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SOKHEY, SARAH WILSON (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   184524


Learning by Doing: Using an Undergraduate Research Lab to Promote Diversity and Inclusion / Nonnemacher, Jeffrey; Sokhey, Sarah Wilson   Journal Article
Sokhey, Sarah Wilson Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Undergraduate research labs have long been recognized as having educational and professional benefits, but much less attention has been given to how they can promote diversity and inclusion. Without a conscientious effort to promote these goals, labs are likely to replicate and perpetuate existing inequalities. This article discusses our experiences and lessons from launching an undergraduate research lab in a political science department at a research-oriented state university. It concludes with suggestions for other departments interested in starting undergraduate research labs. Promoting diversity and inclusion by working with undergraduates is unlikely if faculty are recruiting students individually outside of a lab, if the burden is on students to approach faculty, or if labs do not take practical steps to make this happen.
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2
ID:   139274


Market-oriented reforms as a tool of state-building: Russian pension reform in 2001 / Sokhey, Sarah Wilson   Article
Sokhey, Sarah Wilson Article
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Summary/Abstract Despite domestic opposition and several policy alternatives, in 2001 the Russian government adopted a pension reform that was potentially costly and had uncertain long-term benefits. Demographic and fiscal pressures created the desire to reform and a more cooperative Duma made it possible to do so. These points do not explain why Putin chose the pension privatisation option. Russia's pension reform is best understood as part of a state-building strategy to diminish the role of powerful bureaucracies. Russia's welfare state was not merely the product of a powerful and popular president, but rather a tool to create a stronger executive.
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