Hayward appointed Dean’s Fellow for Policies
https://artsci.wustl.edu/ampersand/hayward-appointed-deans-fellow-policies
Hayward appointed Dean’s Fellow for Policies Read More »
https://artsci.wustl.edu/ampersand/hayward-appointed-deans-fellow-policies
Hayward appointed Dean’s Fellow for Policies Read More »
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/2158379X.2021.1991697
Power in Modernity Read More »
TheHill.com. March 2020
Michael Bloomberg Is Not Our Savior Read More »
Interview with Sarah Penske, St. Louis On the Air, St. Louis Public Radio, June 10, 202
How Disruption and Discomfort Drive Political Change Read More »
Abstract: This article challenges a common understanding of the role that political disruption plays in promoting large-scale change. It argues that the most basic political work disruption performs is not to win public sympathy but instead to interrupt privileged people’s motivated ignorance. Drawing on examples from the Civil Rights and Black Lives Matter Movements, it
Disruption: What Is It Good For? Read More »
The American Political Science Association is delighted to announce a new editorial team to lead the American Political Science Review (APSR), starting June 1, 2020. The APSA Council selected a team co-led by twelve distinguished political scientists. APSA Announces the New Editorial Team for the American Political Science Review
The St. Louis American. April 2019
Close the Workhouse Campaign Gains Momentum Read More »
Review of Tommie Shelby’s Dark Ghettos. Political Theory. 2019
Political Agency In The Face Of Structural Injustice: Is ‘Impure Dissent’ Enough? Read More »
The Common Reader. July, 2018In the spring of 1968, Larman and Geraldine Williams were among the first black homebuyers in Ferguson, Missouri. Larman Williams, a public school principal, worked in the Wellston district, one of just two school districts in St. Louis County with a majority black population. A few years back, the Williams family had
Like Any Other Citizen Would Want: American Residential Segregation Since 1968 Read More »
Abstract: This article engages Rainer Forst’s account of structural power, as elaborated in Normativity and Power: Analyzing Social Orders of Justification. Its central claim is that structural power works, not only through what Forst calls ‘justificatory narratives’, but also through institutionalized and objectified social norms. When norms are institutionalized, they define incentive structures, which people internalize
On Structural Power Read More »