Department Announcements and Achievements
Our department works hard conducting research, teaching classes, and remaining engaged
with local and global trends on topics that impact us and shape the future. We are
proud to recognize the achievements of our faculty, graduate students, and staff in
service of our mission.
We are also proud of our alumni as they continue on to their professional careers. If you have an achievement
related to your degree and career you would like highlighted, please email polsci_alumni@stonybrook.edu.
Political Science Department Announces 2023-2024 Scholarship Recipients
The Political Science Department is thrilled to congratulate our outstanding scholarship recipients for the 2023-2024 academic year. These six students have showcased incredible academic achievement, commitment to their academia, and a dedication to excellence in political science.
Firstly, Madelin Silva (top left) has been awarded the prestigious Alumni Pre-Law Scholarship for her exceptional academic record, with plans to pursue a career in law. Noah Kirchner (top middle) is honored for his service to the United States Armed Forces and was awarded the Davidson Family Scholarship.
Furthermore, Johan Arias Chacon (bottom left) has been recognized with the Patricia A. Gramer Memorial Scholarship for his outstanding performance and dedication to his senior honors thesis. Lana Gouda (bottom middle) is celebrated for her academic excellence, earning the Robert Clasen Scholarship.
Lastly, we congratulate Tristan Brown-Devergilio (top right) and Emma Li (bottom right), recipients of the Mark Herzinger Scholarship in Political Science, for their academic achievements and commitment to the field of political science.
These scholarships, ranging from $1,000 to $5,000, provide crucial support to our students, enabling them to pursue their academic and professional goals. We are immensely proud of their accomplishments and look forward to witnessing their continued success. Congratulations to all our scholarship recipients!
4/16/24
Past announcements
2023-2024
Emeritus Professor Milton Lodge received the Political Psychology Career Achievement Award from the American Political Science Association (APSA) this year. This distinguished award is given every two years, celebrating a scholar whose lifelong commitment and contributions to the profession has left a mark on the field of political psychology.
Emeritus Professor Lodge was selected for this prestigious award for his book, “The Rationalizing Voter,” co-authored with Charles Tabler and published 2013, as well as the theory of motivated reasoning. The book delves into the subtle influences that often go unnoticed and shape political behavior. This theory is assessed through various components, including the examination of cognition, automaticity, affect transfer, affect contagion, and motivated reasoning. It highlights how conscious thought is a way to rationalize emotions and feelings that are automatically triggered.
The theory of motivated reasoning revolves around three hypotheses: the primacy of affect, the automaticity of affect, and the affective contagion effect. The primacy of affect indicates that emotions come before our conscious reasoning when forming judgments. The automaticity of affect suggests that emotional responses can be triggered automatically without conscious thinking. The affective contagion effect demonstrates how our surroundings can shape political emotions and decisions.
In his ongoing research, Emeritus Professor Lodge focuses on a dual-process model for political beliefs, emphasizing the relationship between automatic subconscious processes and deliberate cognitive elements.
10/20/23
Professor Drew Engelhardt received the Best Paper Award from the American Political Science Association Political Psychology Organized Section. Engelhardt co-wrote the paper, “From Protest to Child-Rearing: How Movement Politics Shape Socialization Priorities” with Allison Anoll from Vanderbilt University and Mackenzie Israel-Trummel from The College of William and Mary. The paper explores how movements can have long-term effects by influencing adults’ beliefs about child socialization. Using the context of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, Engehlardt and his colleagues examined racial socialization preferences, highlighting the impact of BLM on changing child rearing preferences, particularly in relation to race, racism and diversity.
Studies and surveys indicate that BLM’s ability to shape agendas and provide information can change Whites’ childrearing preferences, highlighting race, racism and diversity in Summer 2020. These results allow Engelhardt and his co-authors to explain race and ethnic gaps in evaluations of the BLM protests, political psychology and child rearing.
Professor Engelhardt is a new Assistant Professor of Political Science. He received his Bachelors of Arts in Government at The College of William and Mary and then attended Vanderbilt University and graduated with a PhD in political science.
To learn more about Professor Engelhardt and his research, you can visit his website at http://www.amengelhardt.com/.
10/13/23
Stony Brook University’s Eta Theta chapter of Pi Sigma Alpha, the National Political Science Honor Society, has been awarded the prestigious Best Chapter Award for the 2022-2023 academic year. Their faculty advisor, Jason Rose, a lecturer in the Department of Political Science, also received the Best Advisor Award. Recent graduate Mary Brantle won the Pi Sigma Alpha Penniman Scholarship Award for Graduate Study, which she plans to use for her studies in Stony Brook’s Political Science Masters of Public Policy program.
This recognition acknowledges the exceptional contributions of local chapters within their respective institutions and communities. These chapters must exemplify Pi Sigma Alpha’s mission of fostering scholarship and intellectual curiosity in the political science field.
Professor Rose's exemplary leadership and dedication to student leaders and members stand out. The chapter’s student officers, including Jordyn Christophides, Aisha Khwaja, Alec Waldman and James Lopez-Perez, have played a pivotal role in achieving the group’s remarkable successes.
The award includes a cash prize of $500 for the chapter, with an additional $200 awarded to the advisor in acknowledgement of their dedicated service. Furthermore, the winners will be announced on Pi Sigma Alpha's digital platforms and will be featured in the American Political Science Association's magazine, Political Science Today.
Read more at Stony Brook's news website.
10/3/23
2022-2023
The Model EU team Peter Joyce, Sowad Ocean Karim, Charles (CJ) Burgardt, and Tessa Kearke participated in the SUNY Model European Union conference held at the SUNY Global Center in NYC. At the conference CJ Burgardt was honored with the Most Effective Head of Government award.
“As a double major in Political Science (with a concentration in international and comparative politics) and History, participating in something like the Model EU always seemed natural. In addition to being associated with SBU's Model UN club, I was part of my high school's Model UN club and attended several conferences with them, giving me a taste of what it might be like to be a diplomat. Now that I'm at SBU, SUNYMEU offers me the opportunity to learn more about European politics and participate in simulated diplomacy, which I enjoy” said Burgardt.
The Most Effective Head of Government award is voted by committee members of the SUNYMEU European Council . It is essentially up to delegates to determine which delegate is most suitable for the award, though it is suggested that delegates vote for the person who is most effective at moving the debate forward, acting in a diplomatic manner, and/or cooperating effectively with their peers.
“I was involved in Model UN starting my third year of High School. I became involved in Model EU after my friend from a different university told me about it last year. I shared it with CJ and we made plans to attend. We returned this year with more students from our school” said Peter Joyce.
The team (known as a "delegation" according to SUNYMEU organizers) was presented with various discussion topics. They were all on different committees. Each committee debated specific agenda items related to European politics and policy.
5/2/23
Harsh K. Bhasin, known variously to those who loved and admired him as Harshji, Mr. Ambassador, Professor, Nana, Dadaji, and Pa, died peacefully in New York City on March 24, 2023. Harsh dedicated his life to applying his knowledge, curiosity and pursuit of excellence to the service of others. Born on August 15th, 1944, his birth foretold a lifetime of service to his native India that would be independent 3 years later on that very day. In 1969, he began a 35-year career in the Indian Foreign Service in capitals around the world from Beijing and Hong Kong to Washington, Delhi and Pretoria.Always a bastion of honor, hard work and a kind word, he became Ambassador Bhasin to governments in Botswana, the United States, South Africa and Denmark. After his first "retirement", eager to share his knowledge and love for diplomacy and international relations, he evolved into Professor Bhasin. In his almost 20 years at Stony Brook University, he exposed thousands of young people to the power of diplomacy over conflict, the wonders of South and East Asia, and the complexities of the geopolitics of India, China and the United States.
Our department, Harsh's family, and the thousands of people he touched, will miss him dearly. Visitation and prayers will be held from 11am-1pm on Tuesday March 28 at Moloney’s Lake Funeral Home (132 Ronkonkoma Ave., Lake Ronkonkoma, NY 11779), followed by refreshments. In lieu of flowers, we request that you make a contribution to support an award in Ambassador Bhasin’s name for Stony Brook students interested in a career in the foreign service (details below).
For those who wish to recognize Ambassador Bhasin and his impact on our community, we invite you to share your memories here.
To make a contribution, please visit https://tinyurl.com/HarshBhasin. When making your contribution check the box on the second page under Tribute Information, select “in Memory of”, and insert Ambassador Bhasin’s name. If you would like to send a check, please make your check out to the Stony Brook Foundation (with Ambassador Bhasin’s name in the memo section) and mail it to:
Attn: Chris Scarpati
E3320 Frank Melville Jr. Library
Stony Brook University
Stony Brook, NY 11794-33913/27/23
Shawn Kim, PhD Candidate in Political Science, has been awarded a doctoral dissertation grant by the Rapoport Family Foundation conduct a study on the effects of exclusionary discrimination and elite signals on pan-Asian political cohesion. Results from Kim's previous research indicate that Asian Americans show stronger support for policies favorable to different Asian-subgroups in response to group-based discrimination, though its link to the group’s party preferences is yet to be known.
To build on these findings, Kim will be fielding a survey experiment supported by the grant to study preferences and support for the Democratic Party among Asian Americans as a form of pan-Asian political solidarity. Specifically, this study will investigate whether Asian Americans become more supportive of the Democratic Party when concerns about social exclusion shared among Asians as a group are heightened. This research will further examine how different party stances can affect the group's support in the face of shared discrimination. The findings from this study will contribute to the analysis in Kim's dissertation of pan-ethnic and political cohesion among Asian Americans. In addition to research on the roles of race and discrimination in shaping partisanship, this research also has important implications for how scholars should approach the study of diverse ethnic and racial categories.
To learn more about Shawn and his research, you can view his website at suhwanshawnkim.com.
1/19/23
Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom has just been appointed as a full professor in the Department of Political Science at Hebrew University. She is the first female full professor to be promoted to this level in the department in over 20 years.
Professor Bloom is a PhD alumni of our department and specializes in comparative political behavior and political psychology. She holds the Carmi Gillon Lectureship in Political Science, is a recipient of several grants and fellowships including the Marie Curie Grant from the European Union and grants from the Israel Science Foundation (ISF) and the National Science Foundation (NSF).
To learn more about her work, be sure to visit here
8/31/22
2021-2022
This past weekend Professor Stanley Feldman was honored as the recipient of the John L. Sullivan Mentor Award at the 45th annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology. Congratulations to Professor Feldman, whose work and dedication is well known to PhD alumni of our department that have gone on to successful careers in political psychology research.
Professor Feldman received his PhD from the University of Minnesota and is himself a mentee of John L. Sullivan, making the award all the more fitting. The award honors faculty who have demonstrated an exceptional commitment to and a history of success in the mentorship of scholars at all levels.
To learn more about Professor Feldman's research and work you can visit his page here.
7/25/22
Hillary Style, PhD Candidate in Political Science, has been awarded a doctoral dissertation grant by the Rapoport Family Foundation to conduct a study on the relationship between political cynicism and perceptions of political knowledge. Results from Style's preliminary research indicate that people do view an individual who makes a cynical statement about politicians as more knowledgeable than an individual who make a statement that is not cynical.
To build on these findings, Style will be fielding a survey experiment supported by the grant to determine if individuals perceive statements about political issues framed in a cynical way as more informative and if they are more likely to share and trust cynically framed statements. This research will further analyze the relationship between expressions of political cynicism and perceptions of political knowledge. The results of this study will contribute to the analysis in Style's dissertation of the role political cynicism plays in American democracy. The findings of this study also have implications for the study of political communication and participation more
broadly by extending research on political cynicism beyond media effects and addressing concerns about the impact of political cynicism on participation.To learn more about Hillary and her research, you can view her website at hillarystyle.com.
6/10/22
Congratulations to PhD alum Julie Wronski (2014), who just received tenure in the Department of Political Science at the University of Mississippi. She will be a visiting scholar at the University of Maryland's Department of Government and Politics in the coming year. Julie's research (with fellow SBU alums Lily Mason and John Kane) was recently featured in the New York Times.
Alumna Mariam Malik (‘21) has been selected as a Fulbright Award recipient to Kyrgyzstan for the 2022-2023 academic year. The Fulbright program is the world’s largest international educational exchange program that gives students the opportunity to work in a variety of different fields of study with international partners. While studying in Kyrgyzstan, Mailk will develop long-term relationships and deepen her understanding of the country as a whole. She will also be able to openly communicate and engage with the local community as both a Fulbright participant and a representative of the United States. Congratulations Mariam!
5/16/22
Professor Helmut Norpoth and undergraduate student Yulia Pechenkina collaborated on an article published in the LSE USAPP blog, where they present evidence for President Biden’s low approval ratings in his second year of office. They explain that his decreasing popularity can be attributed to the disappointment of progressive voters and those who voted for him out of disapproval for former President Trump. Many Democrats supported President Biden because of the proposals in his “Build Back Better” agenda. However, his passivity in delivering on these promises has led to the dismay of voters. Additionally, a significant amount of President Biden’s support in the 2020 election came from people who opposed Trump. Once he left office, many voters lost interest in Biden’s actions in the White House. As a result, President Biden’s approval ratings continue to experience a steady decline. Click here to read their article.
5/10/22
PhD student Lauren Palladino was awarded first place in the Young Public Opinion Stars competition on April 26, 2022 from The New York Chapter of the American Association for Public Opinion Research (NYAAPOR). Her project is in collaboration with Professor Krupnikov and is titled, “Hair, Hemlines, and Husbands: The Exploitation of Feminine Stereotypes in Political Media,” which focuses on the intersection of race and gender in politics. Specifically, it analyzes how feminine stereotypes of white and Black women running for office can be weaponized in the media. She describes how these stereotypes can affect people’s perceptions of women candidates in several different ways. Congratulations on this great accomplishment Lauren!
5/10/22
Associate Professors Gallya Lahav and Oleg Smirnov and co-authors Minghua Zhang from SOMAS and former PhD student Tingyin Xiao from SOMAS recently published their paper in the International Migration Review, a top journal in the field of migration studies. Their interdisciplinary project makes use of both climate science data and social science research to study climate change projections in the 21st century. They analyze the likely displacement of populations due to extreme droughts around the world, primarily through 16 climate models. These models incorporate two policy scenarios in regard to greenhouse gas emissions, where one follows the goals laid out by the Paris Agreement and the other represents our current trajectory with business as usual. Their findings reveal that climate change mitigation will likely be less costly in the long term rather than a series of adaptation policies meant to take on such challenges. To read more about their study, click here: https://bit.ly/3JR43Zy
We are most sad to report the death on March 21, 2022 of our devoted colleague Professor Lee Koppelman. One of the nation’s most eminent urban planners and the chief planner of Long Island for over forty years, Lee was a leading member of the Stony Brook political science department for over five decades. Indeed, Lee continued teaching in our Public Policy program until late in 2021.
His contributions to the planning of Long Island have long been recognized: Director of the Suffolk County Planning Department from 1960 to 1988 and Executive Director of the Nassau-Suffolk County Regional Planning Board from 1965 to 2006. In these roles Lee promoted the environmental sustainability of Long Island through protection of its water supply, developing sanitary sewerage disposal and preventing destruction of the Long Island Pine Barrens. He was also instrumental in guiding Long Island’s land use and development regulation, promoting more affordable housing and expanding its transit system.
Lee Koppelman essentially launched Stony Brook’s Masters in Public Policy program and was instrumental in locating it the Department of Political Science. At Stony Brook he also ran a Center for Regional Studies that conducted research and advocacy for the planning and advancement of Long Island’s economic, environmental and demographic vitality. As a professor of public policy, Lee was among the most highly regarded by the program’s graduates, teaching courses in environmental policy, regional planning, the environment and transportation.
He trained generations of local leaders and policy analysts, ensuring his legacy. He will be sorely missed.
The family asks that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the Doctors Connie and Lee Koppelman Endowed Fellowship Fund in Political Science through the Stony Brook Foundation.
3/26/22
Congratulations to these outstanding undergraduate students for receiving our scholarships for the 2021-2022 academic year! The Scholarship and Awards Committee reviewed the highest number of applicants in recent years, so the recipients truly exemplify the best in scholarship and potential.
Ryan Magill and Erin Byers
Recipients of the Patricia A.Gramer Memorial Scholarship
The recipients of this scholarship goes to political science students who have done exceptionally well in their academic studies and are writing a senior honors thesis in political science.
Alice Mo
Recipient of the Alumni Pre-Law Scholarship
This scholarship is given to students who have shown interest in pursuing a career in law. Those who have had previous experience in working in the legal industry and intend to go to law school in the future.
Bisma Bhatti
Recipient of the Robert Clasen Scholarship
This scholarship was established by Robert Clasen, a practicing attorney who graduated from Stony Brook University in 1980 to provide scholarship support for deserving students.
Emily Carll (‘20) has been selected for the nationally competitive Thomas R. Pickering Foreign Affairs Program Fellowship and will become SBU’s first-ever Pickering Fellow. The financial award Emily receives will be used to pursue a Master’s degree in international affairs. During her time at Stony Brook, she double majored in Political Science and Asian and Asian-American Studies and was a recipient of the prestigious Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) in Hindi. She is currently serving as a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant in Serbia. Congratulations Emily on this great achievement!
2020-2021
Congratulations to these four undergraduate students for receiving our scholarships for the 2020-2021 academic year!
Paul J. Dreyer (Senior)
Recipient of the Patricia A.Gramer Memorial ScholarshipThe recipient of this scholarship goes to political science students who have done exceptionally well in their academic studies.
Haya Farid (Junior)
Recipient of the Alumni Pre-Law ScholarshipThis scholarship is given to students who have shown interest in pursuing a career in law. Those who have had previous experience in working in the legal industry and intend to go to law school in the future.
Ryan Magill (Junior)
Recipient of the Scott D. Middleton ScholarshipThe Middleton scholarship is intended for students who have a specific interest in governmental studies while undergoing their political science major/minor.
Mariam Malik (Senior)
Recipient of the Robert Clasen ScholarshipThis scholarship was established by Robert Clasen, a practicing attorney who graduated from Stony Brook University in 1980 to provide scholarship support for deserving students with financial need.
Yvette Williams (Senior)
Recipient of the Davidson Family ScholarshipThe Davidson Family Scholarship was created to provide support to a Junior or Senior, preferably majoring in Political Science, who is a veteran of the armed forces of the United States or Coastguard that has served on active duty.
In Fall 2020 two distinguished researchers join our department and the Stony Brook community. We welcome Ryan Vander Wielen, Associate Professor and Joseph Vitriol, Senior Researcher. We are excited to work alongside them and are eager to gain from their teaching and research expertise. To learn more about their education profiles and specific research, click on their names above.
Congratulations to PhD candidate Talbot Andrews, who has accepted a position as a postdoctoral research associate at Princeton University’s Center for the Study of Democratic Politics. She will be working under the supervision of Markus Prior on a project that focuses on psychological processes related to time and their consequences for politics. Talbot is currently a PhD candidate who is interested in public opinion and behavioral political economy. She primarily focuses on responses to climate change, examining how both institutions interact with individuals’ psychology to shape climate change mitigation preferences. Her position begins in the fall of 2020.
Read more about her work here: https://vigorous-hermann-4588d1.netlify.app/
Michelle is a PhD candidate whose research interests centers around public opinion and political behavior. Much of her work centers around understanding how people form opinions related to economic inequality. Some of her work examines how political ideology, political emotions, and political identities affect beliefs about inequality and support for redistribution. She has recently been awarded the National University of Singapore’s (NUS) Development Grant and the title “Young NUS Fellow.” This grant is designed to nurture high caliber Singaporean talents for a career in academia by providing additional resources to sharpen their competitive edge and to improve their chances of being hired by top institutions.
Read more about her work here: https://miolow.github.io/
2019-2020
Senior Political Science Majors Andrew Bearkland, Jeanette Blanchette, and Hana Kim from the Honors College virtually presented their research as part of the 2020 Senior Symposim this past week. To view their posters click below and to view their presentations, visit the Virtual Symposium web page.
Andrew Bearkland — THE CASE FOR A CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS ON THE BASIS OF SEXUAL ORIENTATION, GENDER IDENTITY AND EXPRESSION, AND SEXUAL CHARACTERISTICS (SOGIESC)
The goal of this research project was to discuss the pertinence, implications, and possible issues of a human rights convention to safeguard the basic rights of all peoples regardless of SOGIESC. The project outlines how the UN is currently mishandling the issue of SOGIESC human rights, how many countries worldwide are allowing the abuse of this community through legal frameworks and other means such as hate crimes, and how the mental and physical health of people of diverse SOGIESC are at stake in bringing light to this issue. I combined the framework of the Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) with the rights outlined in the Yogyakarta Principles Plus Ten (YP+10) to create a prospective human rights convention titled the “Convention on Human Rights on the Basis of Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Expression, and Sexual Characteristics (SOGIESC)”, as well as how this convention could be effective by evaluating the positive effects of the CEDAW. My mentor was Dr. Charles Robbins and I came to this project through my interest in international human rights and the advancement of the SOGIESC rights. I am graduating Summa Cum Laude with majors of political science and sociology and minors of international studies and Asian/Asian-American studies, and next fall I am attending George Washington University Law School to earn my JD.
Jeanette Blanchette — THE ROLE OF SOCIAL MEDIA ON POLITICAL POLARIZATION
During the 2016 election, polarization became an often-used reason to explain partisan hostility. Social media was at the forefront of political communication; shaping policy and public perception. Despite some research stating the opposite, many Americans believe that increasing polarization is the cause of this hostility and I wanted to know why. For these reasons, I chose to work with Dr. Yanna Krupnikov who is an expert in this field and has written extensively about it. With this research project, I specifically wanted to prove that social media makes people believe there is more polarization than there actually is. After conducting my experiment, I found that the anger treatment influenced respondents to be more polarized than they actually were. Some results did not prove any polarization and it is possible that respondents may have caught on to what the experiment was trying to test and acted differently. However, anger continued to be prevalent throughout the experiment as many still believed angry discourse to be the most accurate representation of the current American political landscape. In the future, I hope to become either a foreign policy or public policy analyst and work for the State Department.
Hana Kim — PREVENTION OR RELIEF? PUBLIC ATTITUDES TOWARDS DISASTER POLICIES
Governments sometimes want to mitigate the threat of various types of disasters. Governments can invest in prevention and preparedness before a disaster strikes, and they can spend on relief for citizens after a disaster strikes. The U.S. can also invest in epidemic research and public health. This could be a type of prevention spending because it could help the country be better prepared and reduce the likelihood of an epidemic. While my study doesn’t look into viruses specifically, my research sheds light on public attitudes toward disaster policies generally. Past research has shown that citizens reward incumbents for relief spending in response to disasters, but not for prevention spending. However, it is not clear whether these study results reflect the public’s true policy preferences. In my research, I use a survey experiment to study (1) how framing the issue as a disaster prevention spending — as opposed to a disaster relief spending — affects an individual’s vote, and (2) how each policy leads to different levels of thinking about deservingness. I find no evidence that people support relief policies over prevention policies. Finally, the results suggest that people think about disaster victims as people when evaluating a relief policy more than they do when evaluating a prevention policy. After I graduate, I plan to apply to a Ph.D. program in a political science department concentrating on political psychology. I wish to learn more quantitative research methods, start teaching undergraduate classes by my 3rd year in the program, and be a good scientist. I am hoping to become a professor one day.
PhD student Payel Sen has won a second place Young Public Opinion Stars award from the New York chapter of the American Association for Public Opinion Research (NYAAPOR) for her research on humanitarianism and charitable donations. Payel was recognized at the virtual chapter meeting on 4/28/2020. Congratulations Payel!
Brandon Marshall (PhD '20) has been announced as a top 8 finalist in the Graduate School's 2020 Three Minute Thesis Competition. Virtual voting takes places April 28-April 30, so view the finalists videos and cast your vote! Learn more about Brandon's research here or follow him here.
Congratulations to Kathleen (Katie) Donovan (PhD '14), who received tenure at St. John Fisher College in 2019. Katie is currently working on several research topics, including economic influences on presidential approval and contextual factors on support for gun control. She appears regularly on local Rochester TV and is often quoted in the local newspaper, the Democrat & Chronicle. She also serves as an election night analyst for WXXI, the Rochester local NPR affiliate. She is taking a sabbatical this fall to follow a political consultant who works on campaigns across New York state, Fenno-style. She was also awarded undergraduate teacher of the year at St John Fisher College in 2019.
We are delighted to announce that the International Society of Political Psychology (ISPP) has named Pazit Ben-Nun Bloom as this year’s (2019) winner of its Erik Erikson Early Career Award. Pazit received her PhD from the Department of Political Science at Stony Brook University in 2010 and is currently an Associate Professor of Political Science at Hebrew University. Her research examines the influence of religion, values, and morality on political behavior. The award recognizes and celebrates exceptional achievement and is given to a member of ISPP within a decade of receiving a Ph.D.
Congratulations to Lily Mason (PhD 2013) who received tenure and promotion to Associate Professor at the University of Maryland! To follow her and her research, find her on Twitter with the handle @LilyMasonPhD.
Amy Ellis (BA '11) has been named Clerk of the Legislature for Suffolk County. Amy has previously worked for the Leglislature as Chief Deputy Clerk and Chief of Staff. Congratulations Amy on this well-deserved achievement!
Photo credit: newli.comFranck Joseph II ('12), the Deputy Commissioner for the New York City Commission on Human Rights and honored as one of Stony Brook's 40 Under 40, returned to campus in February. During his visit, he sat in on Professor Wamble's Race and Politics course and met with students to discuss his experience and life after Stony Brook.
Emily Carll ('20) has been awarded the highly-competitive and prestigious "Critical Language Scholarship" by the US State Department's Bureau of Cultural Educational Affairs (BECA). In the summer of 2020, she took part in an intensive course of study of the Hindi language in Jaipur India. The CLS Program provides American college and university students the opportunity to learn languages essential to America’s engagement with the world.
Alumna Nicole Scartozzi ('18) has had her article “US Differing Support of Tibet and Palestine” accepted for publication in the January 2019 issue of The Journal of Political Inquiry. In the article, she explores the interconnection of the political ideology of constructivism and realism in explaining the differing support of disputed territories between Tibet and Palestine. She uses these two complementary theories to illustrate the US financial and political support of Tibet due to prospective self-interest and the principle of shared identities. Nicole notes her achievement was supported by the rigorous coursework and guidance of Ambassador Harsh Bhasin. Nicole is currently pursuing her MA in International Relations at New York University.
Brooke Baldwin interviewed alumnus Joseph Moreno on CNN Newsroom concerning the testimony of Colonel Vindman. Joseph is a former National Security prosecutor and a decorated combat veteran who has served on active duty in Europe, the Middle East, and Africa. To watch a short clip check of his interview, check his Twitter, @JosephMoreno.