Senior Thesis 2017-2018
“The Justification of God in History”: Why Hegel Believes Religion is Integral to the Survival of the Modern State
Hazel Baldwin-Kress, Political Science, Class of 2018
Chile’s Education System: Crafting Policy for the Modern Era
Ben Corey, International Relations, Class of 2018
European Domino: US Foreign Policy Towards Italy During the Vietnam War, 1964-1973
Nicholas Fallah, History, Class of 2018
Competition and Principal Behavior: A Case Study of School Choice in Detroit, MI
Sarah Gargaro, Political Science, Class of 2018
Further South than the South: Race and Citizenship in Italy
Ari Gizzi, International Relations, Class of 2018
China’s Environmental Diplomacy in Copenhagen and Paris: Examining the Reasons for a Shift in Policy
Lily Hartzell, International Relations, Class of 2018
Faithless Justice: Understanding the Justice System’s Role in Facilitating Abuse of the Blasphemy Laws in Pakistan
Faryal Jafri, International Relations, Class of 2018
Computing the Conversation: Understanding the Role of Language and Narrative in Influencing Policy Outcomes to Industrial Accidents in Bangladesh’s Ready Made Garment Industry
Natasha Khwaja, International Relations, Class of 2018
Political Partisanship and the Ultimate Attribution Error
Misha Linnehan, Political Science, Class of 2018
Perfect Competition: Primary Challenges in Competitive and Safe Districts
Jamie Niekrie, Political Science, Class of 2018
“Apruebo Este Mensaje:” How the Language of Political Communication Affects the Political Attitudes of Linguistically Diverse Latino Voters
Lorenza Ramirez, Political Science, Class of 2018
“They’re Coming for Our Lives and Out Values:” Le Pen, Trump, and the Convergence of Islamophobic Discourse in French and American Politics
Jack Ronan, International Relations, Class of 2018
Exploring the Relationship between How Companies Treat their Domestic Workforce and the Treatment of their Supplier Factory Workers
Kenneth Weitzman, International Relations, Class of 2018