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Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > News Topics >

Public Policy & Politics

The Public Policy news topic offers a selection of news and experts drawn from the following sub-categories:

Areas of Interest
• American Politics   • International Politics
 • Presidential Politics & Campaign Issues   • Social Policy / Issues
• Economic Policy   • War / Terrorism

Faculty Experts:

Showing Public Policy & Politics Experts 1 through 5 of 19.  - Show More
Ross Brownson

Professor

A leading expert in chronic disease prevention and an expert in the area of applied epidemiology, Ross Brownson is regarded as one of the great intellectual, educational, and practice leaders in the field of evidence-based public health.


Expertise: Chronic disease prevention, evidence-based public health, policy effects on physical activity and obesity

Direct contact: 314-362-9641 / rbrownson@wustl.edu


Matthew Kreuter

Professor

Matt Kreuter is a leading national public health expert in the field of health communications.


Expertise: Health communication, cancer prevention and control, health disparities

Direct contact: 314-935-3701 / mkreuter@wustl.edu


Timothy McBride

Associate Dean for Public Health

McBride

Tim McBride has been active in testifying before Congress and consulting with important policy constituencies on Medicare, insurance and rural health policy issues. He is a member of the Rural Policy Research Institute Health Panel that provides expert advice on rural health issues to the U.S. Congress ...


Expertise: Health insurance, universal health care, public health, Medicare policy, health economics, gerontology and Social Security, state health policy, …

Direct contact: 314-935-4356 / tmcbride@wustl.edu


Gregory Magarian

Professor of law

Gregory Magarian

Magarian is a leading expert in the areas of election law, the electoral system, free speech, the First Amendment and constitutional law. He is the author of a number of articles including the forthcoming "Substantive Media Regulation in Three Dimensions" (George Washington Law Review).


Expertise: election law, First Amendment, third parties, free speech, law and religion, church-state law, media regulation, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-3394 / gpmagarian@wulaw.wustl.edu


Ramesh Raghavan

Assistant professor of Social Work

Ramesh Raghavan's clinical, policy and administrative expertise in public health and psychiatry fuel his research interests in mental health services and policies for children in the child welfare system. Prior to joining the faculty at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work and the School of ...


Expertise: public health, mental health services, children in the child welfare system, health policy, Medicaid

Direct contact: 314-935-4469 / raghavan@wustl.edu



Showing Public Policy & Politics Experts 1 through 5 of 19.  - Show More

News Stories & Tip Sheets:

Showing Public Policy & Politics Stories 1 through 3 of 173.  - Show More
Holiday cheer or holiday hunger?

Nearly half of all U.S. children will use food stamps, says poverty expert

Nov. 2, 2009 -- Holidays and tables full of delicious food usually go hand in hand, but for nearly half of the children in the United States, this is not guaranteed. "49 percent of all U.S. children will be in a household that uses food stamps at some point during their childhood," says Mark R. Rank, Ph.D., poverty expert at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis. "Food stamp use is a clear sign of poverty and food insecurity, two of the most detrimental economic conditions affecting a child's health." Rank's study, "Estimating the Risk of Food Stamp Use and Impoverishment During Childhood," is published in the current issue of the Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine. Video available.


Major milestone in the health care debate

Expert discusses the next steps for health care reform in the U.S.

Oct. 16, 2009 -- With health care legislation now up for debate in both the House and the Senate, comprehensive health care reform is closer than ever, says Timothy McBride, Ph.D., health economist and associate dean of public health at the George Warren Brown School of Social Work at Washington University in St. Louis. McBride says that there is still much work to be done with health care reform and contentious issues remain. Among those are the public option, how the legislation will be financed, the generosity of the coverage, Medicare Advantage reforms and whether there will be mandates for employers to offer coverage. (Video available)


China's rapidly aging population -- part of a worldwide trend

The global demographic shift is a significant opportunity as long as it is in tandem with a policy and cultural shift, say productive aging experts

Oct. 14, 2009 -- China's population of adults over 65 tops 100 million. This number is steadily growing, putting China at the forefront of a global demographic shift that includes the United States and other developed nations. "While a common tendency is to focus on the burdens an aging population will place on a country's economic and social welfare, an aging society represents an opportunity, not just a crisis," says Nancy Morrow-Howell, Ph.D., productive aging expert and professor at the Brown School of Social Work at Washington University. "Expanding opportunities for productive engagement, including paid employment, formal volunteering, and mutual aid, may reduce social costs by reducing health care expenses and need for post-retirement income supports. (Video available)



Showing Public Policy & Politics Stories 1 through 3 of 173.  - Show More

Related News Clips:

Showing Public Policy & Politics Clips 1 through 5 of 64.  - Show More
Show More Public Policy & Politics Clips
Republicans tense as voter disillusionment sets in
USA Today

May 20, 2008 -- Iraq is one of several tides running against GOP candidates, driving away independent voters and some party faithful. Except for Missouri, independent voters in five Senate races polled by USA Today were swinging toward the Democrat. Party loyalty was stronger among Democrats than Republicans in every state but Ohio. Michael Minta, professor of political science in Arts & Sciences, comments on how the stem cell research issue is dividing Republicans in Missouri.


A few tips to lead a 'greener' lifestyle
DailyIndia.com (FL) and 3 others

Jan. 14, 2008 -- Matt Malten, WUSTL assistant vice chancellor for campus sustainability, offers a few tips on how to lessen your impact on the environment without spending a lot of bucks. "The old adage of reduce, reuse, recycle remains apropos. We must remind ourselves that the first step is always to reduce our demand of natural resources," Malten said.


Houston area schools don't expect ruling to have major impact
Houston Chronicle

July 2, 2007 -- School leaders in the Houston area said Thursday they're not expecting a shake-up in how they assign students to campuses after a Supreme Court decision that limits the use of race.
WUSTL law professor Samuel Bagenstos comments on the ruling.


Scientists Look to Vaccines in the War on E. Coli
The New York Times and 1 others

May 1, 2007 -- Vaccines for people and for cattle are just two approaches under development to prevent or treat food poisoning by the strain E. coli O157:H7.
Right now, scientists can do little medically to fight the pathogen, which was responsible for two severe outbreaks last fall.
WUSTL pediatrics professor Phillip Tarr, a gastroenterology specialist, comments on the difficulty of treatment.


Hopes for a Renaissance After Exodus in St. Louis
The New York Times and 3 others

April 17, 2007 -- Article looks at St. Louis' effort to rebuild its image in the face of population loss and public school accreditation problems.
WUSTL architecture professor John Hoal, who has been involved in numerous municipal planning projects, comments on the redevelopment effort.


Former Supreme Court justice to hear cases in St. Louis
Associated Press State & Local Wire and 2 others

Feb. 14, 2007 -- Friday story on retired U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor who will be part of a three-judge appellate court panel in St. Louis hearing two high-profile cases this week.
One case she'll hear involves a challenge to Missouri election law that opponents say denies voting rights to some who are mentally ill.
WUSTL law professor and anti-discrimination law expert Samuel Bagenstos says a dozen states allow for individual assessments of mentally ill people under guardianship.


Diabetes, obesity can increase your Alzheimer's risk
CNN.com

Nov. 7, 2006 -- November is National Alzheimer's Disease month. CNN medical correspondent Judy Fortin talked about the illness with John Morris, director of WUSTL's Alzheimer's Disease Research Center. He said besides old age, diabetes and obesity are also risk factors for developing Alzheimer's.


Commentary: Laureate Phelps
The Wall Street Journal

Oct. 18, 2006 -- Hoover Institution research fellow David Henderson writes about the work of Edmund Phelps, this year's Nobel laureate in economics. Phelps collaborated with Robert Pollak on his capital formation research. Pollak is now an economics professor at WUSTL.


Commentary: Laureate Phelps
The Wall Street Journal

Oct. 18, 2006 -- Hoover Institution research fellow David Henderson writes about the work of Edmund Phelps, this year's Nobel laureate in economics. Phelps collaborated with Robert Pollak on his capital formation research. Pollak is now an economics professor at WUSTL.


Parents often naive about children's drug use
Atlanta Journal-Constitution and 16 others

Sept. 27, 2006 -- Parents are largely unaware of their children's alcohol and drug use, according to new WUSTL research published in the October issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experiemental Research.
WUSTL psychiatry professor and study researcher Jean Bierut comments.


Search for an E. coli defense
Los Angeles Times and 1 others

Sept. 25, 2006 -- Part of the alarm over cases of E. coli poisoning, such as the current spinach-linked outbreak, has been the difficulty in treating the most severe cases -- when toxins produced by the bacterium cause kidney failure. But researchers have been working for two decades to learn more about the illness and now think they will eventually have ways to limit the damage.
WUSTL pediatrics professor Phillip Tarr comments. Tarr treated many of the children who fell ill in 1993 in the Pacific Northwest from E. coli poisoning involving contaminated, under-cooked meat.


Judge again blocks flight attendants from striking against Northwest Airlines
Associated Press, Chicago Tribune and 5 others

Sept. 22, 2006 -- Northwest Airlines Corp. flight attendants on Thursday asked to be released from federal mediation so they can strike the carrier after a federal judge ruled they couldn't walk off the job. WUSTL law professor and labor relations expert Neil Bernstein comments.


U.S. to Deploy Proven Technology on Borders
NPR - Morning Edition

Sept. 22, 2006 -- The Department of Homeland Security today awards a multi-billion dollar contract to beef up border security. The anticipated winner is Boeing. Despite the aerospace giant's background, Boeing's border security plan is less high tech than you might expect.
WUSTL computer science professor Robert Pless comments on surveillance technology. He is assistant director of WUSTL's Center for Security Technologies.


Political pros sharpen their knives in press release wars
Associated Press State & Local Wire and 5 others

July 26, 2006 -- Article on the increasingly common attack fare in news releases from political operatives desperate to spin news coverage to their advantage.
WUSTL political rhetoric expert Wayne Fields, who directs the American Culture Studies program, says these tactics threaten to drain the substance out of political debate.


Editorial: Young Latinas and a cry for help
The New York Times

July 21, 2006 -- Editorial responds to a recent series in the Spanish-language New York newspaper El Diario/La Prensa sheds some light on a mostly overlooked national phenomenon, the misunderstood and endangered young Latina, who represents one of the fastest-growing segments of the American population. Hispanic teenage girls attempt suicide more often than any other group. A five-year study now in its second year in New York is being led by WUSTL social work and psychiatry professor Luis Zayas, who says the self-destructive behavior seems to affect Latinas of every origin and every region of the country.


Live mike captures Bush's tough talk at G8 summit
USA Today

July 18, 2006 -- President Bush got bit again Monday by the open-microphone bug. Apparently unaware that his words were being broadcast, Bush offered an unvarnished assessment of Syria's alleged support for Hezbollah's attacks on Israel. He also criticized United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan, teased British Prime Minister Tony Blair about a sweater he recently gave the president, and joked about the long-windedness of some unnamed world leaders. Wayne Fields, a political scientist at Washington University in St. Louis, said Bush is unlikely to take heat at home for his remarks.


Secularism, the French & Alfred Dreyfus
The New York Sun

July 7, 2006 -- Several hundred Parisians gathered at City Hall yesterday to pay tribute to a French army captain, Alfred Dreyfus,who was convicted wrongly of treason in a trial that divided France more than a century ago. Anti-Semitism and assimilation are still controversial subjects in France today. WUSTL anthropology professor John Bowen comments.


Bird extinction pace worries scientists
Kansas City Star and 19 others

July 5, 2006 -- New research shows that birds are becoming extinct faster than scientists have thought.
A group of scientists that included WUSTL biology professor and conservationist Peter Raven, president of the Missouri Botanical Garden, revised the existing extinction estimate to take into account ongoing fossil discoveries of extinct species and missing birds not yet classified as extinct. The results of their study appear this week in the online early edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


Funding for Alzheimer's research is key, scientists say
Kansas City Star and 17 others

July 5, 2006 -- Scientists who study Alzheimer's disease say they are on the brink of finding treatments to slow or stop it.
A few weeks ago, Congress voted to reduce funding for research on Alzheimer's disease.
WUSTL scientists commenting are neurology professor Anne Fagan Niven, neurology professor and chair David Holtzman, and Tom Meuser, director of education and rural outreach at WUSTL's Alzheimer's Disease Research Center.


Outbreak has bird-flu experts stumped
Chicago Tribune and 11 others

May 25, 2006 -- Seven members of one family in a remote village in Indonesia have died of bird flu, and disease detectives from around the world are trying to determine the facts surrounding the case.
It remains unclear if the family members transmitted the deadly illness to one another or if all were infected by a source yet to be identified.
WUSTL molecular microbiology professor Andrew Pekosz comments.



Related Information
Media Assistance:

Gerry Everding
Exec. Director of News and Electronic Communications
gerry_everding@wustl.edu

(314) 935-5230
Related Groups:

Schools:
George Warren Brown School of Social Work
Olin Business School
School of Law

Departments:
Political Science

- View All Groups

Related Topics:
American Politics
Campaign Tactics & Strategy
Economic Policy
International Politics
Social Policy / Issues
War / Terrorism

- View All Topics

Revised:

Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2004


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