Lieberman has written extensively on American political development, social welfare policy, issues of race and politics in America, institutional racism, and the welfare state. He has received support from the
National Science Foundation,
Russell Sage Foundation, the
German Marshall Fund, and the
American Philosophical Society, the
Social Science History Association’s President’s Book Award,
Harvard University Press’s Thomas J. Wilson Prize, and
Columbia University’s Lionel Trilling Book Award. ;Books • 1998,
Shifting the Color Line: Race and the American Welfare State. Harvard University Press. • 2005,
Shaping Race Policy: The United States in Comparative Perspective. Princeton University Press. Winner of the 2006 Best Book on Public Policy Award, Race, Ethnicity and Politics Section of the
American Political Science Association • 2009,
Democratization in America: A Comparative-Historical Analysis. with
Desmond King,
Gretchen Ritter, and Laurence Whitehead, Johns Hopkins University Press. • 2013, "Beyond Discrimination: Racial Inequality in a Postracist Era," with
Fredrick C. Harris • 2016, "The Oxford Handbook of American Political Development," with Richard M. Valelly and
Suzanne Mettler ;Highly Cited Articles • 2000, with Greg M. Shaw,
Looking inward, looking outward: The politics of state welfare innovation under devolution, in:
Political Research Quarterly. Vol. 53, nº 2, 215–240. • 2001, with John S. Lapinski,
American federalism, race and the administration of welfare, in:
British Journal of Political Science. Vol. 31, nº 2, 303–329. • 2002, "Ideas, institutions, and political order: Explaining political change", in:
American Political Science Review. Vol. 96, nº 4, 697–712. • 2002,
Weak state, strong policy: Paradoxes of race policy in the United States, Great Britain, and France, in:
Studies in American Political Development. Vol. 16, nº 2, 138–161. • 2009, with Desmond King,
Ironies of state building: A comparative perspective on the American state, in:
World Politics. Vol. 61, nº 3, 547–588. • 2015, with Fredrick C. Harris,
Racial Inequality After Racism: How Institutions Hold Back African Americans, in:
Foreign Affairs. Vol 94, nº 2. ==References==