
The Periphery from the Pulaski Institution (The Pulaski Institution)
Explore every episode of The Periphery from the Pulaski Institution
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
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10 Jun 2022 | Stephen F. Knott on the Lost Soul of the American Presidency and the Dangers of Populist Presidents | 01:07:02 | |
Dr. Stephen Knott joins us in an episode co-hosted by Dr. Heather Yates. Dr. Stephen F. Knott is a professor in the National Security Affairs Department. Prior to accepting his position at the War College, Knott co-chaired the Presidential Oral History Program at the Miller Center of Public Affairs at the University of Virginia. His books include “Secret and Sanctioned: Covert Operations and the American Presidency,” “Washington and Hamilton: The Alliance That Forged America” and “Rush to Judgment: George W. Bush, the War on Terror, and His Critics.” His most recent book is “The Lost Soul of the American Presidency: The Decline into Demagoguery and the Prospects for Renewal.” He is currently at work on a book on the presidency of John F. Kennedy. | |||
27 Jun 2022 | Emergency Episode: Abortion Rights and Subnational Democracy in America (with Dr. Heather Yates) | 01:09:57 | |
Dr. Heather Yates (Acting Director of the Program on Nativism, Nationalism, and Populism at Pulaski) joins to talk about the Supreme Court's reversal of Roe and what it means for subnational democracy in America. We talk about the myths surrounding abortion, the political conditions in anti-abortion states, and what this all means for citizenship and freedom in the United States. | |||
18 Jul 2022 | Jessica Pishko on the American Sheriff | 01:12:15 | |
On this episode, Jessica Pishko joins to talk about sheriffs—their history, politics, and institutional role in law enforcement in America. | |||
06 Jan 2023 | Steven L. Taylor on Alabama, Party Competition, and Voter Participation | 01:02:18 | |
In the first of our episode featuring authors from Pulaski's 50 Takes on Democracy series, Dr. Steven L. Taylor joins to discuss the state of things in Alabama. We talk about one-party dominance, gerrymandering, and the distortive effects of primaries on American politics. His 50 Takes essay can be found here: Alabama: Lack of Competition and Election Skepticism Down South — The Pulaski Institution | |||
10 Jan 2023 | Kevin Baron on Anti-democratic Tendencies and Civic Health in Tennessee | 01:04:12 | |
In the second of our 50 Takes on Democracy episodes, Dr. Kevin Baron of Austin Peay State University joins to talk about Tennessee. We discuss anti-CRT and anti-LGBTQ legislation, the state of Tennessee's education system, and the challenges of representation. | |||
23 Jan 2023 | Luke Perry on Scandal, Party Politics, and the Urban/Rural Divide in New York | 00:43:51 | |
Dr. Luke Perry joins to talk about New York politics, with a focus the upstate regions away from New York City. Dr. Perry is Professor of Political Science at Utica University and Director of the Utica University Center of Public Affairs and Election Research. Perry’s recent books include The 2020 Presidential Election: Key Issues and Dynamics, The 2020 Democratic Primary: Key Lessons, Dynamics and Lessons for 2024, and Donald Trump and the 2018 Midterm Battle for Central New York. | |||
26 Jan 2023 | Alex Middlewood on Home Rule, Factionalism, and Political Change in Kansas | 00:52:21 | |
Dr. Alex Middlewood joins for another conversation in our 50 Takes on Democracy Series. Dr. Middlewood is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Wichita State University. Her areas of specialization include gun politics, public opinion, political behavior, civic engagement, and gender. Her research focuses on the political participation and attitudes of American gun owners. She is also a Policy Fellow at the Docking Institute of Public Affairs at Fort Hays State University and a member of Insight Kansas. | |||
12 Feb 2023 | Tom Nichols on Globalization, Nostalgia, and the Populist Threat to Democracy | 01:01:21 | |
This episode's guest is Tom Nichols, professor emeritus at the United States Naval War College and staff writer at The Atlantic. Tom is the author of the Peacefield newsletter and the Atlantic Daily newsletter. His most recent book is Our Own Worst Enemy: The Assault from within on Modern Democracy. | |||
15 Feb 2023 | Shaun Casey on Religion in American Foreign Policy, Democratic Values, and How to Meet the Challenges of the Future | 01:00:08 | |
Dr. Shaun Casey was U.S. special representative for religion and global affairs and director of the U.S. Department of State’s Office of Religion and Global Affairs. He is also a non-resident fellow at Pulaski. | |||
22 Mar 2023 | Justin Ellis on Drag Queen Story Time and LGBTQ Rights in Australia, America, and the United Kingdom | 00:46:58 | |
Dr. Justin Ellis is a senior lecturer in criminology at the Newcastle School of Law and Justice. His research into digiqueer criminology critically analyses the relationship between digital media technology, criminal justice, and queer representation and resistance. His broader research focus is on the relationship between digital technologies on institutional accountability and responsible government. He is also joining Pulaski as new fellow! Policing Legitimacy : Social Media, Scandal and Sexual CitizenshipLiberal MP Moira Deeming says she will fight moves to oust her from party after attending Melbourne rallyJ.K. Rowling’s transphobia is a product of British culture | |||
18 Apr 2023 | Bill Kristol on Liberalism, Illiberalism, and the Arc of History | 00:55:18 | |
William Kristol has been a major figure in American political life for decades. He was a founder of The Weekly Standard, and is a regular guest on leading political commentary shows. Prior to his work at The Weekly Standard, Kristol led the Project for the Republican Future, an organization that helped shape the strategy that produced the 1994 Republican congressional victory. From 1985 to 1993, Kristol served as chief of staff to Education Secretary William Bennett in the Reagan Administration and as chief of staff to Vice President Dan Quayle in the George H. W. Bush administration. Before coming to Washington, Kristol taught politics at the University of Pennsylvania and Harvard University. William Kristol is currently editor-at-large of The Bulwark and a leading Never Trump voice. | |||
25 Apr 2023 | Matt McManus on Liberal Socialism, the Postliberal Right, and Thinking Seriously About Freedom | 00:54:59 | |
Matt McManus is a lecturer in political science at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. He is the author of The Emergence of Postmodernity and Liberalism and Liberal Rights: A Critical Legal Argument amongst other books. His forthcoming work includes the essay collection Nietzsche and the Politics of Reaction for Palgrave MacMillan and The Political Right and Equality for Routledge Press.
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08 May 2023 | Samuel C. Spitale on Fake News, Cognitive Dissonance, and How to Win the War on Truth | 01:03:04 | |
Samuel C. Spitale is a media studies expert who has written for Huffington Post, as well as Geek magazine and Advocate.com. Previously, he worked at Lucasfilm Ltd. in global product development. In addition to How to Win the War on Truth, he is the author of Star Wars: Collecting a Galaxy. | |||
12 Jun 2023 | Craig Calhoun on Meritocracy, Public Virtue, and Revitalizing Our Democracy | 01:10:48 | |
Craig Calhoun is University Professor of Social Sciences at Arizona State University. Previously, he was Director of the London School of Economics, President of the Social Science Research Council (SSRC), founder of the Institute for Public Knowledge at NYU, and a professor there and at UNC-Chapel Hill, Columbia, and Princeton. He is also a member of the Pulaski Board. | |||
11 Aug 2023 | A Pulaski Panel: Misinformation, Disinformation, and Offline Effects in America's Heartlands | 01:31:33 | |
Pulaski fellows Dr. Hanah Stiverson and Dr. Dominik Stecuła join Dr. Michael Simeone from New America and Arizona State to discuss some of the dangers of misinformation and disinformation, with particular attention given to rural and exurban America. | |||
10 Oct 2023 | Dr. Kevin Vallier on Catholic Integralism, Anti-liberal Elites, and the Hungarian Connection | 00:46:02 | |
Dr. Kevin Vallier is an Associate Professor of Philosophy at Bowling Green State University, where he directs their program in Philosophy, Politics, Economics, and Law. Vallier’s interests lie primarily in political philosophy, ethics, philosophy of religion, and philosophy, politics, and economics (PPE). He is also an affiliate with the Center for Social Norms and Behavioral Dynamics at the University of Pennsylvania. | |||
19 Oct 2023 | Itoro Bassey on Growing Up Rural, Being Nigerian-American, and How We Relate to One Another | 00:47:46 | |
Itoro Bassey is a first-generation Nigerian-American who grew up in Southbridge, Massachusetts. She is a journalist, playwright, cultural worker, educator, and novelist. Her debut novel, Faith, was published by Malarkey Books in 2022. Itoro has previously worked as a correspondent for Arise News and is now a segment producer for the BBC, based in Washington, D.C. | |||
26 Oct 2023 | Matt McManus on The Political Right and Equality | 01:05:56 | |
Matt McManus joins to talk about his newest book, The Political Right and Equality: Turning Back the Tide of Egalitarian Modernity (Routledge). The book is a wide-ranging and gripping exploration of right-wing arguments against egalitarianism. We talk about as many of McManus's subjects as we can fit into an episode, including Fyodor Dostoevsky, Patrick Devlin, Patrick Deneen, Friedrich Nietzsche, Carl Schmitt, and more. | |||
02 Nov 2023 | Special Episode: Dominik Stecula and Ben Stanley on Poland's Elections and the Future of Polish Democracy | 00:44:53 | |
This episode is guest hosted by Pulaski fellow Dr. Dominik Stecula. Dominik is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Colorado State University. His research interests encompass the intersection of political communication, political behavior, and science communication, in the American, but also in a comparative context. He was also born in Brzeg, Poland and writes about American politics for Polish publications like Polityka, Gazeta Wyborcza, and Kultura Liberalna. | |||
22 Feb 2024 | Talking About the Alabama Embryo Ruling with Bailey Fairbanks | 00:36:42 | |
Welcome to a new regular segment of The Periphery, in which I'll be joined by Pulaski fellow Dr. Bailey Fairbanks to talk about current events with an eye to Pulaski's mission. This time, we're talking about the Alabama Supreme Court's recent ruling that frozen embryos are children. | |||
04 Mar 2024 | IVF Is Good, Actually with Bailey Fairbanks | 00:38:44 | |
Bailey Fairbanks joins to talk immunity, Judge Aileen Cannon, Alabama's IVF U-turn, and the Michigan primary. | |||
07 Mar 2024 | Alex Middlewood on IKE Lab, Kansas Politics, and Local Democracy | 00:47:07 | |
Dr. Alex Middlewood of Wichita State University joins to talk about her new venture, IKE Lab. At IKE Lab, Alex and Brian Amos are building data and analysis of Kansas elections down to the most local level. | |||
15 Mar 2024 | Talking Texas Immigration Law and "Ortho Bros" with Bailey Fairbanks | 00:41:29 | |
Bailey Fairbanks joins Alan to talk about the Supreme Court's temporary hold on Texas's SB4. We also chat about a story featured in one of this week's Headlines from the Heartlands, concerning Russian Orthodoxy and American neo-Confederates. | |||
31 Mar 2024 | Mifepristone and Judge Shopping with Bailey Fairbanks | 00:31:41 | |
Pulaski fellow Bailey Fairbanks joins to talk about the potential for a mifepristone ban and the practice of judge shopping. | |||
12 Apr 2024 | Kristin Lunz Trujillo on White Rural Rage and Being Rural in America | 00:50:56 | |
Dr. Kristin Lunz Trujillo from the University of South Carolina joins to discuss ruralness and identity in America. We talk about the new book, White Rural Rage: The Threat to American Democracy by Tom Schaller and Paul Waldman, as well as some of the broader ideas about who is rural and what that means for the people living in those places. | |||
13 Jun 2024 | Keri Leigh Merritt on Life, Poverty, and Politics in The American South | 00:49:25 | |
Today, I'm talking with Dr. Keri Leigh Merritt about her recent piece in Aeon Magazine, entitled "The southern gap." The piece explores the roots of economic underdevelopment in the American South, a problem that still plagues the region. From there, we talk more broadly about the politics of the South and what it means to be a Southerner today. | |||
01 Oct 2024 | Franziska Wagner on Positive Authoritarianism and How The Far Right Makes Extremism Sound Good | 00:50:33 | |
Franziska Wagner studied comparative political sciences at the University of Mannheim and at the Paris Institute of Political Studies, Sciences Po. Her research interests lie in party politics, far-right politics, social media, and computational approaches to social sciences. Currently, she is pursuing a Ph.D in Political Sciences at the Central European University, where she works on party communication on social media, and the role of discourse and emotions. Franziska is a researcher at the AUTHLIB project (Neo-authoritarianisms in Europe and the liberal democratic response) that aims at exploring the varieties of neo-authoritarian, illiberal ideologies in Europe and their political implications. | |||
08 Feb 2025 | Benjamin Carter Hett Reminds Us The End of Democracy Is Never Inevitable | 00:55:49 | |
Benjamin Carter Hett is Professor of History at Hunter College and the Graduate Center at City University of New York. He specializes in German history, and his books include The Death of Democracy: Hitler’s Rise to Power and the Downfall of the Weimar Republic; The Nazi Menace: Hitler, Churchill, Roosevelt, Stalin, and the Road to War; and more. He is one of my favorite historians, and I was really excited to get to have him on the show. We dive into the parallels he thinks do and don't exist between today and the 1920s and 1930s. We also spend some time on the f-word debate and whether he thinks fascism is the best term to describe what we're facing in Trump 2.0. Then we get into contemporary politics in Germany and the strength of the AfD ahead of the upcoming elections. | |||
31 Aug 2021 | John Hogan Morris on Levelling Up, the UK truck driver shortage, and net zero. | 01:04:30 | |
John Hogan Morris, a non-resident fellow at Pulaski and Assistant Professor of Economic Geography at the University of Nottingham (UK), joins to discuss some current topics in British economics. | |||
04 Sep 2021 | Heather Yates on the Emotions of Politics | 01:11:42 | |
Dr. Heather Yates is an associate professor of political science at the University of Central Arkansas and an non-resident fellow at the Pulaski Institution. Her research centers on the intersection between emotions and political behavior. Join us for a ranging discussion looking at some of the big issues in our current moment through that lens. We talk about the emotional psychology underpinning the different responses to the coronavirus pandemic and vaccine rollout, the issues of trust in institutions and our politics, and crucially related to that, the Big Lie and the fallout from the January 6th insurrection. | |||
17 Sep 2021 | William Haden Chomphosy on Land Use, Carbon Emissions, and a Greener Economy for Rural America | 00:47:18 | |
Dr. William Haden Chomphosy is an Assistant Professor of Economics at Hendrix College (Conway, AR) and a non-resident fellow at the Pulaski Institution. He joins today to discuss his research on abandoned oil and gas wells across the United States and the economics of restoring this land. We also discuss the potentials for carbon capture technology and the utility of revenue-neutral carbon pricing. | |||
28 Sep 2021 | Angie Maxwell on the Southern Style in American Politics | 01:01:58 | |
Dr. Angie Maxwell is the Director of the Diane Blair Center of Southern Politics and Society and the holder Diane Blair Endowed Professorship the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville, Arkansas. She's the author, along with Todd Shields, of The Long Southern Strategy: How Chasing White Voters in the South Changed American Politics. In this book—which is, I think, a really remarkable and essential work in American studies and for understanding both the South and American politics more generally—the "Southern Strategy" is presented as a longer historical event and one that's built on more than just Southern racial attitudes. In this conversation, we discuss the dynamics of Southern political identity and how the Republican Party's pursuit of political power in the American South has changed national politics and the Republican Party itself. | |||
05 Oct 2021 | Andre Audette and Christopher Weaver on Churches as Civic Institutions and the Politicization of Religion in America | 01:09:04 | |
In this episode, Dr. Christopher Weaver and Dr. Andre Audette discuss the role many churches and congregations play across America in promoting and facilitation civic engagement. They also discuss research on the politicization of religion in America and the way this shapes the preferences of churchgoers in selecting where to worship. Andre Audette is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Monmouth College. He researches and teaches courses about religion and politics, law, identity politics, and political behavior. | |||
15 Oct 2021 | Paul Hindley and Stephen Richmond on Brexit, Populism, and the Prospects for Liberalism in the UK | 01:30:52 | |
One of the topics that’s gotten more than a little traction in the last half decade is liberalism and, more specifically, whether or not liberalism and its ideas, its values, are in retreat. And that’s pretty important to us at Pulaski because really at the end of the day Liberalism, taken as its broad commitments to openness, pluralism, democratic accountability, and the movement of people and ideas and goods around the world and the idea that that’s good for us and our future really is at the heart of what we’re doing.
Our guests today are Paul Hindley and Stephen Richmond. Paul is a PhD student at Lancaster University in the UK. He researches the political economy of neoliberalism. He is a member of the Social Liberal Forum and has previously been a member of the Liberal Democrats. And he was the election agent for the Liberal Democrats in Blackpool South before leaving the party. Stephen is a council member of the Social Liberal forum and Vice-Chair of Coventry Liberal Democrats. He was also previously the Liberal Democrat candidate for Parliament for Coventry South. | |||
23 Nov 2021 | Edward Goldberg on Global Trade, Enlightenment Values, and American Leadership | 01:02:34 | |
Edward Goldberg is a Non-resident Fellow at the Pulaski Institution. He is a leading expert in the area of where global politics and economics intercept. He teaches International Political Economy at the New York University Center for Global Affairs where he is an Adjunct Assistant Professor. He is also a Scholarly Practitioner at the Zicklin Graduate School of Business of Baruch College of the City University of New York where he teaches courses on globalization. He is the author of "Why Globalization Works For America: How Nationalist Trade Policies Destroy Countries.” and "The Joint Ventured Nation: Why America Needs A New Foreign Policy”. He is a much-quoted essayist and public speaker on the subjects of Globalization, European-American relations, U.S.-Russian and China relations. He has commented on these issues on PBS, NPR, CBS, Bloomberg, The New York Times, The Hill, and the Huffington Post. |