March 28, 2022

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In his Cutting-Edge Leadership column for Psychology Today, Prof. Ronald E. Riggio explained why punitive leaders are destined to fail. “Effective leaders use positive reinforcement to motivate followers,” he said. “Offering rewards for good and productive behavior is a much better strategy. It focuses on what team members are doing right, and encourages that, rather than focusing on stopping what they are doing wrong.”

March 25, 2022

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Prof. George Thomas reviewed Noah Feldman’s “The Broken Constitution,” a book about how President Abraham Lincoln remade the U.S. Constitution.

March 23, 2022

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In an op-ed for The Japan Times, Prof. Minxin Pei warned that the war in Ukraine could trigger a nuclear arms race in Asia. “By bolstering the case for more nuclear weapons in Asia, Putin’s war in Ukraine could decimate what little is left of the region’s strategic stability,” he said. “This not only poses an existential threat to Asia; it would also deliver yet another blow to the global nonproliferation regime, making it even harder to prevent the spread of such weapons in other regions.”

March 22, 2022

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A Washington Examiner piece about Biden’s attempts to move past the pandemic quoted Prof. Jack Pitney: “Most Americans are sick of restrictions and want the pandemic to be over,” he said. “Sounding the alarm bell might trigger resentment instead of watchfulness.”

March 21, 2022

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Prof. Ronald Riggio was quoted in a Swaddler piece about why we believe people in power when they lie. Speaking broadly about lying, he said, “It’s the politics of audacity. The more outrageous and audacious the lie is, the more people say ‘that’s got to be true because why would someone make something like that up?’”

March 21, 2022

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In an opinion piece for Bloomberg, Prof. Minxin Pei wrote: “Any hopes that U.S. President Joe Biden might persuade his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping to help stop the war in Ukraine should probably be put aside. … With no good options, China’s only coping strategy for now is to do what it can to help Russia without crossing U.S. red lines.”

March 20, 2022

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The Washington Post quoted Prof. Frederick Lynch on the benefits of higher education. “...education has provided upward mobility...and many benefits outside of work, such as critical thinking, civic engagement, healthy behavior and so on,” he said.

March 15, 2022

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Prof. Andrew Busch wrote a commentary about mail voting and election legitimacy for RealClear Politics. Co-author of Divided We Stand: The 2020 Elections and American Politics, Busch wrote that the proportion of ballots cast by mail nearly doubled from 2016 to 2020, a development that contributed to undermining confidence in results. He outlines two problems—inadequate ballot security and delayed vote totals—and ways of mitigating future concerns.