News
- Professor Sven Steinmo has just written a new online publication (co-authored with Bo Rothstein) which argues that the Left’s “Identity Politics” help explain the rise of populism in Europe (and America?). Read the article.
- Professor Jennifer Wolak just published an article in The Political Behavior. It can be found here.
- “People tend to discount the effect that Hillary Clinton probably had on the number of women running for office,” said Christina Ladam, a Boulder political science graduate student and the study’s lead author. “There’s strong support for the idea
- The Department of Political Science is excited to introduce Dr. Clara Park this year!“I was always interested in International Relations and Economics, and specifically the intersection of those two fields.” Dr. Clara Park
- Dr. Steinmo has taken a novel path to publishing his latest book, "The Leap of Faith" through Oxford University Press. The book focuses on why citizens in some countries are more willing to pay taxes than in other countries,
- "Sometimes Michaele Ferguson’s classes are going too smoothly, and there’s a real need for a riot or maybe just a bit more heckling.The heckling is real, the riots just acknowledged, and they are part of an innovative teaching
- "After an astonishing 27 years at odds, in June, Macedonia and Greece reached a dramatic breakthrough in negotiations over what’s known as the Macedonia naming dispute. The dispute was, yes, over the former
- The department of Political Science would like to congratulate Keaton Brown, a recent graduate of Boulder, in his recent success with the startup company Statehill. "Keaton Brown, who graduated from Boulder in May of
- Following the Trump-Putin Summit in Helsinki, Finland, Professor Sarah Sokhey spoke with KOA Newsradio hosts April Zesbaugh and Marty Lenz on July 18, 2018. She addressed the implications of the summit itself, and its impact on both Russian politics and American politics. Listen below!
- Governments that do the best job protecting the rights of the accused have the lowest murder rates, while those that neglect due process have the highest, according to a five-year study of 89 countries by Boulder