Many undergraduate students come to Michigan State University with the impression that they'll be able to earn their degree in just four years. And while that is definitely the case for most, others may find that the path from orientation to graduation is a little less straightforward.
Hayden Ferguson, Political Science senior and Army ROTC student, has been selected for the George C. Marshall Leadership Award. Hayden has served as cadet battalion commander during the fall semester and is the top senior in the Army ROTC program this semester.
Mr. Maen Hammad, an MSU political science alumnus. Mr. Hammad, photographer, filmmaker, and activist is an experienced human rights researcher and campaigner at Amnesty International.
Harnoor Kaur is a third-year MSU political science and criminal justice major whose work on violence against the trans community, the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, and international law has won the respect of her classmates and professor in her ANP 321: Human Rights course.
Dr. Eric Montgomery, an adviser in the MSU College of Social Science’s Peace and Justice Studies, is an Assistant Professor of Anthropology who has dedicated his career to the study of peace, conflict, and human rights.
A Michigan State University graduate student in the Department of Psychology's clinical science program has discovered a link between the neighborhoods female adolescents grow up in and their risk of developing disordered eating patterns.
Earlier this fall, Women and Minorities in Economics (WAMIE), hosted three MSU alumni in a panel event that students could join in person or by Zoom.
Two students within the MSU College of Social Science have been recognized by the Michigan State University Office of University Outreach and Engagement for fostering outstanding community engagement within their research.
The National Institute of Dental & Craniofacial Research of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) awarded Joseph T. Hefner, Ph.D., and colleagues at the University of Kentucky a five-year, $1.4 grant to develop a standardized graphic library to assist clinicians and biomedical researchers to communicate anatomical concepts with their patients and their families.
In early 2020, Prabhat Barnwal, Ph.D., MSU assistant professor of economics, was originally part of a team with researchers from Columbia University studying how to mitigate environmental risks in rural Bangladesh as part of an NSF funded project.
Eleven Michigan State University researchers have been recognized in the 2021 Highly Cited Researchers List compiled by Clarivate Analytics, including two from the MSU College of Social Science.
Veda Hawkins, the Assistant Director of Academic and Student Affairs within the Michigan State University College of Social Science, has won the 2021 MSU Outstanding Advising Administrator Award. This university-wide award recognizes advising staff who demonstrate the utmost commitment and exceptionalism towards students and the overall Spartan community.
The Women’s Leadership Institute (WLI) invited MSU undergraduate students enter to win “The Future of Work and Leadership” scholarship this fall. This contest was tied to an event held on September 30 by the same name, featuring women leaders.
The Women’s Leadership Institute (WLI) at Michigan State University has officially created a first of its kind student cohort for the 2021-2022 academic year.
The MSU A-CAPP Center’s Assistant Director of Research and Assistant Professor, Jay Kennedy, was called upon by Rep. James E. Clyburn, Chairman of the Select Subcommittee to testify November 17, 2021, on online COVID-19 misinformation regarding product and scheme threats facing Americans. This includes fake products, websites that sell unverified treatments, and fraudsters who portray themselves as legitimate service providers.
Michigan State University Department of Psychology professor Dr. Robin Miller has won the University Outreach and Engagement (UOE) Distinguished Partnership Award for Community-Engaged Research. Together with her community partner, the MPact Global Action for Gay Men’s Health and Rights, Dr. Miller was recognized for her work advancing healthcare access for LGBTQ+ people with HIV in countries where homosexuality is criminalized.
As a kid, Don Weir followed his dad -- an amateur archaeologist working with University of Michigan in the 1930s -- around archaeological sites, collecting arrowheads and attending meetings. Looking back, it was a unique way to grow up, surrounded by people unearthing and analyzing artifacts.
Anne Marie Ryan PhD, a Professor of organizational psychology at Michigan State University has been awarded the prestigious Michael R. Losey Excellence in Research award. The award honors lifetime achievement in human resource research, recognizing significant past and ongoing research contributions that impact the HR management field.
Jason Cross, an enrolled citizen of the Little River Band of Ottawa Indians, is an MSU School of Social Work alumnus. An award-winning children’s advocate, Cross has a wealth of experience in the tribal government sector. He is presently the State Manager of Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) Compliance and Race Equity.
Roxy Sprowl, a citizen of Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe, is a second-year student in the MSU School of Social Work and is in the MSU Social Science Scholars Program. She is a member of the Bridge Scholars Program, a STARR Scholar, and the Public Relations Representative for the North American Indigenous Student Organization (NAISO).
Dr. Heather Howard, an MSU Anthropology associate professor has dedicated her career to promoting our understanding of Native American heritage, through community engaged research.
MSU Economics Associate Professor Emilie Jackson researches the gig economy and its effect on workers and society as a whole. A general definition of the gig economy is the economic sector consisting of part-time, temporary, and freelance jobs.
Four Michigan State University students and alumni are finalists for the Marshall Scholarship and the Rhodes Scholarship, including two from the College of Social Science. These are nationally competitive scholarships that support students attending graduate school in the United Kingdom. We will hear about the results of these competitions in the coming weeks.
The Michigan State University College of Social Science has renewed its incredibly successful Dean's Research Associate Program (DRAP) for 2022, meaning that three talented new associates will be bringing diverse skill sets, research interests and unique perspectives to MSU's campus next fall.
Michigan State University will host a workshop with a panel of youth and researchers on the importance of youth expression and agency - or their ability to influence their own decisions and their own lives - on Friday November 12 from 3:00-4:30 p.m at the MSU Broad Museum, 547 E Circle Dr, East Lansing. The workshop is free, open to the public. Middle-school- to high-school-aged youth and people who work with youth are especially encouraged to attend and participate.
Anna Maria Santiago, Associate Dean for Research and Graduate Studies in the College of Social Science at Michigan State University was awarded the Career Achievement Award by the Association for Community Organization and Social Action (ACOSA).
The MSU Center for Anti-Counterfeiting and Product Protection’s (A-CAPP) Assistant Director of Education and Outreach, Kari Kammel, was called upon by the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee to testify November 2, 2021, on the problem of the sale of counterfeit goods by third-party sellers on e-commerce.
As the days continue to get shorter and colder, it is likely that you or someone you know has started to experience seasonal mood changes. Dr. Lily Yan, an associate professor in the Michigan State University Department of Psychology and director of the Light, Emotion and Cognition lab, explains how light exposure impacts our mood, memory and motivation.
The Michigan constitution requires that the 10-year census serves as a basis for redistricting our voting boundaries. Those boundaries guide elections for next 10 years, and play a crucial role in state policy, state taxes, revenues, economic development, right down to the decisions about education in our schools.
The Michigan State University Campus Archaeology Program is hosting the 7th annual "Apparitions & Archaeology" tour, an event that explores the history of MSU's campus as well as alleged hauntings that have taken place at the university. The event is free and open to the public, is family-friendly, and will take place on Tuesday, October 26 from 6-8 p.m.
Nearly 50 years ago, a young MSU School of Social Work graduate student was inspired to run for public office after a learning a local nursing home was being closed. Debbie Stabenow was 24 and won her first campaign by a landslide and went on to become Michigan’s first woman elected to the U.S. Senate.
Researchers at Michigan State University are calling on residents, who live or own property along the Great Lakes, to provide input regarding the management of Great Lakes shorelines in a new survey. A team of coastal scientists within the Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences at MSU have been working to better understand future challenges facing coastal environments, especially those brought about by human activity and climate change. Research from this team is taking a scientific approach to inform policy and management of Michigan's coastal communities.
“People make assumptions that criminal justice and social work are opposite ends of the spectrum, but they’re not, and I get to live in that intersection of the two,” said Derrick Jackson, director of community engagement at the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office. During his early career as a social worker, Jackson gave examples of working with Washtenaw County youth and witnessing police officers as the first connection to people who needed access to resources such as homeless shelters or centers for survivors of domestic violence.
The Michigan State University Department of Anthropology hosted the joint annual meeting of the Midwest Archaeological Conference and the Midwest Historical Archaeology Conference October 7–9, 2021, on MSU’s campus. Jodie O’Gorman, MSU associate professor and archaeologist, led the team responsible for organizing the conference.
A Buddhist temple, a church, a hotel, grocery stores, homes, a barbershop - Nihonmachi or “Japantown” in Santa Barbara, California, was thriving in the 1920s and 1930s. But that was before February 1942, when President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 9066 that allowed the United States government to incarcerate over 120,000 Japanese-Americans.
Dr. Cameron Whitley is an assistant professor at Western Washington University's College of Humanities and Social Sciences. But before he was a Viking, Dr. Whitley was a Spartan, earning both his Master's degree and PhD from the Michigan State University College of Social Science.
John Steudle is a graduate student at Michigan State University earning his Master's degree in Human Resources and Labor Relations. Set to graduate in December, John is planning to work in an HR role with Cummins after leaving MSU.
Dr. Robin Lin Miller is a social scientist in the Michigan State University Department of Psychology, and is renown around the world for her scholarship and advocacy surrounding the LGBTQ+ community and the fight against the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
James E. Clyburn, Majority Whip, in the United States House of Representatives will speak at the Wharton Center at 7:30 pm on Monday, November 8th, as a special guest of the Governor Jim Blanchard Public Service Forum. Tickets are now on sale at whartoncenter.com. General Admission is $25 and $5 for MSU students.
The National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, part of the National Institute of Health, awarded Yijie Wang, PhD, assistant professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies, and her team a five-year, $2,108,204 grant to investigate adolescents’ experiences of multiple forms of discrimination and its implication for substance use.
The Institute of Education Sciences, part of the U.S. Department of Education, recently awarded Ryan Bowles, PhD, associate professor in the Department of Human Development and Family Studies, a $2 million, 4-year grant to develop tools to help teachers support early writing development in young children ages 3-6.
Former Michigan Gov. Jim Blanchard sat down with 11 MSU Political Science students recently to discuss his history, current politics and how vastly different Michigan’s political landscape is today.
The College of Social Science (SSC) Dean’s Research Associate Program at Michigan State University was established in 2018, as a major College initiative aimed at promoting an inclusive scholarly environment in which outstanding scholars in the social sciences support the advancement of diversity, equity, and inclusion in the academy.
Dr. David Córdova, is an MSU Human Development and Family Studies Alumnus. Dr. Córdova is an Associate Professor in the School of Social Work at University of Michigan, whose research focuses on Latino health inequalities, the prevention of substance use, and HIV in adolescents.
Brenda Pilar-Ayala is a fourth-year MSU undergraduate student majoring in Psychology and Political Science, pre-law, and minoring in Chicano-Latino Studies, Educational Studies and Leadership in Integrated Learning. We celebrate her commitment to education and engagement with service-learning programs such as “Read to Succeed” and the “Bailey Scholars Program.”
MSU Faculty member Rene Rosenbaum, is a scholar of U.S. Latinos and community economic development. Dr. Rosenbaum, an associate professor in the School of Planning, Designing and Construction has demonstrated a commitment to understanding, supporting, and serving Hispanic communities.
When it comes to transgender and nonbinary children and teens, familial support of their gender identity can truly be a matter of life and death: according to 2021 survey data from the Trevor Project, gender diverse kids are half as likely to attempt suicide when their identities are supported at home.
Governor Gretchen Whitmer reappointed Laurie Linscott, director of the Michigan State University Child Development Laboratory, to her Early Childhood Investment Corporation Executive Committee as vice chair from July 30, 2021 through July 22, 2025.
As summer comes to end, the K-12 school year is right around the corner. For many young students in Michigan, this will be their first time in a classroom after 18 months of remote learning. Given the uncertainties surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, it's natural for kids to feel anxious about going back to school in the midst of a pandemic.
Ashley Pattee graduated in 2006 with a degree in Psychology and then in 2008 with a Master's degree in Social Work. She is now the Program Improvement Director for Arbor Circle, a nonprofit community organization in Grand Rapids, Michigan, which provides mental health care, substance use treatment and family services.
At first glance, Michigan State University social scientists Anita Khushalani and Mikayla Ward have very little in common. However, their paths crossed after Mikayla received a life-changing gift from Anita: the gift of a Spartan education.
Dr. David Blight, an MSU History Alumnus, is a Sterling Professor of History, African American Studies, and of American Studies at Yale University. Dr. Blight is also the Director of the Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance and Abolition.
Mr. Zach Sneathen is a fourth-year MSU undergraduate majoring in Interdisciplinary Studies in Social Science, who took an African American History class with one of the college's newest assistant professors, Nakia Parker, in which he produced a podcast that discusses the importance of using appropriate language when talking about the history of slavery.
Dr. Nakia Parker, an MSU Assistant Professor of History, is a scholar of Black life in Indian Slave Country. Dr. Parker has shaped our understanding of enslavement and abolitionism in America.
Coastlines of the Great Lakes are constantly changing, but new MSU research led by Ethan Theuerkauf indicates that increased fluctuations in lake levels due to climate change will likely drive sustained habitat loss. That’s why MSU geographers are sharing their research with coastal communities to help them prepare.
When looking for their next romantic partners, most people would think they'd like to avoid someone who is just like their ex. But new social science research suggests that the majority of us actually do the exact opposite - or will even look for someone who reminds us of our parents.
“For over fifty years, I have known Carl Levin as a friend, a colleague and a leader of the important issues of our times. He was much more than Michigan’s longest serving United States Senator."
The Michigan Employment Clinic (Mi-EC) has launched a new website to help people with disabilities or criminal records overcome barriers to obtaining and retaining employment. The website and its resources are free to use and provide support for both job seekers and employers in the Lansing area.
Anthony Ianni is an MSU Sociology Alumnus and an advocate for people with autism. A former award-winning basketball player, and change agent, Ianni is a motivational speaker who works with the Michigan Department of Civil Rights and Autism Alliance of Michigan to provide hope and inspiration to people in the autism community.
Katie Pezzetti an MSU junior majoring in Human Resources and Labor Relations in the College of Social Science. As an intern with the Michigan Employment Clinic, she worked to support jobseekers with disabilities in creating resumes, preparing for interviews, and finding employment. She also helped create an employer pledge in which employers commit to hiring people with disabilities.
Ms. Michele Brock is the School of Social Work's Director of Community Programs at MSU. She is a disability justice advocate, whose work and research on health disabilities advances our understanding of the plight of people living with disabilities.
With COVID restrictions beginning to lift across the country, many employees are finding themselves being called back into the office after almost over a year and a half of remote work.
Gabby Kindig graduated from the College of Social Science in 2021 with degrees in both Political Science and Psychology. Now a Press Assistant for the Executive Office of Governor Gretchen Whitmer, Gabby shares how she found a community at Michigan State University that allowed to be true to herself while she found the career path right for her.
While the LGBTQ+ community has seen significant advancements in legal rights, political representation and social acceptance over recent years, mental and physical health disparities still exist for queer Americans - and are even worse among younger generations.
Under a Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Program award of nearly $1.2M from the National Science Foundation (NSF), Dahlin will lead research that takes a new approach to unravel the challenge of measuring carbon uptake, especially at large scales.
Congratulations to Dr. Nathan Moore, associate professor and graduate program director in the Department of Geography, Environmental, and Spatial Sciences, for receiving The Outstanding Faculty Mentor Award for a senior faculty member.
Parenting is one of life’s greatest joys, right? Not for everyone. New research from Michigan State University psychologists examines characteristics and satisfaction of adults who don’t want children.
Dr. Breanne Grace earned her PhD in Sociology from Michigan State University in 2013. Since then, she has joined the faculty of the University of South Carolina's School of Social Work as an associate professor. A humanitarian at heart, Dr. Grace's research surrounds the refugee community around the world with a focus on finding solutions for the compassionate resettling of displaced people.
Julian Trevino is a junior, studying Political Science with a minor in International Development and French. The Grand Rapids native is also a representative in ASMSU and has worked on a myriad of bills within the college and the city of East Lansing. Trevino envisions his post-graduation future as one in public policy, law or becoming a Representative for the State of Michigan.
Dr. Stephanie Nawyn joined MSU's faculty in 2006, bringing with her a passion for humanitarianism that included rigorous research into the experiences of refugees and the people that provide them assistance. A 2013-14 Fulbright Scholar, Dr. Nawyn is also the Co-director of Academic Programs at the MSU Center for Gender in Global Context.
Researchers at Michigan State University studying the interplay between water levels and erosion say some sandy beaches will be wider this year, but due to erosion, Great Lakes coastlines will not look the same as they did a decade ago, and more challenges could be coming.
In these times of technological innovation, the symbiotic relation between higher-ed learning and technology is prevalent in almost every classroom. When it comes to large, lecture-based classroom settings—seating between 300 to 500 students—that prevalence of technology usage dominates.
Criminal Justice graduate student Alexandra Gormely, Psychology senior Caleb Inman and Economics senior Gregory Marshall have been announced as the 2021 winners of the College of Social Science Achievement Gala.
Dr. Elizabeth Mack leads effort to make a much-anticipated open-source Broadband Integrated Time Series (BITS) dataset available to anyone wishing to work on analyzing FCC broadband availability data.
The MSU A-CAPP Center’s Assistant Director of Education and Outreach, Kari Kammel, was called upon by the U.S. House Judiciary Committee’s Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual Property and the Internet to testify May 27, 2021 with regard to the SHOP SAFE Act of 2021.
Manny Alalouf is a 2018 graduate of the College of Social Science. A Political Science major and Social Science Scholar, Manny joined alumni mentor Doug Scott at Movement Search & Delivery Company as a headhunter.
Last week, Colonial Pipeline announced that they had been subject to a ransomware attack and had shut down one of the largest fuel pipelines in the United States as a result. Dr. Tom Holt, Director and Professor in the School of Criminal Justice, answers common questions about ransomware and how we can protect critical infrastructure from future attacks.
Last month, the Arkansas Senate passed legislation prohibiting medical providers from offering gender-affirming hormones or surgeries to trans youth.
Mr. Ernest Wong, is a MSU Landscape Architecture Alumnus from the School of Planning, Design and Construction. Wong is the founding Principal and President of Site Design Group, Ltd. He is an award-winning urban designer of creative and beautiful spaces, whose architectural designs have positively impacted the lives of many in our community.
Alisha Phan is a fourth-year MSU undergraduate double majoring in Psychology and Human Biology and minoring in Asian Pacific American Studies. She is also an active member of Asian Pacific American Student Organization and is the newly elected president of the Vietnamese Student Association.
Ms. Thuy-Tram Butler, an academic specialist in MSU's School of Human Resources and Labor Relations (SHRLR), is primarily charged with helping SHRLR Master's students find placements. She is also a member of her school’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion committee, and ensures that SHRLR adheres to DEI policies.
From the 2020 police killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor to the recent deaths of Daunte Wright and Adam Toledo, a 13-year-old child, the potential for police-caused harm plays an important role in understanding trust between law enforcement and the communities they serve.
Michigan State University’s Institute for Public Policy and Social Research has secured a key grant supporting a new initiative instilling racial equity in all aspects of IPPSR’s policy education, political leadership development and survey research.
The justice system, and the ideologies behind judicial policies, have been fueled by innovative and nuanced ways of thinking. This means pulling together various aspects and perspectives on certain social constructs; pooling together a wealth of information from various schools of thought;
The world is always in a constant state of forward perpetuation: The earth’s rotation, innovation in technology, slang and clothing, and in this case—education and teaching methods. Current higher-ed educators are in a constant battle.
For some instructors, Integrative Studies in Social Science presents a challenge - how to not only teach a wide range of students with different interests and knowledge but also to engage them in the topic and with each other.
MSU Sociology Assistant Professor Jennifer Carrera may be the recipient of the first College of Social Science Faculty Outreach and Engagement Award but the honor was earned by the entire Flint-based research team, she said.
Mark Suchyta knew even as an undergraduate that he wanted to be a university professor. Now about to complete his PhD, Suchyta’s focus, determination and innovation have earned him the College of Social Science’s Graduate Student Teaching Award for 2020-2021.
Melissa Christle is the Graduate Secretary for the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University and the recipient of the 2021 College of Social Science Matt Hansen Support Staff Award.
Dr. Najib Hourani, an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology and the Global Urban Studies Program and core faculty in the Muslim Studies Program, is the winner of the inaugural 2021 College of Social Science Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Faculty Award. The award recognizes social science faculty who have made comprehensive, impressive and sustained efforts surrounding diversity, equity and inclusion.
Political Science senior Jasmine Jordan is the winner of the College of Social Science's 2021 Diversity, Equity, and Inclusive Excellence Undergraduate Student Award. Since joining MSU in 2017, Jasmine has committed herself to improving the campus experience for students of color, students with disabilities, and other students.
Anh Sy Huy Le, a PhD student in the Department of History, has won the 2021 College of Social Science Graduate Student Research Award for his dissertation entitled, "Taming the Intractable”: Chinese Migrants, Inter-Asian Interactions, and the Transformation of French Rule in Colonial Vietnam, 1862-1954."
The shift to online learning in the past year has presented significant challenges for children and families, especially for autistic children who often struggle with changes in routine and the engagement required for remote instruction.
There are a few common identity milestones that transgender, or trans, people experience across their lives.
Stephen Gasteyer is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology and MSU AgBioResearch. Recently, Gasteyer participated in MSU Dialogues, an intergroup dialogue program for students, faculty and staff that brings together people from different identity groups and aims to equip participants with the tools to engage in conversation (rather than debate) and to facilitate understanding regarding commonalities and differences by examining the impact of social inequalities.
The recent escalation of anti-Asian discrimination and violence in our country points to how racism and sexism are inextricably linked. As members of the College of Social Science, we must strongly condemn these acts.
Yesterday’s guilty verdict in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer, Derek Chauvin, marks nearly a year of calls for justice in the death of George Floyd and other police killings of Black people. The horrific events sparked nationwide awareness and demand for social change and for equality.
Research teams Dr. Nazita Lajevardi and undergraduate student Jasmine Jordan, and Dr. Cristina Bodea and Dr. Andrew Kerner with undergraduate students Zac Ozormoor and Lillian Meng are the winners of the inaugural 2021 Women's Leadership Institute Tomlanovich Equity Research Fund.
With symptoms such as cognitive decline and memory loss, dementia is an extremely difficult chronic condition that often targets older adults. While research has shown that biological factors play a role in determining the development of dementia, social scientists are identifying societal influences that factor in as well.
Algeria Wilson is the Director of Public Policy for the Michigan chapter of the National Association of Social Workers. She graduated from MSU with her MSW in 2019, and has since used her passion for helping others to be a leading voice for social workers in the state.
MSU expert says Oregon gun violence restraining orders could be used more proactively.
Gregory Marchal has been named Michigan State University’s 17th Truman Scholar. He is one of 62 students from 51 U.S. colleges and universities selected as Truman Scholars.
Secretary Spencer Abraham, a MSU Alumnus, has worked to make our world a better place for all. He has served as an attorney, author, U.S. Senator and U.S. Secretary of Energy. We celebrate his selfless and unwavering service to our nation.
Marwa Bakabas is an MSU doctoral student in socio-cultural Anthropology, whose work centers on violence, forced migration, exile, and trauma in the Arab world.
Dr. Nazita Lajevardi, assistant professor in MSU's Political Science department is an attorney and scholar who studies political opinion and political behavior in Muslim and Arab American communities.
The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation awarded $1.4 million to Michigan State University for Enslaved: Peoples of the Historical Slave Trade, or Enslaved.org, a first-of-its-kind database containing millions of records cataloging the lives of enslaved Africans and their descendants.
Wisdom Henry, an Honors College junior majoring in History, and Urban and Regional Planning in the College of Social Science, has been selected as one of 16 students selected from a pool of 95 nominees across the country to receive a Beinecke Scholarship.
MSU College of Social Science alumna Brenda Larsen Becker has some advice for MSU Class of 2021 grads: “First of all, it’s about building relationships and networking. Don’t wait – it’s not all about bookwork. It’s important to study and get good grades but it’s about internships, building your resume and getting involved on campus and in campaigns,” Ms. Becker said. “It’s great that you played lacrosse – that’s leadership and teamwork – but what have you done that shows your interest in this world?”
In its 2022 America’s Best Graduate Schools ranking, U.S. News and World Report recognized four of the MSU College of Social Science graduate programs as among the top 20 in the nation.
Dopamine is a neurotransmitter in the brain that is known for making us feel good. But besides helping us feel happy, it also plays a big role in our ability to make decisions and put effort into certain tasks, especially when the result is a reward that we want.
While the Flint water crisis was breaking news almost seven years ago, its impact on the health and trust of Flint residents has outlived the headlines. While ex-Governor Rick Snyder and many of his officials are currently facing criminal charges, many community leaders and academic researchers are teaming up to learn from the past and create a better future.
We in the College of Social Science at Michigan State University stand against persistent racism and xenophobia directed toward Asian Pacific Islander Desi Americans (APIDA) and Asian individuals and communities. We stand in support of our students, faculty, and staff in these marginalized groups.
In the traditionally male dominated field of economics, one woman would blaze the trail for others at Michigan State University. In 1970, Barbara Lowrey became the first woman to receive her doctorate in economics at MSU, cementing herself and her legacy in the world of academia. The incredible story begins, well, right in East Lansing—long before she earned her PhD.
Dr. Nwando Achebe, the Jack and Margaret Sweet Endowed Professor of History and Associate Dean of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the Michigan State University College of Social Science, was recently named one of Nigeria’s 100 Most Inspiring Women For 2021.
This Women's History Month, we are celebrating the Spartan women who make diversity, equity, and inclusion a top priority in everything they accomplish. No alum embodies this empowering mission quite like the co-founder and executive board member of the Michigan State University Women's Leadership Institute, Christine Mason Soneral, who is also the Senior Vice President for ITC Holdings Corporation.
Danielle McClain is a junior majoring in Political Science (Pre-law) with a focus on Political Philosophy and a minor in African American studies. A passionate mentor and advocate for social change, Danielle is always looking for opportunities to celebrate and empower the women around her. This Women's History Month, Danielle shares more about her career aspirations, the women who inspire her, and the importance of women uplifting each other.
As a founding member and former director of the Women's Leadership Institute, empowerment and advocacy have always been central to Dr. Amy Bonomi's work as an academic and an activist. This Women's History Month, Dr. Bonomi shares more about her impactful research, as well as the importance of empowerment and intersectionality in women-focused spaces.
Dr. Nwando Achebe, the Jack and Margaret Sweet Endowed Professor of History and Associate Dean of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the Michigan State University College of Social Science, has recently won the 2020-21 William J. Beal Outstanding Faculty Award.
Dr. David Blight is a world-renowned historian, a critically-acclaimed author and a beloved professor at Yale University. He is also a proud Social Science Spartan, graduating with his bachelor’s degree in History in 1971 and then a Master's degree in 1976.
Ten years ago tomorrow, a 9.0 magnitude earthquake off Japan’s northeastern coast created a massive tsunami that devastated coastal communities. The tsunami also flooded the Fukushima Dai-ichi Nuclear Power Plant, triggering meltdowns and the release of radioactive materials. Close to 20,000 people lost their lives that day, with many more left homeless. More than 400,000 had to evacuate and many lost their businesses or places of employment. A World Bank estimate of $235 billion in damage make it the costliest disaster in world history. How are affected communities faring ten years later? What might we learn from such tragedies?
Dulce Cardenas graduated from the College of Social Science with a degree in Psychology in 2012. She is now the Executive Assistant for the Speaker of the Michigan House of Representatives, Jason Wentworth. A community-focused Spartan with a dedication to helping others, Dulce is hoping to pursue law school soon to advance her career.
The College of Social Science joins the entire Michigan State University community in remembering alumna, trustee emerita and philanthropist Barbara Sawyer-Koch, 72, who died March 6, 2021.
According to the Pew Research Center, 1 in 10 American adults have landed a long-term relationship from an online dating app, such as Tinder, OKCupid and Match.com. But what compels people to "swipe right" on certain profiles and reject others?
Nonconsensual pornography, or the sharing of sexual images or videos without participants' consent, has become a major topic of discussion regarding online safety. Trigger warning: Sexual abuse, online abuse, pornography
America's stark racial disparities in health care have been exposed by COVID-19, but a new study from Michigan State University suggests that Black individuals are more likely than conservative White people to adhere to public health standards due to disparities.
On Thursday February 25th the College of Social Science hosted a webinar for members of the Michigan State University community and beyond to learn more about the globally-recognized Enslaved.org: Peoples of the Historic Slave Trade project.
Bezil Taylor graduated from the Michigan State University College of Social Science with a Master's degree in Social Work in 2020. A student activist committed to making change on campus, Bezil spent his career as a student fighting for social justice and working to end student homelessness.
Dr. Hart epitomizes what it means to be a social scientist: through his work as a city planner, filmmaker, lecturer, and activist, Dr. Hart has had a successful career of transforming the human experience and inspiring leaders.
Wisdom Henry is a junior in the Michigan State University College of Social Science, majoring in both Urban and Regional Planning and History. A member of the Social Science Scholars Program as well as the Honors College, Wisdom is a dedicated student in the classroom and a committed activist outside of it.
Dr. Joe Darden has been a beloved and integral member of MSU's faculty for over 40 years. A professor in the Department of Geography, Environment and Spatial Sciences, Dr. Darden has authored 8 books, won countless awards and earned international recognition for his work as a geographer.
A multi-institutional team of researchers, including Michigan State University social scientists, has been granted over $800,000 from the National Science Foundation to study "epistemic exclusion." This type of exclusion results from policies and practices within American institutions of higher education that make minority faculty members in STEM fields feel they are unsupported and their research is undervalued.
Michigan State University senior Jasmine Jordan, an Honors College Political Science senior who grew up in Detroit, has been named as a Gates-Cambridge Scholar.
Michigan State University President Samuel L. Stanley Jr., M.D., has selected Marlon Lynch to serve as the sixth chief of the MSU Police Department. Based on his vast experience and expertise, Lynch will also hold the title of vice president for public safety.
MSU Sociology Professor Hui (Cathy) Liu, Anthropology PhD student Anna Christina Martínez-Hume, and Psychology undergraduate Jacqui Adams were all among the 2021 Awardees announced this week by the Center for Gender in Global Context Director Dr. Stephanie Nawyn.
Hundreds of general education students embarked on integrative undergraduate research that resulted in student-produced short documentary films that were highlighted in an innovative student film festival during December 2020. Talking with Dr. Eddie Boucher, educator and Assistant Professor in the Center for Integrative Studies and Social Science (ISS), and Faculty Fellow in the Hub for Innovation and Learning Technology (Hub), it is clear that the excitement and ingenuity in the course was both educator and student driven. The course took a quick turn to a remote learning environment due to the pandemic, which led to a dynamic student film festival.
Dr. Levin is an assistant professor of Middle Eastern Studies at Emory University and is a graduate of MSU’s Asian Studies and Peace and Justice Studies Programs. Dr. Levin conducts research on the relationship between American Jews and Israel following the 1948 war.
Reid Ellefson-Frank is an MSU College of Social Science student majoring in Anthropology, whose recent work on tourism at Auschwitz, and Auschwitz’s archaeological environment earned the regard of his professors.
As a scholar of Holocaust memory in the United States, Dr. Fermaglich, a MSU History Professor, exemplifies efforts to remember the impact of the Holocaust on today’s world.
On January 20, 2021, Kamala Harris will be sworn into office as Vice President of the United States of America, alongside President Joe Biden. As both the first woman and the first person of color to assume the office, Harris's win is being celebrated as a major victory for underrepresented minority groups across the country. But why is this win so significant, and how will future historians recount the legacy of the 2020 election?
On January 6th, 2021, a riot erupted at the United States Capitol which resulted in Pro-Trump and Anti-Government activists storming the Capitol during a joint session of Congress to certify the Electoral College vote count. We spoke with Dr. David Carter (Professor in the School of Criminal Justice and an expert in Law Enforcement Intelligence and Violent Crime Control) to try to understand what happened, what went wrong, and what can be learned from a Law Enforcement perspective.
In the following interview, Michigan State's Jae Puckett, an assistant professor in the Department of Psychology's clinical science program, discusses how best to recognize and respect transgender identities. Puckett's research interests include working with the LGBTQ community and the experiences of transgender individuals. They are also the director of Trans-ilience, the transgender stress and resilience research team at MSU.