• Guriev, S., & Treisman, D. (2022).
Spin dictators The changing face of tyranny in the 21st century. Princeton University Press. • Treisman, D. (Ed.). (2018).
The new autocracy: Information, politics, and policy in Putin’s Russia. Brookings Institution Press. • Treisman, D. (2011).
The return: Russia’s journey from Gorbachev to Medvedev. The Free Press. • Treisman, D. (2007).
The architecture of government: Rethinking political decentralization. Cambridge University Press. • Shleifer, A., & Treisman, D. (2000).
Without a map: Political tactics and economic reform in Russia. MIT Press. • Treisman, D. (1999).
After the deluge: Regional crises and political consolidation in Russia.
University of Michigan Press. • Treisman, D. (2020). Democracy by mistake: How the errors of autocrats trigger transitions to democracy.
American Political Science Review, 114(3), 792-810. • Treisman, D. (2020). Economic development and democracy: Predispositions and triggers.
Annual Review of Political Science, 23, 241-257. • Guriev, S., & Treisman, D. (2019). Informational autocrats.
Journal of Economic Perspectives, 33(4), 100-127. • Gimpelson, V., & Treisman, D. (2018). Misperceiving inequality.
Economics and Politics, 30(1), 27-54. • Blom-Hansen, J., Houlberg, K., Serritzlew, S., & Treisman, D. (2016). Jurisdiction size and local government policy expenditure: Assessing the effect of municipal amalgamation.
American Political Science Review, 110(4), 812-831. • Treisman, D. (2015). Income, democracy, and leader turnover.
American Journal of Political Science, 59(4), 927-942. • Treisman, D. (2011). Presidential popularity in a hybrid regime: Russia under Yeltsin and Putin.
American Journal of Political Science, 55(3), 590-609. • Treisman, D. (2010). ‘Loans for shares’ revisited.
Post-Soviet Affairs, 26(3), 207-227. • Cai, H., & Treisman, D. (2009). Political decentralization and policy experimentation.
Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 4(1), 35-58. • Fan, C. S., Lin, C., & Treisman, D. (2009). Political decentralization and corruption: Evidence from around the world.
Journal of Public Economics, 93(1-2), 14-34. • Treisman, D. (2007). Putin’s silovarchs.
Orbis, 51(1), 141-153. • Treisman, D. (2007). What have we learned about the causes of corruption from ten years of cross-national empirical research?
Annual Review of Political Science, 10, 211-244. • Cai, H., & Treisman, D. (2006). Did government decentralization cause China’s economic miracle?
World Politics, 58(4), 505-535. • Cai, H., & Treisman, D. (2005). Does competition for capital discipline governments? Decentralization, globalization, and public policy.
American Economic Review, 95(3), 817-830. • Shleifer, A., & Treisman, D. (2005). A normal country: Russia after communism.
Journal of Economic Perspectives, 19(1), 151-174. (Shorter version published in Foreign Affairs, March–April 2004.) • Treisman, D. (2004). Rational appeasement.
International Organization, 58(2), 345-373. • Cai, H., & Treisman, D. (2004). State corroding federalism.
Journal of Public Economics, 88(3-4), 819-843. • Treisman, D. (2000). Decentralization and inflation: Commitment, collective action, or continuity?
American Political Science Review, 94(4), 837-857. • Treisman, D. (2000). The causes of corruption: A cross-national study.
Journal of Public Economics, 76(3), 399-457. == External links ==