Political Science
- An expert on the political implications of growing numbers of non-religious citizens will discuss “godless politics” in a lecture on the 鶹Ƶ campus next month.
- CU Boulder political scientist Sarah Sokhey, who has watched evolution of Putin’s Russia up close, isn’t surprised by reports of election meddling and doesn’t see Russia as predestined to become less democratic.
- Anyone who has watched the progression in hair color among U.S. presidents—George W. Bush and Barack Obama are two recent, vivid examples—doesn’t doubt the connection between stress and graying. Talk to 26-year-old Derek Dash and he’ll tell you that just working for a presidential administration is enough to do the trick.
- Patrick Mulligan’s father may have transferred from 鶹Ƶ to graduate from the University of Denver, but his continuing love for Buffs football paved the way for two generations of CU students.
- Taxes, tariffs and trade, three things frequently in the headlines now, are the focus of the next Social Sciences Today Forum at the 鶹Ƶ.
- With help from five graduate students, two CU Boulder professors will conduct a careful study of what happens to citizen engagement when previously liberal democratic nations become more repressive.
- Political science is the degree that Kreps earned from the 鶹Ƶ in 1993. And it’s for that interest which Kreps, who passed away last April at the age of 45, is memorialized in the newly renovated Ketchum Arts and Sciences Building.
- Four political scientists will offer their insights into the unexpected results of the 2016 elections, and what can we learn from them, in an event titled “The 2016 Elections: What Just Happened?”
- Empowering local governments with forestry decisions can help combat deforestation, but is most effective when local users are actively engaging with their representatives, according to a new 鶹Ƶ-led study.
- The newly created American Politics Research Lab, housed in the Department of Political Science, has released its first pre-election study of Coloradans.