Skip to content

Jenny Sacks '08 BA (Soc) to receive Generation Orange Award

Jenny Sacks '08 B.A. (Soc), current president of the Syracuse University Alumni Club of Philadelphia, is this year’s recipient of the Generation Orange Award. The award recognizes alumni who have made an impact on campus and in their communities through volunteer work and philanthropy on behalf of Syracuse University.

August 4, 2017

Burman shares his proposal for tax policy on TaxVox Blog

According to Leonard Burman, professor of public administration and international affairs, "enlightened policy should aim to make work pay and help workers adapt. Better education and training will help. But a permanent solution would create a mechanism to automatically translate economic growth into higher wages."

August 3, 2017

Reeher quoted in USA Today on Trump's strong-arm tactics in the Senate

"No matter how strong or dominant a personality the president has, he is going to have trouble taking on an American political institution as powerful as the U.S. Senate," says Grant Reeher, professor of political science.

August 3, 2017

Steven White op-ed on transgender military ban published in Washington Post

"Both Truman and Trump were going against majority opinion when they declared a change in military policy that pertained to a marginalized group. The difference, however, is that Truman sought greater inclusion. Trump seeks the opposite," writes Steven White, incoming assistant professor of political science.

August 1, 2017

WP 206 Pregnancy Medicaid Expansions and Fertility

Lincoln H. Groves, Sarah Hamersma & Leonard M. Lopoo
The authors revisit the 1980s Medicaid expansions for pregnant women to estimate the heterogeneous impacts of public health insurance access on childbirth.
July 31, 2017

Miriam Elman op-ed on Entry into Israel Law published in The Forward

"The amended Entry Law shouldn’t make it difficult for the vast majority of people who criticize Israel to get tourist visas," writes Miriam Elman, associate professor of political science. "To meet the criteria, you have to hold a senior-level position in certain targeted organizations, be key activists in the boycott movement, be an establishment figure who openly supports the boycott, or operate on behalf of the targeted organizations."

July 31, 2017

Policy studies student Marcus Lane reflects on Syracuse experiences

"I am interested in community organizing, particularly around issues such as incarceration, housing segregation, juvenile justice and police accountability. I imagine that my future career would pertain to one of those areas," says Marcus Lane Jr., a junior policy studies major. Marcus is one of four students across the country engaged in the Montgomery Fellowship at the American Bar Foundation.

July 31, 2017

Banks talks about the latest on Sessions, Russia on Bloomberg Law

"The Justice Department could certainly apply pressure on Mueller's team to hasten the investigation, make it difficult to obtain the funds beyond certain periods to continue to investigate; more likely that those kinds of informal pressures would be applied rather than removal itself," said William Banks, professor of public administration and international affairs and director of the Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism.

July 28, 2017

Dutkowsky questions $10m grants to rehab aging downtowns in the NYT

On the distribution of grants to other small cities in New York state, Donald Dutkowsky, professor of economics, notes: “I always regarded Glens Falls as a healthy small city and Westbury—I have stayed there, and I don’t remember seeing much of any empty storefronts."
July 27, 2017

SU to invest $100 million in academic programs, student experience

“Invest Syracuse is the engine for advancing the University’s academic programs and the student experience,” says Chancellor Kent Syverud. “It will elevate our academic excellence, provide an unrivaled student experience and solidify Syracuse University’s standing as a distinctive, preeminent, global research institution.”

July 27, 2017

Burman discusses private sector interests in tax reform with WCNY

UNPUBLISHING BECAUSE THE LINK IS NO LONGER VALID.
July 26, 2017

Banks discusses prospect of Kushner/Russia FISA taps with WIRED

“The Russian ambassador has probably been under surveillance since before you and I were born,” says William C. Banks, professor of public administration and international affairs.

July 25, 2017

Mitra pens OpEd for Indian Express on PM Modi's economic reforms

"If the government is serious about exports and jobs, a bolder approach needs to be taken on labor reforms," says Devashish Mitra, professor of economics and the Gerald B. and Daphna Cramer Professor of Global Affairs, about the Indian government.

July 25, 2017

O'Keefe discusses DoD approach to tech adoption with Government Matters TV

UNPUBLISHING BECAUSE THE WEBSITE NO LONGER EXISTS (Government Matters TV site is down/unsupported/reads a DNS error message.)
July 25, 2017

Gadarian discusses news, terrorism and policy impact on CBC The National

According to Shana Kushner Gadarian, associate professor of political science, "Images matter. The emotions that you evoke really do have implications for how the public feels about whether or not they are safe, what kinds of beliefs they want to support, and their feelings about fellow citizens and whether or not they want to take liberties away from fellow citizens."

July 24, 2017

VIDEO: Faulkner a featured scholar at women's suffrage celebration

Maxwell Associate Dean and Professor of History Carol Faulkner was one of the featured scholars on day one of the VoteTilla voyage. VoteTilla is part of a year-long celebration recognizing 100 years of women’s voices and suffrage in New York state.

July 20, 2017

Communications and Media Relations Office
200 Eggers Hall