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Universidad Panamericana students spend week in DC with Reeher

“The UPA program in Washington is a great two-way learning experience,” said Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute. “I easily learn as much from the participants as they glean from me.”

April 3, 2019

McCormick discusses Trump's view of Central America in The Hill

Gladys McCormick, the Jay and Debe Moskowitz Endowed Chair in Mexico-U.S. Relations at the Maxwell School, was published in The Hill. She writes about the interpolation by the Trump administration of southern border refugees as Mexican, whereas these immigrants are also fleeing Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador as well.

April 3, 2019

Conti joins Meridian International to help build global programs

Katie Conti ’18 B.A. (IR) is a special assistant for the GlobalConnect Division of the Meridian International Center, a nonprofit, nonpartisan diplomatic and global leadership institution. Conti was previously a staff assistant at the Brookings Institution and a summer intern at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

April 2, 2019

Incentivizing Participation in Diabetes Self-Management Education with Fruit & Vegetable Vouchers

Angie Mejia, Mary Katherine A. Lee, Shannon M. Monnat

This research brief describes the results of a 12-month, diabetes self-management education and fruit and vegetable purchase assistance intervention designed to improve diabetes self-management knowledge and health outcomes among adults diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes.


 
 
April 2, 2019

Ma wins fellowship from the National Committee on US China Relations

The highly competitive Public Intellectual Program Fellowship provides support for scholars who specialize in China and directly engage with public and policy communities. It has been awarded to Yingyi Ma, associate professor of sociology and director of Syracuse University’s Asian/Asian American Studies program.

April 1, 2019

See related: Awards & Honors

Thorson discusses how partisanship affects belief of facts with PBS

According to Emily Thorson, assistant professor of political science, negative misinformation about a politician of an opposing party is hard to shake, even after people learn that the original story was false.

April 1, 2019

Lerner Center Kicks Off National Public Health Week with the Disease of Busyness

April 1 was the kickoff to National Public Health Week and we celebrated by hosting a luncheon to discuss the Disease of Busyness. Around 80 people came together to hear guest speaker Jaime Weisberg, of Northbound Coaching and Consulting, lead a powerful talk on how our busy state of minds affect our relationships, productivity, and overall health.
April 1, 2019

WP 214 Structural Changes in Heterogeneous Panels with Endogenous Regressors

Badi H. Baltagi, Qu Feng & Chihwa Kao
This paper extends Pesaran (2006) by allowing for endogenous regressors in large heterogeneous panels with unknown common structural changes.
March 31, 2019

WP 215 The Effects of EITC Exposure in Childhood on Marriage and Early Childbearing

Katherine Michelmore & Leonard M. Lopoo
This study analyzes the effect of exposure to the Earned Income Tax Credit in childhood on marriage and childbearing in early adulthood.
March 31, 2019

See related: Parenting & Family

Gerard featured in WCNY series on Women, War, and Peace

Catherine Gerard, director of the Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration, discusses the importance of peacebuilding, dialogue and local efforts in combatting violence against women across the globe. She appeared on a documentary featuring a local women's group, Women Transcending Boundaries, which is a group that fosters a community of women from many faith and cultural traditions seeking to nurture mutual respect and understanding.

March 28, 2019

Lerner Center Graduate Fellow Katie Mott featured on NPR for research on the NoJaims closure

Katie Mott was interviewed on local station NPR due to her latest research brief on food access in Syracuse. 
March 26, 2019

Siddiki publishes study on economic effect of US vehicle regulations

Sanya Carley, Nikolaos Zirogiannis, Denvil Duncan, Saba Siddiki & John D. Graham
March 26, 2019

Lovely discusses President Xi Jinping's visit to France on Bloomberg

According to Mary Lovely, professor of economics, China's leadership is "looking for friends everywhere." And with France being an important player in Europe, "they're also looking to continue to diversify their portfolio in terms of where they do business and how they do business," she says.

March 26, 2019

Jumpstart your Week with a Monday Mile

Mary Katherine A. Lee, Bonnie Slocum

This issue brief discusses the benefits of kick starting your week with a Monday Mile and profile a local community that created several Monday Mile routes where local residents can interact and be active.

March 26, 2019

Veteran Katy Quartaro '20 EMPA finds new ways to achieve goals

“Ultimately, I want to work for the government in counterterrorism or intelligence, so a good foundation in public leadership is important,” says E.M.P.A. candidate Katy Quartaro.

March 25, 2019

Reeher weighs in on Elizabeth Warren's campaign strategy in TIME

 "When you put out things that people can get behind, you also put out things that people can criticize," says Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute, about Senator Warren's campaign strategy to release detailed policy positions early on in the primary cycle.

March 25, 2019

Keck discusses the history of packing the Supreme Court on C-SPAN

"The size of the court is not specified in the constitution and it's changed multiple times…in the first 100 years it was a regular occurrence for Congress to change the size of the Supreme Court," says Thomas Keck, professor of political science and Michael O. Sawyer Chair of Constitutional Law and Politics.

March 22, 2019

See related: Congress, SCOTUS, United States

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