APSA

Policing Us Sick: The Health of Latinos in an Era of Heightened Deportations and Racialized Policing

Policing Us Sick: The Health of Latinos in an Era of Heightened Deportations and Racialized Policing by Vanessa Cruz Nichols, Indiana University, Alana M. W. LeBrón, University of California, Irvine, and Francisco I. Pedraza, University of California, Riverside In 2016, Donald Trump campaigned […]

APSA

When the World Helps Teach Your Class

When the World Helps Teach Your Class: Using Wikipedia to Teach Controversial Issues by Mark K. Cassell, Kent State University It’s a problem nearly everyone who teaches political science confronts at one time or another: how […]

APSA Annual Meeting

Short Course: Activism, Advocacy, and/vs. Scholarship: The Methods Studio—Workshop and “Crit”

Activism, Advocacy, and/vs. Scholarship: The Methods Studio—Workshop and “Crit” Dvora Yanow Half Day The Methods Studio has 2 parts, a workshop and a “crit.” This year’s workshop topic is “Activism, Advocacy, &/vs Scholarship.” Following that, […]

APSA

Meet 2018 RBSI Scholar, Geidy Mendez

Geidy Mendez, Rutgers University Geidy Mendez attends the School of Arts and Sciences/Douglass Residential College at Rutgers University and is a double major in political science and Latino & Caribbean Studies. She is a 2017 intern […]

American Political Science Review

Hume on Partisanship and Political Legitimacy

Whither Parties? Hume on Partisanship and Political Legitimacy by Joel E. Landis, University of California, Davis Recent work in political theory shows a burgeoning interest in the nature and normative value of political parties, suggesting that parties […]