Episodios

  • Episode 25: Rose McDermott
    Oct 3 2025

    Our podcast’s first bona fide political psychologist! Rose McDermott (Brown) has expertise spanning subjects from pharmacology to polygyny. In this lively episode we cover everything from male club behavior in security studies to the challenges of navigating graduate school if statistics aren’t your thing. Even nuclear war is easier to handle if you can laugh at it a little.

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    52 m
  • Episode 27: Kirsten Weld
    Sep 26 2025

    How do you describe the smell of a secret police archive, accidentally discovered in a steamy Guatemalan jungle? Only a few rare researchers can speak themselves into the Raiders of the Lost Archive canon as vividly as Kirsten Weld (Harvard). A can’t miss episode for anyone interested in pushing the boundaries between critical scholarship and activism.

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    54 m
  • Episode 24: Mark Beissinger
    Sep 12 2025

    Mark Beissinger (Princeton) recalls fieldwork in the Soviet Union, the transition to a “post-Soviet” experience, and speculates about the future of fieldwork in Russia as U.S.-Russia relations return to something resembling a new Cold War. A tireless mentor to dozens of comparativists, he reflects on his career and our shared ethical responsibility as archivists.

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    52 m
  • Episode 23 -- Roger Petersen
    May 2 2024

    How many civil wars were there in Iraq after the U.S. invasion – and how did they really end? Roger Petersen of MIT describes a life of immersion, from road construction to honchoing a network of scholar-soldiers as they unspooled the complexity of a decade of war in Iraq. How does one get honest answers out of warlords in situations where they (and their entourage) have all the power? Is it possible to be a neutral observer in an ongoing war? Can ethnographicsensibility be taught -- and if not, as the profession incentivizes students to become technically-oriented in our training sequences, what is lost? Provocative, funny, blunt, and always thoughtful, Petersen's slow-rolled delivery is calibrated to get you wondering what you might learn if you got serious about active listening.

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    53 m
  • Episode 22 - Wendy Pearlman
    Oct 16 2023

    Wendy Pearlman is Professor of Political Science at Northwestern University, where she is Crown Professor of Middle East Studies. She studies the comparative politics of the Middle East, social movements, and forced migration, and has conducted with more than 500 displaced Syrians since 2012. In this podcast we discuss how this data was curated ("midwife-ing") to create the award-winning We Crossed A Bridge and It Trembled: Voices from Syria (HarperCollins, 2017).

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    59 m
  • Episode 21 - Kristine Eck
    Jun 12 2023

    Kristine Eck (Uppsala University) discusses the challenges of working with contemporary and historical police archives. For quantitative social scientists, how does "the data generation process" introduce measurement bias into the processes that we are actually describing when we employ data generated by the state for counterinsurgency? How do ongoing state efforts to digitize archives aid and hinder political scientists and data scientists trying to quantify human rights abuses? What are the citation norms for private correspondence by public figures who were in command decision roles during episodes of violence? A frank, eye-opening discussion on how scholars access and use state-generated datasets on repression, with comparative cases ranging from the Malayan Emergency to Israel and from contemporary OECD countries to Nepal.

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    52 m
  • Episode 20 - Ana Bracic
    May 19 2023

    Ana Bracic (Michigan State University) discusses positionality, entree, and a variety of ethical considerations that informed her work with a highly-vulnerable population in Central Europe. The candid discussion of how her project on the Roma evolved from an idealized, perfect "magical dataset" ("something as ridiculous as a time-series cross-section dataset on some sort of dimension of Roma exclusion, and it didn't matter what it was, so long as it was the same one across all these observations...") to her actual project. How was her mother an asset? What happens if you come home from the field with data that, once analyzed, is shown to be completely unhelpful for your job market paper? A can't miss episode for an aspiring junior scholar.

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    55 m
  • Episode 19 - Margaret Levi
    May 5 2023

    The author of Rule and Revenue, In the Interests of Others, Consent, Dissent, and Patriotism, and Analytic Narratives describes some of her lesser-known her early-career work: police ride-alongs in Detroit after the social upheavals of the 1960s, interviewing Jimmy Hoffa, and day-drinking with scary police officers (before they went on duty). A wide-ranging discussion of triangulating data to tell a compelling story, how and when to alter theories in the face of new data, and numerous inspiring examples of tenacity in the face of adversity dealing with hard-to-access archives. With generous answers, always more cogent and coherent than the questions, this is truly a can't miss episode.

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    1 h y 4 m