- Welcome
- Undergraduate Program
- Graduate Program
- Baccalaureate and Master’s Awards Ceremony 2013
- Faculty
- Aaron Belkin
- Martin D. Carcieri
- Katherine Gordy
- Michael Graham
- Sujian Guo
- Joel J. Kassiola
- James Martel
- Jason McDaniel
- Francis Neely
- Amita Shastri
- Robert Smith
- Andrei Tsygankov
- Alexander Otruba
- Ali Kashani
- Benjamin J Lozano
- Carol Silverman
- Diana Anders
- Dominic Caserta
- Kathy Emery
- Nura Hossainzadeh
- Sara Callow
- Zeynep Aydogan
- Nicole Watts
- Anatole Anton
- David Lee
- Blake Respini
- Al Schendan
- Richard DeLeon
- Gerard Heather
- David Tabb
- Student Resources
- Alumni
- Contact us
Francis Neely

Associate Professor
Contact Info:
Office: HSS 128
Office Hours: TBA
Phone:(415) 338-1522
Email: fneely@sfsu.edu
Website: http://bss.sfsu.edu/fneely/
Francis Neely is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science. He specializes in American politics, political psychology, and quantitative methodology. He teaches courses that examine political attitudes and behavior, parties and partisanship, and research design and methodology.
His current research examines partisanship in the U.S., focusing on the social-psychological aspect of citizen-party relationships. In addition, he led a two-year study of ranked-choice voting in San Francisco, in collaboration with Professor Corey Cook (USF) and the Public Research Institute (PRI). In this study, they assessed the impact of the 2004 reform from a majority runoff system to an alternative voting system with attention to groups of voters who may be at risk.
His publications include a solo-authored article on party identification in Political Psychology (2007), a co-authored article on San Francisco's reform to ranked-choice voting in American Politics Research (2008), and a co-authored article examining attitudes about the women's movement, published in Public Opinion Quarterly (2000). He has also contributed entries to the Encyclopedia of American Parties and Elections (2006, Facts on File), and was the lead author of two reports (2005, 2006) to the City and County of San Francisco on ranked-choice voting.
