Brian Levin (criminal justice) wrote an opinion column in the New York Daily News in which he said that despite the apparent hoax in the Jussie Smollett attack, hate crimes are rising and likely to be underreported.
Daniel MacDonald and Eric Nilsson (economics) put their research in proper context in a Pennsylvania minimum wage debate and David Yaghoubian (history) is interviewed about the ongoing turmoil in Venezuela.
The publication listed CSUSB in three categories: best online graduate criminal justice program, best online MBA program, and best online graduate business programs excluding MBA.
CSUSB’s John M. Pfau Library will host a talk, “We Carry the Border on our Bodies: Bridging and Maneuvering Immigration Status Barriers in U.S. and Canadian Postsecondary Education,” by Paloma E. Villegas, assistant professor of sociology.
Brian Levin (criminal justice) is interviewed about the latest Southern Poverty Law Center study on hate groups, hate crimes against Latinos, the Jussie Smollet case, and a U.S. Coast Guard officer accused of a domestic terror plot.
Anthony Metcalf (biology), Daniel MacDonald and Eric Nilsson (economic) and Brian Levin (criminal justice) appeared in news coverage on topics in which they are experts.
“Asylums and the Insane in Early Twentieth-Century China,” is the title of the talk to be given by Emily Baum, associate professor of modern Chinese history at UC Irvine, at the John M. Pfau Library, room PL-4005.
News media sought the analysis and perspective of Brian Levin (criminal justice) and Kevin Grisham (geography and environmental science) of the CSUSB Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism on the Jussie Smollett case.
Kate Liszka, CSUSB assistant professor of history and the Pamela and Benson Harer Fellow specializing in Egyptology, is leading the students on the trip.