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Introducing AAPOR Profiles

10/21/2016

AAPOR has a rich history of members from a variety of areas. We are committed to showcasing these members and their work in our fields.  I'm proud to bring you the first profile of notable AAPOR member, Peter Miller.

Peter Miller is a former AAPOR President, having served in that role in 2009 and 2010. One of his biggest accomplishments as AAPOR President was launching the Transparency Initiative, which now encompasses more than 75 survey firms. Over the years, Peter has served AAPOR in many other ways—he was AAPOR’s Standards Chair, its Conference Chair, and, for eight years, the Editor-in-Chief of its flagship journal, Public Opinion Quarterly. Currently, he serves on the Standards Committee, the Transparency Initiative Coordinating Committee and he is the co-Chair of the joint ASA/AAPOR Task Force on Improving the Climate for Surveys.

Peter received his Ph. D. in Mass Communication Research from the University of Michigan and spent most of his career (so far) as an academic.  He was at Northwestern University for 29 years, where he held a number of posts, including teaching in the Department of Communication Studies, chairing that department, and serving as an Associate Dean of Northwestern’s School of Communication.  Before that, he was on the faculty of the University of Michigan and at the University of Illinois and Purdue University.  Apparently, it is all Big Ten with Peter.
 
Until recently, that is.  In 2011, Peter “retired” from Northwestern and joined the staff of the United States Bureau of the Census, where became the head of the Center for Survey Measurement and chief scientist in the Center for Adaptive Design.  He subsequently became the Senior Researcher for Survey Measurement.  At the Census Bureau, Peter worked with another former AAPOR President, Bob Groves, who directed the Census Bureau from 2009 through 2012. 
 
“The Census Bureau offers the opportunity to work on many challenging and consequential problems,” Peter says.  “It is ‘high stakes’ research that contributes directly to the functioning of our democracy.”
 
Peter has won lots of awards and honors; most recently, in 2015, he was made a fellow of the American Statistical Association.  He has co-authored three books (including one on presidential polls and the media) and has published numerous articles and chapters.  Maybe his most unusual job was serving, in 1994, as an advisor to the Electoral Commission of Malawi, a place few of us have been to. 
 
“I organized the radio broadcast of the vote count in the first multi-party election in Malawi.  Because of the broadcast, the election results were transparent. The ruling dictatorial party conceded the election based just on the vote count we reported” Peter says.  “It was an exhilarating experience.”