Politics and Government graduate student Fahmida Zaman has published an article titled “Agencies of Social Movements: Experiences of Bangladesh’s Shahbag Movement and Hefazat-e-Islam.”
Unit: Politics and Government
Lane Crothers shares Fulbright experience at Politics and Government brownbag
Professor Lane Crothers presented the Department of Politics and Government’s first brownbag of Fall 2016.
Ali Riaz’s book on Bangladesh released in Washington, DC
Professor Ali Riaz’s book, Bangladesh: A Political History Since Independence, was launched at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C., on September 20.
Singh wins American Political Science Association Feminist Theory award
Professor Jakeet Singh from the Department of Politics and Government has been awarded the American Political Science Association’s Okin-Young Award.
Faculty present at American Political Science Association conference
Department of Politics and Government faculty presented papers at the 2016 American Political Science Association annual meeting in Philadelphia from September 1–4.
Redbird Scholar features Politics and Government faculty commentary
The new issue of Redbird Scholar has been published, and Politics and Government faculty are being featured for their commentary on the election.
5 things you will discover in latest Redbird Scholar
The spring issue of the Redbird Scholar has been published.
After Hillary: If America elects its first female president, what changes?
Hillary Clinton’s election would be loaded with significance, but one thing it wouldn’t mean is that men and women are suddenly on a level cultural playing field come November 9.
Scare tactics: Messages of fear, anger popular in 2016 campaigns
From immigration and employment, to terrorism and loss of patriotic pride, savvy politicians can employ messages to stir fear (and offer themselves as the solution).
Unprecedented fight: Scalia’s death puts Supreme Court on trial during election
The sudden death of Justice Antonin Scalia on February 13 not only left a vacancy on the U.S. Supreme Court, but it also pulled the very future of the court into the turmoil of a heated presidential election.