All the below tweets are in English.
12月18日、下記 cf.を追加しました。
引き続き以下貼っておきます。なお、僭越でありまた舌足らずではありましょうが一応少しだけ書かせて頂きますと、個人や分野にもよりますが、日本の研究者がアメリカの研究者に内容で必ず負けるということはないと考えています。
ただ、社会や大学の構造によって研究内容が国内外の現実社会に活かされていない、英語等も含めて波及力を持ってない、そもそも各種連携が取れていないことが少なからずあるのは、認識せざるを得ないのではないでしょうか。
そういうものも含めると、優れた研究者による優れた研究内容があろうとも、世界の大学ランキングでは順位が伸び難いのは当然かもしれません。結局、日本社会全体の問題であろうと考えております。
Way to go, Penn Staters! https://t.co/zyOpw4kLOb
— McCourtney Institute for Democracy (@McCourtneyInst) November 7, 2018
The next two years are not going to be easy as Republicans and Democrats appear to be moving farther apart. @davidfrum has some advice for finding common ground and doing the hard work of democracy: https://t.co/hIs3JFOaXo pic.twitter.com/0uf05n2qmV
— McCourtney Institute for Democracy (@McCourtneyInst) November 7, 2018
What makes a #ConstitutionalCrisis? @PennStateLaw's Jud Mathews says it's when the Constitution can no longer serve as a guide for how the government should operate. We dove into the topic with him on our podcast earlier this year: https://t.co/VyAekPfg3w
— McCourtney Institute for Democracy (@McCourtneyInst) November 8, 2018
And another Kal Munis piece: "Race for the Senate 2018: Key issues in Montana" from Brookings.https://t.co/9tqwqt4HoM
— Politics UVA (@PoliticsUVA) October 29, 2018
Jennifer Lawless: Can a Republican win again in a Clinton district?https://t.co/Z3wgRy0FCq
— Politics UVA (@PoliticsUVA) October 9, 2018
UVA's Harry Harding, and C.K.Yen professor of politics Brantly Womack on China and the challenges facing American foreign policy https://t.co/h510Byi2iL via @YouTube
— Politics UVA (@PoliticsUVA) October 8, 2018
Check us out in the Sunday NYTimes. The Duke Law / UVA Legal Data Lab Corporate Prosecution Registry (a joint project) used for an above the fold article on the recent drop in corporate prosecutions. https://t.co/sTG3YEC1vC
— UVA Legal Data Lab (@UVALegalDataLab) November 5, 2018
Prof. George Yin tells @WashingtonPost that President Donald Trump probably can’t assert executive privilege to shield his tax returns. https://t.co/n8wQavbcjb
— UVA Law School (@UVALaw) November 7, 2018
Prof. Cale Jaffe discusses with @GoDanRiver how #SCOTUS’s uranium mining ban case defies traditional political leanings. https://t.co/9RRThzmjQ2
— UVA Law School (@UVALaw) November 5, 2018
Read Prof. @Debbie_Hellman’s chapter “Liberty, Equality, Bribery, and Self-Government: Reframing the Campaign Finance Debate” here: https://t.co/nZhBaMEvhC #SSRN https://t.co/cMCBatjCn8
— UVA Law School (@UVALaw) November 1, 2018
President Donald Trump can’t unilaterally decide who’s a birthright citizen, Prof. Saikrishna Prakash tells @BBCNews. https://t.co/EDLCBmdEt4
— UVA Law School (@UVALaw) October 30, 2018
Military deployments to the border are largely a symbolic and narrow action, Prof. David Martin tells @WeAreSinclair. https://t.co/rKQol5vKn3
— UVA Law School (@UVALaw) October 30, 2018
Prof. Kim Forde-Mazrui talks to @TIME about the Trump administration’s possible new transgender policy. https://t.co/U6qqb9PWhF
— UVA Law School (@UVALaw) October 24, 2018
Over the past four decades, @Center4Politics Director Larry Sabato has analyzed 10 midterm elections at UVA. See why he says tomorrow is different. https://t.co/gliqsAi1YC
— UVA (@UVA) November 5, 2018
.@RTDSchapiro @RTDNEWS quotes Prof Rebecca Green, #ElectionLaw Program: #SCOTUS could scramble #Virginia elections https://t.co/szg3Bvuj5Q
— William & Mary Law (@WMLawSchool) June 8, 2016
"I think the pattern of voting, the very high turnout on both sides, is a warning in a way…" Three @DukeU professors comment on #ElectionResults2018 #ncpol @PolisAtDuke @AshleyJardina https://t.co/mqeE7oHdjr
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) November 8, 2018
#ICYMI, he's the the principal military advisor to President Trump and Sec. of Defense Mattis and a key member of the national security security team. A conversation with Gen. Joseph Dunford current Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Watch:https://t.co/ACXDYrFQ5H
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) November 6, 2018
Does language lead to violence? Professor @schanzerdavid discusses on @NPR #Podcast Forum. Listen: https://t.co/DWUsN2LWwx @DukeU @PolisAtDuke @DukePoliSci @DukeinDC @DukeDCTweets
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) October 31, 2018
It's true – voter turnout amongst young people has historically been "pathetic." A @DukeU team is studying why, and what can be done about it.#Election2018 https://t.co/hbXTL9G3aA
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) October 30, 2018
"What would #Reagan do?" Professor Simon Miles writes in @ForeignPolicy https://t.co/dxnB4Id3gd
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) October 30, 2018
Our @SandyDarity's work is at the heart of an "ambitious" proposal from @CoryBooker to close the racial wealth gap.https://t.co/qlK3nM5Q8w
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) October 29, 2018
"Our government is run by rich people — and it benefits them the most." -Professor @Nick_Carnes_
Read More: @voxdotcom https://t.co/3ojAlF4LEe pic.twitter.com/MDKOntxjyx— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) October 24, 2018
“People are going to keep fleeing as long as it’s that bad." comments Professor @SarahBBermeo on the #MigrantCaravan heading towards the US. @washingtonpost: https://t.co/4TeMC2WzPN @DukeU @DukeDCID
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) October 23, 2018
Are you ready to #vote? Put your policy understanding to the test: https://t.co/v3FNgzCsgl
(Research by Sanford Professors Cook and @KAGoss contributed to these questions!)@DukeU @DukeStudents #Election2018 #MidtermElections2018— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) October 16, 2018
How do active #military feel about #Trump? New poll shows support is fading. https://t.co/k7OhRjP7c9 pic.twitter.com/oGI6UuoekA
— SanfordPublicPolicy (@DukeSanford) October 16, 2018
New episode delves into #MigrantCaravans – "The only real solution is to tackle the underlying causes of the violence," says @SarahBBermeo Listen:@DukeU @DukeDCID https://t.co/XEk93BJOJn
— Policy 360 (@Policy_360) November 3, 2018
Anthony A. Braga of @RutgersU and Philip J. Cook of @DukeSanford have conducted research showing a strong positive association between death rate and #gun caliber, refuting the popular " #peoplekillpeople " argument https://t.co/B6EiNHHkMP
— The Regulatory Review (@TheRegReview) November 6, 2018
Working-class people are underrepresented in politics. The problem isn’t voters. — @Nick_Carnes_ https://t.co/RGuxJtCHwY via @voxdotcom @DukeU @DukeSanford
— Mark Anthony Neal (@NewBlackMan) October 31, 2018
Prof. @brandonlgarrett: Corporate Prosecution Registry tracks trend towards lenience in corporate criminal prosecution under AG Sessions https://t.co/fpTvgqSLPw
— Duke Law (@DukeLaw) November 8, 2018
Prof. Bradley serves as reporter on American Law Institute's new restatement of U.S. foreign relations law https://t.co/m2wdkC845z
— Duke Law (@DukeLaw) November 8, 2018
Mike Levin ’05 will join the 116th U.S. Congress representing CA's 49th district & Susan Bysiewicz ’86 will begin a four-year term as CT's lieutenant gov. The two are among several members of the Duke Law community who won election or re-election on Nov. 6 https://t.co/fUj3KlFEnK
— Duke Law (@DukeLaw) November 7, 2018
Prof. Powell comments on constitutional amendments on North Carolina ballot https://t.co/yI6x32znUz
— Duke Law (@DukeLaw) November 5, 2018
Prof. Coleman urges politicians to "identify the serious problems facing the state (and country) and work with each other to find solutions." https://t.co/pnq7HxSKzS
— Duke Law (@DukeLaw) November 5, 2018
Prof. Emeritus Dellinger: President's plan to end birthright citizenship by executive order "flatly unlawful and unconstitutional" and would create "permanent caste of aliens" https://t.co/yXVqRwblwV
— Duke Law (@DukeLaw) November 1, 2018
Prof. Dunlap: Deploying armed forces within the U.S. “for politically charged goals is seldom desired by the military itself” https://t.co/P7iAteFadV
— Duke Law (@DukeLaw) October 31, 2018
Prof. Beskind on president’s claim of Kavanaugh’s innocence: In U.S. courts, “not guilty” only means doubt remains https://t.co/8upY6D7tKm
— Duke Law (@DukeLaw) October 11, 2018
People who say businesses should stay out of politics are "missing the point," Prof @aaronchatterji told @Yukinoguchi https://t.co/9dgRUevQ5G
— Duke Fuqua (@DukeFuqua) October 17, 2018
On Nov6, millions of Americans will cast their votes in districts that have been declared unconstitutional by a federal court. Listen to @annieminoff and @ElahFeder talk about their podcast on the math that may save democracy https://t.co/ID220QzCqG @undiscoveredpod @jcmattingly
— dukeresearch (@dukeresearch) October 31, 2018
.@DukeSanford Dean Judith Kelley says international election observers are likely to encounter a growing climate of distrust among U.S. voters about elections and the voting process this year. https://t.co/NfFsF4e4Cb
— Duke University (@DukeU) November 1, 2018
"It is a realistic goal, but I think it's going to take a lot of work by multiple parties," says Duke's Jennifer Weiss about NC Governor's greenhouse gas emissions reduction order. @NichInstitute https://t.co/kovk5DgfA8
— Duke University (@DukeU) October 31, 2018
Domestic terrorism? Experts, including @DukeSanford's @schanzerdavid, analyze targets, timing and tactics in package bomb attacks. https://t.co/lcJ4X6QaPp
— Duke University (@DukeU) October 29, 2018
The voice of the young voter on Election Day 2018.https://t.co/IYcaSCQfwe
— USC Carolina N&R (@USCCarolinaNews) November 7, 2018
Democratic officials and critics of Trump received packages containing suspected pipe bombs. Read @rachelcpittman article on what experts have to say about this. https://t.co/37K08kjjr7
— USC Carolina N&R (@USCCarolinaNews) October 26, 2018
.@jonathanwpeters of our #GradyFaculty talks with @cnn about First Amendment rights in relation to the revocation of Jim Acosta's press pass at the White House. #GradyExperts https://t.co/47H0WWdNBc
— UGA Grady College (@UGAGrady) November 9, 2018
In small teams of reporters, researchers, designers, visual journalists and a copy/web desk, they ended up with three digital pieces in one hour: https://t.co/NndfDigWsi #ProudProf
— Amanda Bright (@amandacbright) November 6, 2018
With Georgia being a battleground state, our kids are scattering across the land for the last few days of the campaigns. @Vira_Halim was in Groveland yesterday with the Vice President and Brian Kemp for @GradyNewsource : https://t.co/DEjvEEwbJP #UGAVJ
— Mark E. Johnson (@markejohnson) November 2, 2018
Millions Have Voted Early in the Midterms. Here’s What That Means — and What It Doesn’t, featuring our own @ElectProject, Professor Michael McDonald https://t.co/qLwFzDxSJE
— UFPoliSci (@UFPoliSci) October 25, 2018
Did you miss this deep-dive into voter turnout, featuring our own @ElectProject, in @nytimes this week? Here it is…https://t.co/g6avroYzjM
— UFPoliSci (@UFPoliSci) October 7, 2018
My prophetic words from 2016 about overtime scenarios: Better hope the election's not close: Michael McDonald https://t.co/RGufse87z3
— Michael McDonald (@ElectProject) November 9, 2018
https://twitter.com/ElectProject/status/1060577574324236291
My work with @marceelias to unpack the Virginia’s 3rd congressional district as an unconstitutional racial gerrymander helped the Democrats win 3 more seats to Congress: the 2nd, 4th, and 7th https://t.co/WpXogu2T8L
— Michael McDonald (@ElectProject) November 8, 2018
Broward is still counting mail ballots, which is why the FL Gov race is likely to join the Senate race and head into recount territory.
Oh, the oddly high undervote in the Senate election? That may be due to poor ballot design. Have we learned nothing? https://t.co/TVJLPbM6mp
— Michael McDonald (@ElectProject) November 8, 2018
Here is a bit of an oddity. About 30K Broward voters didn't have a vote recorded in the FL Senate election, the highest of any county by far https://t.co/qUubDbTwdv pic.twitter.com/zF7knhviMw
— Michael McDonald (@ElectProject) November 7, 2018
The House has the right to determine its membership. They could refuse to seat or expel any of these members. In the 19th century the majority party regularly refused to seat members of the minority party, particularly over election disputes https://t.co/i5BswACHcm
— Michael McDonald (@ElectProject) November 7, 2018
It's impossible to have a high turnout election on the strength of just one party voting. Both parties must be engaged. Democrats did much better than 2014, but did not realize all the gains they had hoped for because Republicans didn't stay home https://t.co/cmHj2DUFvr pic.twitter.com/ZCzIjQeDDl
— Michael McDonald (@ElectProject) November 7, 2018
Turnout update: An estimated 111.7 million voted for a turnout rate of 47.4%, which just slightly tops the turnout rate of 47.3% in 1970, but does not beat 1966's 48.7%. Still some uncertainty here, especially among the high volume mail ballot states https://t.co/uab97udAQr
— Michael McDonald (@ElectProject) November 7, 2018
Amendment 4 passed, but so did a lot of crappy ones! Yuck. https://t.co/RaTMydQmQ2
— Professor Darren Hutchinson (@dissentingj) November 7, 2018
The Onion captures reality in many red states. https://t.co/2Xh01cHarS
— Professor Darren Hutchinson (@dissentingj) November 6, 2018
Poll workers often ask people for a driver's license, even when state law is more liberal. https://t.co/hvhYIVCyPF
— Professor Darren Hutchinson (@dissentingj) November 6, 2018
Election Land is also covering today's problems https://t.co/sfT2tuOtro
— Professor Darren Hutchinson (@dissentingj) November 6, 2018
Early voting provided by the Supervisor of Elections will be available at the @ReitzUnion, Room G-50, every day from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Oct. 22 through Nov. 3. On Election Day itself, voters must vote in their assigned polling place. pic.twitter.com/8ffGpcPS4X
— FLORIDA (@UF) October 22, 2018
West Virginia residents serving oversees will be first U.S. voters to cast election ballots by blockchain-powered mobile technology. Innovation? Danger? Both? https://t.co/vG3Mj594W0
— The iSchool at FSU (@FSUiSchool) August 7, 2018
Yesterday, #FSULaw Professor @MichaelMorley11 was interviewed for Central Florida’s @Fox35News piece and accompanying article about the Senate recount (https://t.co/aPNF3S4MAi), as well as a @News6WKMG TV interview (https://t.co/Wan4GASEdf).
— FSU College of Law (@FSUCollegeofLaw) November 8, 2018
#FSULaw Professor @MichaelMorley11 has been in the election news this week. He was quoted in North Carolina’s @newsobserver article “Humidity, ballot size cause issues with voting machines in North Carolina, officials say.” https://t.co/Y5xLhG2e9M
— FSU College of Law (@FSUCollegeofLaw) November 8, 2018
The 2018 midterm election shifts the balance of power in Congress, with women playing a huge role. UM political science experts weigh in on what this new landscape means for Washington and for governing the nation. https://t.co/gs3wt9068j
— UM Arts&Sciences (@UMCAS) November 8, 2018
UM political science professor Gregory Koger reflects on the life of longtime Arizona senator #JohnMcCain, who died from brain cancer at age 81 and will be buried Sunday at the U.S. Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. https://t.co/U9TBTwFcb1
— UM Arts&Sciences (@UMCAS) August 31, 2018
Angel Sanchez is one of millions of Floridians impacted by a law that strips individuals with felony convictions of their voting rights. We have the power this Nov. to restore these rights once and for all. Learn how: https://t.co/8RgyERVdfx pic.twitter.com/fyHNywQp3v
— John Legend (@johnlegend) October 29, 2018
Is history repeating itself? @umcas and @MiamiLawSchool professors recount where they were in 1968 and weigh in on the issue of a nation divided in 2018. https://t.co/rRLkIDEXYN #umiami pic.twitter.com/OmG6STb1fl
— University of Miami (@univmiami) November 5, 2018
UM Political Science Associate Professor @JoeUscinski, an expert on #conspiracytheories, provides his analysis on what makes some people ardent believers. https://t.co/c9rh8Lglci pic.twitter.com/VlIoTcswcl
— University of Miami (@univmiami) November 1, 2018
With a life of crime and gang violence behind him, @MiamiLawSchool student Angel Sanchez is an eloquent advocate for overturning Florida’s felony #voting ban. https://t.co/0Nupk4TEbe pic.twitter.com/UBz2Sw2dhB
— University of Miami (@univmiami) November 1, 2018
Democracy in action: @univmiami President @Julio_Frenk shares how you can make your voice count by #voting this #electionseason. https://t.co/dbS5LvwvOU #umiami pic.twitter.com/YWfXP0onY4
— University of Miami (@univmiami) October 25, 2018
CNN host, journalist and author, @fareedzakaria spoke to UM students about the global pressures facing America and the ways to unite the country. https://t.co/dU90jI9jdP #umiami pic.twitter.com/0hH0poAurC
— University of Miami (@univmiami) October 16, 2018
—
https://twitter.com/WSjp_insight/status/1061873619079294976
cf.12月18日追加分 昨年のほぼ同時期です。
US Policy Changes Vol.73 (US business school professors Vol.6) ウェストバージニア、テネシー、アラバマ、ミシシッピを含めて、ワシントンDC以南の東部~南東部です。
US Policy Changes Vol.66 (US law professors Vol.2) ワシントンDC以南の東南部から中西部ミズーリまでです。
1月9日追加分
North Carolina Vol.2 (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
North Carolina Vol.3 (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
North Carolina Vol.4 (University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)
North Carolina Vol.5 (UNC at Charlotte/Greensboro, North Carolina State University, et al.)
North Carolina Vol.6 (Wake Forest & Duke)