Maxwell School News
Boroujerdi quoted in USA Today on Trump's Iran policy
"Muscular tweets and orations will not intimidate an Iranian leadership that has dealt with five other American Presidents over the last 38 years," says Mehrzad Boroujerdi, professor of political science.
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Reeher comments on Trump's political style in The Hill
According to Professor of Political Science Grant Reeher, President Donald Trump "is doubling down, and I think the reaction on the part of those who are not favorably oriented toward him is going to harden.”
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Banks explains what's next for the SCOTUS nominee on TWC News
Judge Neil Gorsuch will be vetted and reviewed by the Senate, and needs the votes of at least 60 senators to be confirmed. "That requirement is not in the Constitution, but it's one that Congress itself, the Senate has chosen to impose. It's been that way for a long, long time," says William C. Banks, professor of public administration and international affairs.
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Boroujerdi discusses impact of travel ban on academics on Marketplace
Mehrzad Boroujerdi, professor of political science, has been working to get an Iranian scholar to teach Iranian politics at Maxwell for the last ten months and now the whole process has been called into question because of the ban.
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Imagining Governance: A Q&A with Jack Manno '03 PhD (SSc)
Jack Manno G’03, professor of environmental studies at SUNY ESF and a faculty affiliate in Syracuse's Native American Studies program contends that, as a new political regime gets underway in the United States, the need for an effective governance system—one in step with climate change and the environment—is imperative.
Peter Castro receives Unsung Hero Award at SU's MLK celebration
Peter Castro, associate professor of anthropology, received the Unsung Hero Award at Sunday's Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration at the Carrier Dome. His nominator writes, "Receiving an MLK Unsung Hero Award acknowledges his long-time service to African development as an applied anthropologist, particularly with regard to the management of and access to natural resources, and efforts to alleviate hunger and poverty.”
Elizabeth Cohen discusses effect of travel ban on healthcare workers in WIRED
"Since the 1940s we've been not only recruiting nurses from other countries but actually in some cases getting people into training abroad and then bringing them to America," says Elizabeth Cohen, associate professor of political science. "This H-1B shift could really reduce the population of highly skilled doctors and nurses."
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WP 201 The Effect of Workplace Inspections on Worker Safety
Monnat study on demographic characteristics and physical activity practices published in PM
WP 200 The Effects of State and Federal Mental Health Parity Laws on Working Time
Zoli, McCormick, Lutz discuss the US-Mexico border wall in the DO
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Wasylenko weighs in on Hancock International Airport upgrade in DO
“The transportation funds can (not only) get the personnel coming down here, but visitors,” Michael Wasylenko, professor of economics, said. “It would have a very good economic impact for us as a region.”
McDowell discusses problems facing globalism in World Politics Review
"The headline events of 2016—Brexit, the election of Donald Trump in the United States, a struggling Chinese economy—do not represent the start of a process of 'deglobalization.' Rather, they themselves are a product of a slow unraveling of global economic interconnectedness that has been unfolding for nearly a decade now," writes Daniel McDowell, associate professor of political science.
Boroujerdi, student Abdulkadir featured in DO story on immigration ban
Next week, Professor of Political Science Mehrzad Boroujerdi said, the University planned to host a scholar who has been imprisoned in Iran. Now, he is unsure if the scholar will be able to come to SU at all. “It’s a serious infringement on our academic rights,” he said.
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Excerpt from Ebner's book on violence in Mussolini's Italy in Slate
Michael Ebner, associate professor of history, describes how fascism emerged in Italy as a response to the growing power of socialists, and how fascist violence was used to break their hold on local administration and labor organizations.
Steinberg comments on Bannon, national security in The Guardian
According to University Professor James Steinberg, Steve Bannon's formal inclusion in the U.S. national security policymaking process "is such an explicit rejection of the well-entrenched principle that when it comes to matters of national security that politics doesn’t have any place in the room.”
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Karas Montez paper on recent mortality increases in The Lancet
Andersen weighs in on education secretary nominee Betsy DeVos in DO
“She has no expertise or experience in the educational world,” Kristi Andersen, professor emerita of political science, says. “She has not been a teacher, she has not been an administrator, she has not been a policymaker, she has not worked for an educational think tank and she has not written about education.”
Zeller '06 MPA/IR op-ed on Trump's immigration ban in The Washington Post
"This ban leaves thousands of our wartime allies to fend for themselves against the very enemies we asked them to fight," writes Maxwell alumnus Matt Zeller, co-founder and CEO of No One Left Behind. "We are permanently harming the fabric of U.S. national security. Our credibility is forever tarnished if not eroded."
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Banks comments on Trump's travel ban, terrorist attacks in PolitiFact
William Banks, professor emeritus of public administration and international affairs, says "since 9/11, no one has been killed in this country in a terrorist attack by anyone who emigrated from any of the seven countries," on President Trump's travel ban.
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