Megan Mikhail, a graduate student in the Department of Psychology, was awarded the 2022 College of Social Science Graduate Student Researcher Award for her research on eating disorders and disadvantaged populations.
A total of nine College of Social Science students graduating this fall were recognized by the Michigan State University Board of Trustees this week for their scholastic achievements.
Why is it that we often overeat during the holidays? How can some people always seem to make room for an extra slice of pie? Psychology professor Dr. Alex Johnson and his team of researchers know just how complex the answers are to those questions. From genetics to chemicals to environmental cues, there are a lot of factors that make a difference in why and how people eat.
Over 5,000 graduates, including students from the College of Social Science, gathered at the Breslin Center on December 16 and 17 for Michigan State University’s fall semester commencement ceremonies. The celebrations included the handing out of an honorary degree in social science to Spartan alumna Marta Tienda.
MSU Psychology faculty, S. Alexandra Burt, has been selected as the inaugural SSC Diamond Distinguished Professor in College of Social Science. The College of Social Science established the Diamond Professorships this year in honor of its 60th anniversary, traditionally referred to as the diamond anniversary. In total, there will be eight SCC Diamond Distinguished Professorships awarded through the year 2036. The recognition is intended to assist MSU in the retention of outstanding faculty who are widely recognized for their inclusive excellence in teaching, research, and service, and who have demonstrated scholarly impact.
During the annual Midwest Archaeological Conference (MAC), Dr. Jodie O’Gorman, MSU Department of Anthropology professor, received the Distinguished Career Award that recognizes archaeologists who have demonstrated excellence and contributed significantly and regularly to the advancement of Midwestern archaeology.
A team of researchers from the MSU School of Criminal Justice are working to better understand the Incel Community in their own words. The term “Incel” stands for an “Involuntary Celibate” and the Incel Community exists almost entirely online, made up of individuals (mostly identifying as young men) who struggle to acquire romantic and sexual relationships.
Ajin Lee, Ph.D., assistant professor in the MSU Department of Economics, researches the determinants of health and well-being in addition to the government policies that target populations who are underserved, especially in a country that spends so much on health care.
Jeremy Wilson (Professor in the School of Criminal Justice) and his team of researchers are set to address the national police staffing crisis by developing data-driven lessons for administrators and lawmakers.
Under a new, nearly $1 million grant from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), researchers at the Center for Global Change and Earth Observations (CGCEO) at Michigan State University will be investigating how a mix of geopolitical events and policies have altered agricultural land use patterns and the adoption of innovative farming practices in Romania.
The Blue Cross Blue Shield of Michigan (BCBSM) Foundation recently awarded social work faculty member Deirdre Shires a grant to examine how prepared health centers are to serve LGBTQ patients. The research project, a collaboration with the Michigan Primary Care Association, is titled “LGBTQ-Affirming Primary Care at Michigan Community Health Centers”. The goal of the study is to assess current healthcare practices and how they can be improved to better serve and support the LGBTQ community.
A new study by Dr. Yijie Wang suggests that children grow up with more positive feelings and pride around their racial or ethnic heritage when their parents talk about their heritage. Dr. Wang is an associate professor in the MSU Department of Human Development and Family Studies in the College of Social Science.
December 1 is World AIDS Day. Miller has devoted the past 37 years of her career to studying community-led responses to the HIV epidemic, working closely with communities of gay and bisexual men worldwide to bring an end to AIDS.
Former Defense Secretary Leon Panetta shared stories from his four decades of public service as a soldier, Congressman, budget officer, intelligence head and leader of the armed forces at this year’s Gov. Jim Blanchard Public Service Forum hosted by the College of Social Science.
Dr. Bodea, along with research partner Dr. Andrew Kerner, found that Americans are less likely to trust statements from the Federal Reserve about interest rates when a U.S. central bank official portrayed as a woman delivers the information as opposed to a man.
According to a 2019 American Psychological Association report, Black men are underrepresented in the field of Psychology. The report indicates only 4.53% of the U.S. psychology workforce is Black or African American and only 30% of all psychologists are male. The same APA report shows that these statistics have stayed consistent over the last decade. When Kenan Sayers, a first-year MSU psychology graduate student in the Clinical Science area, heard about this as a high schooler, he knew immediately that he was going to become a psychologist.
MSU Sociology Assistant Professor Jennifer Carrera has been given the Distinguished Partnership Award for Community-Engaged Research from MSU’s Outreach & Engagement.
Social scientists and communications experts joined engineers to engage rural communities that are off-grid in the Amazon rainforest to find better ways to deliver electricity.
The College of Agriculture and Natural Resources announced that Dr. Sarah Prior is the new program director of the Bailey Scholars. The Liberty Hyde Bailey Scholars Program (BSP) is an integrated learning and leadership community at Michigan State University (MSU). It was established to foster a diverse learning community where students grow with and from one another while practicing self-directed learning. The program is guided by a series of program principles focused on individual scholars, a collaborative learning community, and forward-focused radical influence.
Recently, Jackson Intermediate School District had to close all public schools in Jackson and Hillsdale counties for multiple days due to a cyberattack. Hackers utilized ransomware to gain control over the School District’s technological infrastructure. We sat down with Dr. Tom Holt, a cybercrime expert and Professor in the School of Criminal Justice, to discuss the recent attacks and how to prevent these types of events going forth.
With new funding secured through a nearly $800,000 grant from the NASA Land Cover/Land Use Change (LCLUC) program, researchers from Michigan State University will be working to assess aquaculture in Bangladesh, India, Myanmar, and Thailand. Using satellite imagery and survey information, Drs. Lin Yan, Ben Belton, and David Roy will analyze how the industry is driving land cover and land use change in aquaculture hot spots.
Macken Keefe, an Honors College senior majoring in political science and global and international studies in social science, has been selected for the nationally competitive George J. Mitchell Scholarship.
Three professors from the College of Social Science were named to this year's Highly Cited Researchers List compiled by Clarivate Analytics.
Student interns of the Center for Anti-Counterfeiting and Product Protection (A-CAPP) returned from the 2022 Bring Down Counterfeiting Public Policy Hackathon with awards for their research and innovation in global anti-counterfeiting solutions.
A commonly overlooked group of students at any university are those who were raised without a home to call their own. Individuals who grew up homeless, in the foster system, or through kinship care or a guardianship often lack the tools and resources that other incoming college students possess. They may not have a support person on their side to help them navigate the transition into higher education, supplies for classes and life on campus, or a basic roadmap for how to handle personal finances and the stress of daily life.
Geography alum, and supporter, Tim Caywood is committed to keeping Harm’s legacy alive. Tim wants to support Harm's initiative to provide opportunities for students to make a difference. Join him in supporting the de Blij Scholars to "make it easier for bright young minds to discover a path in Geography". Tim will generously match the first $5,000 in gifts to the de Blij Scholars every dollar donated up to $5,000.
The MSU Department of Economics welcomes Professor Enrique Seira to their faculty as the new Frederick S. Addy Distinguished Chair of Economics. He joined the department for the 2022-2023 academic year to teach development economics and research in the field of development.
Dr. Ana Bracic, Assistant Professor, has published a new article in the journal Science that highlights the dangers of increasing exclusion of minority populations through the use of artificial intelligence in medicine.
Macken Keefe is a finalist for the Mitchell Scholarship. He is an Honors College senior majoring in political science and global and international studies in social science, with minors in peace and justice studies, and law, justice and public policy.
In September, the MSU Department of Anthropology offered their four-day, Human Remains Excavation Course for Michigan State Police officers and laboratory personnel.
It’s a phrase heard often this time of year: “Your vote matters.” But the words ring true, and now more than ever we are seeing the emergence of an increasingly diverse pool of political candidates, because for some, voting isn’t enough. There is an impassioned rise in the number of minority candidates throwing their hats into the political ring. these individuals are stepping up to fight and push for legislation as a voice for those who may not have one.
The Fall 2022 Provost’s Undergraduate Research Initiative (PURI) grant recipients were announced this week, with a total of 51 undergraduate students from across the College of Social Science being awarded funding toward faculty-assisted research during the 2022-23 school year.
Drs. Sarah Prior and Jennifer Carrera have been awarded funding through Michigan State University’s Institutional Diversity and Inclusion’s Creating Inclusive Grants program toward the development of a new project centered around the improvement of diversity, equity and inclusion in the campus community.
Psychology professor Lily Yan, Ph.D., and her team of researchers are researching with grass rats to understand how light modulates brain functions and behavior. African grass rats are diurnal rodents, so they have similar sleep patterns to humans of sleeping at night and being awake during the day. This allows for much more accurate comparisons between grass rats and humans over the typical lab mice who are not diurnal.
Former Defense Secretary and CIA Director, Leon Panetta will be former Governor Jim Blanchard’s special guest at his upcoming MSU Public Service Forum on November 29, 2022. Panetta, who also served as a member of Congress from California and US Budget Director and Chief of Staff for President Bill Clinton, will attend the evening, conversational style forum at the Wharton Center at 7:30 pm on the East Lansing campus.
The month of October marks the 28th celebration of LGBTQ+ History Month, an important time of reflection on the achievements of the LGBTQ+ community as well as a reminder of the continued fight for rights that this group faces.
Nearly 200 members of the College of Social Science Community gathered on October 26th at Kellogg Center for a day-long planning retreat to discuss goals, objectives and priorities to inform the College’s Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Strategic Plan. Faculty, academic staff, support staff, graduate students and undergraduate students, serving as delegates representing each of the over 20 College’s units and academic programs, engaged in a host of activities facilitated by Strategic Diversity Initiatives (SDI).
Mental health has been a national concern for many Americans during COVID-19, but little research has been done to determine what factors have influenced mental health and how they compare across countries. New research from Michigan State University sampled five countries— the United States, Italy, Spain, Saudi Arabia, and India—and looked at what factors affected suicidal ideation risk during COVID-19 lockdown.
In early October, a class of Organizational Psychology students pitched ideas to the Michigan State Police to better recruit and retain women and ethnic minorities as Michigan State Troopers. Their task was to persuade a panel within five minutes that their idea was the most useful and innovative.
Danielle King has received the American Psychological Association (APA) Achievement Award for Early Career Psychologists. Dr. King, who earned a doctorate in organizational psychology at MSU, is an assistant professor at Rice University and studies resilience and identity.
The Michigan State University Campus Archaeology Program is hosting the 8th annual “Apparitions and 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 from 7–9 p.m, Thursday, Oct. 27. The public can begin at any of the five stops along the tour.
In partnership with Matrix, Walter Hawthorne, Michigan State University History Professor, has received a $235,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities for a project titled “Enslaved.org Summer Faculty Institute: Data-Informed Methods in Slavery Studies.”
The College of Social Science is well represented on this year’s Homecoming Court. A total of five students across nine different majors and eight minors are members of the 2022 MSU Homecoming Court, rounding out an impressive group of 12 students. These students are an excellent example of the diversity within the College and the many ways that being a Social Scientist can have a larger impact on the University and in the community as a whole.
Dr. Jae Puckett (they/them; Michigan State University Department of Psychology), along with Drs. Em Matsuno (they/them; Arizona State University) and Paz Galupo (she/they; Towson University) have been awarded a $2.2 million dollar grant from the National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities. This grant will help fund the team’s research on experiences of resilience in transgender communities.
Over the summer, Michigan State University researchers published in Frontiers in Psychology, a developmental psychology journal, about parental behaviors that positively affect their children’s mental health. Dr. Holly Brophy-Herb, professor from the MSU Department of Human and Development Studies (HDFS), was the lead author and is collaborating with a rich, multi-university team who are working on a series of papers focused on mind-mindedness.
For 18 years, Procter & Gamble (P&G) has invited organizational psychology graduate students to a weeklong challenge to address problems they face as a business. Michigan State University psychology graduate student, Nathan Baker, will be taking part this year.
“Although asexuals don’t have the desire for sexual relationships, they nevertheless form romantic relationships and those connections look at least somewhat similar to non-asexuals’ romantic relationships,” said William Chopik, associate professor in MSU’s psychology department and coauthor of the study.
A new season of Minority Politics Online Seminar Series (MPOSS) kicks off on September 27th with a talk by Justin Zimmerman on “Race, Class, and Distrust.” This series, hosted by Drs. Ana Bracic and Nazita Lajevardi from the Department of Political Science, and Dr. Mark J. Brandt from the Department of Psychology, uniquely focuses on how politics affect and is affected by marginalized people who have less power and are often excluded from the system.
Raf Newaz and Keerat Handa, two economics undergraduates, had the opportunity to intern in Flint over the summer through the Office of Experiential Learning and MSU’s Flint Internship Program. The two spent the summer working with the Downtown Development Authority and The Flint & Genesee Group, two organizations deeply involved in the city’s economic development.
Anxiety disorders are the most common mental illness in the United States, affecting adults and children. Research, support services, and intervention options are in place for many struggling people, but young kids are often left out. Psychology professor Jason Moser, Ph.D., and his team are working to fill this research gap and explore ways to help kids through this early developmental stage.
MSU Anthropology professors Gabe Wrobel, PhD, and Joe Hefner, PhD, recently published their collaborative research findings on ancient populations from Central Belize in the Journal of Archaeological Sciences: Reports. Their article, “Exploring Maya population history of Central Belize from Late Preclassic to Late/Terminal Classic,” focuses on an expansive moment in history that saw a rise in population and construction in this region of connected river valleys.
Drs. Heather McCauley & Joanne Smith-Darden, in the Michigan State University School of Social Work, within the College of Social Science, have been awarded a two-year, $900,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. This project will expand implementation and evaluation of the trauma-informed program, Drama Club, at Rikers Island in New York City.
Carrie Nielsen is entering her fourth year pursuing a BA in economics and a BS in sociology. She came to MSU with a declared major in sociology, but after taking a course in social inequality as part of the Social Science Scholars Program, she realized that understanding economics was a prerequisite for addressing and dismantling many of the injustices in our society.
September is National Suicide Prevention month and Corbin Standley, an ecological-community psychology Ph.D. candidate, is uniquely equipped to share his story. Standley focuses on public health and community-level approaches to suicide prevention. He serves as a national director at the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. And he has his own story of loss by suicide.
Combining service learning and internship experiences, students live in the City of Flint and work on their projects, learning more about the nonprofit sector and social, political and economic priorities of urban settings in the process. The program is co-instructed by Senior Associate Dean for Research and Strategic Initiatives, Dr. Anna Maria Santiago and Program Coordinator, community leader and Flint resident Monica Villarreal.
Passionate about the intersection of people, animals, environment and activism, Kelsey Merreck Wagner is a Ph.D. candidate in the MSU Anthropology program and is also an artist. Since the pandemic, she has been weaving community trash into tapestries and preparing for her dissertation research trip to Thailand in October.
As academic leaders at Michigan State University, we write to reaffirm our commitment to the University’s values and to applying and upholding the University’s policies and procedures. We must ensure that our campus is a safe learning and working environment and a vibrant place of discovery for our students, staff, and faculty.
The College of Social Science congratulates psychology alumna Jennifer Lawlor on receiving the Ten Outstanding Young Americans Award by JCI USA. Dr. Lawlor, who earned a doctorate in ecological-community psychology, works to help communities understand, share information, and move to action on complex social issues.
Over the last few years, the pandemic has forced most of us to stay home in our own neighborhoods. New research from Michigan State University found that for some groups of people, spending time in their neighborhoods is no block party.
On the political spectrum, Americans are becoming more politically extreme, more hostile toward opposing views, and more politically engaged than ever before, documented by a new study from MSU Economics Professor Hanzhe Zhang and University of Oregon Economics Professor Jiabin Wu.
The Institute for Public Policy and Social Research (IPPSR) is pleased to announce that seven team faculty research proposals have been selected to receive funding through the Michigan Applied Public Policy Research (MAPPR) grant program. IPPSR is housed in the College of Social Science at Michigan State University. The grants of up to $30,000 are designed to link the work of MSU faculty teams to current state policy discussions and influence future public policy.
This year, 19 students participated in the study abroad program, the largest class since the program started in 2005. During their time in London, students learned about the government’s role in the economy and the economics of health care, and they receive credit for EC 335, Taxes, Government Spending and Public Policy; and EC 498, Economics of Health Care.
Carole Gibbs and Jennifer Cobbina of the College of Social Science’s School of Criminal Justice, along with Psychology research associate Sean Hankins, are in the midst of conducting an ongoing research project with adolescents in the Lansing community.
We hope you will join us this school year in celebrating the 60th anniversary of the Michigan State University College of Social Science!
Annually, Michigan State University recognizes outstanding alumni with its Alumni Grand Awards. This year, the College of Social Science has two of our own that will be recognized with the Distinguished Alumni Award this fall. Harold Henderson (1972) and Theda Skocpol (1969) both will receive the award as a demonstration of their outstanding professional accomplishments in their respective fields.
“This experience is wonderful,” Hui-ying Hung, a professor from Chang Gung University. “Our alumni who finished this program have had a very good experience. Many of them apply for graduate study in Taiwan and some of them go to different countries to do their careers. This program really brings a lot to our students and my department appreciates this program.”
MSU Psychology Professor Robin Lin Miller got a front-seat view this week of the discrepancies in the way different countries are approaching the international monkeypox outbreak.
The College of Social Science congratulates alumna Sian Leah Beilock, on her recent election as the 19th President of Dartmouth College. Dr. Beilock, who earned doctorates in both kinesiology and psychology from Michigan State University, is the first woman elected to the position in Dartmouth’s more than 250-year history.
Each year, Mid-Michigan Symposium for Undergraduate Research Experiences (Mid-SURE) affords undergraduate students from across multiple academic disciplines the opportunity to share their research with both the University and the community at large.
A new study co-authored by Michigan State University economics professor Scott Imberman, PhD., and doctoral student Wenjia Cao, found that university vaccine mandates were effective in reducing new COVID-19 cases in communities.
The Transgender Research Award highlights and honors research that makes a notable contribution to this goal of understanding, health and well-being of transgender people and gender diversity in society. Dr. Puckett earned the recognition based on their most recent research area surrounding minority stress in transgender and gender diverse communities.
Megan Maas, PhD., assistant professor in the MSU Department of Human Development and Family Studies, recently published, “Popular Culture and Pornography Education to Improve the Efficacy of Secondary School Staff Response to Student Sexual Harassment,” in the American Journal of Sexuality Education.
Disability Network Southwest Michigan President and CEO Yvonne Fleener has been at the forefront of disability awareness, advocacy and acceptance her entire life.
Nora Curley is a senior at MSU studying Criminal Justice and Interdisciplinary Studies in Social Science. She is a member of the MSU Tower Guard, an on-campus organization serving the Resource Center for Persons with Disabilities (RCPD) in its mission to create a more inclusive environment at Michigan State.
Dr. Todd Elder is an MSU Foundation Professor and Director of Graduate Studies in the MSU Department of Economics, whose research aims to identify the factors both internal and external that can lead to children being diagnosed with a disability.
PhD Students from Sociology, Chicano/Latino Studies and the College of Social Science have been awarded fellowship grants from MSU’s Center for Gender in Global Context.
Dr. Seven Mattes, assistant professor at the Center for Integrative Studies in the College of Social Science, has been accepted into the Adams Academy Fellowship for the upcoming academic year.
The MSU Department of Economics has recently announced that economics assistant professor Benjamin Bushong, PhD., will receive the first Marilyn Addy Teacher Scholar Award. This award was created to honor those faculty who exhibit excellence both in undergraduate teaching and research. With this award, Dr. Bushong will receive the support of a quarter-time department research assistant in addition to a research stipend for the next two years.
We, in the MSU College of Social Science, firmly believe that reproductive rights - the ability to decide whether and when to have children - is a basic human right across the globe. Today’s decision by the Supreme Court to strike down Roe v. Wade not only erases this right for women and other marginalized bodies, but also threatens their health, access to healthcare, safety, and well-being.
MSU Social Work PhD student Lucas Prieto (he/him) has won the inaugural Graduate Student Research Award presented by the Consortium on Sexual and Gender Minority (SGM) Health.
Michigan State University researchers are studying the experiences of sexual and gender minority (SGM) communities within the healthcare system, as more and more people identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender.
Larry Thompson, an MSU Sociology alumnus, was the former U.S. Deputy Attorney General during part of the George W. Bush administration (2001-2003), the second highest ranking position in the U.S. Department of Justice. An experienced leader in the private and public sectors, Mr. Thompson continues to thrive in his law career.
A'Lexus Hunt is a recent MSU graduate, who majored in Interdisciplinary Studies. A'Lexus was a member of the Black Student Alliance at MSU.
Dr. Kaston Anderson-Carpenter is an MSU assistant professor of Psychology, whose research aims to understand the social determinants that contribute to inequity in sexual minority communities, and the processes that facilitate positive change.
Dr. Brandy Ellison, an assistant professor in the Department of Integrative Studies in Social Science, has been nominated as a 2022-2023 faculty fellow with the College of Agriculture and Natural Resources Bailey Scholars Program. The Bailey Scholars Program provides a flexible, customizable educational experience for students, allowing them to create courses and opportunities to study topics important to them and their academic and professional goals. Student participants in the program earn a minor in Leadership in Integrated Learning.
MSU’s research center, Matrix: Center for Digital Humanities and Social Sciences was instrumental in helping to design and implement the KnowWhereGraph, the world’s second largest knowledge graph that makes decision making and data analytics substantially more effective, accessible, and affordable.
Mr. Anthony Knapp is an MSU Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences alum, is a statistician and demographer, who has worked on migration patterns amongst Asian Americans.
Chloe Majzel graduated this spring with bachelor's degrees in Economics from the College of Social Science, and International Relations in the James Madison College with minors in Asian Pacific studies and Chinese. A member of Asian Pacific American Student Organization (APASO), she was the organization’s past president.
Dr. Andrea Louie professor of MSU Anthropology and founding director of the Asian Pacific American Studies Program at MSU is a leading scholar on the constructions of Chineseness in the U.S.
Ever wondered whether the electoral districts in your state are fair, or whether they favor one party at the expense of others? Michigan State University Professor Jon X. Eguia posed that question too and today released a newly built tool to help journalists, policy advocates, candidates, campaigns and citizens ask – and answer – the same question. Eguia’s newly released Partisan Advantage Tracker, developed with MSU’s Institute for Public Policy and Social Research, is a user-friendly way to measure partisan fairness in elections to the U.S. House of Representatives.
Alumnus Frederick S. Addy made a tremendous impact on MSU—and was fortunate enough to have been able to watch his philanthropy take root and blossom, many times over, to the benefit of students and faculty in the Broad College of Business and the College of Social Science.
Michigan State University economist and professor Lisa D. Cook today was confirmed by Senate Banking Committee to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Cook is the first Black women to serve on the on board in its 108-year history.
Social science student and soon-to-be graduate Wisdom Henry has won the 2022 Richard Lee Featherstone Endowed Prize. The prize is awarded to MSU's most outstanding graduate based on criteria such as openness, curiosity, creativity, intellectualism, character and leadership - all of which Wisdom exemplifies through her work as a student, researcher and activist.
Navigating college as a first generation student can be a difficult experience. Finding research opportunities can seem doubly as daunting, but through the Michigan State University College of Social Science, funding and support exists to make the process manageable.
Political Science senior Danielle McClain hopes to encourage and motivate students to celebrate their journey to graduation as the 2022 University Convocation Speaker.
It's well known that when doing the same job, women are on average paid less than men - and for women of color, this gap is even more pronounced. So, how can women advocate for ourselves and each other when it comes to negotiating pay?
Psychology student Sam Barans, Psychology senior Jenny Vu and Psychology junior Belle Hoke have been announced as the 2021 winners of the College of Social Science Achievement Gala.
Dr. Carla A. Pfeffer is an associate professor within the MSU School of Social Work, the director of the Consortium for Sexual and Gender Minority (SGM) Health, and affiliate faculty in the Department of Sociology and Center for Gender in Global Context. Dr. Pfeffer's research centers on the health and wellness of marginalized people - including members of the LGBTQIA+ community.
Master of Social Work student Sterling Bentley came to MSU to learn, not to teach. Not an unusual position for most graduate students, but for Bentley, this was as much about what happens outside the classroom as in it. For most of his adult life, Bentley, a queer trans man, has had to inform everyone around him about his identity, his orientation, and his passion for advocacy.
For graduating seniors, the end of the Spring semester can bring so many emotions: from excitement, joy and pride to uncertainty and anxiety about the future. This is why Lilli Meng, a Political Science senior at Michigan State University, is focusing the speech she will give at the College of Social Science Undergraduate Commencement Ceremony on the hard work and tenacity that has carried her and her peers this far.
On April 13, 2022 in the Union Ballroom, undergraduate researchers, faculty and supporters gathered to celebrate the University Undergraduate Research and Arts Forum (UURAF)
Ms. Ikram Adawe a MSU School of Social Work alumna and Arabic-fluent therapist who works with Arab American communities as well as refugee and immigrant populations in the Greater Lansing Area, providing them with trauma informed care.
Tamara Siblani is an third year MSU student who is majoring in Psychology and minoring in leadership of organizations. She is also treasurer of MSU Arab Cultural Society, which works to advance the customs and culture of Michigan State’s Arab students.
This month we celebrate our Dean’s Research Associate, Dr. Rebecca Karam. Dr. Karam’s research focuses on the making of Arab American communities and the racialization of Muslim Americans.
MSU’s renowned research center, Matrix: Center for Digital Humanities and Social Sciences was awarded a grant from The National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). The $346,206 grant is for The Quilt Index, a project that consists of thousands of images, stories and knowledge of quilts and their origins from across the world.
24 students in the College of Social Science were among a record breaking 179 MSU students that have achieved a perfect 4.0 GPA for their entire MSU academic careers. The students were recognized by the MSU Board of Trustees during their April 22 meeting with the Trustees' Award for Academic Excellence.
After almost 40 years of service, the College of Social Science is honored to celebrate the retirement of Dr. Charley Ballard - one of the most gifted teachers and devoted scholars to grace Michigan State University's campus.
Research in LGBTQ+ health is becoming an increasingly necessary field to identify and eliminate barriers to access of mental and physical healthcare for people of all ages. New research is also changing norms across the healthcare world, challenging long-held assumptions and recognizing the unique healthcare needs of the LGBTQ+ community. That’s why researchers at MSU, within the College of Social Science, are studying the experiences of sexual and gender minority (SGM) communities within the healthcare system.
What does it mean to be an American, how is this identity shaped and how does our identity inform our social relationships? These are all questions that graduate student Kelsey Osborne-Garth sought to answer during her time at Michigan State University through the MSU Summer Research Opportunities Program (SROP).
“Rarely is there another person in any meeting room that I’m in that has the background that I have,” Michigan State University alumnus Jeffrey Bennish laughed good-naturedly. Bennish is the Vice President of QuVA Pharma Inc., a 503B pharmacy drug manufacturer, who graduated with a degree in anthropology.
This year, the Michigan State University College of Social Science is thrilled to announce the four accomplished academics joining the Dean's Research Associate Program (DRAP) as a part of the program's third cohort of postdoctoral scholars.
In Madeleine Albright, we have lost a fabulous diplomat, a public servant, a gifted author and a great American success story. Born in Czechoslovakia, surviving the World War II bombing in London and coming to America, she rose to the highest diplomatic positions in our country.
Dr. Theda Skocpol, an MSU Sociology alumna. is the Victor S. Thomas Professor of Government and Sociology at Harvard University, and is a world-renowned author. She has dedicated her life to equity, social justice education and activism.
Alexis Hampton is a fourth-year MSU undergraduate majoring in Public Policy. As the vice president of the Women’s Council, she advocates for all women-identifying students on campus.
Dr. Deborah Johnson is an MSU Human Development and Family Studies Professor and MSU Foundation Professor. Her research on racial and cultural development and coping skills of children in diverse settings, and her leadership and support of diversity scholars, embodies the mission of our College to advance women and build a more just world.
Following a rigorous review process, Nwando Achebe, the Jack and Margaret Sweet Endowed Professor of History, and associate dean for diversity, equity, and inclusion for the College of Social Science at Michigan State University, has been named one of 46 American Council on Education Fellows for academic year 2022-23.
Michigan State University’s ANDIE LAB (Accountability, Non-Discrimination, Inclusion in Employment) will host the Leadership Accountability in Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Conference April 7 & 8 beginning at Noon EST. Speakers at the conference will offer guidance, challenge traditional DEI practices, and offer future research suggestions on how people can hold their leaders accountable to truly promote and support DEI within organizations.
Over the last two decades, almost 1,000 hydropower dams have been built around the globe. And while these dams provide many benefits to farmers, wildlife and the climate, the costs of their construction on local communities where they are built has largely been left out of the conversation - that is, until now.
MSU Provost Teresa K. Woodruff, Ph.D. is recommending Pero G. Dagbovie as the associate provost for graduate and postdoctoral studies and dean of the Graduate School. The appointment will be effective April 22, pending approval by the Board of Trustees Prior to Board approval, he will serve as associate provost for graduate and postdoctoral studies and dean of the Graduate School Designate, beginning on April 11.
On Thursday, February 24 at 3 p.m., Dr. John Waller was seated in Berkey Hall room 307, listening intently to a group of Social Science Scholars as they presented their latest research - until class was interrupted by a surprise visit from Michigan State University President Samuel L. Stanley.
For many students, learning remotely has many benefits, especially in the midst of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic: it allows for less traveling, less risk of exposure, and more opportunities to wear sweatpants all day. But there is a significant downside as well: loneliness and feelings of isolation, especially from peers.
When history unfolds itself in real-time, keeping up with current events can be extremely challenging - and the invasion of Ukraine by Russian forces is no exception.
Faron Paramore. a graduate of the MSU School of Criminal Justice, is the 22nd Deputy Director of the United States Secret Service. Paramore oversees the agency's daily investigative and protective operations. He is trusted and respected for his integrity and ethics.
Jen Fry is a social-justice educator and Ph.D. student in the MSU Department of Geography, Environment, and Spatial Sciences. Her research focuses on sports geography, centering the racial experiences of professional Black volleyball players in Europe.
Dr. Jualynne Dodson, an MSU Sociology professor, is an award-winning scholar who has dedicated her career to studying the religion and culture of African descendant peoples in the Americas.
Through the National and International Fellowships and Scholarships Office, 10 Michigan State University undergraduate students have been nominated for 12 prestigious national awards. Administered by the Honors College, the office helps interested undergraduate and graduate students pursue major national and international awards by providing information and direct support throughout the competitive application processes.
When it comes to a potential romantic partner, there aren't many people who wouldn't consider a great sense of humor to be an extremely attractive quality. Why else would Pete Davidson be everyone's current celebrity crush?
A team of researchers from Michigan State University were commissioned by the Michigan State Police (MSP) to conduct an independent study analyzing data from traffic stops initiated by State Troopers in 2020. The research team consisted of Criminal Justice Associate Professor Dr. Scott Wolfe and two Criminal Justice Doctoral Students, Travis Carter and Jed Knode. Their findings concluded that racial and ethnic disparities were present and consistent across nearly all Michigan counties in the 2020 traffic stop data.
Deborah J. Johnson, Ph.D., a Human Development and Family Studies professor within the College of Social Science has been appointed as an MSU Foundation Professor.
For the second straight year, the College of Social Science’s online master’s program in criminal justice is ranked No. 5 in the nation. The program has consistently been in the top 10 since 2017. The program also maintained its No. 3 ranking for veterans.
Ms. Micaela Procopio graduated with a B.A. in History and a minor in Jewish Studies from MSU. She is a Holocaust educator who works to create dialogue around Holocaust history and combating antisemitism.
Jordan D. Robinson is a fourth-year MSU undergraduate majoring in Interdisciplinary Studies with a focus in Community Governance and Advocacy in the College of Social Science. He has minors in Jewish Studies, Leadership of Organizations, and Sociology. We are recognizing him for his leadership in Jewish student organizing and in combating antisemitism on MSU's campus.
Dr. Amy Simon is an Assistant Professor in MSU's History Department. Dr. Simon is a scholar of Holocaust Studies and European Jewish History. She exemplifies efforts to remember the impact of the Holocaust on today’s world.
Angela Hall Ph.D. has been named the next Faculty Excellence Advocate for the MSU College of Social Science. The Faculty Excellence Advocate (FEA) serves as a link between the Dean’s Office and the College’s Department/Schools to help implement diversity goals and evaluation criteria related to the recruitment, retention, promotion, and professional development of tenure-system faculty, fixed-term faculty, and academic staff.
Doctoral students Melissa Yzaguirre and Gia Casaburo in the College of Social Science launch the Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Graduate Certificate pilot program funded by Creating Inclusive Excellence Grants.
Michigan State University economist Lisa D. Cook has been elected to the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.
Each of us has something we are passionate about, as well as the capacity to create meaningful change as individuals - but when we connect with like-minded people who share our convictions and drive to make a difference, that's when the magic is amplified.
MSU College of Social Science Dean, Mary A. Finn, has appointed Amanda Guinot Talbot, PhD, as Director of the MSU Women’s Leadership Institute (WLI). Talbot has been serving as acting director since April 2021.
MSU’s Michigan Government Semester Program (MGSP), housed in the Department of Political Science, is about to kick off its tenth year with the most diverse class of students to date.
The saying goes, “with age comes wisdom,” but according to a recent study from Michigan State University, with age also comes an increase in one’s gratitude for the relationships, experiences and material things that we have.