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Meet the 2024-2025 Public Scholars

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2025

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Abstract

Type
Association News
Copyright
© American Political Science Association 2025

The public scholarship program is a remote fellowship that introduces political science graduate students to the intellectual and practical aspects of presenting academic scholarship to the public (https://connect.apsanet.org/centennialcenter/fellowships/public-scholarship-program/).

During the fellowship period, fellows focus on producing public-facing summaries of political science research. This involves communicating with journal editors and authors under the supervision of APSA staff. This work is shared via APSA’s blog, https://www.politicalsciencenow.com, as well as on APSA social media accounts.

The Public Scholarship Program was created in collaboration with the APSA Presidential Task Force for New Partnerships, and thanks to generous support from the Ivywood Foundation.

Our fellows write public-facing, accessible summaries of cutting-edge political science research published in the American Political Science Review. Recent articles covered include work on links between misinformation and vigilante violence, political polarization and its drivers, and production in the era of digital capitalism. You can read all of our fellows’ posts at this link: https://politicalsciencenow.com/category/public-scholarship-program/.

SIENNA NORDQUIST

Sienna Nordquist is a 3rd year PhD Student in Social and Political Science at Bocconi University, Italy. She is also a visiting researcher at the WZB’s Transformations of Democracy Unit in Berlin, Germany. Originally from the US, Sienna was a Robert W. Woodruff Scholar at Emory University, received her master’s degree from the LSE’s European Institute, and has been a Fellow at the Atlantic Council.

EWA NIZALOWSKA

Ewa Nizalowska is a PhD candidate in political theory at Cornell University with research interests in American political thought, feminist theory, and theories of political economy and empire. Her dissertation examines how early to mid-twentieth-century radicals theorized the organization of economic power in the United States and strategized for its rearrangement. Her work has been supported by, among others, the American Political Science Association, the College of Arts and Sciences at Cornell University, and the Yan P. Lin Centre at McGill University.

JACK WIPPELL

Jack Wippell is a PhD Student in the department of sociology at The Ohio State University. His research interests cover political sociology, social movements, and culture, and his current focus is on the emergence, spread and mobilization of far-right extremism across the United States and Europe. He also has interests at the intersection of computational and qualitative methodologies. ■