American Primary Elections
In this Family and Friends Weekend Faculty Research Highlight event, Political Science Professor Robert Boatright will discuss American primary elections and how they have changed over the past century.
In this Family and Friends Weekend Faculty Research Highlight event, Political Science Professor Robert Boatright will discuss American primary elections and how they have changed over the past century.
In this Family and Friends Weekend Faculty Research Highlight event, Political Science Professor Robert Boatright will discuss American primary elections and how they have changed over the past century.
Join Clark’s Political Science Department for a chance to look past the punditry and understand how scholars are analyzing the 2024 presidential election.
With the understanding that the election may still be undecided, we will gather the day after for a conversation about the results.
A live cooking demonstration with Chef Panos Karafoulidis from Thessaloniki, Greece, where Clark students participated in the “Food, Migration, and Belonging in Thessaloniki” summer study abroad program.
Please join the Center for Gender, Race and Area Studies and co-sponsor Asian Studies Program for an exceptional lecture about China’s power abroad presented by political scientist Diana Fu.
Hear from Claudia Luz Suarez and Chef Nicole Garcia, of Oakland Bloom, a nonprofit that supports poor-and-working class immigrant, refugee, and BIPOC chefs to start their own food businesses in Oakland, CA.
Professor Jenny Goldstein of Cornell University will present “Starting with solutions: A Global Political Ecology of Algae Innovation.”
A conversation on current events with professors Cynthia Enloe, Elyse Semerdjian, and Ora Szekely.
Political Science Professor Cyril Ghosh will take a close look at recent controversial actions taken by the Trump administration.
Sara Hassani, professor of political science at Providence College, will examine the political significance of self-immolation among women and girls in Iran, Afghanistan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.
History and political science faculty will discuss the impacts and implications of actions taken during the first 100 days of the Trump administration.
Come study at a small research university with a strong liberal arts core.
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