UVA’s John Owen, Taylor Professor of Politics, spoke to the Greek newspaper To Vima about the upheaval in Turkey. “It shows the classic signs of authoritarian paranoia.”
(By Steven Keithley, a third-year law student at the UVA School of Law) For all their rhetoric about protecting jobs and industry, what Trump and Clinton fail to understand is that the only guaranteed benefactor of their opposition to the agreement is not the downtrodden workers whose votes they seek, but one of the few entities that they both villainize even more than the Trans-Pacific Partnership: the People’s Republic of China.
By Kelley Deetz, research associate for the UVA President’s Commission on Slavery, and Alfred L. Brophy, Judge John J. Parker Distinguished Professor of Law, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) When First Lady Michelle Obama reminded Americans during the Democratic National Convention that she lives in a house literally built by slaves, it once again sparked discussion of slavery in the United States’ history.
Research published recently by Jennifer Doleac, a UVA assistant professor of public policy and economics, found that ban-the-box policies actually lowered the probability of employment by 5.1 percent for young, low-skilled black men and 2.9 percent for young, low-skilled Hispanic men.
A new study involving the University of Virginia finds that older, frail Americans – up to 4 million of them – live at home, but are not getting the health care they need. Aaron Yao, an assistant professor in the Department of Public Health Sciences in UVA’s School of Medicine, said bringing back the house call can greatly help this population.
UVA researchers are offering some good news for people with Type 1 diabetes.
Today is Virginia Western Community College Day in the City of Roanoke. Mayor Sherman Lea issued the proclamation in honor of the college’s 50th anniversary. The college was founded in 1966 by Gov. Mills Godwin when The Roanoke Extension Division of the University of Virginia and Roanoke Technical Institute, an extension of Virginia Tech merged. Enrollment has grown from 1,300 students to 12,000.
Bonnie Baha, a U.S. bond portfolio manager who helped Jeffrey Gundlach turn DoubleLine Capital into a $100 billion asset management firm, has died. She was 56. Baha died Sunday at the UVA Medical Center after she was struck by a car while crossing a street, according to a statement by the Albemarle County Police Department.
An Albemarle County police spokeswoman said three people – a mother, father and daughter – were crossing the street toward the shopping area when a driver was turning left from Bond Street onto District Avenue toward Hydraulic Road when the vehicle struck them.
More than 70 first-year law students took part in Sunday’s eighth annual Public Service Day.
Christopher Ruhm is a professor of public policy and economics at UVA. He’s also a trim 167 pounds, and he thinks America’s weight problem might be tied to the easy availability of high-calorie food.
(By Phoebe Willis, a UVA law student and the student representative to the UVA Board of Visitors) I understand the privilege of attending the University of Virginia, which provides a first-class education at a fraction of the cost of its peer group colleges and universities.
The Virginia Eventing and Dressage Team has grown to almost 30 members since its start in 2013. UVA has won the college team challenge at the Fall Virginia Horse Trials for three consecutive years and is hoping to continue that streak this fall.
Telos Corp., an Ashburn-based IT consulting company, is hosting its third annual Cyber Innovation Internship commencement Thursday night – like a “Shark Tank” for ideas on how to commercialize cybersecurity products and technologies. This year, students from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Stanford University, University of Virginia, Georgia Institute of Technology, Northern Virginia Community College, Providence College and George Mason University are representing their schools, and showing off their products Thursday night at Telos’ headquarters.
Administrators, faculty and students across Apereo’s global network responded enthusiastically to the announcement. “We’re so excited about the enhancements included in this release,” said Trisha Gordon, the director of the group that manages Sakai at UVA. “The introduction of Morpheus, a completely updated user interface with an emphasis on responsive design, allows our faculty and students to do outstanding work no matter where they are or what devices they’re using.”
For months now, the team at UVA’s Center on Politics has engaged in a periodic assessment of the likely breakdown in electoral votes in the presidential election. Rather than allow themselves to weasel out of making tough calls, they have eliminated the “toss-up” category and forced themselves to assign states to either Democrat Hillary Clinton or Republican Donald Trump.
As former U.S. Poet Laureate Rita Dove remarked, “Our nation needs to learn to value its independent writers and artists as the heralds of a richly textured, inclusive national identity.” Along with Dove, a UVA professor of creative writing, M.F.A. alumna Eleanor Henderson and upcoming Kapnick Writer-in-Residence Junot Díaz weighed in.
According to Larry Sabato, director of UVA’s Center of Politics, Obama may be waiting for the water to recede, since his visit could affect rescue efforts.
The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau’s use of undercover investigators “is a worrisome precedent, because ... we see more and more aggressive civil law-enforcement activity by the government, so that civil law enforcement borders on, if not bleeds into, criminal law enforcement,” said Andrew Vollmer, a former deputy general counsel at the Securities and Exchange Commission who teaches at the UVA School of Law.
A new Electoral College analysis by UVA’s Center for Politics reveals that the map is only growing for Hillary Clinton and even South Carolina and Kansas have moved from “safe Republican” to “likely Republican.”