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Posts by Kathleen Searles

HOORAY!

2 weeks ago 2 0 1 0
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The Department of Political Science just got a whole lot better! We are so thrilled to have these wonderful people on board for the coming academic year. 👏 #uofsc #polisci

2 weeks ago 9 4 1 1
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Thrilled to share that next year I'll be @stanfordcddrl.bsky.social as the Einstein-Moos Postdoctoral Fellow, before starting @sc.edu as an Assistant Professor of Political Science in Fall 2027! Very excited to join such a dynamic department and to contribute to public ed back home in the Carolinas.

1 month ago 47 5 4 0
Employment Opportunities - College of Information and Communications | University of South Carolina

We are hiring for several positions this cycle: Assistant Prof in Sci Comm, Assistant Prof in Health Comm, Open-Rank in AI. I think this is a great place to work. More info here: sc.edu/study/colleg...

6 months ago 2 1 1 1
“We Want to Put Them in Trauma”: Understanding the Trump Administration's Attack on Government Health Agency Regulatory Authority | Journal of Health Politics, Policy and Law | Duke University Press

The Trump administration's attacks on civil service are profoundly personal.

Today at @jhppl.bsky.social, I outline the "science of standing up for science;" how we can use social science research to restore health agencies' regulatory authority.

read.dukeupress.edu/jhppl/articl...

6 months ago 12 6 1 0
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Has Your Scientific Work Been Cut? We Want to Hear.

NYT wants to hear from researchers who had their funding cut, form here: www.nytimes.com/2025/10/08/c...

6 months ago 31 20 1 1
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Why most polls overstate support for political violence Misperceptions about the popularity of violence increase public support for it — but you can help change that.

Why most polls overstate support for political violence
www.gelliottmorris.com/p/most-polls...

6 months ago 171 69 1 11
Learn more about Expert Voices Together (EVT) and our approach to customized support.

that is always a silver lining, i cant wait to hear more! (& for folks reading the replies that need help or have colleagues that need help > expertvoicestogether.org for person-to-person crisis support and researchersupport.org for resources geared towards institutions)

6 months ago 4 3 1 0

🫠

6 months ago 0 0 0 0

Thank you, Dave.

6 months ago 1 0 0 0
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My friend & mentor, Martin Johnson is 5 years gone today - i regularly quote him to my students (my fav is to do finger guns & say I’m not a normal professor I’m a cool professor), but mostly every day I try to do well while doing good, just like he always said. www.cambridge.org/core/service...

6 months ago 12 1 3 0

This makes me think about the article that demonstrates rollout of Fox News affected Republican candidates’ perceptions of their own viability

7 months ago 3 0 1 0
The National Road was an early, but failed, attempt by the United States Congress to build an interstate highway. The Road, which extended through the newly formed western states, led to fierce debate over two interconnected issues. First, should Congress authorize additional routes that would expand the Road beyond its original western route? Second, should the Road remain under federal control or should it be given to the states through which it ran? I find that partisanship was the most consistent predictor of a legislator’s position on these questions. In addition to partisanship, legislators from districts with a larger slave population were also more likely to oppose the Road. Distributive politics also informed representative’s behavior ad those whose districts were more proximate to the Road were more of these projects. In sum, an examination of the politics of the National Road helps to shed light on the interconnection of partisanship, slavery, and distributive politics in early America and its implications for early American political development.

The National Road was an early, but failed, attempt by the United States Congress to build an interstate highway. The Road, which extended through the newly formed western states, led to fierce debate over two interconnected issues. First, should Congress authorize additional routes that would expand the Road beyond its original western route? Second, should the Road remain under federal control or should it be given to the states through which it ran? I find that partisanship was the most consistent predictor of a legislator’s position on these questions. In addition to partisanship, legislators from districts with a larger slave population were also more likely to oppose the Road. Distributive politics also informed representative’s behavior ad those whose districts were more proximate to the Road were more of these projects. In sum, an examination of the politics of the National Road helps to shed light on the interconnection of partisanship, slavery, and distributive politics in early America and its implications for early American political development.

Happy (official) publication day to one of my favorite projects ever!

tldr: Congressional votes on early federal infrastructure policy was influenced by partisan, distributive, and racial considerations

7 months ago 25 3 3 0

Might be good to name the outlet so others can take precautions if you feel comfortable

7 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Researcher Support Consortium

You’d think I’d get my own urls right 🙃 researchersupport.org

7 months ago 6 0 0 0

& researchsupport.org which provides institutional level policy recommendations for supporting folks under attack (this is my work with @rebekahtromble.bsky.social fwiw)

7 months ago 8 1 1 0
Learn more about Expert Voices Together (EVT) and our approach to customized support.

100% - more people need to think about this and talk to their students and junior colleagues. Also bookmark expertvoicestogether.org, a rapid response crisis care system that specifically works with researchers or journalists under attack for their work if you’re in the oh shit stage

7 months ago 17 4 1 0
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just ask chatgpt what would katie do (eat a snack? drink more coffee!)

7 months ago 1 0 1 0

The heart people are my fav 😂

7 months ago 1 0 0 0

Perfect!

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

oh yes, also can listen to the unplugged album start to finish with glee

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

that enya album is such a soundtrack of my childhood (my parents were obsessed), i need to revisit!

8 months ago 0 0 0 0

oh that Miles Davis album, ofc!

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

So good!

8 months ago 0 0 0 0

I am getting so many good recs here (also love this playlist title!)

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

Jagged Little Pill for sure on my list too, classic

8 months ago 2 0 0 0

Oh Ella! Such a good one. I need to add Cat Power sings Dylan into my rotation

8 months ago 0 0 0 0
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Oh these are good, I love folklore too but listened during a dark time period nonstop and now it’s can’t do it anymore 😭

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

Too busy talking about work, dummies

8 months ago 1 0 0 0

Oh Liz! How could I forget. What a moment

8 months ago 1 0 0 0