Margaret Carlson, political journalist for Time magazine and CNN, will deliver a lecture titledHow Did We Get Here? The Voters, the Media and the Unknown in Election 2004at 2 p.m. Nov. 9 (Tuesday) in the auditorium of the Hesburgh Center for International Studies. The lecture is free and open to the public.p. The 2004-05 journalist-in-residence at 91³Ô¹Ï, Carlson joined Time as its first woman columnist in January 1988 from the New Republic, where she was managing editor. She has served as Times deputy Washington bureau chief and as a White House correspondent. Her journalism career has included stints as Washington bureau chief for Esquire magazine, editor of Washington Weekly, and editor of the Legal Times of Washington.p. In addition to her duties at Time, Carlson serves as a panelist on CNN’s political programsInside PoliticsandThe Capital Gang.She is the author of the memoirAnyone Can Grow Up: How George Bush and I Made it to the White House.p. A graduate of Pennsylvania State University, Carlson earned a law degree from George Washington University.p. As journalist-in-residence, Carlson will meet with students and faculty as well as speak in classes associated with the University’s John W. Gallivan Program in Journalism, Ethics&Democracy.
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]]>Published by 91³Ô¹Ï Press,The Quality of Democracyexplores a growing concern among policy experts and academics over the widely varying degrees of effectiveness of new democratic regimes, particularly in Latin America. It combines ODonnells theoretical study of how to determine quality in a democracy with analysis of data collected in an audit of Costa Rican citizens on the quality of democracy in their nation. ODonnell, Costa Rican researcher Jorge Vargas Cullell and Argentinean political scientist Osvaldo M. Iazzetta co-edited the volume, which includes scholarly reflections from 91³Ô¹Ï faculty members Juan Méndez and Michael Coppedge and 12 others.
ODonnell, the Helen Kellogg Professor of Political Science and a fellow in 91³Ô¹Ïs Kellogg Institute for International Studies, has published extensively on authoritarianism, democratization and democratic theory, including most recentlyThe (Un )Rule of Law and New Democracies in Latin America,also from 91³Ô¹Ï Press.
A graduate of the National University of Buenos Aires and Yale University, ODonnell specializes in the study of democratic theory, comparative democracy and democratization, Latin American politics and society, and relationships between legal and political theory.
Contact: Guillermo ODonnell, (574) 631-7756, odonnell.1@nd.edu
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