PhD Candidate Rex Weiye Deng Receives APSA Doctoral Dissertation Research Improvement Grant
The grant provides support to enhance and improve the conduct of doctoral dissertation research in political science.
The grant provides support to enhance and improve the conduct of doctoral dissertation research in political science.
The article investigates how senators discuss Supreme Court nominations with their constituents, focusing on one common rhetorical strategy: highlighting the descriptive traits of nominees.
The article looks at a political candidates sources of funding and how those sources affect perceptions of the candidate and campaign.
Strawbridge's article highlights his research into Black political socialization earlier published in Politics, Groups and Identities.
Covering everything from social media to bitcoin to AI, a timely and all-too-topical political science graduate course challenges students to think differently.
The awards will be presented at the APSA Annual Meeting & Exhibition in Vancouver this September.
Burge joins the Center as Professor of Practice beginning August 1, 2025. He will offer courses for undergraduate students through the Department of Political Science in the College of Arts & Sciences.
The fellowships were bestowed on four different grad students across Arts & Sciences including two PhD students from Political Science.
The article highlights research that looks at “regularized campaigns” as an institutional innovation that combines the high-intensity enforcement of campaigns with the stability of institutions to mitigate principal-agent problems.