Firm-level Lobbying for Trade Liberalization” American Political Science Review (2017), Vol. 111, No. 1, pp. 1-20.
 
“The Charmed Life of Superstar Exporters: Survey Evidence on Firms and Trade Policy” Journal of Politics (2017), Vol. 79, No. 1, pp. 133-152. (with Iain Osgood, Dustin Tingley, Thomas Bernauer, Helen V. Milner, and Gabrielle Spilker)
 
“Estimating Spatial Preferences from Votes and Text” Political Analysis (2018), Vol. 26, No. 2, pp. 210-229. (with John Londregan and Marc Ratkovic)
 
“Firms and Global Value Chains: Identifying Firms’ Multidimensional Trade Preferences” International Studies Quarterly (2019), Vol 63, No. 1, pp. 153-167. (with Helen V. Milner, Thomas Bernauer, Iain Osgood, Gabrielle Spilker, and Dustin Tingley)
 
“When Should We Use Unit Fixed Effects Regression Models for Causal Inference with Longitudinal Data?” American Journal of Political Science (2019), Vol 63, No. 2, pp. 467-490. (with Kosuke Imai)
 
“Firms in Trade and Trade Politics” Annual Review of Political Science (2019), Vol 22, pp. 399-417. (with Iain Osgood)
 
“The Effects of Political Institutions on the Extensive and Intensive Margins of Trade” International Organization, (2019), Vol 73, No. 4, pp. 755-792. (with John Londregan and Marc Ratkovic)
 
“Measuring Trade Profile with Granular Product-level Trade Data” American Journal of Political Science, (2020), Vol 64, No. 1, pp. 102-117. (with Steven Liao and Kosuke Imai)
 
“Mapping Political Communities: A Statistical Analysis of Lobbying Networks in Legislative Politics” Political Analysis, (2021), Vol.29, No.3, pp.317-336 (with Dmitriy Kunisky)
 
“On the Use of Two-way Fixed Effects Regression Models for Causal Inference with Panel Data” Political Analysis, (2021), Vol.29, No.3, pp.405-415 (with Kosuke Imai)
 
“Learning Bill Similarity with Annotated and Augmented Corpora of Bills” Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP). (2021) (with Jiseon Kim, Elden Griggs, and Alice Oh)
 
“Matching Methods for Causal Inference with Time-Series Cross-Section Data” Forthcoming at American Journal of Political Science (with Kosuke Imai and Erik Wang)

Teaching

17.464 IPE of Advanced Industrial Societies
17.800 Quantitative Research Methods I: Regression
17.804 Quantitative Research Methods III: Generalized Linear Models and Extensions
17.806 Quantitative Research Methods IV: Advanced Topics
17.810/811

Game Theory and Political Theory

17.835 Machine Learning and Data Science in Politics

News

Political scientist In Song Kim receives the 2021 Levitan Prize

MIT SHASS Communications

In his new book, Kim aims to "provides a big data analysis of contemporary trade policy-making, facilitating not only academic research of trade with a new unit of analysis but also public awareness of product-specific trade negotiations such as the current China-U.S. trade dispute.”

Best New Dataset Award

MIT Department of Political Science

Profesor In Song Kim is the recipient of the International Political Economy Society’s Best New Dataset Award for his LobbyView database.

3 Questions: Database shines a bright light on Washington lobbying

Peter Dizikes MIT News

Follow the money. It’s a famous phrase from the Watergate era, but it applies to everyday life in modern Washington as well. That advice just got easier for everyone to carry out, thanks to the launch of LobbyView.org, a new public database created by MIT political scientist In Song Kim

Biography

In Song Kim is Associate Professor of Political Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He completed his Ph.D. in Politics at Princeton University. His research interests include International Political Economy and Formal and Quantitative Methodology. His research focuses on the political economy of lobbying and campaign donation, estimation of political preferences, and causal inference with panel data. His dissertation won the 2015 Mancur Olson Award for the Best Dissertation in political economy. An article version of this research received the 2018 Michael Wallerstein Award for the best published article in political economy. In Song Kim conducts Big Data analysis of international trade. He is developing methods for dimension reduction and visualization to investigate how the structure of international trade around the globe has evolved over time. His work has appeared and is forthcoming in various academic journals, including the American Political Science Review,  American Journal of Political Science, Annual Review of Political Science, International Organization, International Studies Quarterly, Political Analysis, and The Journal of Politics.

Research

Professor Kim is broadly interested in international political economy and political methodology. His current research interests include firm-level lobbying on trade policies, product-level trade policy-making, and the interaction between domestic political institutions and international trade. Professor Kim is also interested in the development of quantitative methods for causal inference with panel data, "big data" analysis, network models, and estimating political actors' preferred policy outcomes. He is developing a large-scale database on lobbying supported by the National Science Foundation.

Recent Publications

“Political Cleavages within Industry: Firm-level Lobbying for Trade Liberalization” American Political Science Review (2017), Vol. 111, No. 1, pp. 1-20.
 
“The Charmed Life of Superstar Exporters: Survey Evidence on Firms and Trade Policy” Journal of Politics (2017), Vol. 79, No. 1, pp. 133-152. (with Iain Osgood, Dustin Tingley, Thomas Bernauer, Helen V. Milner, and Gabrielle Spilker)
 
“Estimating Spatial Preferences from Votes and Text” Political Analysis (2018), Vol. 26, No. 2, pp. 210-229. (with John Londregan and Marc Ratkovic)
 
“Firms and Global Value Chains: Identifying Firms’ Multidimensional Trade Preferences” International Studies Quarterly (2019), Vol 63, No. 1, pp. 153-167. (with Helen V. Milner, Thomas Bernauer, Iain Osgood, Gabrielle Spilker, and Dustin Tingley)
 
“When Should We Use Unit Fixed Effects Regression Models for Causal Inference with Longitudinal Data?” American Journal of Political Science (2019), Vol 63, No. 2, pp. 467-490. (with Kosuke Imai)
 
“Firms in Trade and Trade Politics” Annual Review of Political Science (2019), Vol 22, pp. 399-417. (with Iain Osgood)
 
“The Effects of Political Institutions on the Extensive and Intensive Margins of Trade” International Organization, (2019), Vol 73, No. 4, pp. 755-792. (with John Londregan and Marc Ratkovic)
 
“Measuring Trade Profile with Granular Product-level Trade Data” American Journal of Political Science, (2020), Vol 64, No. 1, pp. 102-117. (with Steven Liao and Kosuke Imai)
 
“Mapping Political Communities: A Statistical Analysis of Lobbying Networks in Legislative Politics” Political Analysis, (2021), Vol.29, No.3, pp.317-336 (with Dmitriy Kunisky)
 
“On the Use of Two-way Fixed Effects Regression Models for Causal Inference with Panel Data” Political Analysis, (2021), Vol.29, No.3, pp.405-415 (with Kosuke Imai)
 
“Learning Bill Similarity with Annotated and Augmented Corpora of Bills” Empirical Methods in Natural Language Processing (EMNLP). (2021) (with Jiseon Kim, Elden Griggs, and Alice Oh)
 
“Matching Methods for Causal Inference with Time-Series Cross-Section Data” Forthcoming at American Journal of Political Science (with Kosuke Imai and Erik Wang)

Teaching

17.464 IPE of Advanced Industrial Societies
17.800 Quantitative Research Methods I: Regression
17.804 Quantitative Research Methods III: Generalized Linear Models and Extensions
17.806 Quantitative Research Methods IV: Advanced Topics
17.810/811

Game Theory and Political Theory

17.835 Machine Learning and Data Science in Politics

News

Political scientist In Song Kim receives the 2021 Levitan Prize

MIT SHASS Communications

In his new book, Kim aims to "provides a big data analysis of contemporary trade policy-making, facilitating not only academic research of trade with a new unit of analysis but also public awareness of product-specific trade negotiations such as the current China-U.S. trade dispute.”

Best New Dataset Award

MIT Department of Political Science

Profesor In Song Kim is the recipient of the International Political Economy Society’s Best New Dataset Award for his LobbyView database.

3 Questions: Database shines a bright light on Washington lobbying

Peter Dizikes MIT News

Follow the money. It’s a famous phrase from the Watergate era, but it applies to everyday life in modern Washington as well. That advice just got easier for everyone to carry out, thanks to the launch of LobbyView.org, a new public database created by MIT political scientist In Song Kim