Connections and Content: Reflections on Networks and the History of Cartography
See related: Maps
Constitutional Law: Structure and Rights in Our Federal System, 7th Edition
Developing States, Shaping Citizenship: Service Delivery and Political Participation in Zambia
See related: Africa (Sub-Saharan)
The Revolution Within: State Institutions and Unarmed Resistance in Palestine
United States Relations with China and Iran: Towards the Asian Century
See related: East Asia, Middle East & North Africa
Unmanned Aerial Systems and Disaster Response: A State-by-State Assessment
This policy brief examines how state-level emergency response divisions across the United States incorporate unmanned aerial systems into their disaster-response operational plans.
Rossman appointed to California’s wildfire board
Rhoda Rossman ’82 M.P.A. has been appointed to the California Catastrophe Response Council by Governor Gavin Newsom. The council is responsible for overseeing the California Wildfire Fund, which contains $20 billion in capital liquidity earmarked for paying uninsured destruction due to wildfire damage.
See related: Promotions & Appointments
Summer Plans
See related: Student Experience
Lovely quoted in Quartz article on USMCA
See related: Canada, Economic Policy, Latin America & the Caribbean, Trade, United States
December graduates celebrate new skills, strong relationships
See related: Student Experience
Zogby honored as French institute’s keynote speaker
John Zogby ’74 M.A. (Hist) is a senior partner at John Zogby Strategies, and widely recognized as one of the most accurate pollsters in the world today.
See related: Awards & Honors
Reeher comments on impeachment vote in Democrat & Chronicle
"The fact that this in the end became such a strict party line vote, I think it’s going to reinforce the divisions that already exist," says Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute.
See related: Congress, New York State, Political Parties, State & Local
Jok discusses the link between violence and corruption in the Citizen
"One thing that has not been clearly delineated about violence in South Sudan is the role of corruption as a most insidious driver of the ghastly inequities that have now come to characterize the young state as one of the most unequal societies in Africa," writes Jok Madut Jok, professor of anthropology.
See related: Africa (Sub-Saharan), Crime & Violence
McDowell examines affect of financial sanctions on US dollar in World Politics Review
Daniel McDowell, associate professor of political science, says it will be difficult for countries that are looking for ways to "de-dollarize."
See related: Economic Policy, International Affairs, United States
Results from Lerner Center campus-wide survey featured in SU Faculty and Staff Newsletter
See related: Gender and Sex, Longevity, New York State, Nutrition, Race & Ethnicity, Research Methods
Ma explains why Chinese students study abroad in Washington Post piece
Yingyi Ma, professor of sociology, suggests that Chinese students are motivated to study abroad because of disappointment with the Chinese education system, which they assert “stifles creativity” and “entails hellish hours of studying.”
See related: China, U.S. Education
Banks comments on FISA reform in USA Today
Professor Emeritus William C. Banks said congressional action regarding FISA could further insert politics into a process that should be free of it. "All the politics that surrounded the headlines of this story would rear their ugly head again," he says. "It could end up with more amendments to FISA that do more harm than good."
See related: U.S. National Security, United States
DeStress for Success: Improving Student Mental Health with a New Healthy Monday Program