Understanding the Politics of Resentment: Rural vs Urban Tensions in Wisconsin

EVENT HIGHLIGHTS

Niagara Foundation is organizing a remarkable Niagara Forum with Professor Katherine J. Cramer, professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of Wisconsin – Madison.”

The topic is entitled “Understanding the Politics of Resentment: Rural vs Urban Tensions in Wisconsin

We would like to cordially extend this invitation to you.  Lunch boxes will be provided but limited to the number of RSVPs.

Date: Thursday, February 6th, 2014
Time: 12:00 pm
Venue: Robert P. Lee Lounge, Pyle Center

Katherine J. Cramer (B.A. University of Wisconsin-Madison 1994, Ph.D. University of Michigan 2000) is a Professor in the Department of Political Science, and is an affiliate faculty member in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication, the LaFollette School of Public Affairs, the Department of Forest and Wildlife Ecology, and the Wisconsin Center for the Advancement of Postsecondary Education. Her work focuses on the way people in the United States make sense of politics and their place in it.

She is known for her innovative approach to the study of public opinion, in which she invites herself into the conversations of groups of people to listen to the way they understand public affairs. She has also published as Katherine Cramer Walsh and is the author of Talking about Race: Community Dialogues and the Politics of Difference (University of Chicago Press, 2007), Talking about Politics: Informal Groups and Social Identity in American Life (University of Chicago Press, 2004) and co-author of Democracy at Risk: How Political Choices Have Undermined Citizenship and What We Can Do About It with the members of the American Political Science Association’s Task Force on Civic Engagement and Civic Education, Stephen Macedo, Yvette M. Alex-Assensoh, Jeffrey M. Berry, Michael Brintnall, David E. Campbell, Luis Ricardo Fraga, Archon Fung, William A. Galston, Christopher F. Karpowitz, Margaret Levi, Meira Levinson, Keena Lipsitz, Richard G. Niemi, Robert D. Putnam, Wendy M. Rahn, Rob Reich, Robert R. Rodgers, Todd Swanstrom (Brookings, 2005).

She is the recipient of the 2012 APSA Qualitative and Multi-Method Research Section Award for the best qualitative or multi-method submission to the American Political Science Review, a 2006 UW-Madison Chancellor’s Distinguished Teaching Award, and a 2012-2014 UW-Madison Vilas Associate Award.


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