Summer 2025 Newsletter

Letter from Department Chair

Dear Friends,

One of my favorite children’s books to read to my kids is titled “Me…Jane”. In it, young Jane Goodall learns everything she can about the natural world around her as she takes her stuffed toy chimpanzee Jubilee everywhere she goes. She dreams of growing up and having “a life living with and helping all animals.” I always cry on the last page where we see a picture of the adult Jane in Tanzania observing real chimpanzees.

It’s a true story. Jane Goodall achieved her dream and had this tremendous impact as one of the world’s greatest primatologists. She passed away this month, and as I reflect on both this children’s book and of an academic life lived with such purpose, I wanted to use this space to emphasize the theme of hope that Jane Goodall shared.

As we enter this academic year, we face a world deeply divided with global conflicts rising, political anger increasing, and public trust in institutions eroding. As the political science chair, I want to share with you three components of our department that bring me hope, and to ask for your help with my goal of spreading hope through our department.

First, we have significantly expanded our faculty with experts who will fortify our department as we address the most important needs of our age with scientifically rigorous research. We have hired new faculty whose expertise in propaganda (Elaine Yao), Chinese politics (Peng Peng) and energy politics (Shiran Victoria Shen) are helping us understand our current, interconnected world. We are expanding our ability to understand climate change and lobbying (Juan Dodyk). We are pushing the frontier of understanding gender and justice with pioneering scholarship (Ophelia Vedder).

Second, we are engaging with a broad set of stakeholders to increase public trust in higher education. Whether this means being interviewed by KMOV or providing political, environmental and health data for the St Louis region, our faculty are working to engage and inform the community. We are also teaching a record number of undergraduates. Amongst so much global turmoil, WashU students want the knowledge and tools to be able to engage and build a different future.

Third, we are continuing our commitment to recruit and train the best PhD students. Our fierce cohort of first year students have arrived on campus and are enthusiastically starting their studies. We have four graduate students on the academic job market this year – you can read about them below – and if you’re hiring, we’d love to talk!

Now here is the chance for you to help. This summer, Professor Carly Wayne will direct our WUSTEPS program which is entering its third year. This program establishes a pathway to graduate school via professionalization experiences as well as exposure to political methodology for students who would not otherwise have this opportunity. We have successfully recruited several of the WUSTEPS alums to WashU as well as helped these students find placements in other peer institutions. We need help to continue this program. If you have the financial capacity to support this mission at any dollar amount, we would be very grateful – you can contribute HERE.

Hope is a revolutionary act in our world. I say to our faculty, staff and students all the time that we get the world we build. Each one of us has the capacity in our own lives to make a difference in the world. As Jane Goodell said, “You cannot get through a single day without having an impact on the world around you. What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make.”

Let’s move forward with this academic year by making that difference together. Onwards!

Betsy Sinclair
Thomas F. Eagleton University Professor of Public Affairs and Political Science
Chair of Political Science Department

PhD Candidates on the Academic Job Market!

Highlighting our sixth year PhD students hitting the job market this year

Political Science PhD Candidate - International Relations & Comparative Politics

Amaan Charaniya

Amaan Charaniya is a sixth year Political Science PhD student specializing in International Relations and Comparative Politics. Amaan's job market paper is titled, "War and Peace: Territorial Disputes and Public Opinion in India." His research examines why states contest their borders and what factors influence domestic public opinion towards territorial disputes, specifically in South Asia. His work has received the 2022 APSA Foreign Policy Section Best Paper Award as well as Honorable Mention - 2023 Best Paper Award from the Southern Political Science Association. Learn more about Amaan and his work at https://sites.wustl.edu/amaancharaniya/

Political Science PhD Candidate - Comparative Politics, International Relations, & Political Methodology

Rex Weiye Deng

Rex Weiye Deng is a sixth-year Political Science PhD candidate specializing in International Relations, Comparative Politics, and Political Methodology. Rex's dissertation is titled, "Turning Resistance into Compliance: the Art of Transforming Negative Public Opinion." His research examines how political elites use media communication and co-optation to foster voluntary mass compliance in both authoritarian and democratic contexts. His work has received the 2024 APSA Timothy E. Cook Best Graduate Paper Award, 2025 Rebecca Morton Poster Award from the NYU Rebecca B. Morton Conference on Experimental Political Science, 2022 APSA Foreign Policy Section Best Paper Award, and 2025 APSA Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant. Learn more about Rex and his work at https://rexweiyedeng.org/.

Political Science PhD Candidate - American Politics & Political Methodology

Annie Jarman

Annie Jarman is a sixth-year Political Science PhD candidate specializing in American Politics and Political Methodology. Annie's job market paper is titled, "Toll of Trolls: Gendered Online Hostility and its Impact on Women's Political Ambition." Her research focuses on the causes and consequences of gendered hostility online. Her research also advances our understanding of women's underrepresentation by distinguishing between general & gendered hostility, illustrating that women politicians still encounter higher costs due to gender bias, and that the gendered costs of officeholding influence how women enter and exit political careers. Her work has received the 2024 Sophonsia Breckinridge Award for Best Paper on Women and Politics from the MPSA and Honorable Mention for Cutting Edge Research on Women and Politics from the Empirical Study of Gender Networks (2024). Learn more about Annie and her work at https://anniejarman.github.io/.

Political Science PhD Candidate - American Politics & Political Methodology

Jordon Newton

Jordon Newton is a sixth-year Political Science PhD candidate specializing in American Politics and Political Methodology. Jordon's job market paper is titled, "Bias at the Ballot: Partisan Influence Over Direct Democracy." His research interests are centered around the U.S. electoral process, congress, and state legislatures particularly testing the ways that electoral systems and legislative processes might influence representational outcomes. His work has received the 2025 APSA State Politics and Policy Conference Best Graduate Student Poster Award, 2024 Thomas Carsey Graduate Fellow Award, and Honorable Mention - 2023 Best Paper Award from the Southern Political Science Association. Learn more about Jordon and his work at
www.jnewton.org.

100 Years of Political Science PhDs

Last year marked a major milestone in the political science department. 2024 was the 100th Anniversary of the very first Political Science PhD granted from WashU. Over the last year we've been collecting names and information on every Political Science PhD graduated from WashU. Some feature links to biographies, obituaries, and more to show the success and interesting stories our graduates have amassed.

If you or a loved one are on this list, we'd love to hear from you! Fill out the survey on the bottom of the page, and let us know your story.

Faculty & Student Success

Just because students were off campus doesn't mean the work of our faculty and grad students stopped. This summer continued a banner year for the department as far as research, publications, and awards. Click this text for more great news from the department this summer.

Letters from Department Leadership

Notes from our leadership reflecting on the summer

Associate Chair

Clarissa Rile Hayward, Professor of Political Science

Director of Undergraduate Studies

Dan Butler, Professor of Political Science

Director of Graduate Studies

Taylor Carlson, Associate Professor of Political Science

Alex, a fifth-year PolSci PhD, received a 2025-2026 Weidenbaum Graduate Fellowship from the Weidenbaum Center on the Economy, Government, and Public Policy. Her research examines the intersections of gender, conflict, and political behavior, with particular attention to how identity-based violence shapes women’s lives and decision-making.

Alex Avery

Political Science PhD Candidate

Ruilin, a fourth-year PoliSci PhD, also received a 2025-2026 Weidenbaum Graduate Fellowship from the Weidenbaum Center. Substantively, his research centers on authoritarian politics, with particular attention to the judiciary’s role in facilitating repression and the downstream effects of such practices on citizens’ political attitudes and behaviors.

Ruilin Lai

Political Science PhD Candidate

Support Political Science at WashU

Looking to the future of the department we are committed to enriching undergraduate and graduate experiences through student research, scholarly networking, and extracurricular events, including democracy-related programming, speakers, and our political science graduate pipeline program - WUSTEPS. These varied learning opportunities are invaluable to our students, and you can help enhance our efforts by making a gift to the Department of Political Science today.

Donate today!