BCAD faculty affiliate Eric Schickler was featured in the BBC

Eric Schickler was quoted in the BBC: Dianne Feinstein’s death could throw the race to replace her into chaos. A senate race featuring high-profile, ambitious Democrats is already underway to replace her in November 2024…A spokesman for Governor Gavin Newsom did not comment on a potential appointment. “It’s a decision he would rather not have to […]

BCAD faculty affiliate Cecilia Mo’s research about national service programs and political participation was featured in Science

Cecilia Mo was quoted in Science: Researchers had theorized that national service programs could improve dismally low voting participation rates among young adults. But the analysis of the TFA program, published today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), confirms and quantifies that positive relationship for the first time. The finding strikes a personal […]

BCAD faculty affiliate Desmond Jagmohan’s book chapter on Booker T. Washington was featured in Boston Review

In a recent essay discussing Booker T. Washington’s “ethics of ambivalence,” for example, political scientist Desmond Jagmohan argues that although “we value truthfulness and sincerity and condemn deceit,” “these moral judgments hold true in a community of social equals. . . . the Jim Crow South was far from being such a place.” Washington believed that aggressive protest of Jim Crow would likely fail because of the economic, political, and ideological entrenchment of white supremacy; this is why, according to Jagmohan, Washington sought a more accommodationist route to achieving his ends: “that way forward required the use of concealment and dishonesty, political necessities of the dispossessed and powerless.” While Washington explicitly preached accommodationist policies in public, he defended ambivalences about them in private correspondence

BCAD faculty affiliate Amy Lerman’s research about clean slate laws was featured in WIRED

“What our study shows,” study authors Alyssa Mooney, Alissa Skog, and Amy Lerman told me in an email exchange, “is that automating record clearance alone is not going to be sufficient to reduce racial disparities in who has a criminal record. … What will be needed to actually reduce the racial gap in criminal records is a policy change that extends record clearance eligibility to a wider range of cases. This isn’t a technology problem; it’s a political problem.”

BCAD faculty affiliate Paul Pierson co-authored an op-ed in The Atlantic about the politics of the Senate filibuster

The filibuster is in trouble. President Joe Biden has come out in favor of reforming it, and Democrats in the Senate are weighing alternatives. But the strongest sign that its days are numbered is that the Republican leader Mitch McConnell is threatening Armageddon if the other party touches it. No one presently—or perhaps ever—in the Senate has practiced the dark art of obstruction as relentlessly as the current minority leader.

BCAD faculty affiliate Sean Gailmard was featured in Mission Local

Sean Gailmard was quoted in Mission Local: The San Francisco general election on March 5 drew in a stunning amount of cash: Over $11 million raised on the various ballot measures and candidates, much of it by a clique of wealthy individuals. But how far did that money go to lure voters in the DCCC race?   The […]

BCAD director and faculty affiliate David Broockman’s research on the political behavior of economic elites was featured in The New York Times

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David Broockman was quoted in The New York Times: In 2017, David Broockman, Gregory Ferenstein and I conducted the first large-scale survey of the founders of technology companies. We found that they were heavily Democratic, with over 75 percent indicating that they supported Hillary Clinton in the 2016 election. Yet technology founders were unusual in […]

BCAD faculty Sarah Anzia pens Washington Post op-ed about the challenges of rising local pension costs

In late July, the House passed a bill that would shore up endangered pensions for millions of private-sector retirees and workers in trucking, mining and other blue collar industries, offering loans for insolvent employers so they could make good on their contractual promises. But underfunded state and local government pensions loom as an even bigger problem. Over the past few decades, policymakers from California to Wyoming have made public pension benefits ever more generous — while setting aside too little money to pay for them.

BCAD faculty Sarah Anzia’s book on the origins of urban-rural political conflict was featured in The New York Times

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In an analysis of the complexity of the current Democratic predicament, Sarah Anzia, a professor of public policy and political science at Berkeley, addressed the preponderance of urban voters in the Democratic coalition: “The Democrats have a challenge rooted in political geography and the institution of single-member, first-past-the-post elections.” Citing Jonathan Rodden’s 2019 book “Why Cities Lose,” Anzia argued that the density of Democratic voters in cities has both geographically isolated the party and empowered its most progressive activist wing

BCAD faculty Sarah Anzia was quoted in The Sacramento Bee

“Young people, even with their higher turnout in 2018, were far less likely to participate than those 40 and up,” said Sarah Anzia, a political science professor at University of California, Berkeley. “Even with increases in turnout that I expect to see in 2020, they’re still far, far below the turnout rates of senior citizens and the middle-aged”