不良研究所

不良研究所 Media Sources: Inauguration, Presidential Transition, Biden Administration

Historians, Political Scientists, Constitutional Law Experts

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Coming out of the presidential elections and series of political events, including an unprecedented insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, 不良研究所 historians, political scientists, economists and constitutional law professors, and researchers from other fields are contributing their academic expertise to media. Faculty are quoted in this story  covering a recent School of Law panel discussion. That webinar is also covered here.

This source list will be updated regularly in the early days of the new presidential administration as events and policies unfold. This list was updated March 17.

Historic presidencies, electoral college, transitions

The transition of power between one U.S. president and the next typically goes off without a hitch 鈥 full of decorum, tradition and stability. The 2021 transition between President Donald Trump and President-elect Joe Biden, however, has been anything but typical.

, distinguished professor of history, on this month鈥檚 edition of the 不良研究所 podcast The Backdrop discusses how history can help inform this turbulent presidential transition, including parallels with the transfer of power from Herbert Hoover to Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Rauchway also offers perspectives on the consequences of chaotic transitions and the deadly siege of the U.S. Capitol by a violent pro-Trump mob. That podcast information is here. Listen

Rauchway
Eric Rauchway, professor of history

He is also quoted on the difficult transition, thus far, in this

Rauchway, a leading scholar of FDR, has expertise in U.S. policy, social and economic history from the Civil War through the Second World War. He is the author of several books, including, most recently, Winter War: Hoover, Roosevelt and the First Clash Over the New Deal. 

Rauchway has contributed to The New York Times and The Washington Post and appeared on BBC Radio 4 and NPR, among others. Contact: 530-754-1646, earauchway@ucdavis.edu

Constitutional law, treason, impeachment, sedition

, professor of law, is a scholar of American constitutional law and Anglo-American legal history. His scholarship addresses a wide range of issues, including enemy combatant detentions, legacy preferences in public universities, the historical basis of Second Amendment rights, and parents鈥 rights to name their children. 

Larson is one of the nation鈥檚 leading authorities on the law of treason and is the author of the book  (Oxford University Press). He talks about his book in this .

His scholarship has been cited by numerous federal and state courts and has been profiled in The New York Times, The Economist, TIME, and many other publications. He is a frequent commentator for the national media on constitutional law issues. He appeared on the PBS series Open Mind in December. His recent op-ed on sedition is . He was part of a law school discussion on the attack on the U.S. Capitol. A story about that webinar is here. Contact: 530-754-5731, clarson@ucdavis.edu

Conspiracy theories; roots of modern conservatism

Professor of history  has long investigated conspiracy theories, from the Kennedy assassination to 9/11, and many that have cropped up since, even during the primary and general elections. She authored Real Enemies: Conspiracy Theories and American Democracy, World War I to 9/11 (2009); it was reissued this year with a  on the Trump era. She has also written op-eds comparing Watergate and the Trump impeachment inquiry in  and . 

Olmsted

Kathryn Olmsted

Professor of History

Expert on conspiracy theories

In her recent research, she also has re-examined the labor disputes in Depression-era California that led California鈥檚 businessmen and media to create a new style of politics with corporate funding, intelligence gathering, professional campaign consultants and alliances between religious and economic conservatives. She has been featured in various podcasts and other media, and commented about modern conservatism in this podcast. Her 2015 book is .  Her recent interview on the 不良研究所 podcast The Backdrop is here. Contact: 530-752-7764, ksolmsted@ucdavis.edu

History and sedition

, professor of history, studies the political and cultural history of the United States in the 19th and early 20th centuries. Downs has written a variety of works on post-Civil-War America, including two monographs on Reconstruction and Mapping Occupation, and co-wrote the National Park Service鈥檚 Theme Study on Reconstruction. Downs has been interviewed and written about recent events at the U.S. Capitol including this op-ed in the Washington Post 鈥溾 and in the New York Times article 鈥.鈥 He analyzes the history of authoritarianism, white supremacy and political violence in the United States, and what factors allow these issues to persist today. Contact: gdowns@ucdavis.edu

History and African Cultural Affairs

, associate professor of history, works on the social and cultural history of 20th century East Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda). Decker has published several works on education, development, gender, sexuality, and childhood, including a book on the  and another co-authored book on the . She has co-authored an op-ed in the Washington Post  and she has been interviewed for the  podcast and on a Davis radio program. Decker investigates African experiences of colonialism and international development and how these shape ideas about gender, sexuality and youth. 

Leadership and inconsistency

, Stephen G. Newberry Chair in Leadership in the 不良研究所 Graduate School of Management, studies how organizations, their leaders and individuals acquire and maintain images, identities and reputations. She commented recently on leadership inconsistencies in Gov. Gavin Newsom's well-publicized birthday dinner attendance while he continued to urge California residents to stay home.

Elsbach

Kimberly Elsbach

Professor of Management

Media source for leadership, consistency

She is the author of the book, Organizational Perception Management. Elsbach says, 鈥淧eople in Western society do not like inconsistency in their leaders. It鈥檚 what gets a lot of leaders tripped up. There is so much pressure on leaders to be consistent that it outweighs the need to make the right decision or to be accurate.鈥 Contact: 530-752-0910, kdelsbach@ucdavis.edu

Lawsuits, challenges to vote count

, the Boochever and Bird Endowed Chair for the Study and Teaching of Freedom and Equality and Martin Luther King Jr. Professor of Law at the School of Law, can address the validity of Donald Trump鈥檚 lawsuits regarding the voting process and election. Bhagwat practiced appellate and regulatory law for two years in the Washington, D.C., offices of the Sidley & Austin law firm. He has written about a variety of subjects ranging from the structure of constitutional rights, to free speech law, to the California electricity crisis. Contact: aabhagwat@ucdavis.edu

Presidency and the Supreme Court

 professor of law, has commented to media recently on matters concerning the U.S. Supreme Court and presidential appointments. Most recently, he wrote "How to Fix the Supreme Court" in the New York Times. His teaching and research interests include constitutional law, federal courts and education law. 

Tang

Aaron Tang

Professor of Law

The presidency and the Supreme Court

His 鈥淩ethinking Political Power in Judicial Review,鈥 won the American Association of Law Schools 2018 Scholarly Paper Competition. Tang also writes frequently about the Supreme Court for broader popular audiences. Contact: 203-507-4715, aatang@ucdavis.edu

Election law

, professor of law, has teaching and research interests that include election law, property and land-use law, statutory interpretation and administrative law. Contact: cselmendorf@ucdavis.edu

Elections, electoral systems, voting behavior, race 

, assistant professor of political science, blogs on applying spatial models to current questions and issues in American politics at . He has also consulted for political campaigns on statistical modeling issues. 

Hare鈥檚 substantive research agenda focuses on ideology and voting behavior in the American electorate, campaign strategy, and political polarization. Methodologically, his work focuses on measurement theory and ideal point estimation, Bayesian methods, and the application of machine learning techniques to model political behavior. He also studies swing voters. Contact: 530-754-0942, cdhare@ucdavis.edu

Lecturer of political science  focuses on electoral systems, legislative representation, political behavior and public opinion. His dissertation project focuses on how electoral systems shape electoral outcomes and candidate behavior. He is also involved in projects analyzing how racial attitudes affect voter behavior and legislative representation, particularly in recent U.S. elections. In a , 鈥淩acial attitudes & political cross-pressures in nationalized elections: The case of the Republican coalition in the Trump era,鈥 co-authored with , University of Texas-El Paso, he found that there continue to be large numbers of racially conservative Democrats who can be persuaded to vote for Republicans candidates. Hale has participated in various media interviews, including a recent on the electoral college on the Sacramento CBS affiliate. Contact: idhale@ucdavis.edu

Child Tax Credit, safety net

Economists and have written a paper on the Child Tax Credit, which Biden has vowed to expand. Read that paper, 鈥,鈥 published by the Russell Sage Foundation. They propose replacing the complicated array of benefits provided through the tax system with a universal child benefit of $2,000 per child that would be available regardless of parents鈥 work status. 

Page is a professor of economics, director of the Center for Poverty and Inequality Research, and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. She was appointed in 2020 to California Gov. Newsom鈥檚 Council on Economic Advisors. She specializes in inter-generational mobility and the impact social programs have on children. Her recent research includes investigations of the short- and long-term effects of U.S. public health investments in children (such as the WIC and Medicaid programs). She has also published papers on the impacts of educational investments. Contact: mepage@ucdavis.edu

page

Marianne Page

Professor of Economics

Director, Center for Poverty & Inequality Research. Expertise: Child Tax Credit

Bitler is a professor of economics with the Center for Poverty and Inequality Research. Her research measures the impact of various government safety net programs, including TANF, SNAP, WIC and the ACA. She is chair of the Panel on Improving Consumer Data for Food and Nutrition Policy Research Service for the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, which released a report, 鈥淎 Consumer Food Data System for 2030 and Beyond,鈥 in March 2020. She is a research associate with the National Bureau of Economic Research, and she is currently serving on the Institute of Medicine鈥檚 Panel to Review the WIC Package. She co-authored a major study for the Brookings Institution鈥檚 Hamilton Project about how well TANF responded for families in poverty during the Great Recession. Contact: bitler@ucdavis.edu

Bitler

Marianne Bitler

Professor of Economics

Expertise on safety net, Child Tax Credit

Social media

How media use and political talk influence the political divide

, professor of communication at 不良研究所 and associate researcher (ERC SG PI), University of Amsterdam, co-wrote an about the Democratic primaries after Kamala Harris dropped out of the race. The article, 鈥淲hat Kamala Harris supporters鈥 media consumption habits say about who they might support next in the Democratic presidential primary鈥 was published in the United States Politics and Policy Blog, London School of Economics. She also co-authored an op-ed in The Conversation, 鈥.鈥 Wojcieszak is interested in how the changing media environment creates both opportunities and challenges for informed publics, tolerant citizenry, and responsive governance. She also researches the role of social media in elections. Read this about her research. Contact: mwojcieszak@ucdavis.edu 

 studies people鈥檚 behaviors in online social networks and virtual worlds. Recently, she has taken an interest in the reaction to and diffusion of online misinformation and how it can be corrected, especially misinformation in multimedia format (see a recent paper ). During the election, she has commented on Twitter鈥檚 efforts to correct misinformation spread by President Trump and his campaign. She commented in in Adweek Magazine. Contact: cuishen@ucdavis.edu.

Corporate political activity

Accounting professor , of the Graduate School of Management, researches financial reporting issues and corporate governance topics, including the consequences of companies鈥 spending in political activities. In one study she and a co-author examined the reputational risks in the opportunities that the Supreme Court鈥檚 Citizens United ruling created for managers to spend unlimited, and potentially undisclosed, firm resources on independent political expenditures, or IPEs. These opportunities include channeling 鈥渄ark money,鈥 which is untraceable, through certain nonprofits and trade associations. The research found that it is the structure of a firm鈥檚 governance 鈥 the concentration of decision rights 鈥 that may cause shareholders to walk away when they are unable to hold the firm accountable for its political spending. She is a former practicing certified public accountant. Contact: 608-692-1082, haskaife@ucdavis.edu

Taxes, tax revolts, property taxes

School of Law Professor has conducted multiple media interviews on property taxes, tax revolts and California propositions that propose to change tax formulas. His academic interests include taxation, particularly state and local taxation, local government law, public finance, and political theory, particularly jurisprudence. Some of his current projects are on the local property tax, the state and local fiscal relationship, the fiscal constitution of California, and the role of reciprocity in Aristotle. Contact: 530-752-5860, dshanske@ucdavis.edu

Immigration detention, undocumented youth, DACA, immigration policy

, assistant professor of sociology, can discuss issues related to immigration, including immigration policy, immigration reform, immigration detention (including conditions of confinement and spillover impacts of detention), deportation, DACA, and the situation of undocumented youth and families. She can also comment on such topics as the social and health consequences of revoking DACA and TPS, and the general social costs of noncitizenship. Her research is informed by 20 years of work in immigrants鈥 rights organizations focused on immigration detention, access to education for undocumented youth and low-wage labor markets. Contact: patler@ucdavis.edu

Immigration policy and civil rights

, dean and the Mabie-Apallas Professor of Public Interest Law and Chicano/a Studies at the 不良研究所 School of Law, is one of the nation鈥檚 leading immigration law scholars. He is co-editor of the influential . Contact: 530-752-0243, krjohnson@ucdavis.edu.

Additional immigration experts are available on this list.

Link to other experts lists (election, environment, trade) here.

Additional top experts in various fields can be found on the 不良研究所 News page; go to the right column and scroll down to Expert Sources.

Media Resources

Karen Nikos-Rose, News and Media Relations, 530-219-5472, kmnikos@ucdavis.edu

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