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DESCRIPTION:Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs&nbsp\;Sovereignty\, Order 
 and Conflict presentsThe Elections of\nOthersPartisan electoral\nintervent
 ions (or election interference) in U.S. elections have become a common\nto
 pic of discussion in the U.S. since the discovery of the Russian intervent
 ion\nof this kind in the 2016 U.S. elections. However\, there has been far
  less\ndiscussion of American meddling of this kind around the world. This
  is despite\nits great frequency prior to 2016- and multiple post-2016 cal
 ls by members of\nthe&nbsp\;U.S.&nbsp\;foreign policy community for the U.
 S. to conduct such\ninterference in various countries with relatively comp
 etitive elections. This\npaper\, using a new set of surveys recently condu
 cted in the U.S.\, accordingly\nwill try to analyze one key factor U.S. de
 cision-makers need to take into\naccount in this regard- the views of the 
 American public about the conduct of\nelection interference by the U.S..&n
 bsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\; Paul MusgravePaul Musgrave is assistant professor of
  political science at\nthe University of Massachusetts Amherst. He studies
  U.S. foreign policy\,\ninternational relations theory\, and how oil and p
 olitics mix. His research has\nappeared in International Organization\,\nI
 nternational Studies Quarterly\, Security\nStudies\, Presidential Studies 
 Quarterly\, and Comparative Political Studies\, and he has written for The
  Washington Post\, Foreign Policy\, and\nother outlets. He holds a Ph.D. i
 n Government with a focus on International\nRelations from Georgetown Univ
 ersity. Before graduate school\, he worked at the\nfederal\, nonpartisan R
 ichard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum.Click here to registerFor mor
 e information please contact Ryan Griffiths\, rgriff01@syr.edu or to reque
 st accessibility arrangements\, please contact Morgan Bicknell\, mebickne@
 syr.edu. 
DTEND:20210401T180000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T042504Z
DTSTART:20210401T163000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:The Elections of Others
UID:RFCALITEM639140559048362806
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs&nbsp\;
 </p><p>Sovereignty\, Order and Conflict presents</p><p><br></p><p><strong>
 The Elections of\nOthers</strong></p><p>Partisan electoral\ninterventions 
 (or election interference) in U.S. elections have become a common\ntopic o
 f discussion in the U.S. since the discovery of the Russian intervention\n
 of this kind in the 2016 U.S. elections. However\, there has been far less
 \ndiscussion of American meddling of this kind around the world. This is d
 espite\nits great frequency prior to 2016- and multiple post-2016 calls by
  members of\nthe&nbsp\;<u>U.S.&nbsp\;</u>foreign policy community for the 
 U.S. to conduct such\ninterference in various countries with relatively co
 mpetitive elections. This\npaper\, using a new set of surveys recently con
 ducted in the U.S.\, accordingly\nwill try to analyze one key factor U.S. 
 decision-makers need to take into\naccount in this regard- the views of th
 e American public about the conduct of\nelection interference by the U.S..
 &nbsp\; &nbsp\; &nbsp\;</p><p> <br></p><p><strong>Paul Musgrave</strong></
 p><p>Paul Musgrave is assistant professor of political science at\nthe Uni
 versity of Massachusetts Amherst. He studies U.S. foreign policy\,\nintern
 ational relations theory\, and how oil and politics mix. His research has\
 nappeared in <i>International Organization\,\nInternational Studies Quarte
 rly</i>\, <i>Security\nStudies\, Presidential Studies Quarterly\, </i>and 
 <i>Comparative Political Studies</i>\, and he has written for <i>The Washi
 ngton Post\, Foreign Policy</i>\, and\nother outlets. He holds a Ph.D. in 
 Government with a focus on International\nRelations from Georgetown Univer
 sity. Before graduate school\, he worked at the\nfederal\, nonpartisan Ric
 hard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum.</p><p><br></p><p><a href="http
 s://syracuseuniversity.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJMsd--oqzsvH90uE9gFpSQiNh
 ed9IzUQ340 " title="Click here to register">Click here to register</a></p>
 <p><br></p><p>For more information please contact Ryan Griffiths\, rgriff0
 1@syr.edu or to request accessibility arrangements\, please contact Morgan
  Bicknell\, mebickne@syr.edu.<br> </p>
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