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Guido Pezzarossi Awarded the 2025 Montonna Fund

The fund was created in 1997 with a gift from the honoree’s daughter and Maxwell alumna, the late Mary Lou Williams.

May 29, 2025

See related: Awards & Honors, Giving

Buzard Discusses Her Research on Parental Involvement With The Atlantic

Research by Kristy Buzard, associate professor of economics, confirms the idea that people tend to assume mothers are the default parent, even when they explicitly ask not to be. Part of the reason, Buzard posits, is “this underlying belief that moms are more available and are going to be more responsive.”

May 29, 2025

Taylor Speaks With CBS News, El País, KTVU and Kyiv Post About Trump, Ukraine and Russia

“Putin isn’t interested in a ceasefire or an agreement, but rather in victory, understood as the subjugation of Ukraine,” says Brian Taylor, professor of political science. “The Russian president has faced zero consequences for stalling Trump over the past four months, and from what Trump has said about the conversation, that hasn’t changed one bit.”

May 28, 2025

Presidential Veto Rhetoric

Kernell, Sam, and Jonathan Lewallen
This dataset, begun by Sam Kernell and extended by Jonathan Lewallen, includes 1618 veto threats made by the President of the United States from 1985-2016, coded according to the Policy Agendas Project subtopic scheme.
May 27, 2025

State of the Union Speeches

Jones, Bryan D., Frank R. Baumgartner, Sean M. Theriault, Derek A. Epp, Rebecca Eissler, Cheyenne Lee, Miranda E. Sullivan
This dataset provides information on each quasi-statement in Presidential State of the Union speeches. Each quasi-statement is coded according to our system of policy content categories and other variables.
May 27, 2025

Sultana Article on Building Democracy in Bangladesh Published in LA Progressive

“In a region where democratic backsliding has often been normalized, Bangladesh is attempting a rare and ambitious path forward. But reforms – no matter how visionary – face real resistance from entrenched interests and are fraught with obstacles, both internal and external, that threaten to derail Bangladesh’s progress,” writes Farhana Sultana, professor of geography and the environment.

May 27, 2025

Bhan Talks to Morning Wave in Bhusan and the WOZ About Rising Tensions Between India and Pakistan

“I don't think either the Indian or Pakistani governments actually want a war,” says Mona Bhan, Ford-Maxwell Professor of South Asian Studies. “But neither of them wants to appear weak under any circumstances.”

May 23, 2025

Reeher Discusses Trumps ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ on LiveNOW from FOX

“There's going to be an enormous amount of pressure on the Republicans to stay together on this. More than anything else that any Republican who's serving in Congress right now will face, because this is going to be Donald Trump's signature domestic bill,” says Grant Reeher, professor of political science.

May 22, 2025

Timur Hammond’s ‘Placing Islam’ Receives Journal’s Honorable Mention

The 2025 International Journal of Islamic Architecture lauded the book for its “evocative storytelling.”

May 22, 2025

Khalil Speaks With Clarín About Trump’s Meeting With the President of Syria

The meeting between Trump and al-Sharaa “represents a remarkable shift in U.S. policy toward al-Qaeda and its affiliates. More than 23 years after the 9/11 attacks and the declaration of the Global War on Terror, the United States is developing relations with a former leader of the organization who now declares himself a moderate,” says Osamah Khalil, professor of history.

May 21, 2025

Thompson Quoted in USA Today Articles on Pope Leo XIV’s Social Media Accounts, His First Mass

“Social media can be a minefield for divisive commentary, so I imagine he’ll use it sparingly, perhaps for simple, pastoral messages (and yes, delivered on the official pope account) like holiday greetings, but not for anything controversial,” says Margaret Susan Thompson, professor of history and political science.

May 20, 2025

Policy Moods

Stimson, James A., and K. Elizabeth Coggins
The policy specific moods data set was created to supplement the traditional Global Mood measure in an effort to provide scholars with as many policy specific mood measures as possible.
May 20, 2025

Gallup's Most Important Problem

Jones, Bryan D., Frank R. Baumgartner, Sean M. Theriault, Derek A. Epp, Cheyenne Lee, Miranda E. Sullivan
This data set codes public opinion polls from Gallup’s Most Important Problem Survey using the Policy Agendas Project’s content coding scheme.
May 20, 2025

Encyclopedia of Associations

Frank R. Baumgartner, John D. McCarthy, Shaun Bevan
This dataset consists of estimated numbers of associations per year for each of the major topics of the Policy Agendas Project.
May 20, 2025

Maxwell Advisory Board Welcomes New Leadership

Alumni Cathy Daicoff and Nate Shanok lead the board as chair and vice chair, respectively.

May 20, 2025

Republican Party Platform

Wolbrecht, Christina, Brooke Shannon, E.J. Fagan, Jones, Bryan D., Frank R. Baumgartner, Sean M. Theriault, Derek A. Epp, Cheyenne Lee, Miranda E. Sullivan
This dataset contains information on each quasi-statement in the Republican party platform.
May 19, 2025

Democratic Party Platform

Wolbrecht, Christina, Brooke Shannon, E.J. Fagan, Jones, Bryan D., Frank R. Baumgartner, Sean M. Theriault, Derek A. Epp, Cheyenne Lee, Miranda E. Sullivan
This dataset contains information on each quasi-statement in the Democratic party platform.
May 19, 2025

Tax Expenditures

Christopher Faricy
This dataset is based on the Congressional Joint Committee on Taxation’s annual five-year estimates of federal tax expenditures informally referred to as ‘Bluebooks’ and is compiled annually by Christopher Faricy.
May 19, 2025

Sultana Weighs In on the Suspension of the Indus River Waters Treaty in DW News Article

India's move to use the Indus Waters Treaty as geopolitical leverage “undermines the legal integrity of such treaties,” says Farhana Sultana, professor of geography and the environment. ”These treaty violations and suspensions can have ripple-on deleterious (harmful) effects across and beyond the region for the examples they set,” she says.

May 19, 2025

Gump Quoted in Washington Post Article on the Health Benefits of Taking Vacation

More than the immediate rewards, “vacations provide a buffer against chronic stress and inflammation—both of which wreak havoc on the body,” says Brooks Gump, Falk Family Endowed Professor of Public Health. Vacationing turns off the spigot of stress hormones like cortisol and allows the body to reset, restoring equilibrium, he says.

May 17, 2025
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