Main Content Region

politics

CSBS building, Faculty in the News
April 21, 2022

Brian Levin (criminal justice) comments on the Riverside County sheriff appearing at a campaign rally to be emceed by an extreme right-wing commentator.

Jack H. Brown Hall, Faculty in the News
April 18, 2022

Mike Stull (entrepreneurship) is CSUSB’s 2021-22 Golden Apple Award recipient, research by Brian Levin (criminal justice) is cited, and Owen J.P. Murphy (computer science emeritus) wrote an opinion piece on the Russia-Ukraine war.

Art sculpture, Faculty in the News
March 11, 2022

Andre Harrington (theatre arts), Brian Levin (criminal justice) and Anthony Silard (public administration) were included in recent news coverage.

JHB College, Faculty in the News
February 21, 2022

Tony Coulson (information and decision science), Brian Levin (criminal justice), David Yaghoubian (history), and Nicholas Bratcher (music) were included in recent news coverage.

College of Education, Faculty in the News
February 18, 2022

Nancy Acevedo (education) was interviewed about “The Chicana/o/x Dream: Hope, Resistance, and Educational Success,” a book she co-authored, and Brian Levin (criminal justice) discussed the sharp increase in hate crimes between 2020 and 2021.

CSBS building, Faculty in the News
February 14, 2022

Brian Levin (criminal justice), in separate news articles, was interviewed about a conspiracy theory tied to the Super Bowl halftime show, the extremist group Patriot Front and the rise in anti-Asian hate crimes in the past year.

CSBS, Faculty in the News
February 11, 2022

Brian Levin (criminal justice) was interviewed about the increase in anti-Asian hate crimes in 2021, security at this weekend’s Super Bowl in Inglewood and the extremist “Cali Bois” and “Boogaloo” movement.

People protesting after George Floyd’s death in May 2020.
February 11, 2022

“Mobilized by Injustice: Criminal Justice Contact, Political Participation, and Race,” presented by Hannah L. Walker of the University of Texas at Austin, will take place beginning at noon, Wednesday, Feb. 16, on Zoom.

Pfau Library, faculty in the news
February 10, 2022

Brian Levin (criminal justice) was interviewed about the extremist group known as the Cali Bois, Kelly Campbell (psychology) offered insights on what makes relationships long-lasting, and Anthony Silard (public administration) began a new series of articles on how social media has adversely affected people.