THE Nelson A. Rockefeller Center for Public Policy This weekend welcomed 50 attendance researchers very first research conference held by the political and political section of health of the American Political Science Association.
The panels detained at the Haldeman Center addressed questions such as “the political economy of American health and social policy”, “reproductive rights”, “rural urban division” and “pandemic preparation and the prevention of diseases in a polarized society”.
The conference also presented a plenary session on “democracy, health policy and 2025” to discuss emerging issues, a graduate students and a “Meet the Editors” panel with publishers of research reviews.
“Dartmouth is an ideal house for learned conferences on urgent public issues,” explains the government and the public policy professor Herschel NachlisAssociate director and director of senior policies of the Rockefeller Center and co-organizer of the conference.
Natalie Hernandez, doctoral student in political science in Yale, discusses her research with the participants in the conference. (Photo by Zoe Olson)
“Dartmouth brings leading academics, an expert staff, a magnificent framework and an academic calendar based on terms which can allow us to carve out a time of conference when our university establishments based on the semester are on break,” explains Nachlis.
The inaugural conference was designed to present leading researchers in the field and also to welcome graduate students and junior academics, with funding to allow them to attend.
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We aim to make this conference a contributor coherent in national conversations on health and policy policy.
The conference was co-organized by officials of the political and political section of health of the American Political Science Association, including Nachlis, Charley Willison of Cornell University, Holly Jarman of the University of Michigan, and Andrew Kelly by Cal State University East Bay. The co-sponsors included the Rockefeller Center, C. Everett Koop Institute in DartmouthTHE Dean Associate for the Social Sciencesand the Government department.
The conference was organized by the team of public programs and special events at the Rockefeller Center, which also organized this year 2024 Series of electoral speakers And 100 -day series.
“Andrew, Charley, Holly and I have dreamed of holding a conference like this for years,” said Nachlis. “Given the success of this first iteration, we hope that we can develop our group of supporters and participants in the future.”
Planning is already underway to associate with peer institutions and research journals in the future. “We aim to make this conference a contributor coherent in national conversations on health policy and policy,” explains Nachlis.