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Ever-growing war chests fuel billions of voter contacts every cycle. Campaigns now have better ways of scaling outreach ...
Matthew Cebul and Sharan Grewal explain that dictators around the world have been emboldened by the Trump administration’s ...
Chief Sophie Pierre On Being The First: Bridging the Past, Present, and Future of the Ktunaxa Nation
Fluent in Ktunaxa and a lifelong advocate for Indigenous rights, Pierre has dedicated over three decades to public service, ...
Matthew Cebul is the Lead Research Fellow for the Ash Center’s Nonviolent Action Lab, where he conducts applied research on the dynamics of contemporary nonviolent protest movements, especially in ...
Virtual 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm EDT This event is online only and registration is required. A recording will be made available after the event’s conclusion. The information collected in the registration ...
In this paper, Mary W. Graham, co-director of the Center’s Transparency Policy Project, explores the unintended information inequities that weaken the nation’s vital health and safety alerts. By ...
In their latest article for The Conversation, Justin de Benedictis-Kessner and Christopher Warshaw explain that there’s no empirical evidence linking crime trends to leadership by either political ...
In Race/Class Conflict and Urban Financial Threat, political scientist Jennifer L. Hochschild analyzes key policies in four major U.S. cities to explore when race and class influence urban politics, ...
What kind of democracy do legislators want? This question was at the center of a recent discussion with Melody Crowder-Meyer, associate professor of political science at Davidson College, as part of ...
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