Maxwell School News
Hou weighs in on China's property tax in Financial Times
"I like to stay on the optimistic side to assume that though this seems to have stalled on the surface, ground work has never stopped," says Yilin Hou, professor of public administration and international affairs. "The Chinese style is, once something is announced, everything has been already done."
Thomsen discusses lack of Republican women in Congress in Washington Post
Danielle Thomsen, associate professor of political science, says "both male and female [Republican] donors make ideology a priority and pay no attention to candidates’ gender. Thus, no group of Republican donors is particularly committed to electing women," as an explanation for the lack of Republican women in Congress.
25th Monday Mile Launch
The Monday Mile is a part of the Lerner Center's Healthy Monday Campaign, an initiative aimed at offering weekly prompts and programs to support people and participating organizations in starting and sustaining healthy behaviors.
Bostwick comments on Skiddy Park police substation in Post Standard
"We hear it a lot: Can we just have conversations and be on a first-name basis with officers?" says Rebecca Bostwick, managing director of the Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion. "And [cops] have been good about it at the Near Westside block parties—just shoot some hoops with the kids. It's a work in progress. I'm optimistic about what the field house can do to move that forward."
Reeher quoted in Daily Star article on Senator Kirsten Gillibrand
Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute, theorized that Gillibrand's language could be an effort by the senator to closely connect with critics of Trump.
Zamarripa debuts first novel, The Spectacle of Let—the Oliet and Obit
In the novel, Samuel Zamarripa ’78 M.P.A. offers a contemporary American voice through a narrative style that merges real world settings with fantastical elements and stories.
Gadarian cited in DiversityInc article on Sen Harris, Sessions hearing
"Not sure it’s a big deal that @SenKamalaHarris gets interrupted more than her male colleagues during committee meetings? Here’s some reading," tweeted Shana Gadarian, associate professor of political science. She proceeded to share multiple examples and links to published reports of women being interrupted more than their male colleagues.
Incoming MPA student Ryan Gross named 2017 Tillman Scholar
Ryan Gross, an incoming M.P.A. candidate and one of 61 Tillman Scholars across the nation, plans to use his degree to build upon the leadership and decision-making skills he gained through his career and to hone his policy development expertise. His goal is to create flexible, effective policy that will meet military commanders’ and soldiers’ operational needs on the ground.
Wang article on fixed-k asymptotic inference About tail properties published in JASA
James Tatum '17 MPA article on Detroit bankruptcy in Urban Lawyer
"To allow a municipality to be stripped bare...would be to counter every other effort by which the law attempts to keep the municipal debtor intact," writes James Tatum III '17 M.P.A.
Barkun discusses contemporary white supremacy, alt-right in Salon
"The role of the alt-right in the 2016 campaign, alongside the broader movement of fringe motifs into the mainstream, suggests a political future that once seemed inconceivable: the potential public re-emergence of a white supremacist organization, something not seen in America since the Ku Klux Klan of the 1920s," says Michael Barkun, professor emeritus of political science.
Logan Strother '13 MA (PSc) article on Confederate flag in the Washington Post
"These [Confederate] symbols were not widely used after the Civil War, but were reintroduced in the middle of the 20th century by white Southerners to fight against civil rights for African Americans," writes Logan Strother '13 M.A. (PSc), a Ph.D. candidate in political science.
Reeher discusses Trump admins unemployment rate on Marketplace
Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute, says without key people pushing the administration’s agenda, "the government is going to have a tendency to kind of trundle along in the same direction it was beforehand."
Popp wins AERE award for paper on induced innovation and energy prices
Reeher talks Republican strategy during Comey hearings in USA Today
"We're at a point now where I would think that the pressure to not be seen as toeing the party line for the White House would probably be more powerful than the pressure to protect the president in some way," says Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute.
Van Slyke discusses privatization, public-private partnerships in Politico
"Trump’s proposal — at least what we know of it so far — reveals a plan that rests not on privatization but on public-private partnerships," writes David M. Van Slyke, dean of the Maxwell School.
Van der Vort '13 MA (PSc) reviews lessons to learn from LGBTQ history
Eric van der Vort '13 M.A. (PSc), Ph.D. candidate in political science, explains the lessons that LGBT movement history can teach social movements. He says the four key lessons are to acknowledge difference, pursue and provide education, build informal policy networks, and turn networks into durable coalitions.
Campbell Conversations wins NYS Associated Press Association award
The Campbell Conversations, a public affairs interview radio program hosted by Professor Grant Reeher, was awarded first place from the New York State Associated Press Association. The half-hour show features extended, in-depth interviews in which Reeher goes beyond and behind the current news cycle to explore more lasting questions about public affairs.
Wilson weighs in on US withdrawal from Paris Agreement
See related: Climate Change, Government, United States