With the understanding that the election may still be undecided, we will gather the day-after for a conversation about the results. Bring your questions for Clark University experts, as we address: what we know about election returns; when and how decisions will be made and how information will be communicated; the important roles played by different constituencies in the process; the historical precedents involved; and the psychological impacts of perceived threats, uncertainty, resistance, and protest.
Moderated by:
- Asha Best, PhD (Director, Center for Gender, Race and Area Studies (CGRAS))
With panelists:
- Robert Boatright, PhD (Political Science): American political parties, campaigns, and elections
- Jack Delehanty, PhD (Sociology): Progressive religious activism and conservative Christian discourse
- Cyril Ghosh, PhD (Political Science/Law & Society): Democratic inclusion in contemporary American political culture
- Ousmane Power-Greene, PhD (History): African American social and political movements
- Johanna Vollhardt, PhD (Psychology): Psychology of collective violence, oppression, and resistance
Admission is free and open to the public. Refreshments will be offered.
This event will also be streamed live – registration details to be announced soon.
Sponsored by the Alice Coonley Higgins Institute for Arts and Humanities in partnership with the Department of Political Science and the Center for Gender, Race, and Area Studies at Clark University