Betsy Sinclair Co-Authors Article for European Political Science Review
Sinclair, Thomas F. Eagleton University Professor and Chair of Political Science, co-authored the article with scholars from George Mason, Harvard, WashU, and CalTech.
Sinclair, Thomas F. Eagleton University Professor and Chair of Political Science, co-authored the article with scholars from George Mason, Harvard, WashU, and CalTech.
Strawbridge, Assistant Professor of Political Science, co-authored the piece with scholars from Georgetown, Newcastle University, Darmouth, and University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill.
Michael Strawbridge was invited to join a roundtable focused on Black Women's Politics.
Carlson, an Associate Professor of Political Science, was interviewed on local St. Louis radio program, Total Information AM.
Lindquist is the current Nickerson Dean of WashU Law School with a PhD in Political Science and Public Administration
Sinclair's distinguished professorship is named after longtime former US senator and Washu Professor of Public Affairs and Political Science, Thomas F. Eagleton.
Enamorado will design open-source data software that can process tens of millions of records – all from a personal computer.
Lecturer of Political Science, Stephanie Shady, co-authors a piece exploring the divide among Republican pastors in North Carolina on the legitimacy of force defending the “traditional American way of life."
Professor Ted Enamorado's newest article in American Political Science Review puts forward a new algorithm for text classification.
David Carter's newest article looking into the flow of illicit goods at ports of entry has been published in International Studies Quarterly
Assistant professor of political science Ted Enamorado has earned a $233,955 National Science Foundation grant to expand his efforts in linking disparate sets of data. Enamorado is one of the faculty leads of Improving Data Integration Techniques, a group supported by a programmatic grant from the Incubator for Transdisciplinary Futures.
James L. Gibson's newest book, "Democracy's Destruction?: Changing Perceptions of the Supreme Court, the Presidency, and the Senate After the 2020 Election" is slated for publication in September from the Russell Sage Foundation.