D. Stephen Voss
A.M. in Government, Harvard University (1998)
B.A. in History, Louisiana State University (1990)
B.A.J. in Print Journalism, Louisiana State University Manship School of Journalism (1990)
Graduated with math/science focus from Louisiana School for Math, Science, & the Arts (1986)
Steve Voss joined the University of Kentucky in 1998, and spent his first two years in Lexington teaching at UK while he completed and published from his doctoral dissertation. He became an Assistant Professor in 2000, received tenure and promotion to Associate Professor in 2004, and began acting in the capacity of Associate Chair almost immediately afterward, a job he held off and on, informally and formally, until 2015. He served as President of the Kentucky Political Science Association in 2012-2013, and helped edit the KPSA's research journal during its inaugural issues.
RESEARCH - Steve's methodological training has allowed him to contribute to a variety of scholarly literatures. His early work focused on race and the U.S. South, especially as regards elections and voting behavior. However, his quantitative-analysis toolkit allowed his work to expand to included other topics influenced by culture and ethnicity such as research on American immigration attitudes, on Quebec's secessionary politics, and on political and social/cultural influences shaping international commerce. Some of his current work shifts geographical focus to look at ethnicity and migration politics in the Balkan region, as well as attitudes toward the death penalty (especially in the Albanian world) and toward women's rights globally. His articles have appeared in numerous peer-reviewed journals, including the American Journal of Political Science, the Journal of Politics, International Studies Quarterly, and Public Opinion Quarterly. You can find links to his publications here.
PUBLIC OUTREACH: Steve has served for many years as a nonpartisan media commentator, especially during election season in Kentucky, having appeared more than a thousand times per year in local, national, and international news during key years. He is political analyst for Spectrum One News in Louisville after having served for years as ABC-36 WTVQ's political analyst, and he appears as a recurring guest on radio station WVLK, including multiple appearances as a guest talk-show host. Steve also occasionally works as a voting/elections and Kentucky politics consultant in his private time, when doing so can bring in research money that lets him update his technical skills and provide professional employment for past & present UK students. Partly thanks to his outreach activity, the Martin School of Public Policy & Public Administration granted Voss their prestigious William E. Lyons Award for public service and asked him to become an honorary affiliated member of their school.
SERVICE - Steve is Internship Director for the Department of Political Science, and also runs the department's social media as its Publicity Director. He currently serves as one of two Arts & Sciences representatives on UK's Faculty Senate and as one of three social scientists on the A&S Educational Policy Committee (a body that he chaired during the creation of UK's International Studies program). Originally hired as a political methodologist to teach quantitative analysis to UK graduate students, Steve quickly saw his responsibilities in the undergraduate program grow. He began directing the department's Undergraduate Studies program while still being promoted to Associate rank, leading a complete overhaul of the department's curriculum from 2004-2006, the framework of which remains in place today (a curriculum he also shaped indirectly by helping revamp the College's requirements in 2010 and the university's general-education UKCore framework over a span of years). His proudest accomplishment while heading the EPC was when he successfully convinced A&S to create an outstanding teaching assistant award to recognize the College's most-dedicated and talented T.A.'s, a program still in place today.
TEACHING - Steve's teaching duties evolved along with his dual administrative roles during the department's lean years. Originally a consistent member of the department's graduate methods sequence, he had to be shifted out of it once Political Science and Sociology started taking turns delivering that training and younger political scientists wanted a piece of the action - so now he cycles through a diverse and widely varying rotation of upper-division undergraduate courses, including American Campaigns & Elections, Civil Liberties, Legislative Process, Social & Political Movements, Racial & Ethnic Politics, and Kentucky Politics & Government (not to mention the department's honors thesis capstone seminar). All through this period, Voss also regularly helmed the program's big lecture-hall Introduction to American Government, making him the first professor with whom many of our past undergraduate majors have studied (and the first professor with whom many of our Teaching Assistants have apprenticed). The dizzying array of teaching responsibilities did not stop Voss from winning repeated recognition as a teacher. Voss has won teaching awards from the UK Alumni Association, the UK College of Arts & Sciences, and most recently from the Delta Chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, who gave him their inaugural Outstanding Professor of the Year Award in Spring 2022. The UK's Division of Student Affairs recognized Voss with a Faculty Partner Award due to the strong support he gives undergraduates who try to host politically educational events.
ROOTS - Before moving to Lexington, Steve lived for eight years in the Boston area while earning his doctorate from Harvard University (where he taught courses, worked as a research assistant, and edited a travel guide) and prior to that spent all of his life in Louisiana (where some of his jobs included working as a political reporter and working as a staffer in the State Senate). Like the city of New Orleans where Steve was born, his own ancestry combines a wide ethnic mix, including German, (Cajun) French, and (Cuban) Spanish roots.
Dissertation Title: "Familiarity Doesn't Breed Contempt: The Political Geography of Racial Polarization." Committee: Gary King (chair), James Alt, Bradley Palmquist (defended: February 2000).
Fall 2025 office hours: M 10 - 10:50 am & W 10 - 11:50 am
Steve's work has appeared in various professional journals - including the American Journal of Political Science, Journal of Politics, Public Opinion Quarterly, American Politics Research, International Studies Quarterly, and the inaugural edition of State Politics and Policy Quarterly.
- Voss, D. Stephen. "Less White than Ever? Using Ecological Inference to Probe the Trump Coalition’s Diversity in Louisiana" The Forum 22, no. 2-3 (2024): 393-408. https://doi.org/10.1515/for-2025-2007
- Morina, D., Peshkopia, R. & Voss, D.S. You Can Go Your Own Way: How Transit-Country Migration Attitudes Are Influenced by European Union Ideals. Int. Migration & Integration (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12134-025-01254-0
- Voss, D. Stephen; Elliott, Corrine F.; and Roberts, Sherelle (2024) "Seeing Red in the Bluegrass: How the Democratic Party Lost Kentucky’s Voters," Commonwealth Review of Political Science: Vol. 7: No. 1, Article 5. DOI: https://doi.org/10.61611/2994-0044.1053
- Voss, D. Stephen, and Ridvan Peshkopia. 2024. “Discovering Neighbors: The Regional Migration Experience as a Source of Intergroup Contact.” European Politics and Society. https://doi.org/10.1080/23745118.2024.2380692.
- Marleku, Alfred, Ridvan Peshkopia, and D. Stephen Voss. 2024. “Let’s Get Numerical: Explaining Social-Science Student Preferences for Quantitative Studies.” International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology. https://doi.org/10.1080/0020739X.2024.2327560.
- Marleku, Alfred, Ridvan Peshkopia, and D. Stephen Voss. 2024. “Using Survey Research as an Education Tool: Cross-Cultural Lessons on How to Balance Research and Teaching.” In Charity Butcher, Tavishi Bhasin, Maia Hallward, and Elizabeth Gordon (eds.), Aligning Teaching and Research: Work Smarter, Not Harder. New York: Palgrave Macmillan (Political Pedagogies Series). Chap. 16. Pp. 181-194. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-42887-6_16
- Marleku, Alfred, Ridvan Peshkopia, and D. Stephen Voss. 2023. “Research-Oriented Studies in Political Science: How Research Collaboration Shapes Southeast European Student Learning Preferences.” Journal of Political Science Education. Published online April 11. https://doi.org/10.1080/15512169.2023.2196023.
- Voss, D. Stephen, and Penny Miller. 2017. “The Phantom Segregationists: Kentucky’s 1996 Desegregation Amendment and the Limits of Direct Democracy.” Commonwealth Review of Political Science 4(1): 21-38.
- Peshkopia, Ridvan, and D. Stephen Voss. 2016. "The Role of Ethnic Divisions in People's Attitudes toward the Death Penalty: The Case of the Albanians." Punishment and Society 18 (December): 610-630.
- Peshkopia, Ridvan, and D. Stephen Voss. 2016. "Attitudes toward the Death Penalty in Ethnically Divided Societies: Albania, Macedonia, and Montenegro." Journal of Behavioral and Social Sciences 3(1): 29-40.
- Peshkopia, Ridvan, Mergin Cahani, Festim Cahani, and D. Stephen Voss. 2014. “SKUTHI: Developing a Tablet-Based Survey Technology and its Application in Teaching Research Methods in Social Sciences.” Applied Technologies & Innovations 10(3): 91-100.
- Voss, D. Stephen, Jason E. Kehrberg, and Adam M. Butz. 2012. "The Structure of Self-Interest(s): Applying Comparative Theory to U.S. Immigration Attitudes." In Gary P. Freeman, Randall Hansen, and David L. Leal (eds.), Immigration and Public Opinion in Liberal Democracies. New York: Routledge. Chap. 4.
- Voss, D. Stephen, and Donald Gross. 2011. "Poster Child for the Tea Party: Rand Paul of Kentucky." In William J. Miller and Jeremy D. Walling (eds.), Tea Party Effects on 2010 Senate Elections: Stuck in the Middle to Lose. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books. Chap. 8.
- Bartilow, Horace A., and D. Stephen Voss. 2009. "Market Rules: The Incidental Relationship between Democratic Compatibility and International Commerce." International Studies Quarterly 53(March).