Political Studies in the News - November 17, 2023
Department of Political Studies professor Oded Haklai explores how conflict in the Middle East could be resolved in this opinion piece in the Toronto Star on November 17, 2023: "".
From the article:
Department of Political Studies professor Oded Haklai explores how conflict in the Middle East could be resolved in this opinion piece in the Toronto Star on November 17, 2023: "".
From the article:
In this article, , Bella Aung examines challenges faced by the interim education system post-coup. This article was published in , hosted at the
Department of Political Studies PhD candidate Fikir Haile wrote this recently published in , reviewing Everyday Practices of State Building in Ethiopia: Power, Scale, Performativity, by Davide Chinigò (Oxford University Press, 2022).
From the introduction:
Department of Political Studies professor Oded Haklai contributed this opinion piece to the Globe and Mail on November 1, 2023: "Anti-Jewish bias has deeply permeated university culture".
From the article:
Date
Thursday November 9, 2023Location
Date
Tuesday November 7, 2023Location
Via ZoomDate
Friday November 3, 2023Location

Biography:
Dr. Elizabeth Dubois (PhD, University of Oxford) is an Associate Professor and University Research Chair in Politics, Communication and Technology at the University of Ottawa where she runs the and is a member of the Center for Law, Technology and Society. She is also a Faculty Associate and former Fellow at the Berkman-Klein Center at Harvard University and an Affiliate at the Center for Information, Technology and Public Life at University of North Carolina. Her work examines political uses of digital media, including artificial intelligence, political social media influencers, and online harassment of public figures. In 2019, she co-led the which brought together 18 research teams to examine uses of digital media in the 2019 Federal Election in Canada. She leads the multi-disciplinary Pol Comm Tech Lab which includes political scientists, computer scientists, and communication students. She collaborates internationally with non-profits, technology companies, journalists, and academics. She also hosts the where political communication theory meets on the ground strategy. Her public writing has appeared in Maclean's, The Globe and Mail, the Toronto Star, Policy Options, The Conversation, Salon and been featured in many others. Find her on Twitter , at or check out her latest edited book, .
Department of Political Studies professor Oded Haklai comments on the situation on the ground in Jerusalem following Hamas' invasion of Israel and the ongoing evacuation efforts.
Department of Political Studies professor Oded Haklai comments on what the situation has been like on the ground in Jerusalem over the past 48 hours.
Date
Friday October 20, 2023Location

Light lunch served
The theory of retrospective voting – the idea that voters reward and punish incumbents at the ballot box according to their record of performance in office – is one of the dominant models in the study of voting behaviour. The model also aligns with common intuitions about how democracy ought to work. Yet, we have remarkably little credible evidence for the theory’s fundamental premises: that citizens integrate streams of performance information into manageable impressions of the state of the world during an incumbent’s term, and then form appraisals of incumbents based on those impressions. In this talk, I will advance a novel experimental framework for studying the microfoundations of retrospective voting. I will also report results from an extended series of experiments applying the framework to a range of critical questions regarding how, and how well, voters evaluate incumbent performance. I will conclude that the results suggest voters process performance information in a way that ably, if not always optimally, identifies competent incumbents.
Dr. Matthews (Ph.D., UBC) specializes in the study of elections, voting and public opinion in established democracies. While much of his work focuses on Canada or the United States, he is also a student of comparative political behaviour. His research focuses primarily on the effects of election campaigns on political decision making, the impact of institutional context on policy attitudes, and retrospective voting. He is past holder of the Fulbright Canada Visiting Research Chair at Vanderbilt University and a Humboldt Fellowship at the University of Mannheim.