WashU's Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government, and Public Policy recently announced awardees of their Fall 2025 Small Grants, with multiple political science faculty and graduate students among them.
The Weidenbaum Center Small Grants provide research funding up to $15,000 to WashU tenure-track faculty in the departments of Economics, Political Science, and Sociology. The funding is provided for up to one year for research that focuses on social science and/or public policy.
The political science faculty and graduate student awardees and their proposals are below. To see the full list of awardees visit the Weidenbaum Center's website.
Deniz Askoy, Leo Tien, and Zeynep Ceren Topac, Disarmament and Reconciliation in Ethnic Conflicts
David Carter and Alma Velazquez, How Local Communities in the Global South Evaluate Controversial Corporate Behavior when Firms Adopt Costly Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Measures
Jacob Montgomery, A Practical Solution for Missing Data in Social Science Experiments
Lucia Motolinia and Diana O'Brien, Gender Effects on Candidate Platforms: When Nominating Women Matters for Policy
Peng Peng, Department of Political Science, Haohan Chen, The University of Hong Kong, and Yingtian He, Tsinghua University, Aspirational Nationalism: Enmity, Emulation, and Making of Chinese Identity (1840-1949)
Shiran Victoria Shen, Climate Disasters and the Formation of Citizen Demand for Government-Led Climate Adaptation in China
Betsy Sinclair, The Efficacy of Conversations with a Chatbot to "Prebunk" Against Election Misinformation
Michael Strawbridge, In the Thick of It: Operationalizing the Relationship Between Black People, Black Spaces, and Black Political Unity
Margit Tavits and Matthew Ribar, Social Cohesion, Violent Conflict, and Customary Institutions in Liberia
Carly Wayne and Margit Tavits, Wartime Violence Exposure, Social Cohesion, and Resilience in Israel-Palestine