Professor Luskin has also taught at the University of Alabama, Indiana University, l’Université de Paris I (la Sorbonne), Princeton University, and Stanford University and in the ICPSR Summer Program at the University of Michigan, the ECPR Summer School at the University of Essex, and the Summer School on Advanced Methods in the Social Sciences at the Università della Svizzera Italiana. He has been a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford and Chercheur Associé at the Centre d’Etude de la Vie Politique Française in Paris. He is a Research Advisor at the Center for Deliberative Democracy at Stanford University and Director of the Center for Deliberative Opinion Research at the University of Texas at Austin. He has been a member of the Advisory Board of the Texas Poll and of the Editorial Boards of Political Analysis and the American Political Science Review.
His general interests include public opinion, voting behavior, political psychology, and statistical methods, and he has long been particularly interested in the effects of political information on the texture and outcomes of representative democracy. Among other projects, he is using Deliberative Polling in the U.S. and abroad to examine the empirical dimensions of deliberative democracy and is working on a study of political information in France. He has published papers on these and other topics in the American Political Science Review, the American Journal of Political Science, the Journal of Politics, the British Journal of Political Science, Political Analysis, and other scholarly journals.