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Year: 2016

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APSA

Senate Bill Threatens Grave Cuts to Fulbright-Hays

June 15, 2016 1

The Senate Appropriations Committee approved the FY17 Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education appropriations bill by a vote of 29-1 on June 9, 2016. The bill includes a $4.89 million cut to Fulbright-Hays that […]

APSA

Theme Panel: Higher Education Disrupted: The Politics and Policies of Transformation

June 15, 2016 Comments Off on Theme Panel: Higher Education Disrupted: The Politics and Policies of Transformation

Theme Panel: Higher Education Disrupted: The Politics and Policies of Transformation Fri, September 2, 12:00 to 1:30pm This roundtable brings together established and newer voices from different parts of the academy to discuss the politics […]

APSA

Meet 2016 APSA RBSI Scholar, Danielle Russell, University of Connecticut

June 15, 2016 Comments Off on Meet 2016 APSA RBSI Scholar, Danielle Russell, University of Connecticut

Danielle Russell is a third year student at the University of Connecticut and majors in political science. Recently, Danielle has been conducting research on black conservatives, their experiences and how they are received in the […]

Africa Workshops

Theme Panel: The Rise of the Radical Right in Europe after the Migrant Crisis and Paris

June 14, 2016 Comments Off on Theme Panel: The Rise of the Radical Right in Europe after the Migrant Crisis and Paris

Theme Panel: The Rise of the Radical Right in Europe after the Migrant Crisis and Paris Sat, September 3, 12:00 to 1:30pm The conference theme, “Great Transformations”, prompts us to ask about the populist response […]

APSA

Meet 2016 APSA RBSI Scholar, Akua Yamoah, University of South Florida

June 14, 2016 Comments Off on Meet 2016 APSA RBSI Scholar, Akua Yamoah, University of South Florida

Akua Yamoah, a first generation Ghanaian American born and raised in Florida, majored in Women’s & Gender Studies and International Studies at the University of South Florida. During her time in college, she became a […]

APSA

Theme Panel: Transforming Marriage and Religion in American Political Thought

June 13, 2016 Comments Off on Theme Panel: Transforming Marriage and Religion in American Political Thought

Theme Panel: Transforming Marriage and Religion in American Political Thought Fri, September 2, 10:00 to 11:30am One of the most significant political, social, and ideational transformations in America in recent decades is the legal establishment, […]

APSA

Meet 2016 APSA RBSI Scholar, Heidi Obediente, University of Central Florida

June 13, 2016 1

Heidi Obediente is a third year undergraduate student at the University of Central Florida (UCF). She obtained her associates degree a semester after finishing high school, and is now pursuing a B.A. in International and […]

APSA

Theme Panel: Transformations during Presidential Transitions: How Scholars Can Help

June 10, 2016 Comments Off on Theme Panel: Transformations during Presidential Transitions: How Scholars Can Help

Theme Panel: Transformations during Presidential Transitions: How Scholars Can Help Fri, September 2, 2:00 to 3:30pm This themed roundtable focuses on presidential transitions and the ways scholars are helping the next president navigate this transformative […]

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Recent Posts

  • A Precolonial Paradox? Rethinking Political Centralization and Its Legacies
  • Meet 2026 RBSI Scholar, Camila Armas, Howard University
  • Silencing the Press in Criminal Wars: Why the War on Drugs Turned Mexico into the World’s Most Dangerous Country for Journalists
  • Land, Power, and Property Rights: The Political Economy of Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Meet 2026 RBSI Scholar, Mohamed Aljahmi, CUNY Queens College

Journals

  • A Precolonial Paradox? Rethinking Political Centralization and Its Legacies

    April 24, 2026 0
    A Precolonial Paradox? Rethinking Political Centralization and Its Legacies By Martha Wilfahrt, University of California, Berkeley A paradox has emerged in the growing literature on the legacies of the precolonial past: areas home to precolonial [...]
  • Silencing the Press in Criminal Wars: Why the War on Drugs Turned Mexico into the World’s Most Dangerous Country for Journalists

    April 24, 2026 0
    Silencing the Press in Criminal Wars: Why the War on Drugs Turned Mexico into the World’s Most Dangerous Country for Journalists By Guillermo Trejo and Natán Skigin, University of Notre Dame This article examines the [...]
  • Land, Power, and Property Rights: The Political Economy of Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa

    April 23, 2026 0
    Land, Power, and Property Rights: The Political Economy of Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa By Matthew K. Ribar, Stanford University Only 15% of African households possess a formal title for their agricultural land, despite the [...]

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