Participants

RSS

Debbie Walsh

Director, Center for American Women and Politics

Debbie Walsh is director of the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP). She joined the CAWP staff in 1981. As director of the Center, she oversees CAWP's research, education and public service programs. She is frequently called upon by the media for information and comment and speaks to a variety of audiences around the country on topics related to women's political participation. First as director of CAWP's Program for Women Public Officials and now as the Center's director, Walsh has led the Center's extensive work with women officeholders and organized more than a dozen national conferences for women officials. Walsh serves on the New Jersey Advisory Commission on the Status of Women, having been appointed by Governor James McGreevey and reappointed by Governor Jon Corzine.She earned her B.A. in political science from SUNY Binghamton and her M.A. in political science from Rutgers, where she was an Eagleton Fellow.

Website

Email

 
View All
 

News

RSS 2.0 Feed
 

Online Appendix: Integrating Gender into the Political Science Core Curriculum

Several participants have been engaged in sharing ideas about how to integrate gender in the broader Political Science curricula via "gender mainstreaming." This is an online appendix to accompany their current manuscript.

Continue Reading
 

Wooster Professor Co-Organizing Conference on Gender in Political Psychology

Angela Bos and Monica Schneider receive National Science Foundation Grant to hold conference

Continue Reading

participants

participantsMeet the Organizers

Monica Schneider and Angie Bos

Monica is an Asst. Professor at Miami University (Ohio) and Angie is an Asst. Professor at the College of Wooster. They have been friends and collaborators since they first met at the University of Minnesota where they both completed the interdisciplinary Ph.D. minor in political psychology and focused their dissertation research on gender and political psychology.

Continue reading