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Simon Hix

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Simon Hix
NameSimon Hix
Birth date1968
Birth placeUnited Kingdom
OccupationPolitical Scientist, Professor
Alma materLondon School of Economics, University of Cambridge
EmployerLondon School of Economics, European University Institute

Simon Hix Simon Hix is a British political scientist and academic known for his work on European Union institutions, comparative politics, and voting behavior. He holds professorial positions and has been associated with major academic and policy institutions, contributing to debates involving the European Parliament, Council of the European Union, and European Commission. Hix's research intersects with scholarship on parliamentary procedure, party politics, electoral systems, and institutional design.

Early life and education

Hix was born in the United Kingdom and educated at institutions including the London School of Economics and the University of Cambridge. During his formative years he engaged with scholars and programs linked to European Studies, International Relations, and Public Policy. His doctoral training connected him with researchers associated with the European University Institute, Oxford University, Harvard University, and centers focusing on comparative politics and quantitative methods.

Academic career

Hix has held academic posts at the London School of Economics, the European University Institute, and visiting positions at institutions such as Harvard University, Yale University, Sciences Po, Columbia University, and Princeton University. He has served in leadership roles in departments linked to political science, European studies, and public policy, and contributed to collaborative projects with organizations like the European Research Council, Nuffield College, King's College London, and the University of Oxford. Hix has supervised doctoral candidates who have gone on to positions at Stanford University, University of Chicago, University of Michigan, and University of California, Berkeley. He has been active in professional associations including the European Consortium for Political Research, the American Political Science Association, and the Royal Society-associated networks.

Research and contributions

Hix's research focuses on the institutions and behavior of the European Union system, especially the European Parliament, European Commission, and intergovernmental processes within the Council of the European Union. He has applied methods from game theory, spatial modelling, list experiments, and statistical inference to study legislative decision-making, coalition formation, and representation in supranational settings. His work engages with theories advanced by scholars associated with Anthony Downs, Arend Lijphart, Giovanni Sartori, Robert Dahl, and John Rawls, while addressing empirical puzzles relevant to events such as European Parliament elections, the Maastricht Treaty, the Lisbon Treaty, and debates over Eurozone governance. Hix has collaborated with researchers linked to William Mitchell, Andrew Moravcsik, Helen Milner, Simon Wren-Lewis, and institutions like the Bank of England in applied policy analyses.

Publications and major works

Hix has authored and edited books, articles, and commentaries published by presses and journals connected to Cambridge University Press, Oxford University Press, Journal of Politics, American Political Science Review, and European Journal of Political Research. Major works address legislative behavior in the European Parliament, institutional reforms following the Treaty of Lisbon, and quantitative analysis of voting records and roll-call data. He has contributed to comparative collections alongside authors from Princeton University Press, Routledge, and Palgrave Macmillan, and written policy-facing pieces for outlets linked to the European Policy Centre, Bruegel, and national media organizations such as the BBC, The Guardian, and Financial Times.

Honors and awards

Hix has received recognition from bodies including the European Research Council, national research councils, and learned societies associated with political science and European studies. His honors include grants and fellowships connected to Royal Holloway, the Leverhulme Trust, and awards given by the European Consortium for Political Research and the American Political Science Association for contributions to the study of representation and legislative institutions. He has been invited to lecture at forums such as the Council on Foreign Relations, Centre for European Reform, and parliamentary hearings for the House of Commons and the House of Lords.

Personal life

Hix resides in the United Kingdom and maintains professional ties with research hubs across Europe and North America. He participates in networks involving scholars from King's College London, University College London, University of Cambridge, London School of Economics, and the European University Institute, and engages in public-facing discussions involving policymakers from the European Commission, European Parliament, and national governments.

Category:British political scientists Category:Academics of the London School of Economics