Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society Organization Logo Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society

Faculty Fellow

John Padgett

Professor, Department of Political Science University of Chicago

Biography

John Padgett is a Professor specializing in American politics, organizational theory, mathematical models, and public policy. He is best known for his models of the federal budget process, although he has written on a variety of topics. The American Journal of Sociology published both his 1993 article "Robust Action and the Rise of the Medici, 1400-1434" and his 1985 essay "The Emergent Organization of Plea Bargaining." He is a Director of the Organizations and State-Building Workshop.

Recently, Prof. John Padgett has been awarded a grant, entitled "Modelling Organizational Innovation in Renaissance Florence," for $600,000 over three years from the Human and Social Dynamics program of the National Science Foundation. The intellectual goals of the project are empirically to study and analytically to model the micro-historical process of organizational innovation in Renaissance Florence. The full grant proposal submitted to the NSF is available here. The grant is administered through the Santa Fe Institute.

For more details on his research and publications, please visit his profile page at the University of Chicago and his website.

Featured Project

The Formation of Fin de Siècle Vienna

2020 – 2021

Projects

The Changing Social and Rhetorical Foundations of Florentine Republicanism

The Changing Social and Rhetorical Foundations of Florentine Republicanism

Art historians and political scientists drew from a uniquely rich dataset of social networks among approximately 60,000 Florentines over the period 1350–1530 to explore the tumultuous political history of Florence.
Throughout history, political factions and conflicts organizationally were assembled out of evolving social, economic and patronage networks. At the same time, those factions and conflicts were expressed and articulated through evolving semantic languages, at the levels of both public and private ...

Visualizing the Changing Spatial and Social Ecology of Renaissance Florence

Visualizing the Changing Spatial and Social Ecology of Renaissance Florence

A time-series of urban mapping documented the changing spatial, social, and economic ecology of Florence in the Renaissance period.
Based on coding household-level residential data in the 1427 and the 1480 (or perhaps 1495) tax censuses (catasti) of Renaissance Florence, this project proposed to develop a time-series of urban maps, which documented the changing spatial, social, and economic ecology of that city over one hundred ...

Project Team: