J.D. Vance is *that* guy from discussion section.
This is absolutely the way forward for academic publishing. It's in everyone's interest except the for-profit publishers'. It just requires overcoming some pesky collective action problems. www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
Giant publishers are bleeding universities dry, with profit margins that rival Googleâs. So we decided to start our own, says academic Arash Abizadeh
Here I am, once again, in a time castle of my own creation.
Rent in the Lehigh Valley far exceeds my rent in Philadelphia for comparable units. It's horrendous.
"Half of all renters in the United States spend more than 30 percent of their income on rent and utilities, more than at any other time in history, according to a new report by Harvardâs Joint Center for Housing Studies." www.nytimes.com/2024/01/25/r...
A new Harvard report says 22.4 million households in the United States now spend more than 30 percent of their income in rent, with 12.1 million spending more than 50 percent.
I, like others, am curious why Justice O'Connor is pictured here... but also, awful awful awful.
Hi polisky -- anyone have a (very loosely defined) American political development-oriented paper on disability politics that they would like to present this year at APSA? Email me at hes323 at lehigh dot edu!
Neither Jefferson Davis nor Robert E. Lee were ever tried for insurrection, but the authors of the Fourteenth Amendment *absolutely* wouldâve considered them both barred from office by it.
On a similar note to my last post, I am also organizing a roundtable on eugenics and critical approaches to medical politics/health with some cool folks if anyone is interested in participating!
We are soliciting papers for a panel or series of panels at the 2024Â American Political Science Association Conference in Philadelphia focusing on disability politics in American political development. (1/4)
Clarence Thomas threatened to quit SCOTUS unless he could get rich, so Republican politicians arranged for billionaires to start inundating him with money and gifts in exchange for his continued service. He gladly accepted the trade-off. www.propublica.org/article/clar...
Interviews and newly unearthed documents reveal that Thomas, facing financial strain, privately pushed for a higher salary and to allow Supreme Court justices to take speaking fees.