2023

2022

  • Jessica Brown (’22), Elizabeth Burton (’21), Emma Kettle, Lesley Lavery, and Kristine West. 2022.  “Effect of Start Time Changes on Enrollment.”  National School Board Association.
  • Emma Curchin (’22), Sara Dahill-Brown, and Lesley Lavery. 2022. “Reckoning with Racism in U.S. Schools: Teachers Unions’ Response to Calls for Change.”  Presented at the American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Montreal, Canada (September).
  • Andrew Latham and Audun Sundeen (’22). 2022. The Geopolitical Implications of the Russo-Ukraine War for Central Asia.E-International Relations (April).
  • Andrew Latham and Austin Wu (’23). 2022. “Hidden Victory? The Winter War and Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine,” E-International Relations (May 28).

2021

  • Julie Dolan, Paru Shah and Semilla Stripp (’19). 2021 “Missing the Wave? Women Congressional Candidates Who Lost in the 2018 Elections.” Women, Power and Political Representation, edited by Roosmarijn de Geus, Peter Loewen, Erin Tolley and Elizabeth Goodyear-Grant.  University of Toronto Press. Pp. 53-61.
  • Andrew Latham and Edgar Li (’22). 2021. “Oda Nobunaga and the Gunpowder Revolution in Japan.” Medievalists.net (April).
  • Anna Turner (’22) and Patrick Schmidt. 2021. Review of City on a Hill: Urban Idealism in America from the Puritans to the Present (Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2019), in Utopian Studies 31(3): 191-196.

2020

  • Ignasi Dorca (’20) and Patrick Schmidt. 2020. Review of Between Truth and Power: The Legal Constructions of Informational Capitalism, by Julie E. Cohen (Oxford University Press, 2019) and The Code of Capital: How the Law Creates Wealth and Inequality, by Katharina Pistor (Princeton University Press, 2019) in Law and Society Review 54(3): 722-727.
  • Andrew Latham and Laurel Kriesel-Bigler (’20). 2020. “Theobald’s Crusade.” Medieval Warfare Magazine (May).
  • Andrew Latham and Laurel Kriesel-Bigler (’20). 2020. “Medieval Thinking: Our Liberal Rights Tradition Has Much Older Roots Than Many Realize.” Touchstone: A Journal of Mere Christianity (April/May).
  • Andrew Latham and Chris Werbos (’20). 2020. “Foundations of the Modern Liberal Order: The Dualist-Regnalist Argument of John of Paris.” E-International Relations (April).
  • Margaret Moran (’21) and Patrick Schmidt. 2020. “The Supreme Court just took aim at Congress’s ability to protect federal agencies from partisan politics.Monkey Cage/Washington Post (July 2).
  • Margaret Moran (’21) and Patrick Schmidt. 2020. Review of The Democratic Courthouse: A Modern History of Design, Due Process and Dignity, by Linda Mulcahy and Emma Rowden (London: Routledge) in Journal of Law & Society 47: 351-356.
  • Andrew Latham and Kai Perket (’20), “Minilateralism: A Strategy to Stop China from Dominating the Indo-Pacific?” 19FortyFive (November).
  • Andrew Latham and Kai Perket (’20). 2020. “Is a Russia-Saudi Arabia Military Alliance Brewing? Not Exactly,” 19FortyFive (October)
  • Hannauer, Sophia (’19), Lavery, Lesley and West, Kristine. 2020.  Declining Enrollment Strategy:  An Urban Midwest District finds a Split-Classroom Program Does Not Improve Outcomes. National School Board Association.
  • Caitlyn Keo, Lesley Lavery and Kristine West. 2020. “Do Early Offers Equal Better Teachers: Hiring Practices and Teacher Effectiveness.” Journal of Applied Educational and Policy Research.
  • Adri Arquin, Jessica Brown (’22), Elizabeth Burton (’21), Emma Curchin (’22), Emma Kettle, Lesley Lavery, Olivia Matzke, and Kristine West. 2020. School Start Times and Student Enrollment in St. Paul Public Schools.  Presented to St. Paul Public Schools Research and Evaluation Team. July 2020.

2019

  • Heidi Affi (’17) and Patrick Schmidt. 2019. Review of The Poverty of Privacy Rights, by Khiara M. Bridges (Stanford University Press, 2017) in Law & Society Review­.
  • Julie Dolan, Paru Shah, and Semilla Stripp (’19). 2019. “Missing the Wave? Women Congressional Candidates Who Lost in the 2018 Elections.” Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL.
  • Morgan Doherty (’21) and Patrick Schmidt. 2019.  Review of White Shoe: How a New Breed of Wall Street Lawyers Changed Big Business and the American Century, by John Oller (Dutton, 2019) in International Journal of the Legal Profession (October).
  • Paul Dosh and Julia Smith Coyoli (’11). 2019. “Lessons from the Left in Lima: Susana Villarán and the Fleeting Return of Progressive Politics to City Hall.Latin American Perspectives 46, 1 (January): 263-281.
  • Sophia Hannauer, Lesley Lavery, and Kristine West. 2019. “Class Caps’ and Splits’ Influence on Enrollment.”  Presented to St. Paul Public Schools Research and Evaluations Team (May).
  • Maxwell Kent, Lesley Lavery, and Kristine West. 2019. “St. Paul Public School Enrollment Trends by Program and Subgroup.”  Presented to St. Paul Public Schools Research and Evaluation Team (August).
  • Taren Kindree and Patrick Schmidt. 2019. “Campaign Treasurers and Disclosure: Requiem for a Third Party Gatekeeper Strategy?” Election Law Journal.
  • Andrew Latham and Cooper Jensen (’20). 2019. Review of The Crusader Armies: 1099–1187, by Steve Tibble (Yale University Press, 2018), Medieval Warfare (June).
  • Andrew Latham and Colin Churchill (’19). 2019. “Heteronomy: Tyranny of a Construct?E-International Relations (August 25).
  • Andrew Latham and Chris Werbos (’20). 2019. “On War: The Strange Death of Catholic International Thought.OnePeterFive 23 (September).
  • Alex Ramiller (’18) and Patrick Schmidt. 2019. “Making Radical Change Real: Danish Sustainability, Adaptability, and the Reimagination of Architectural Utopias.” Utopian Studies 30, 2.

2018

  • Andra Boca, Alex Eckert, Sophia Hannauer, Lesley Lavery, and Kristine West. 2018. “St. Paul Public Schools Trends in Enrollment.”  Presented to St. Paul Public Schools Research and Evaluations Team (December).
  • Maakwe Cumanzala, Elizabeth Kula, Lesley Lavery, Khadidja Ngom, and Kristine West. 2018. “Class Size Calculations.” Presented to St. Paul Public Schools Research and Evaluations Team (July).
  • Maakwe Cumanzala, Elizabeth Kula, Lesley Lavery, Khadidja Ngom, and Kristine West. 2018. “Improving Data Collection to Facilitate Program Evaluations.”  Presented to St. Paul Public Schools Research and Evaluations Team (July).
  • Maakwe Cumanzala, Elizabeth Kula, Lesley Lavery, Khadidja Ngom, and Kristine West. 2018. “Matching Mechanisms.” Presented to St. Paul Public Schools Research and Evaluation Team (July).
  • Katherine Davis (’16) and Patrick Schmidt. 2018 “Free Air Time,” in Money in American Politics, David Schultz, ed. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO.
  • Elizabeth Levi (’17) and Patrick Schmidt. 2018. “FEC v. Massachusetts Concerned for Life,” in Money in American Politics, David Schultz, ed. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO.
  • Alex Ramiller (’18) and Patrick Schmidt. 2018. “Scale Limits to Sustainability: Transdisciplinary Evidence from Three Danish Cases.” Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions 27: 48-58.
  • Sarah Shoemaker (’15) and Patrick Schmidt. 2018. “Building Ivory Surveillance Towers: Transformations of Privacy and Public Space in Higher Education,” in Privacy in the Streets: Surveillance, Privacy, and the Changing Nature of Public Space, Bryce Clayton Newell, Tjerk Timan and Bert-Jaap Koops, eds. London: Routledge.

2016

2015

2014

2013

  • Andrew Latham and James Christenson (’11). 2013. “Historicising the ‘New Wars’: The Case of Jihad in the Early Years of Islam.” European Journal of International Relations 19, 2 (June).
  • Patrick Schmidt and Bess Boever (’13).  2013. Review of Privileging the Press: Confidential Sources, Journalism Ethics and the First Amendment, by Jason M. Shepard (LFB Scholarly Publishing, 2011) (August).
  • Patrick Schmidt, Jeremy Carp and Isabella Kulkarni. 2013. “Transparency, Consumers and the Pursuit of an Open Internet: A Critical Appraisal,” in Regulating the Web: Network Neutrality and the Fate of the Open Internet, Zachary Stiegler, ed. Lanham, MD: Lexington Books.

2012

  • Taren Kingser (‘11) and Patrick Schmidt. 2012. “Business in the Bulls-Eye? Target Corp. and the Limits of Campaign Finance Disclosure.” Election Law Journal 11, 1, 21-35.
  • IndiAna Gowland (‘12) and Patrick Schmidt. 2012. “Agatha Christie,” in A Social History of Crime and Punishment in America, Wilbur Miller and J. Geoffrey Golson, eds. (Sage Publications).
  • Samuel Brier (‘13) and Patrick Schmidt. 2012. “Jeffrey Dahmer” in Miller and Golson.
  • Joseph Lalli (‘12) and Patrick Schmidt. 2012. “U.S. v. Nixon” in Miller and Golson.
  • Andrew Latham and Kabir Sethi (’09). 2012. “The Transformation of War” in Craig Snyder (ed), Contemporary Security and Strategy (Palgrave).
  • Andrew Latham and Jeremy Carp (’12). 2012. Review of On China, by Henry Kissinger, in Cambridge Review of International Affairs.

2011

  • Andrew Latham and Jake Waxman (’14). 2011. Review of War, Religion and Empire: The Transformation of International Orders, by Andrew Phillips, in Cambridge Review of International Affairs 24, 3.
  • John Wang and David Blaney. 2011. “Resistance and Late-Modernity: Reconsidering Polanyi’s Countermovement,” Mellon Curricular Pathways, Student-Faculty Summer Research Collaboration Award, 2011. Paper presented at ISA Northeast, Baltimore.
  • Caroline Ettinger (‘09) and Patrick Schmidt. 2011. “Drug Courts” in Encyclopedia of American Law and Criminal Justice, David Schultz, ed., (Facts on File, Inc.).
  • Clare Ryan (‘08) and Patrick Schmidt. 2011. “Juvenile Justice,” “Juvenile Offenders,” and “Minimum Age to be Tried as an Adult,” in Encyclopedia of American Law and Criminal Justice, David Schultz, ed., (Facts on File, Inc.).

2010

  • Emily Hedin (‘07) and Paul Dosh. “Development with Dignity: Partnership, Space, and Empowerment in Bolivia and Peru,” paper presented at the International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association (Toronto, 2010).
  • Paul Dosh and Nicole Kligerman (‘10). “Women’s Voices on the Executive Council: Popular Organizations and Resource Battles in Bolivia and Ecuador,” Latin American Perspectives 37, 4 (July 2010): 214-237.
  • Paul Dosh, Nicole Kligerman (‘10), James Lerager, and Jesús Valencia. “Portraits of Leadership: Women and Resource Battles in Bolivia and Ecuador,” Documentary Photography & Research Project (October 2010). Available at webphotoessay.com.
  • Patrick Schmidt, Zac Farber (‘10), Hannah Johnson (‘11) and Robert Woo (‘12), “Sustaining Transparency?: Journalists, Government Officials, and the Minnesota Data Practices Act” 6(1) Open Government (2010). Recipient of 2010 Essay Prize from Open Government (Canadian $500 award).
  • Binner Ozkececi-Taner and Westenley Alcenat (‘10). 2010. “Potential Roles for Turkey as a Rising Regional Actor in Eurasia” Insight Turkey 12, 3: 237-253.

2009

  • Paul Dosh and Nicole Kligerman (‘10). “Presence, Status, Respect, Voice: Gender Dynamics and Anti-Privatization Movements in Bolivia and Ecuador,” paper presented at the International Congress of the Latin American Studies Association (Rio de Janeiro, 2009).
  • Paul Dosh and Nicole Kligerman (‘10). “Correa vs. Social Movements: Showdown in Ecuador,” NACLA Report on the Americas 42, 5 (September 2009): 21-24.
  • Paul Dosh and Nicole Kligerman (‘10). “Under Fire: Ecuador’s Acción Ecológica,” NACLA Report on the Americas 42, 5 (September 2009). Available at nacla.org/node/6095.
  • Patrick Schmidt and Clare Ryan (‘08), Book Review of: Judging Mohammed: Juvenile Delinquency, Immigration, and Exclusion at the Paris Palace of Justice, by Susan J. Terrio (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2009), in Law and Politics Book Review (July 2009).
  • Patrick Schmidt and Cali Cope-Kasten (‘11) Book Review of: Philadelphia Freedom: Memoir of a Civil Rights Lawyer, by David Kairys (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 2008), in Law and Politics Book Review (February 2009).
  • Patrick Schmidt and Hopi Costello (‘10), “Becoming the Four Horsemen: Regimes, Reputations and the Post-New Deal Construction of Conservative Jurisprudence,” presented to the Annual Meeting of the Law and Society Association, Denver, CO, May 29, 2009.

2008

  • Paul Dosh and Annie Virnig (‘09). Book review of Shining Path: Guerrilla War in Peru’s Northern Highlands, 1980-1997, by Lewis Taylor (Liverpool, 2006), Latin American Politics and Society 50, 2 (May 2008): 212-216.
  • Paul Dosh and Nicole Kligerman (‘10). “Women on the Frontlines: Popular Movements, Resource Wars, and Gender Dynamics in Bolivia and Ecuador,” paper presented at the meeting of the North Central Council of Latin Americanists (University of Wisconsin at Whitewater, 2008).
  • Paul Dosh and Nicole Kligerman (‘10). “Equal Footing: Collaboration at 13,000 Feet,” a faculty-student research and travel blog, available at equalfooting.blogspot.com. Fifteen posts were published by the Daily Planet in 2008.
  • Andrew Latham, Paul Vasey (‘09), Kabir Sethi (‘09), and Johan Lorenzen (‘09), War and World Order Transformation: A Book Prospectus. Submitted to Palgrave in 2009. I am currently working on this monograph.

2006

  • Julie Dolan and Phil Chen (‘06). “She Can’t Say That, Can She?! Campaign Slogans Used by Women Running for Congress in 2004.” Paper presented at the 2006 meeting of the Southern Political Science Association, Atlanta, GA, January 5-7, 2006.
  • Julie Dolan and Jonathan Kropf (‘03), two chapters of Women and Politics: Paths to Power and Political Influence (Prentice Hall, 2006).

2005

  • Paul Dosh and Natalia Espejo (‘07). “Killer Coke in Latin America Revisited: A Consumer Report,” The Macalester Weekly 98, 14 (18 February 2005): 15.
  • Natalia Espejo (‘07) and Paul Dosh. “Quality Control: Socially Responsible Investing at Macalester,” The Macalester Weekly 98, 22 (22 April 2005): 14.
  • Trudy Rebert (’07) and David Blaney, “Measuring Poverty,” funded by grant for case development for Quantitative Methods for Public Policy Analysis.

2004

  • Milla Vidina and David Blaney, collaborative development of courses materials for POLI 320 Global Political Economy on poverty and property rights.
  • Julie Dolan and Jonathan Kropf (‘03). “Credit Claiming from the U.S. House: Gendered Communication Styles?” Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics 9(1): 41-59.

2003

  • Julie Dolan and Jonathan Kropf (‘03). “Credit Claiming from the US House: Gendered Communication Styles?” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Chicago, IL, April 3-6, 2003.

2002

  • Andrew Latham and Ben Straus (‘03), “Preventing the Weaponization of Space: Toward a Canadian Action Plan”, research report for the International Security Research and Outreach Programme, Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, August 2002.
  • Andrew Latham, Tyler Beckelman (’04), Anita Girdhari (’04) and Beth Neitzel (‘04), “An Overview of Multilateral Small Arms/Light Weapons Programme Funding: Options and Opportunities For Canada’, research report for the International Security Research and Outreach Programme, Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade DFAIT, March 2002.