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POLITICS OF RACE, IMMIGRATION AND ETHNICITY

PRIEC Workshop
Friday, Sept. 21, 2012 8:00 am-5:00 pm
Saturday, Sept. 22, 2012 8:00 am-3:00 pm
Stewart Center 306

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About

About The Politics, Race, Immigration and Ethnicity Consortium  (PRIEC), founded at the University of California-Riverside, brings together faculty and graduate students and showcases work-in-progress on racial/ethnic politics and the politics of immigration through a series of workshops. The consortium’s main objectives are to provide a forum and a resource for graduate students seeking mentoring and advice, and for faculty to collaborate and receive feedback on ongoing projects.

This event represents the first time that PRIEC has met east of the Mississippi. PGI is very pleased that members of PRIEC have agreed to come to Purdue. With more than 60 abstracts submitted by researchers at 41 different universities in 5 countries, this workshop presents a powerful opportunity to build a network of scholars conducting work on issues of global policy relevance. At the workshop participants will interact with a range of scholars, including the editors of Politics, Groups, and Identities, with the goal of moving manuscripts toward publication.

PGI Editorial Team

Rosalee A. Clawson, Purdue University
Lisa García Bedolla, University of California, Berkeley
Ange-Marie Hancock, University of Southern California
Kerry L. Haynie, Duke University
James A. McCann, Purdue University (Lead Editor, 2012-13)
Eric N. Waltenburg, Purdue University
S. Laurel Weldon, Purdue University

PGI Editorial Assistant
  
Katie Cahill-Rincón , Purdue University

PRIEC Founder
Karthick Ramakrishnan, University of California-Riverside
PGI WEBSITE
PRIEC WEBSITE

Workshop Schedule

Friday, September 21
Continental Breakfast
8:00 am
Welcome and Introductions
8:30am

The Role of Ethnic Media in Shaping Political Knowledge in a Racially Diverse Electorate

9:00am
Understanding Black Voting Behavior in the Obama Era

10:00am
Morning Break
On the Same Side? Political Elites and Perceptions of Inter-Minority Commonality

11:00am

Lunch

12:00pm
Race in "Pictures in Our Heads": The Political Effects of Perceptions of Communities
1:00pm
Local Variation in Context and the Impact of Perceived Discrimination on Identity Formation for Adolescents from Immigrant Families
2:00pm
Obama and judicial diversity: Promise fulfilled?
3:00pm
Afternoon Break
The Logic of Interracial Electoral and Policy Coalitions
4:00pm
Closing Remarks
5:00pm


Saturday, September 22 Continental Breakfast
8:00 am
Intersectional Advocacy in Hard Times: Marginalization, Representation, and the Political Construction of Crises
8:30am
Towards a Relational Model of Political Participation: Tackling “Identity-to-Politics Link” through Latent Class Models
9:30am
Morning Break
Minority Voices: The Representational Roles of African Americans and Latinos during State Legislative Deliberations
10:30am
Lunch
11:30am
Position Taking in Congressional Debate and the Issue of Immigration
12:00pm
Immigration, Threat Perception, and National Identity: Evidence from South Korea
1:00pm
Apartheid Didn’t Happen Here: Race-Making in South Africa and the United States
2:00pm
Closing Remarks
3:00pm

Presentations

To download a copy of the workshop agenda:
WORKSHOP AGENDA
To download a file of all of the workshop manuscripts:
ALL WORKSHOP MANUSCRIPTS
To download individual manuscripts, please click on the word "manuscript" next to the title that you are interested in reading.

Workshop- Day 1 Friday 9/21

The Role of Ethnic Media in Shaping Political Knowledge in a Racially Diverse Electorate - MANUSCRIPT
Chris Haynes, Ph.D. Candidate, University of California-Riverside 
Karthick Ramakrishnan, Associate Professor, University of
California-Riverside 

Understanding Black Voting Behavior in the Obama Era 
Ismail White, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, The Ohio State University 

On the Same Side? Political Elites and Perceptions of
Inter-Minority Commonality - MANUSCRIPT

Tatishe M. Nteta, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Massachusetts-Amherst 

Race in "Pictures in Our Heads": The Political Effects of
Perceptions of Communities - MANUSCRIPT

Cara Wong, Assistant Professor, University of Illinois- Urbana Champaign 

Local Variation in Context and the Impact of Perceived Discrimination on Identity Formation for Adolescents from Immigrant Families -MANUSCRIPT 
Loan K. Le, Visiting Assistant Professor (2012-2013), Department of Political Science, University of California- Los Angeles 

The Logic of Interracial Electoral and Policy Coalitions - MANUSCRIPT
Paru R. Shah, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee 

Obama and judicial diversity: Promise fulfilled? - MANUSCRIPT

Rorie L. Solberg, Associate Professor, School of Public Policy, Oregon State University 

Workshop- Day 2 Saturday 9/22

Intersectional Advocacy in Hard Times: Marginalization, Representation, and the Political Construction of Crises - MANUSCRIPT 
Dara Z. Strolovitch, Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Political Science, University of Minnesota

Towards a Relational Model of Political Participation:
Tackling "Identity-to-Politics Link" through Latent Class Mod
els - MANUSCRIPT

Sun Kim, Graduate Student, Department of Sociology, University of California-Berkeley 

Minority Voices: The Representational Roles of African
Americans and Latinos during State Legislative Deliberations -
MANUSCRIPT
Renita Miller, Ph.D. Candidate, Political Science, Rice University 
 
Position Taking in Congressional Debate and the Issue of
Immigration - MANUSCRIPT

Niki Kalaf-Hughes, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Bowling Green State University

Immigration, Threat Perception, and National Identity:
Evidence from South Korea - MANUSCRIPT

Shang E. Ha, Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Brooklyn College- CUNY

Apartheid Didn’t Happen Here: Race-Making in South Africa and the United States - MANUSCRIPT
Shamira Gelbman, Byron K. Trippet Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science, Wabash College