😡😡
Posts by Skip Mark
Too bad Trump and Rubio destroyed US diplomatic capacity. goodauthority.org/news/trump-a...
@goodauth.bsky.social
Good point. I’d say the US bears a good deal of responsibility for what’s happening around the world both directly and indirectly.
A recent piece I wrote with David Cingranelli.
We argue that the US is committing atrocities and things are on track to escalate.
Take this as me ringing the alarm bell.
Things are deteriorating worldwide, and the US is not an exception.
BTG Alum Erica De Bruin recently published a timely article in The Conversation, "ICE Not Only Looks Like a Paramilitary Force-- It is One, and That Makes it Harder to Curb."
Americans have a habit of trying to compare all authoritarianism to Nazi Germany. I think in some ways i think it is comforting to view authoritarianism as a foreign ideology. If you want to understand our current authoritarian moment, you need to look to our own past, not to Europe 1/x
Straight to the Intro to IR syllabus
The Doctor is right and correct
The chief reason Mamdani has aroused such keen interest is because he is the first leftwinger to show that politicians can not only face down Trumpism, they can beat him…The centre-left should be taking on the extreme right and acting as the anti-Trump. Instead…it is playing at being not-Trump.
New co-authored article on international trade and forced labour. @nottspolitics.bsky.social
doi.org/10.1111/ecpo...
New #firstview: @uazsgpp.bsky.social's Cameron Mailhot and @gsslab.bsky.social @sabrinamkarim.bsky.social on public perceptions of and support for international state-building, with evidence from conjoint experiments in Liberia.
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
A red quotation mark graphic, followed by bold text excerpted from an August 14th Science magazine editorial by Gretchen Goldman and Erica Chenoweth, saying "The ability to tell the truth, especially when it does not suit any particular partisan aims, is an essential prerequisite for a free society."
Privileged to write this editorial with @gretchentg.bsky.social of @ucs.org in @science.org: "Scientists’ role in defending democracy." www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
A shout out to @aaup.org, the URI Adjunct faculty union, and the URI Professional Staff Association (PSA), a bargaining unit affiliated with the National Education Association of Rhode Island (NEARI).
You are almost always better off in a union, so join one, start one, or support one!
Promoting labor rights reduces inequality, narrows the racial wealth gap, and serves as a popular policy platform for politicians seeking to win elections. If you expand this to all labor rights, you have a political agenda that motivates a majority of diverse voters and strengthens democracy.
We use CIRIGHTS data, which codes US State Department and @amnesty.org human rights reports to assign numerical scores for two dozen human rights. For this piece, we examined the rights to unionize and engage in collective bargaining. We looked at both protection in law and in practice.
Unions have an incentive to recruit all workers. As a result, they often help to promote racial inequality faster than other parts of society (they tend to be less racist). Where collective labor rights are strong, minorities can also unionize for themselves when they are shut out of other unions
Unions, protected by collective labor rights, negotiate for higher wages, limit corporate power, and lobby for better working conditions for all workers. This is how we got the 40-hour workday, overtime pay, & restrictions on child labor. They also strengthen democracy and act as a check on power.
Building on our scholarly work, we argue that collective labor rights reduce inequality by empowering workers: they reduce the cost of organizing unions, reduce the cost of collective bargaining, create a credible threat for non-union workers to unionize, and protect the right to strike
New piece in the @us.theconversation.com with @stephenmbagwell.bsky.social The protection of collective labor rights (right to unionize, strike, and bargain collectively) reduces income inequality between individuals (poor vs. rich) and between ethnic/racial groups (white versus Black).
Image of 5 people on Zoom: Amanda Murdie, K. Chad Clay, Daniel Hill, Jeffrey Berejikian, and Meridith LaVelle
I'm happy to present Dr. Meridith LaVelle! Dr. LaVelle successfully defended her dissertation this morning. She will be a Humboldt Research Fellow at the University of Mannheim this fall. A huge thanks to her other committee members, Amanda Murdie, Danny Hill, and Jeffrey Berejikian.
This update took longer than I anticipated, but it's out now! New data on organizational use of violent and nonviolent tactics. Using a diversity of nonviolent tactics is linked to longer survival for orgs.
journals.sagepub.com/eprint/SXPRW...
🧵 To make this more concrete: don't assume Trump himself knows what he is going to do next in in the Israel-Iran conflict. He definitely doesn't want to get the US involved in a major war in the Middle East (that much he's been clear on). But he loves to bomb and look tough. 1/
In Providence & many cities protests stayed peaceful in large part because police did not engage in repression.
In LA police repressed a large number of peaceful protesters exercising their first amendment right to protest & it turned violent.
Before blaming protesters please consider the cause
In LA today police used flash bangs, rubber bullets, tear gas, pepper balls, and kettled protesters. This happened before the curfew.
This was repression & is illegal.
Protesters threw tear gas canisters and rocks in return and this a prime example of how police turned a peaceful protest violent.
In Providence there was little police presence. It was mostly used to direct traffic. Police were not armored with riot gear.
Police stood away from protests and did not behave aggressively.
These actions reduce violence.
Let peaceful protests be and they usually stay peaceful
What about LA?
When police use repression against peaceful protesters it has a few consequences:
It can attract more violent members to the movement
It can lead some people to believe violence is the only thing that will cause change
It can provoke violence as an emotional response or attempt at revenge
Police beating, or pepper spraying peaceful protesters understandably causes anger.
If your friend or family member is the victim of repression, you may get angry enough to fight back.
Violence here is caused by police and entirely preventable. Some violent protests are caused by police action
violent repression of peaceful protesters and journalists includes:
arrests, firing tear gas, firing rubber bullets, beating protesters with batons, kneeling on their neck, or trampling them with horses
When protests are large and people are very angry this often provokes a violent response…
Threats of repression increase the risk of protests turning violent
A heavy police present increases opportunities for confrontations and often leads the public to view protests as violent. Why else would so many police be there?
peaceful protests can end in violence because of these threats