News

News

Professor Tavits Awarded Global Incubator Seed Grant

10.26.22

Congratulations to Professor Margit Tavits for receiving $25,000 Global Incubator Seed Grant from the McDonnell International Scholars Academy and Office of the Provost for her proposal on "The Behavioral and Attitudinal Effects of Voter ID."

Professors Carter & Gabel Awarded Funding from the Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures

10.25.22

Congratulations to Professors David Cater and Matt Gabel and their collaborators Michael Espositio and Mark Huffman on being awarded $261,500 in funding from the Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures for their cluster proposal of "Trust and Public Health."

Professor Lucas Awarded Seed-Grant from the Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures

10.25.22

Congratulations to Professor Christopher Lucas and collaborators Soumendra Lahiri and Andrew Jordan on receiving a cluster seed-grant of $89,000 from the Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures for "Police Body Camera Metadata."

Professor Enamorado Awarded Funding from the Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures

10.25.22

Congratulations Professor Ted Enamorado and collaborators Soumendra Lahiri and Kunal Agrawal have been awarded $10,000 in funding from the Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures for their proposal on "Improving Data Integration Techniques."

The Well-Ordered Republic by Frank Lovett

10.19.22

Frank Lovett is Professor of Political Science and Director of Legal Studies at Washington University in Saint Louis. He received his PhD in Political Science from Columbia University in 2004, and from 2008-2009 he was Laurance S. Rockefeller Visiting Fellow at the Princeton University Center for Human Values. His book A General Theory of Domination and Justice (OUP) won the APSA Foundations First Book Award for 2010. His primary research concerns the role of freedom and domination in developing theories of justice, equality, and the rule of law.

Taylor Carlson published in New Media & Society

10.19.22

"Not who you think? Exposure and vulnerability to misinformation" considers the possibility that certain individuals hold misinformed beliefs without encountering misinformation, thus questioning for whom exposure to “fake news” is most deleterious.

Professors Aksoy & Tavits published in Journal of Conflict Resolution

10.10.22

Professor Deniz Aksoy, Professor Margit Tavits, and co-author, Andrew Menger, published a new paper, "The Effect of Curfews on Political Preferences" in the Journal of Conflict Resolution.

Professor Nomikos Published Blog Post for LSE's Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa

9.30.22

Professor Will Nomikos pens blog, "Impartiality among UN Peacekeepers is key to ending communal violence in sub-Saharan Africa" for LSE's Firoz Lakji Institute for Africa.

Professor Nomikos Published in Political Violence At A Glance

9.27.22

Professor Will Nomikos published an article, "Does UN Peacekeeping Work? A New Perspective" in Political Violence at a Glance

Professor Tavits' Paper Accepted by the Journal of Politics

8.30.22

Congratulations to Professor Margit Tavits and co-author, Zeynep Somer-Topcu (University of Texas, Austin) on the acceptance of their paper, "Message Distortion as a Campaign Strategy: Does Rival Party Distortion of Focal Party Position Affect Voters?" in the Journal of Politics.

Professor Butler Published Journal of Politics Blog for Forthcoming Article

7.28.22

Professor Butler and co-authors published Journal of Politics Blog for forthcoming article

Professor Carter Publishes in International Studies Quarterly

7.25.22

Professor David Carter and co-authors published their article, "The Geography of Separatist Violence" in International Studies Quarterly.