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Maxwell School News and Commentary

Who Makes the Rules?

That will be just one question considered when a new Syracuse University institute, housed at Maxwell, addresses the policy issues and social impacts associated with drones, self-driving cars, and other autonomous systems.

February 1, 2019

WP 213 Testing for Shifts in a Time Trend Panel Data Model

Badi H.Baltagi, Chihwa Kao & Long Liu
The testing is done with serially correlated error component disturbances, without any prior knowledge of whether the error term is stationary or nonstationary.
January 31, 2019

Faricy quoted in TIME article on the American Family Act

Generally, people find workers and taxpayers to be deserving of government benefits,” says Christopher Faricy, associate professor of political science.

January 31, 2019

Gueorguiev discusses shutdown, China trade talks in Washington Examiner

"What the shutdown reveals is that the Trump administration does not have a very specific game plan for what it wants," says Dimitar Gueorguiev, assistant professor of political science. "So what it is going to do is to give the Chinese negotiators reason to pause and wonder whether any sort of deal they reach would credibly exist in the future."

January 31, 2019

Case Study Research

John Gerring, University of Texas, Austin
January 31, 2019

See related: Research Methods

Lovely weighs in on renewed US-China trade talks in Wall Street Journal

"More tariffs and failure to get a deal will ultimately seem to people like further failure of the government," says Mary Lovely, professor of economics.

January 30, 2019

Joe Reilly named chief technology innovation officer for Canton & Co

Maxwell alumnus Joe Reilly ’11 MPH is the new chief technology innovation officer for Canton & Company. In his new role, he will direct the company’s efforts to connect clients with healthcare technologies that improve operational efficiency and long-term growth.

January 29, 2019

Article describes Lunetta project, A Tiny Home for Good

Maxwell alumnus Andrew Lunetta ’14 MPA was featured in the Daily Orange for founding A Tiny Home for Good, a Syracuse nonprofit that builds tiny homes for people facing homelessness. The article interviews numerous residents, volunteers, and board members to get an inside look at the growing organization, which constructs 300-square-foot homes with all the amenities of a regular house.
January 29, 2019

Monnat quoted in US News article on the opioid epidemic

"Opioids are a symptom and a symbol of far deeper issues in the U.S.," says Shannon Monnat, associate professor of sociology and Lerner Chair for Public Health Promotion. She points to deteriorating economic conditions, a lack of investment in schools, a quick-fix culture and a toxic mix of "pain, despair, disconnection and lack of opportunity" as upstream problems that have fed into the nation's current drug crisis.

January 29, 2019

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