Skip to content

Faricy op-ed on Trump's tax policy proposals in Washington Post

"The release of two pages from President Trump’s 2005 tax returns didn’t show much. But they did show just how much Trump—and other super-rich Americans—would benefit from his proposed tax plan," says Christopher Faricy, associate professor of political science.

March 16, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

O'Keefe discusses commercial space flights, NASA in LA Times

According to University Professor Sean O'Keefe, NASA’s role as a “development catalyst” has been part of the agency’s objectives since its earliest days.

March 8, 2017

Reeher weighs in on sub-cabinet vacancies on NPR's Marketplace

According to Professor of Political Science Grant Reeher, "A lot of prominent Republicans, the usual suspects, either aren't interested or they were critical of the Trump campaign so therefore, they are not being looked at."

March 7, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Thompson discusses closing, merging congregations on CNYCentral

According to Margaret S. Thompson, associate professor of history and political science, some religious congregations may leave their buildings, but other groups can replace them, often representing groups that are new or growing in the community.

March 3, 2017

Elizabeth Cohen op-ed on Trump's immigration policies in Politico

"The goals of nativist enclave policies and a robust job-creating economy are fundamentally at odds with one another. A full-throated embrace of nativism at this point will mean that we are walling ourselves inside our nation only to discover that we have walled in the very people that enclave nativists sought to eject," writes Elizabeth Cohen, professor of political science.

March 1, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Lambright weighs in on plans for Mars exploration in FiveThirtyEight

“The moon program looks more and more like an astounding aberration in the American political context. The space station does show it’s feasible to have a long-term program, but it has to be maintained by a sequence of presidents and a sequence of NASAs. And that’s the dilemma,” says Professor Harry Lambright.

February 27, 2017

Reeher discusses lower-level political appointees in Washington Examiner

"These are the folks who actually attempt to implement the policy changes that the administration is trying to push down from above," says Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute, about the importance of political appointees below the Cabinet level.

February 27, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Thompson discusses presidential leadership survey on NewsChannel 9

Margaret Susan Thompson was interviewed on NewsChannel 9 about the 2017 C-SPAN Historians Survey of Presidential Leadership. On Abraham Lincoln topping the list she says, "We wouldn't have presidents 17 through 45 if we didn't have Abraham Lincoln.
February 21, 2017

Op-ed by ESF/SU academics supporting carbon tax to ease climate change

"In response to the climate crisis we face, our leaders must not continue to merely say 'no' to climate policies proposed by others, or to hope, as we have for decades, for an unforeseeable technological breakthrough that will render fossil fuels uneconomical," write eleven scientists and professors from SUNY ESF and Syracuse University.

February 20, 2017

Reeher discusses activists' call for town halls in CNY, NNY on WRVO

 According to Professor of Political Science Grant Reeher, progressives will have to sustain the movement to the midterm elections of 2018 if they want to enact fundamental change. "The question from here on in is how sustainable will this be," Reeher said. "What will this look like a year from now?"

February 14, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Elizabeth Cohen featured in WalletHub article on immigration policy

Elizabeth Cohen was featured in the WalletHub article, "Economic Impact of Immigration by State."
February 14, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Elizabeth Cohen quoted by CBS San Francisco on attorney access for immigrants

“It is in the government’s interest to do everything possible to avoid any appearance that rights violations are being permitted or encouraged,” says Elizabeth Cohen, professor of political science.

February 10, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Keck comments on Trump's attacks on the judiciary in Christian Science Monitor

“Trump is not reading judicial decisions and criticizing constitutional arguments. He is denouncing a so-called judge and saying decisions are ridiculous. Those pointed attacks from a sitting president are for sure unusual," says Thomas M. Keck, professor of political science.

February 10, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Robertson Foundation extends partnership with Maxwell

The recently announced two-year funding extension will support a total of four additional Robertson fellows. All Robertson fellows receive funding for two years of study, allowing them to pursue one of the joint degrees offered through the Public Administration and International Affairs Department. 

February 7, 2017

Keck weighs in on Trump's Supreme Court nominee in DO

Tom Keck was featured in The Daily Orange article, "SU political science professor evaluates President Donald Trump’s Supreme Court nominee." "(Gorsuch) has also publicly praised Justice Scalia and indicated his hope to follow in his footsteps," he says, and notes that many Democrats and independents are unhappy with the nomination.

February 7, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Thompson weighs in on Trump administration leaks in Talking Points Memo

Margaret Susan Thompson, associate professor of history and political science, compares the volume of leaks coming out of the Trump administration to the Nixon administration and its handling of the Watergate scandal.

February 3, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Reeher comments on Trump's political style in The Hill

According to Professor of Political Science Grant Reeher, President Donald Trump "is doubling down, and I think the reaction on the part of those who are not favorably oriented toward him is going to harden.”

February 3, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Elizabeth Cohen discusses effect of travel ban on healthcare workers in WIRED

"Since the 1940s we've been not only recruiting nurses from other countries but actually in some cases getting people into training abroad and then bringing them to America," says Elizabeth Cohen, associate professor of political science. "This H-1B shift could really reduce the population of highly skilled doctors and nurses."

February 1, 2017

See related: U.S. Elections

Andersen weighs in on education secretary nominee Betsy DeVos in DO

“She has no expertise or experience in the educational world,” Kristi Andersen, professor emerita of political science, says. “She has not been a teacher, she has not been an administrator, she has not been a policymaker, she has not worked for an educational think tank and she has not written about education.”

January 30, 2017

Explore by:

Campbell Public Affairs Institute
306 Eggers Hall