Politics and Government

  • What Amazon's Climate Pledge means, according to experts

    Amazon wants to cut carbon emissions by 2040 through its no-strings-attached pledge program. The UW’s Nives Dolšak, professor of marine and environmental affairs, and Aseem Prakash, professor of political science, are quoted.

    06/17/2021 | NBC News
  • These are the issues Washington’s Native youth leaders are advocating for

    Three youth leaders advocated for environmental protection, legislation to ban Native mascots and the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women crisis Friday afternoon, June 11, during the Seattle CityClub’s digital series “Civic Boot Camp.” The Zoom event was moderated by Owen Oliver, who graduated from the UW in 2021 with a degree in American Indian Studies and Political Science and is of Quinault and Isleta Pueblo heritage, and featured UW student and athletic advocate Rosalie Fish of the Cowlitz Indian Tribe. [This story appeared in multiple outlets]

    06/14/2021 | The Bellingham Herald
  • Laboratories of Democratic Backsliding

    According to new research from Jake Grumbach, assistant professor of political science at the UW, GOP lawmakers have been reducing the “democratic performance” of states they control for the better part of two decades. Grumbach is interviewed on the show "On the Media."

    06/11/2021 | WNYC Studios
  • In WA’s history of interracial marriage, pride and prejudice

    Dr. Quintard Taylor, professor emeritus of history, explains the history of interracial marriage in Washington.

    06/11/2021 | Crosscut
  • How Joe Biden could increase pressure on Vladimir Putin if their June 16 meeting fails to deter Russia’s ‘harmful’ behavior

    “When U.S. President Joe Biden meets with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in June 2021, cybersecurity is certain to be a key topic of discussion ... He says he told Putin in a phone call ‘we could have gone further’ with the sanctions, ‘but I chose not to do so.’ This leaves open the question of what ‘further’ might mean — and could it be any more effective than past sanctions at changing Putin’s behavior?” writes Scott Montgomery, lecturer of international studies at the UW.

    06/09/2021 | The Conversation
  • Opinion: How Far Are Republicans Willing to Go? They’re Already Gone.

    A recent paper by Jacob Grumbach, assistant professor of political science, is referenced.

    06/09/2021 | The New York Times
  • We’re clamping down on the ivory trade, but is it too late for elephants?

    The global trade in ivory is worth about $23 billion. While governments are starting to crack down on the trade, it might be too little, too late. Sam Wasser, research professor of biology at the UW and director of the Center for Conservation Biology, is quoted.

    06/05/2021 | Independent
  • With Biden in office, UW, Inslee seek to return once-jailed scholar to Washington state

    Three years after Walid Salem was plucked off a Cairo street by plainclothes police officers, blindfolded and then imprisoned, the University of Washington doctoral student remains stuck in Egypt, unable to visit his young daughter or finish his dissertation in Seattle. Michael McCann, professor of political science at the UW, and UW President Ana Mari Cauce are quoted.

    06/04/2021 | The Seattle Times
  • The Broken Promise of Retirement

    Caitlin Zaloom reviews “American Bonds: How Credit Markets Shaped a Nation,” by Sarah Quinn, associate professor of sociology at the UW.

    06/01/2021 | The New York Review
  • Should businesses have to keep track of employee vaccinations?

    An orphaned elephant named Nania may soon get to return to their family — if conservationists can find their family, that is. Scientists are searching for relatives using DNA extracted from dung. Sam Wasser, research professor of biology at the UW and director of the Center for Conservation Biology, is interviewed. [This is the fifth segment of "The Record"]

    06/01/2021 | KUOW
  • Civilians In Myanmar Fight Back Against Authoritative Regime

    Resistance to the military coup in Myanmar continues to grow, and social media images now show a military force training to defend the shadow civilian government. Mary Callahan, associate professor of international studies at the UW, is interviewed.

    05/31/2021 | NPR
  • Oil Industry’s Fluctuating Fortunes: Recent Wins And Losses In Climate Policy

    "Some ask whether climate policy has reached a 'social tipping point,' a self-reinforcing contagion process that will decarbonize the economy. Tipping points can be activated by interventions such as divesting from fossil fuel assets or exposing the moral failings of a fossil fuel economy, both of which are reflected in the recent developments in Chevron, Shell, and ExxonMobil," write the UW's Nives Dolšak, professor of marine and environmental affairs, and Aseem Prakash, professor of political science.

    05/30/2021 | Forbes
  • In Afghanistan, all we are saying is 'give peace a chance'

    Mark Ward, lecturer in the Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, discusses peace in Afghanistan.

    05/28/2021 | The Hill
  • Ivory Trade Loopholes Close as Nations Race to Crush Poachers

    A proposal by the European Union would match U.S. and China bans on elephant poaching. But given recent record seizures, it may be too late for elephants. Sam Wasser, research professor of biology at the UW and director of the Center for Conservation Biology, is quoted.

    05/28/2021 | Bloomberg
  • What's the right age for juvenile criminals to be considered adults? Advocates and some states push it past 20.

    When North Carolina raised the age when people are considered an adult in the criminal justice system to 18, the change was more than a dozen years in the making. Now, advocates are setting their sights – and their desired age limit – higher. Chelsea Moore, a doctoral student in political science and a law student at the UW, is referenced.

    05/26/2021 | USA Today