Law, Business And Politics

  • VU undergrads present research on presidential appointments

    VU undergrads present research on presidential appointments

    Two Vanderbilt undergraduates had the rare opportunity to present their research findings on the influence of patronage on presidential appointments and government performance at the 2010 Midwest Political Science Association Conference. Read More

    May 18, 2010

  • Vanderbilt undergraduates present research at national political science meeting

    Vanderbilt undergraduates present research at national political science meeting

    Two Vanderbilt University undergraduates had the rare opportunity to present their research findings on the influence of patronage on presidential appointments and government performance at the 2010 Midwest Political Science Association Conference. Read More

    May 12, 2010

  • TIPSHEET: Vanderbilt experts can talk about Supreme Court justice search

    TIPSHEET: Vanderbilt experts can talk about Supreme Court justice search

    As the Obama administration researches candidates to succeed retiring Supreme Court justice John Paul Stevens, Vanderbilt experts are ready to weigh in on Justice Stevens, the Supreme Court and the list of potential nominees. Read More

    Apr 28, 2010

  • Fitting monstrous crimes into a legal framework

    Fitting monstrous crimes into a legal framework

    "In the non-legal context, genocide has come to be thought of as the epitome of ’evil,’" writes Vanderbilt philosopher Larry May in his new book, Genocide. "Some authors have argued that we should regard genocide as merely a plain fact that should not be further investigated lest we risk that our explanations and conceptual inquiries will be mistakenly seen as forgiveness for the horror of what genocide is." Read More

    Apr 26, 2010

  • Should states hold power over local governments to encourage green building design?

    Should states hold power over local governments to encourage green building design?

    Should states “take back” some of the power to regulate land use from local governments to help facilitate more environmentally sustainable building? That's the question that will be debated during a panel discussion on the role of local and state land use regulation in fostering green building design. Read More

    Mar 18, 2010

  • TIPSHEET: Vanderbilt legal and military expert can talk about military commissions

    TIPSHEET: Vanderbilt legal and military expert can talk about military commissions

    President Obama is now debating whether to have the self-proclaimed mastermind of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Khalid Sheik Mohammed, prosecuted in a military tribunal, despite Attorney General Eric Holder's plan to try Mohammed in civilian court. Read More

    Mar 9, 2010

  • Why taxing marijuana won’t work

    Why taxing marijuana won’t work

    The current financial crisis hitting the United States has made the idea of legalizing and taxing marijuana much more attractive for debt-ridden states. California proponents claim they could generate more than a billion dollars by legalizing and taxing marijuana distribution and save millions more by reducing law enforcement costs on prohibition enforcement. But Vanderbilt University Law School professor Robert Mikos explains in a new paper why the seemingly clear way to make money by legalizing and taxing marijuana distribution has too many legal hurdles to actually work. Read More

    Mar 9, 2010

  • Cross-disciplinary team builds on existing projects to tackle problems of poverty

    Cross-disciplinary team builds on existing projects to tackle problems of poverty

    Problems of extreme poverty – from affordable housing to health care delivery to nutrition – will be the focus of efforts by a large number of students traveling this spring to Guatemala, where Vanderbilt already leads numerous sustained studies and initiatives. Read More

    Mar 3, 2010

  • More nasty ads expected outcome of Supreme Court ruling

    More nasty ads expected outcome of Supreme Court ruling

    Count on more political attack ads in 2010 after a Supreme Court ruling lifting the ban on corporation and labor donations, according to Vanderbilt University political scientist John Geer. Read More

    Jan 21, 2010

  • TIPSHEET:  Grading Obama: Vanderbilt presidential experts offer analysis

    TIPSHEET: Grading Obama: Vanderbilt presidential experts offer analysis

    Vanderbilt experts David Lewis, John Geer and Thomas Schwartz are available to discuss the one-year anniversary of the Obama presidency and his Jan. 27 State of the Union address. Read More

    Jan 19, 2010

  • Terrorist threats unlikely to boost Obama‘s approval rating, VU professor finds

    Terrorist threats unlikely to boost Obama‘s approval rating, VU professor finds

    President Barack Obama, unlike George W. Bush, is not likely to enjoy a surge in public approval after terrorism threats, according to research by Vanderbilt University political scientist Elizabeth Zechmeister and her colleague. Zechmeister, assistant professor of political science at Vanderbilt University, and Jennifer Merolla, associate professor at Claremont Graduate University, are the co-authors of Democracy at Risk: How Terrorist Threats Affect the Public (University of Chicago Press). Read More

    Jan 12, 2010

  • Beginning of a Decade TIPSHEET – Politics and Government

    Beginning of a Decade TIPSHEET – Politics and Government

    As you consider year-in-review stories and look ahead to the trends of 2010, Vanderbilt University faculty are available to offer perspective on these and other topics. mailto:bruce.barry@vanderbilt.edu Read More

    Dec 14, 2009

  • Clashing worldviews a key to understanding voter polarization, VU professor says

    Clashing worldviews a key to understanding voter polarization, VU professor says

    The recent vote in Congress on health care reform – with only one Republican lawmaker voting yes – provides more evidence of the growing polarization between the parties and the fundamentally different understandings of right and wrong that continue to pull the two major political parties further apart, according to Vanderbilt University political scientist Marc Hetherington. Read More

    Nov 18, 2009

  • New Vanderbilt research finds more intervention is a bad idea for Commodity Index Funds and Futures Markets

    New Vanderbilt research finds more intervention is a bad idea for Commodity Index Funds and Futures Markets

    The Commodity Futures Trading Commission, long known for its "hands-off" regulatory policy, appears to be changing course toward greater intervention in markets. New research by professors at the Vanderbilt Owen Graduate School of Management finds that when it comes to index investors, more intervention is a mistake. Read More

    Oct 20, 2009

  • Terrorist warnings affect political attitudes, says Vanderbilt researcher

    Terrorist warnings affect political attitudes, says Vanderbilt researcher

    When citizens in the United States and Mexico are confronted by terrorist threats, they cope in ways that can put significant stresses on the nations' democracies, according to research by political scientists at Vanderbilt and Claremont. Read More

    Sep 1, 2009

  • Obama’s appointees: some strong, some not, Vanderbilt expert finds

    Obama’s appointees: some strong, some not, Vanderbilt expert finds

    A Vanderbilt University political scientist's study of President Obama's appointments during his first six months in office finds some agencies are receiving significantly more qualified presidential appointees than others. Read More

    Aug 25, 2009

  • Why Obama’s birth certificate issue won’t go away: Vanderbilt expert

    Why Obama’s birth certificate issue won’t go away: Vanderbilt expert

    The controversy over President Obama's birth certificate will not go away as long as he refuses to release sealed records, including the original birth certificate, according to Carol Swain, professor of political science and law at Vanderbilt University. Read More

    Jul 30, 2009

  • VU sociologists analyze American music forms and their changes over time

    VU sociologists analyze American music forms and their changes over time

    Vanderbilt sociologists Jennifer Lena and Richard Peterson analyzed 60 samples of American music and found that each one --over time -- took on forms that were roughly comparable during their developmental sequences. The professors call these four distinct genre types Avant-garde, Scene-based, Industry-based and Traditionalist. "Classification as Culture: Types and Trajectories of Music Genres" has been published in the American Sociological Review. Read More

    May 28, 2009

  • Conventional views on liberalism and Black Power challenged by VU professor

    Conventional views on liberalism and Black Power challenged by VU professor

    Black Power's complex relationship with liberalism during the civil rights era and the surprising consequences of that interaction are explored in Devin Fergus' book Liberalism, Black Power, and the Making of American Politics, 1965-1980. Read More

    May 22, 2009

  • Will a bad economy hurt democracy?

    Will a bad economy hurt democracy?

    Results from the latest AmericasBarometer Survey showing what the impact of worldwide economic decline might mean for democratic consolidation in Latin America will be presented on May 8 at the Inter-American Dialogue in Washington, D.C. The presentation by Vanderbilt University political scientists Mitchell Seligson and Elizabeth Zechmeister is titled "Economic Shocks and Democratic Vulnerabilities: Evidence from the AmericasBarometer Survey." Read More

    May 1, 2009