Category: Uncategorized

ECU-MPA’s Mariana Rolinsky wins 2017–18 Donald Hayman Scholarship from NC City & County Management Assoc.

The Master of Public Administration program proudly announces that Mariana Rolinsky is the 2017 – 2018 winner of the Donald B. Hayman Scholarship from the North Carolina City and County Management Association. This award carries a $2,000 stipend to support her MPA studies at ECU. Ms Rolinksy was born in Moldova and holds Bachelor’s and Master degrees from Moldovan State University. She has worked as a College and Career Readiness Instructor at Beaufort Community College and as an Instructor Administrator for the Boys and Girls Club in Washington, NC where she lives.

Mariana will be honored for this award at the winter meeting of the Association in Durham in February. Students selected for this award have shown they are interested in working in local government in North Carolina after complete of their Public Administration studies. Previous ECU winners of this award are working in local governments throughout the state of North Carolina.

Dr. Jonathan Morris, Dept. of Political Science, Joins Editorial Board of the Journal of Political Marketing

Congratulations to Dr. Morris, who has recently been added to the editorial board of the Journal of Political Marketing. The journal “aims to be the leading scholarly journal examining the latest developments in the application of marketing methods to politics” and “is highly selective in publishing only the most advanced conceptual, strategic and quantitative oriented work from academics around the world. It is vital reading for politicians, candidates, political party officials, consultants, corporate lobbyists, pollsters, media specialists, journalists, business executives, managers, and academics in democracies around the world.”

New Research from Magda Giurcanu

Two of Magda Giurcanu’s research papers were published during summer 2017. The first was a book review of “Trouble on the far right. Contemporary right-wing strategies and practices in Europe” published in East European Politics. A second was a co-authored paper (with Juliana Fernandes and Ji Young Kim) titled “Documenting the Emergence of Grassroots Politics on Facebook: The Florida Case,” published in Journal of Social Media in Society, 6(1): 5-41.

A Busy European Summer for Magda Giurcanu

The Department of Political Science’s Magda Giurcanu traveled extensively over the summer to Germany, Czechia, the UK, and Romania. In Germany, she spent about a month as a Visiting Scholar at the GESIS Eurolab Institute, where she delivered a talk on “The Emergence of New Anti-EU Parties in EP Elections: Strategic Elite Calculations and European Union Debates”.

In the UK, she participated in the Council for Europe (CES) 2017 conference at the University of Glasgow, where she presented two papers on 1) “New Party Politics in European Parliament Elections” and 2) the electoral linkages in European elections, “In Search for an Electoral Link Between the EU Electorate(s) and the EU Proposals: Reality or Wishful Thinking?” (Co-authored with Petia Kostadinova, University of Illinois at Chicago).

In Glasgow, she also served as discussant for two panels on European Union politics and Party Systems in Europe. In Romania, she spent one week in the National Archives in Bucharest to collect data on new party manifestos. In Czechia, Magda met with faculty from the Charles University to coordinate visits of Czech scholars at ECU under the Visegrad in the 21 Century grant. She also met with faculty from the Anglo-American University to set up a new Study Abroad program for ECU students, which is currently under review at the Office of Global Affairs.

New Book: The Internet and the 2016 Presidential Campaign, Jody Baumgartner & Terri Towner (eds.)

Although many developments surrounding the Internet campaign are now considered to be standard fare, there were a number of new developments in 2016. Drawing on original research conducted by leading experts, The Internet and the 2016 Presidential Campaign attempts to cover these developments in a comprehensive fashion. How are campaigns making use of the Internet to organize and mobilize their ground game? To communicate their message? The book also examines how citizens made use of online sources to become informed, follow campaigns, and participate. Contributions also explore how the Internet affected developments in media reporting, both traditional and non-traditional, about the campaign. What other messages were available online, and what effects did these messages have had on citizen’s attitudes and vote choice? The book examines these questions in an attempt to summarize the 2016 online campaign.

Book
Book

Dr. Jody Baumgartner Awarded 2017 Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor

Dr. Jody Baumgartner, East Carolina University professor of political science, was named Distinguished Professor at the Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences 54th annual convocation on Aug. 18. Baumgartner is the 19th member of the faculty to be honored with the title of Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor.

“This is quite an honor; an unexpected honor, at that. It is truly humbling,” said Baumgartner.

The THCAS Distinguished Professorship is the highest honor within the college and is conferred upon a professor whose career exemplifies a commitment to and a love for knowledge and academic life, as demonstrated by outstanding teaching and advising, research and creative productivity, and professional service.

New Book by ECU Political Scientists!

Alethia Cook and Marie Olson Lounsbery, of ECU’s Department of Political Science and the Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences, are pleased to announce the release of their book, Conflict Dynamics: Civil Wars, Armed Actors, and Their Tactics by University of Georgia Press.

Conflict Dynamics presents case studies of six nation-states: Sierra Leone, the Republic of Congo, Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Indonesia, and Peru. In the book, Alethia H. Cook and Marie Olson Lounsbery examine the evolving nature of violence in intrastate conflicts, as well as the governments and groups involved, by focusing on the context of the relationships involved, the capacities of the conflict’s participants, and the actors’ goals. The authors first present a theoretical framework through which the changeable mix of relative group capacities and the resulting tactical decisions can be examined systematically and as conflicts evolve over time. They then apply that framework to the six case studies to show its usefulness in better understanding conflicts individually and in comparison.

Cook
Cook

ECU’s Model UN Club compete in Southeast Regional Model UN competition, Charlotte, NC, March 30 – April 2

ECU’s Model United Nations Club competed in the Southeast Regional Model United Nations competition in Charlotte, North Carolina from March 30 – April 2. Jesse Cole, Andrew McLeer, Sorrell Saunders, Braxton Smallwood (ECU’s MUN President), and Kyra Wheatley represented the Democratic Republic of the Congo, while Haley Creef, Caroline Debnam, Shaquille Dixon, James Harris, Jack Myrick, and Aji Njie represented the Dominican Republic. During the competition, delegates engaged in active debate aimed at resolving a series of complex international issues, including preventing gender-based sexual violence, food security in impoverished areas, smart cities for urban sustainability, among others. In doing so, Shaquille and James earned a delegation award on the Commission for Science and Technology for Development, while the Dominican Republic team earned a conference-wide Distinguished Delegation Award.

Dominican Republic team

MIT Prof. Berinsky Comes to ECU April 18

The Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences, Department of Political Science, and the Center for Survey Research present Professor Adam Berinsky of the Massachusetts  Institute of Technology, who will speak about fake news and political rumors on April 18 at East Carolina University. Berinsky is a professor of political science at MIT and serves as the director of the MIT Political Experiments Research Lab (PERL). He is the author of the book, In Time of War: Understanding American Public Opinion from World War II to Iraq (University of Chicago Press, 2009) and Silent Voices: Public Opinion and Political Participation in America (Princeton University Press, 2004).

Berinsky

Dr. Giurcanu awarded GESIS-Leibniz Institute grant to visit EUROLAB in Cologne, Germany

Congratulations to Dr. Magda Giurcanu, who has been recently awarded a GESIS- Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences grant to visit the EUROLAB in Cologne, Germany. The grant, which includes €950 for travel and a month of housing, will allow her to spend June 2017 in Cologne accessing European datasets located at the GESIS DATA archive. These new data will contribute to a research project she is currently working on, titled “The Emergence of New Anti-EU Parties in EP Elections: Strategic Elite Calculations and European Union Debates.”