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What happens to my ballot after I drop it off? Behind the scenes as voting pace accelerates
The pace of voting in this year’s election is well beyond anything the state saw in 2016. After the ballot is put into a drop box, a rigorous collection process follows. James Long, associate professor of political science at the UW, is quoted.
10/22/2020 | KNKX -
Presidential Debate Preview
Leela Fernandes, director of the UW Jackson School of International Studies, joins former Attorney General Rob McKenna and KUOW's Ross Reynolds for a preview of the final presidential debate.
10/22/2020 | KUOW -
Google Lawsuit Marks End Of Washington's Love Affair With Big Tech
This week could mark the official end of the long love affair between Washington, D.C., and Silicon Valley. The U.S. Justice Department and 11 state attorneys general have filed a blockbuster lawsuit against Google, accusing it of being an illegal monopoly because of its stranglehold on Internet search. Margaret O’Mara, professor of history at the UW, is quoted.
10/22/2020 | NPR -
Dimming the Lights
“Societies that reject scientific knowledge and research, for whatever reason, remain weak, poor, backward and dependent. They also tend to be despotic. Scientific work demands much freedom, including the pursuit of phenomena and ideas that may run counter to religious, cultural, or political beliefs sacred to some and useful to others,” writes Scott Montgomery, a lecturer of international studies at the UW.
10/21/2020 | Global Policy Journal -
Immigrants aren’t betting it all on Biden winning the election
Experts and lawmakers warn that undoing the last four years of immigration policy requires more than just a new president. Sophia Jordán Wallace, associate professor of political science at the UW, is quoted.
10/21/2020 | Crosscut -
New Seattle foundation gives $9 million to arts organizations — mostly for new work
In honor of Richard E. Lang and Jane Lang Davis, the Friday Foundation, a new Seattle entity, gave $9 million to nine Seattle arts organizations, one being the Henry Art Gallery
10/20/2020 | The Seattle Times -
Outstanding New Initiative - 2020 Student Life Staff Awards
Student Life honors DXARTS, the College of Engineering, and Housing & Food Services with the Outstanding New Initiative Award for McMahon 8, a makerspace that provides students, staff, and faculty from the UW with the tools and resources to build and prototype their next great idea.
10/20/2020 | UW Student Life -
Boston loves its incumbent mayors. Is that phenomenon all that unique?
A sitting Boston mayor was last unseated in 1949. How unusual is a seven-decade stretch of incumbency dominance? A Boston Globe review of 18 of the nation’s most populous municipalities found a mixed bag when it comes to the reelection success of sitting mayors. Margaret O’Mara, professor of history at the UW, is quoted.
10/20/2020 | Boston Globe -
U.S. News Unveils 2021 Best Global Universities Rankings
U.S. News & World Report, the global authority in education rankings, today released the 2021 edition of the Best Global Universities rankings. With data on nearly 1,500 schools, the rankings evaluate universities from dozens of countries on academic research and reputation. The UW is ranked No. 8.
10/20/2020 | U.S. News -
Conversation with Professor Shawn Wong
“You face failure every day as a writer,” says writer and professor Shawn Wong. In this wide-ranging conversation, Wong cracks open the door to the creative process and lets us peek in to understand the importance of representation in literature and why he teaches his students to tell the truth, not the facts.
10/20/2020 | Undergraduate Academic Affairs