News

News

Carter wins American Library Association Award

2.15.24

David Carter's Historical Dictionary of Modern Coups d'Etat wins Best Historical Materials award from the American Library Association.

3 key takeaways from the Bela Kornitzer Research Symposium

2.6.24

Margit Tavits in APSR: Fixed Effects and Post-Treatment Bias in Legacy Studies

1.29.24

In Memoriam: John Drummond Sprague

1.25.24

We are sad to announce the passing of John Drummond Sprague, beloved husband,  father, grandfather, esteemed professor, and mentor.

Margit Tavits's Upcoming Book: "Counter-Stereotypes and Attitudes Toward Gender and LGBTQ Equality"

1.23.24

Professor Margit Tavits and Jae-Hee Jung have a book forthcoming titled “Counter-Stereotypes and Attitudes Toward Gender and LGBTQ Equality.”

New study probes how emotions influence public attitudes on counterterrorism

1.19.24

Assistant professor of political science Carly Wayne discusses the role anger plays in public attitudes about counterterrorism.

Graduate Spotlight: Jeremy Siow

1.17.24

Get to know Dr. Jeremy Siow, one of our newest PhD graduates who is now a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Quantitative Political Science at the University of Oxford.

Michael Strawbridge to join department as Assistant Professor in Fall 2024

12.20.23

TRIADS receives $330,000 Carnegie Corporation grant to study online populist rhetoric

12.12.23

Research by Diana O'Brien: Voters prefer decisions made by panels balanced between men and women

12.1.23

"We find that citizens strongly prefer that political decision-making bodies have gender parity, meaning that they have equal numbers of men and women. Even when governments require gender quotas for women candidates, citizens still prefer to see gender parity amongst officeholders."

Skeletal Records and Gender Bias

11.30.23

Jeremy Siow, Taylor Damann, and Margit Tavits discuss both historical and modern gender inequality in Europe in the PNAS Science Sessions Podcast.

Carly Wayne published in International Organization

11.16.23

Carly Wayne's new article "Terrified or Enraged? Emotional Microfoundations of Public Counterterror Attitudes" was published in the journal International Organization.