2024-25 Visitors, Affiliates, and Programs

Danielle Allen smiles in front of a backdrop of trees.

Danielle Allen

2024-25 Wayne Morse Chair of Law and Politics

Danielle Allen is a political theorist and professor at Harvard University and an advocate for democracy. Her acclaimed book, Our Declaration, offers a profound analysis of American democratic principles. During the COVID-19 pandemic, Allen contributed crucial insights on equitable policy responses and effective governance. Allen recieved the Kluge Prize, which recognizes work in disciplines not covered by the Nobel Prizes, in 2020. In 2022, she ran for Governor of Massachusetts, emphasizing the need for systemic reform and inclusivity in state government. . She writes a column on constitutional democracy for the Washington Post.

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Resident Scholars

Erica Bornstein, a white woman with short hair and glasses
Department of Anthropology
“Nonprofit Lives: Navigating Democracy through the Nonprofit Form in Global Perspective"
Joel Sati smiles in front of a backdrop of foliage
School of Law
“Streamline: Illegality, Exception, and the Enemy Criminal Law”

 

Graduate Research Fellows

Troy Brundidge
Department of Geography
“Fix the cops: Qualified Immunity and State-Federal Conflict”
Mary Follo
Department of Political Science
"Progressive Policy, Regressive Outcome: The Oregon Case in State Preemption of Housing Policy”
Haifa Souilmi
Department of Political Science
“Unmaking Democracy: Civil Society, Media, and Democratic Backsliding in Tunisia and Hungary”

Project Grants

Civics Learning Project’s workshops in Southern, Central, and Eastern Oregon will give teachers tools to create safe spaces in class, so students learn to engage in constructive discourse on contentious issues.

Eugene Friends of the Farm Workers will hold an Oct. 10 event in conjunction with the Farm Worker Rights Movement exhibit at the Lane County History Museum. The event will raise awareness of and support for PCUN. 

Oregon League of Women Voters Youth Council will engage their peers in voter registration drives, youth-led workshops, and a Civic Engagement Summit to encourage them to amplify their voices in our democracy.

Next Up provides on-ramps for youth to engage in local democracy: Leadership academies teach organizing skills to build collective power. Internships train students to plan and lead voter registration drives. 

Rural Organizing Project and Hood River Latino Network will provide a training hub and civic engagement workshops for new citizens, rural voters, and rural youth voters.