Tag Archives: political science

Graduate students honored for research and teaching

President Dunn congratulates honored graduate students at the Graduate Research and Creative Scholar and Graduate Teaching Effectiveness awards ceremony.

A total of 52 graduate students in the College of Arts and Sciences were honored by the university as winners of the Graduate Research and Creative Scholar and Graduate Teaching Effectiveness awards. Eleven students received further distinction as All-University Graduate Research and Creative Scholars, and were  honored as All-University recipients of the Graduate Teaching Effectiveness Awards.

Graduate Research and Creative Scholar Awards for 2011-12

All-University Scholars from the College of Arts and Sciences:

  • Michelle Barger, geosciences
  • Timothy Edwards, psychology
  • Isurika Fernando, chemistry
  • Dustin Hoffman, English
  • Taylor Paskin, biological sciences
  • Ryan Sibert, geosciences
  • Stephen Spates, communication
  • Anthony Squiers, political science
  • Lydia Walker, comparative religion

Department Scholars

  • Sara Bijani, history
  • Gerardo Bohorquez Gonzalez, Spanish
  • Caitlin Callahan, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Mary Sajini Devadas, chemistry
  • Katherine Ellison, history
  • Leticia Espinoza, Spanish
  • Nicole Fonger, mathematics
  • Tamrat Gashaw, economics
  • David Johnson, English
  • Lucas Kanclerz, geography
  • Ian Kerr, anthropology
  • Maxwell Kirchhoff, political science
  • Scott Marley, physics
  • Christina Sheerin, psychology
  • Benjamin Slager, biological sciences
  • Michelle A. Suarez, interdisciplinary health sciences
  • Cynthia Visscher, sociology

Graduate Teaching Effectiveness Awards

All-University Graduate Teachers

  • Matthew Arsenault, political science
  • Skylar Bre’z, history and gender and women’s studies
  • Colleen Cullinan, psychology
  • Kevin Douglass, chemistry
  • Krystal Howard, English
  • Kathryn Kestner, psychology
  • Kate Rowbotham, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Kristin Sovis, English

Department Graduate Teachers

  • Clara Adams, chemistry
  • David Barry, sociology
  • Emily Beard, communication
  • Erica D’Elia, anthropology
  • Holly DeVrou, Spanish
  • Racha El Kadiri, geosciences
  • Carolina Gonzalo Llera, Spanish
  • Alexandra Haase, biological sciences
  • Justin Hanig, economics
  • Kara Krebs, political science
  • Daniel Kueh, biological sciences
  • Bryan Phinezy, mathematics
  • Buddhi Rai, physics
  • Daniel Serfas, geography
  • Kelly Sparks, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
  • Kathryn Titus, geosciences
  • Scott Watson, comparative religion
  • Adam Wolfe, history

Political Science’s Kevin Corder Awarded Fulbright to Malta

Dr. Kevin Corder, political science, is the recipient of a Fulbright Award to travel to Malta.

By Katy TerBerg

Kevin Corder, chair emeritus and professor of political science, knows what hard work is all about. Corder, who recieved his Ph.D. from Washington University, where the Fulbright Program was first put in place, teaches courses on American politics and political methodology, including econometrics, bayesisan statistics, and mathematical modeling.

Recently, Corder’s work drew the attention of the Fulbright Scholar Program, and he was awarded a Fulbright to travel to Malta for his sabbatical next year. He will study the financial sector reforms instituted in Malta and the European Union in the wake of the global recession and debt crisis. Corder currently is wrapping up a book on the debt crisis in the U.S.

Since Corder’s award is for the 2012-13 academic year, it is the third Fulbright in four years awarded to Department of Political Science faculty members (joining Jim Butterfield in 2009-10 and Susan Hoffmann in 2010-11).

Corder’s major research areas are American electoral politics and public policy. He has published work on the federal credit programs, macroeconomic forecasting, and monetary policy in the American Political Science Review, Public Administration Review, American Politics Quarterly, and the Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory. Most recently, he worked with Notre Dame University associate professor and director of Graduate Studies Dr. Christina Wolbrecht on a project implementing ecological inference to investigate the voting behavior of women in the 1920s.

WMU is proud to boast another illustrious Fulbright scholar.

Links:

Dr. Corder’s profile
WMU Fulbright Scholars

WMU Department of Political Science

Kenyan Pastoralists, an Ethiopian Emperor and 9/11 Topics of Spring Lecture Series

Three nationally and internationally recognized scholars will give campus presentations at WMU during the spring 2012 Distinguished Lectures on Africa series hosted by WMU’s Center for African Development Policy Research.

Dr. Bilinda Straight, associate professor of anthropology at Western Michigan University.

Dr. Bilinda Straight, a WMU associate professor of anthropology, will present “Health Outcomes of Inter-community Violence in Three Northern Kenyan Pastoralist Communities” from 3 to 4:30 p.m., Monday, March 12 in Brown Hall, room 2028.

Straight works with Samburu pastoralists in northern Kenya, examining consciousness, cosmology, material culture, gender, health and violence. She has published scholarly articles in a variety of journals and edited volumes. She is the editor of “Women on the Verge of Home” (SUNY, 2005), and author of “Miracles and Extraordinary Experience in Northern Kenya” (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2007). She has been the recipient of numerous grants and awards from prestigious institutions, including the Fulbright Program and the National Science Foundation.

 

Dr. Theodore Vestal, professor emeritus of political science at Oklahoma State University

Dr. Theodore Vestal, professor emeritus of political science at Oklahoma State University, will present “Ethiopian-American Relations during the Reign of Emperor Haile Selassie, 1930-1974” from 3 to 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, March 28, in Brown Hall, room 2028.

Vestal has served as an expert witness in more than 115 political asylum cases of Ethiopians and Eritreans since 1996. In 1964-1966, he served as a Peace Corps executive in Ethiopia and has maintained an academic interest in the country and its people ever since. Vestal is the author of “The Lion of Judah in the New World: Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and the Shaping of Americans’ Attitudes toward Africa” (Praeger Publishing, 2011) and “Ethiopia: A Post-Cold War African State” (Praeger Publishing, 1999).

 

Dr. David Wiley, professor of sociology and former director of the African Studies Center at Michigan State University

Dr. David Wiley, professor of sociology and former director of the African Studies Center at Michigan State University, will present “Africa After 9/11: Rethinking U.S. Definitions and Policies” from 3 to 4:30 p.m., Wednesday, April 11, in Brown Hall, room 1025.

Wiley served as director of the African Studies Center at MSU from 1978-2008 and at the University of Wisconsin-Madison from 1972-77.  His research has focused on Zambia (urban housing and development); Zimbabwe (race relations, religious movements); Kenya (participatory fisheries management); South Africa (urban environment) as a Fulbright-Hays Senior Fellow at the University of KwaZulu-Natal; and internationalization and less commonly taught languages in the U.S. Wiley is currently conducting research on militarization in Africa. His most recent publication is “International and Language Education for a Global Future: Fifty Years of the U.S. Title VI and Fulbright-Hays Programs” (co-ed, MSU Press, 2010).

The Distinguished Lectures on Africa Series is co-sponsored by WMU’s Haenicke Institute for Global Education; the Departments of Anthropology, Economics, Foreign Languages, History, Political Science, Sociology and Spanish; the Timothy Light Center for Chinese Studies; the Office of the Vice President for Diversity and Inclusion; the University Center for the Humanities; and the Walker Institute for Race and Ethnic Relations.

For more information, contact: Dr. Sisay Asefa, CADPR director and professor of economics, sisay.asefa@wmich.edu 

Ph.D. Alum Speaks on Post-Communist Russia and Memories of WMU

by Helena Witzke

Dr. Katia Levintova, WMU Department of Political Science 2004 Ph.D. graduate, recently returned to campus to talk about the “Evolution of the Communist Party in Post-Communist Russia.” An assistant professor and chair of the Department of Political Science at University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, hers was the first talk of the new semester for the WMU Institute of Government and Politics.

Dr. Katia Levintova, WMU political science Ph.D. graduate

Levintova addressed the changing trends of the Russian Communist Party in recent decades. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, the Communist Party had to evolve in order to maintain its influence in the Russian government, and she emphasized the course of overall democratic reform taken by the Party, despite the presence of remaining hardliners.

In an interview with WMUK, WMU’s nonprofit public radio station, Levintova noted that support for the Party has changed in recent times from mostly the older generation, which had been somewhat left out of the current system, to a younger, middle-class base. “[The younger people] are quite sympathetic to the communist agenda, which is again not communist in a sense but more socially democratic.”

Levintova is a widely published author of several articles on democratization in Russia and Eastern Europe. She teaches comparative politics, international relations, U.S. foreign policy and political behavior.

Here, she is interviewed by the College of Arts and Sciences on her feelings about international education and her Ph.D. from Western.

Links:
Contact Susan Hoffmann, Director, Institute of Government and Politics.
Dr. Katia Levintova’s profile
For a campus map and parking information, please consult WMU Maps.
Institute of Government and Politics
Listen to the WMUK interview with Dr. Levintova

Remembering WMU—an interivew with Robert Kennedy (B.A. Political Science ’89)

Robert KennedyRobert Kennedy remembers what it was like to be a Bronco. Kennedy graduated in 1989 with a Bachelor of Arts and Sciences in Political Science and Public Law.

What do you do at the state Capitol?  I represent various businesses, nonprofit associations, universities and community colleges as their legislative advocate and government affairs consultant.

How did you come to be in this business?  Before becoming a professional consultant, I spent much of the 1990s working in the Michigan State Senate, including key positions as a legislative aide and as the special assistant to the assistant majority leader and later the majority floor leader.

 What do you like best about your work? That I have been able to successfully and aggressively represent the government relations interests of a diverse list of clients ranging from small family businesses to blue chip Fortune 50 multinational conglomerates.

 What challenges do you face working in the Capitol in 2011? The sheer number of public policy issues being addressed has increased significantly with the new Administration and under the leadership of a Republican-led House and Senate. In turn, the speed in which we must respond has become more of a challenge.

Who do you think will be the next president of the US?  It is way too early to forecast this with any accuracy, but I think if the Republican’s select a candidate who can effectively communicate their vision for the future of this country and raise enough money to stay competitive with the incumbent then I would give the GOP the edge.

What is your advice for citizens who want to advocate for an issue in the state Capitol? Hire a lobbyist of course, but otherwise – be polite, be positive, and be brief.

Favorite campus activity or bronco memory? “Bronco Beach” in the Valleys and Hockey Games at Lawson Arena.

What do you miss most about Kalamazoo/WMU? The seemingly carefree days of living on campus and Saturdays at Waldo Stadium.