For three days last week, Duke hosted political cartoonists from around the world discussing how their work helps shape public opinion, including on hot-button issues such as NC House Bill 2 and the Black Lives Matter movement.
“They’re overqualified, they have more free time than most people and they’re usually socially engaged and usually engaging. So they’re a perfect set of people if you can mobilize them,” says professor John Aldrich in an interview with The Chronicle on why students are valuable when it comes to political campaigns.
Duke Debate Watch
Donald Trump
Peter Feaver on Trump and Putin
Civil-Military Relations
A film every American must see
Charlie Dunlap in Lawfire
Cartoon Festival
Thousands come to campus to hear cartoonists from around the world
For three days last week, Duke hosted political cartoonists from around the world discussing how their work helps shape public opinion, including on hot-button issues such as NC House Bill 2 and the Black Lives Matter movement.
Duke Today
America’s Dilemma
What happens if Trump loses?
Political Protests
Divinity student Jasolyn Harris on the situation in Charlotte
North Carolina Politics
Native vs. newcomer: How NC politicians seek to divide us
Leslie Maxwell in the News & Observer
Student Involvement
How Duke students are getting involved in political campaigns
“They’re overqualified, they have more free time than most people and they’re usually socially engaged and usually engaging. So they’re a perfect set of people if you can mobilize them,” says professor John Aldrich in an interview with The Chronicle on why students are valuable when it comes to political campaigns.
John Aldrich in The Chronicle
Political Campaigns
John Aldrich on college students in political campaigns
U.S. Gun Ownership
‘More guns in fewer hands’
Philip Cook in The Guardian