April 20- April 26, 2018
The APSA Press Gallery is a roundup of recent blogs, op-eds, podcasts, and interviews featuring political scientists. We are always eager to follow our members’ engagement online. Let us know what you are doing or reading with the hashtag #APSAPressGallery, or by email to press@apsanet.org.
The Week in Writing
Recent blogs and op-eds authored by APSA members
- Inexperienced Candidates are Becoming More Common, But Only in One Party,Sarah Treul and Rachel Porter, Mischiefs of Faction, April 20, 2018
- Starbucks Won’t Have Any Idea Whether its Diversity Training Works,Hakeem Jefferson and Neil Lewis, Jr., Washington Post, April 23, 2018
- Why Does a President Demand Loyalty from People Who Work for Him?,Yu Ouyang, The Conversation, April 23, 2018
- What’s True, and Fake, About the Facebook Effect,Jessica Feezell and Yanna Krupnikov, Behavioral Scientist, April 23, 2018
- If Anyone Can Be American’s First Black Woman Governor, it’s Stacey Abrams,Christina Greer, Daily Beast, April 24, 2018
- A New ‘Resource Curse’ is Fueling Riots Around the World,Renard Sexton, Monkey Cage, April 25, 2018
Speaking Up: Political Scientists in the Media
Interviews, quotes, and podcasts featuring APSA members
- Research Spotlight: Carol Nackenoff and Political Science,By Aidan Reddy, featuring Carol Nackenoff, Daily Swarthmore Gazette, April 23, 2018
- Latin America’s Most Unpopular Presidency Grinds to a Standstill, By Samy Adghirni and Simone Preissler Iglesias, featuring Claudio Goncalves Couto, Bloomberg, April 26, 2018
Visit the APSA Public Engagement homepage to learn about resources and opportunities for public engagement, including the APSA experts database.