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I am a lecturer in social science research methods and politics at the University of Hamburg (Germany). Between 2014 and 2015 I was on a leave from the University of Hamburg to work as an interim professor (Vertretungsprofessor) of social science research methods at the University of Oldenburg. My work focuses on voting behavior, elections and political sociology. I am particularly interested in electoral and parliamentary behavior in Germany, Poland and the Czech Republic. I earned my Dr. phil. degree from the Chemnitz University of Technology (Germany). In 2019 I completed my Habilitation at the University of Hamburg and was awarded a title of Privatdozent (PD). I hold an MA in International Relations from the University of Wroclaw (Poland). Besides Wroclaw I studied at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro (USA) and at the University of Passau (Germany).

Recent Publications

Marcinkiewicz, Kamil and Ruth Dassonneville. 2021. "Do religious voters support populist radical right parties? Opposite effects in Western and East-Central Europe." Party Politics. Link

Marcinkiewicz, Kamil and Michael Jankowski. 2021. „Legislative Debate under Open List PR System: The Case of Poland” In: The Politics of Legislative Debate, (Ed.) Jorge Fernandes, Hanna Bäck and Marc Debus. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Marcinkiewicz, Kamil and Kai-Uwe Schnapp. 2020. „Regression Analysis“ In: Key Concepts in Research Methods, (Ed.) J.-F. Morin, C. Olsson und E.O. Atikcan. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 233-238. Peer reviewed.

Marcinkiewicz, Kamil and Mary Stegmaier. 2019. "Speaking up to stay in parliament: the electoral importance of speeches and other parliamentary activities." The Journal of Legislative Studies 25(4), pp. 576-596. Link

Jankowski, Michael and Kamil Marcinkiewicz. 2019. "Model Dependency in the Analysis of Women's Electoral Success." Politics & Gender. Link

Jankowski, Michael, Kamil Marcinkiewicz and Anna Gwiazda. 2019. "The Effect of Electing Women on Future Female Candidate Selection Patterns: Findings from a Regression Discontinuity Design." Politics & Gender. Link