Spotlights
Robert Entman Wins Humboldt Prize
Robert Entman, J.B. and M.C. Shapiro Professor of Media and Public Affairs and professor of international affairs at the George Washington University, has won the prestigious international Alexander von Humboldt Research Award for his field-changing contributions to political communication. Entman is the world's first political communication scholar and the first from the George Washington University to receive this award, and he will work at the Free University of Berlin for the majority of 2012. While in Germany, he will conduct comparative research in order to better understand how inequality has grown faster in the United States than in Western Europe.
“I am delighted to be the first Humboldt Award recipient recognized for contributions to political communication scholarship,” said Entman. “I appreciate this acknowledgment of the media's fundamental role in shaping politics and democracy.”
Robert Entman's award-winning research focuses on media framing and bias and the media's influence on foreign policy, race relations and other important areas of American politics. His 1993 conceptualization of framing has been cited in thousands of scholarly works. Dr. Entman will release a new book in March 2012 titled Scandal and Silence: Media Responses to Presidential Misconduct. Using a series of recent case studies, he argues against the commonly-held view that media eagerly work themselves into “feeding frenzies” over sex scandals and other wrong-doings by top politicians.
Entman received two other honors this year. His 2004 book, Projections of Power: Framing News, Public Opinion and U.S. Foreign Policy, won the 2011 Doris Graber Book Award from APSA's political communication section. He also will receive the 2011 Wayne A. Danielson Award for Distinguished Contributions to Communication Scholarship, given annually to one scholar by the Jesse H. Jones College of Communication at the University of Texas.
“It's extremely fitting that Robert Entman was chosen for this award,” said Frank Sesno, director of the School of Media and Public Affairs. “His trailblazing research is without peer in the political communication landscape, and his impact on other researchers and students has changed the way people study issue framing, media bias, and political communication topics. We at the School of Media and Public Affairs are proud to count Bob among our ranks.”
Among his other recognitions are the Murray Edelman Distinguished Career Achievement Award in Political Communication (APSA's political communication section) and an NCA Distinguished Scholar award. The Black Image in the White Mind: Media and Race in America, his 2000 book written with Andrew Rojecki, won Harvard University's Goldsmith Book Prize, the Frank Luther Mott Award for best book in Mass Communication, the APSA political psychology section's Robert E. Lane Award for best book in political psychology, and other prizes.
Goldstein Retires from Delaware
Leslie Goldstein retired in January 2012 from the department of political science and international relations at the University of Delaware after almost 40 years of service. Her research, on which she remains active, focuses on issues in constitutional law, gender and law and political theory. She has written or co-authored several books on the legal rights of women, including the American Political Science Association's Women in the Judicial Process (1988) and The Constitutional and Legal Rights of Women (Oxford, 2006, with Judith Baer). Goldstein received her PhD from Cornell University and has held visiting positions at the University of Pennsylvania, Fordham, University of California, Berkeley, and Bryn Mawr.
Goldstein joined the association in 1966 as a graduate student at the University of Chicago. She has been an active member of APSA's organized section on Law and Courts, and was the section president of from 1992–1993. She has also served on awards committees and the annual meeting program committee. Her presentation at APSA's 2011 annual meeting was The Supreme Court and Racial Minorities 1868–1918.
“Leslie Goldstein is the one of the liveliest colleagues in the department. In departmental meetings, in job talks and even in email exchanges, Leslie is always engaged, making sharp observations and often critical contributions to our deliberations” said Muqtedar Khan, associate professor, POSCIR, at the University of Delaware.
“One of Leslie's major contributions to the department was her enthusiastic participation in department decisions. She invariably played a central role in ensuring that the deliberations as well as the results were fair. This is just one of the many facets of her career that reflect her strong commitment to fairness and democracy,” added Sue Davis, Professor Emerita at the University of Delaware.
Cann Elected to Logan's City Council
Damon Cann, assistant professor of political science at Utah State University, is one of three newly elected individuals chosen in North Logan's (Utah) 2011 general city council election.
“I'm thrilled,” Cann said. “I worked as hard as I could to try to make this happen. I can't really claim credit for my success on my own. I have quite a few people who have been supporting me, advising me, endorsing me, putting up signs, passing out fliers, and just helping in a variety of ways to help make this happen.”
According to general election results, with 608 votes, Cann received the most of the six candidates who ran. Will the election and public office be helpful in the classroom?
“Now when I teach my class on campaigns and elections I'm not just telling them about other people's elections, I can tell them about mine,” Cann said.
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Norris Gains Fellowship
The Australian Research Council has awarded professor Pippa Norris the 2011 Kathleen Fitzpatrick Australian Laureate Fellowship in recognition of her role in the humanities and social sciences. The Australian Laureates are the most prestigious award given by the ARC. In a nation-wide competition among all disciplines in the natural and social sciences and humanities, this is the first ARC Laureate ever awarded to a political scientist.
Pippa Norris is the McGuire Lecturer in Comparative Politics at the John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. She is also a visiting professor at The University of Sydney's department of government and international relations. A well-known public speaker and author of almost 40 books, her research in comparative politics examines democratic institutions and culture, public opinion and elections, gender politics, and political communications.
The five-year award provides $2.6m for research aiming to deepen and advance understanding of the impact of democratic governance on prosperity, welfare, and peace in countries around the world since the late twentieth century. The third wave of democratization has transformed regimes around the globe and the research will seek to establish whether this process has in turn generated concrete benefits in human development.
As part of the additional inaugural Kathleen Fitzpatrick Fellowship, she also plans to run workshops and networking events aimed at encouraging early-career women researchers to stay in academia, and also encourage research on gender equality in elected office.
Professor Norris has received numerous awards including the 2011 Johan Skytte Prize in Political Science(with Ronald Inglehart) for her contribution to political science, APSA's political communications section's Doris A. Graber Award for the best book published in political communications, the Independent Sector's Virginia A. Hodgkinson research prize, and the Outstanding Professional Achievement Award from the Midwest Political Science Association Women's Caucus. Norris has also served as the Director of the Democratic Governance Group at the United Nations Development Programme in New York and as an expert consultant for many international bodies, including UNESCO, NDI, the Council of Europe, International IDEA, the World Bank, the National Endowment for Democracy, and the UK Electoral Commission.
Kaarbo Joins University of Edinburgh Faculty
Juliet Kaarbo joined the School of Social and Political Science at the University of Edinburgh as a senior lecturer. She arrives in Scotland after almost two decades at the University of Kansas, where she was an associate professor and Director of Faculty Programs in the Office of International Programs. Her book, Coalition Politics and Cabinet Decision Making: A Comparative Analysis of Foreign Policy Choices, is expected in 2012 from the University of Michigan Press. She had presented at conferences and workshops in western Europe, Costa Rica, and Turkey (a major current research interest) and briefed officials from the CIA and Department of Defense.
Kaarbo joined the association in 1990, while pursuing her doctorate at Ohio State University. She received a fellowship from the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung Foundation to conduct dissertation research in Germany and additional doctoral dissertation support from the National Science Foundation. Kaarbo has been active in APSA's Foreign Policy organized section. She has published in both PS: Political Science and Politics and Perspectives on Politics. Mark Aspinwall, head of politics and international relations at Kaarbo's new department says, “we in Edinburgh are delighted Julie has joined us. She deepens our expertise in international relations and brings a fresh angle on foreign policy analysis. She also has vast experience working with PhD students, which will be enormously helpful as we build numbers in the coming years.”
Nylan Heads to Dartmouth
Brendan Nyhan was appointed assistant professor in the department of government at Dartmouth College. He received his doctoral degree from Duke University and was a Robert Wood Johnson Scholar in Health Policy Research at the University of Michigan from 2009–2011. His work focuses on political scandal and misperceptions concerning politics and health care. Nyhan is co-author of the New York Times bestseller All the President's Spin.
Nyhan is an avid blogger whose work frequently appears in the Huffington Post and Washington Monthly. His presentation at the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting, which was co-authored with Jason Reifler of Georgia State University, was titled “Opening the Political Mind? The Effects of Self-Affirmation and Graphical Information on Factual Misperceptions.” John Carey, a new colleague of Nyhan's at Dartmouth, is excited about his appointment, stating, “Brendan Nyhan's research is ambitious and creative. He is at the front edge of scholarship on public opinion and American politics. His work is attracting the attention of the most thoughtful blogs and popular media outlets.”
New Appointment for Smith
Steven Rathgeb Smith was named the Senior Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and the Nancy Bell Evans Professor of Public Affairs at the Evans School of Public Affairs at the University of Washington. He returns to the University where he taught from 1996-2009 after a two-year stint at Georgetown University as the Waldemar A. Nielsen Chair in Philanthropy. Smith has also held appointments at Duke University and Washington University in St. Louis. He has published a wide variety of material, including two books in 2010, relating to his interests in nonprofit and public management, public policy, and social services. He has been a member of APSA for more than a quarter of a century; he was the organizer and chair of a panel on nonprofit advocacy for the 2011 APSA Annual Meeting in Seattle.
Smith received his PhD from MIT and also holds a Master of Social Work. He has received research support from several foundations, including the Annie E. Casey Foundation, Pew Foundation, Lilly Foundation and the Ford Foundation. Smith has served on numerous professional committees and is a past president of the Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action (ARNOVA). He currently sits on several editorial boards and is a former editor of Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly.
Hartwig Retires from Arkansas
Charles Hartwig retired in December from the department of political science at Arkansas State University, where he had taught since 1973. He received his PhD from the University of Kentucky; his research has principally focused on African politics and international organizations. He was a Peace Corps volunteer in Liberia and was later a Fulbright exchange professor at Cuttington University in that country. Following the outbreak of Liberia's civil war, he developed an interest in international peacekeeping efforts. Before launching his career in political science, Hartwig briefly served as a hospital administrator in the Kenyan highlands.
He is a former president of the Arkansas Political Science Association and has been a member of APSA for four decades. Hartwig is a former chair of his department and is the faculty advisor for ASU's Model UN program. He teaches courses on US foreign policy, African politics, and international relations. Hartwig is also an active member of his local Lions Club.
Dean Appointment for Montforti
Jessica Lavariega Monforti was named assistant dean of the College of Social and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Texas-Pan American. She received her PhD and MA degrees from The Ohio State University; her dissertation examined Cuban political participation in Miami. Her areas of expertise include public policy analysis, racial/gender politics, and survey research. She began her teaching career at Mercer University. From 2005–06 she was a Ford Foundation Fellow at Florida International University.
Lavariega Monforti has been a member of APSA since 1997 and is highly active in the Race, Ethnicity, and Politics organized section. She served on the Committee on the Status of Latinos y Latinas in the Profession from 2005 through 2008. She has published in this journal and is the co-editor of Black and Latino/a Politics: Issues in Political Development in the United States. Her paper (with Renee Cramer), “Guarding Our Border with Gardasil: Immigrant Women and Physical Autonomy,” received the Western Political Science Association's 2011 Pi Sigma Alpha Award. She also received the Best Paper in Latino/a Politics at the 2008 WPSA, and the 2010 Texas Board of Regents' Outstanding Teaching Award. Kristin Coyle, interim dean of UTPA praises Lavariega Monforti as a “model colleague” with “strong leadership abilities” to help move UTPA forward.
Brady Presents Holden Lecture
Henry Brady, dean of the Goldman School of Public Policy and Class of 1941 Monroe Deutsch Professor of Political Science and Public Policy at the University of California-Berkeley, presented the Fifth Annual Holden Lecture at Jackson State University on November 10, 2011. The lecture is named in honor of Matthew Holden, Jr., Wepner Distinguished Professor in Political Science at the University of Illinois in Springfield. In previous years, the lecture has been presented by Ira Katznelson, Ruggles Professor of Political Science and History at Columbia University; Theda Skocpol, Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology at Harvard University; Glenn Loury, Merton P. Stolz Professor of the Social Sciences and Economics at Brown University; and Dianne Pinderhughes, University of Notre Dame President's Distinguished Professor in the Departments of Africana Studies and Political Science. Drs. Holden, Brady, Katznelson, Pinderhughes, and Skocpol are all former presidents of the American Political Science Association.
Administrative Apppointments
Marlon Boarnet was appointed chair of the graduate program in Urban Planning at the University of Southern California.
Brady Baybeck, director of the graduate program in public administration and associate professor, department of political science, Wayne State University
LeAnn Beaty was appointed the Interim Director of the MPA program at Eastern Kentucky University.
Chris Copper was named interim chair, department of political science and public affairs, Western Carolina University.
R. Scott Crichlow was appointed Chair, department of political science, West Virginia University.
Richard K. Herrmann was appointed chair, department of political science, Ohio State University.
Ruth Melkonian-Hoover was appointed associate professor with tenure and named Chair of the department of political science, Gordon College.
J. Scott Johnson was named chair, joint department of political science at the College of St. Benedict and St. John's University in St. Joseph and Collegeville.
Christopher Jones was named the Vice Provost for University Honors, Northern Illinois University.
John Kilwein was named Director of Undergraduate Studies, West Virginia University.
Gibbs Knotts was appointed Interim Dean of Arts and Sciences at Western Carolina University.
Matthew Lebo was named acting chair, department of political science, Stony Brook University.
Jeffrey Lewis was appointed chair, department of political science, University of California, Los Angeles.
Forrest Maltzman was named Senior Vice Provost for Academic Affairs and Planning, George Washington University.
Jeffrey Peake was appointed chair, department of political science, Clemson University.
Michael Peddle has been named the associate dean, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Northern Illinois University.
Joel Raveloharimisy has accepted a tenure-track position in the behavioral science department at Andrews University. He also will serve as Director of the Community and International Development Program.
Alison Dundes Renteln was appointed chair of the department of political science, University of Southern California.
Gary Roberts was named interim dean, Regent University.
Patrick Roberts was named director of the Alexandria campus of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University's Center for Public Administration and Policy.
Scott Schraufnagel was named the director, Graduate Studies, Northern Illinois University.
Bradley C.S. Watson was appointed chair, department of politics, Saint Vincent College.
William Wilkerson was appointed chair, department of politics, State University of New York College at Oneonta.
Noah Zerbe was appointed chair, department of politics, Humboldt State University.
New Appointments
Yuen Yuen Ang, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Michigan
Sarah Anzia, assistant professor, School of Public Policy, University of California, Berkeley
Kenichi Ariga, lecturer, department of political science, Ohio State University
Fodei Batty, assistant professor, department of philosophy and political science, Quinnipiac University
Eva Bellin, Myra and Robert Kraft Associate Professor of Arab Politics, department of political science, Brandeis University
Tanya Corbin, assistant professor, department of political science, Radford University
Stephen E. Costanza, assistant professor, department of political science and criminal justice, University of South Alabama
Andrew Douglas, assistant professor, department of political science, Morehouse College
Alexander Downes, assistant professor, department of political science, George Washington University
Lee Epstein, provost professor, Gould School of Law, University of Southern California
Jerome Foss, assistant professor, department of politics, Saint Vincent College
Alin Fumurescu, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Tulane University
Laurie Gould, assistant professor, department of political science, justice studies, and public administration, Georgia Southern University
Ryan D. Grauer, assistant professor, graduate School of Public and International Affairs, University of Pittsburgh
Robert Harbaugh, professor, department of political science, College of Western Idaho
Khaled Helmy, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Tulane University
Jeremy Horowitz, assistant professor, department of government, Dartmouth College
Valerie Hudson, professor and George H.W. Bush Chair, Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University
Jason Jordan, assistant professor, department of political science, Drew University
Chris J. Koski, assistant professor, department of political science, Reed College
Kiril Kolev, assistant professor, department of politics and international relations, Hendrix College
Pauline Jones Luong, professor, department of political science, University of Michigan
Xiaobo Lu, assistant professor, Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University
Timothy McCarty, lecturer, department of political science, Brandeis University
Martin Mendoza, visiting assistant professor, department of political science, Tulane University
Spencer Meredith, assistant professor, School of Government, Regent University
Kristina Miler, assistant professor, department of government and politics, University of Maryland
Nikola Mirilovic, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Central Florida
William Norris, assistant professor, Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University
Ryan Owens, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Wisconsin, Madison
Olukunle Owolabi, assistant professor, department of political science, Villanova University
Robin Phinney, research associate, department of political science, University of Minnesota
Scott Powell, assistant professor, department of political science, University of Tennessee
Josh Ryan, assistant professor, department of political science, Bradley University
Caressa Schenk, Nazarbayev University, Kazakhstan
Megan Shannon, assistant professor, department of political science, Florida State University
Melissa Shaffer-O'Connell has accepted a tenure-track position in the department of political science, Lake Superior State University
Karen Sebold, instructor, department of political science, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
Edward Taylor, assistant professor, department of political science, social work, and sociology
Nicholas Wheeler, assistant professor, department of political science, Brigham Young University
Scott Wolford, assistant professor, department of government, University of Texas, Austin
Galina Zapryanova, temporary assistant professor of political science, Truman State University
Promotions
Martin Dimitrov, associate professor, Tulane University
Patrick Egan, assistant professor, Tulane University
Rhonda Kinney Longworth, professor, department of political science, Eastern Michigan University
Zoe Oxley, professor, department of political science, Union College
Barry Pyle, professor, department of political science, Eastern Michigan University
Christina R. Rivers, associate professor with tenure, Cornell University
Michael Rudy a tenure-track position as assistant professor of political science, Truman State University
Aaron Schneider, associate professor with tenure, Tulane University
Eduardo Silva, endowed full professorship, Tulane University
Mark Vail, associate professor with tenure, Tulane University
Awards
Terrence Guay, clinical associate professor of international business, Smeal College of Business, Penn State University, received the 2011 Fred Brand, Jr. Outstanding Teacher Award, the college's highest honor for teaching.
Peter H. Koehn, professor, department of political science, University of Montana, Missoula, received the Paul G. Lauren Undergraduate Research Faculty Mentor Award (campus-wide teaching award, 2011) and the Association of Public and Land-Grant Universities (APLU) 2011 Michael P. Malone International Leadership Award.
James H. Mittelman, university professor of international affairs, School of International Service, American University, was named Honorary Fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Studies.
Pete Moore, professor, department of political science, Case Western Reserve University, has been awarded a Social Science Research Council Grant to support the Northeast Ohio University Consortium for Middle East Studies (NOUCMES)' Speakers Series, Scholarship on the Contemporary Muslim World: Presenting New Perspectives to Middle America.
Louis Pauly, professor, department of political science, University of Toronto, was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada
Quansheng Zhao, professor and director, Center for Asian Studies, American University, was awarded “First Place of the Sumiya Mikio Prize” in 2010 by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences for best essays in Japanese studies published in 2009.
Retirements
Denise Scheberle, professor, department of public and environmental affairs, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay
Charles E. Walcott, professor, department of political science, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State Univerity
Resignations
Jaekwon Suh resigned has position as assistant professor of political science at Truman State University to be closer to his family in Korea.
In the News
Marc Landy, professor, department of political science, Boston College, Boston Globe, on Newt Gingrich campaigning in Massachusetts
Costos Panagopoulos, professor, department of political science, Fordham University, USA Today, on the Occupy Wall Street movement
John J. Pitney, Jr., Crocker Professor of Politics, department of government, Claremont McKenna College, Washington Post, on policies and characteristics of Newt Gingrich
Gary Segura, professor, department of political science, Stanford University, Miami Herald, on recent polling of Hispanic voters
Stephen Voss, associate professor, department of political science, University of Kentucky, and Joe Gerschtenson, associate professor, department of political science, Eastern Kentucky University, NPR affiliate WKMS, on Kentucky elections