by Kayode Babatunde | Apr 28, 2019 | Georgia State University
How can the most compassionate and diverse largest bloc of voters in the United States be the least participant in a country that seems to be digressing from its roots? Based on common knowledge of the voting statistics in the United States, the millennials are by far...
by Kenya Shawlaney | Apr 28, 2019 | Georgia State University
Over my spring break, I went to a political event called “How Journalists and The Public Shape our Democracy.” This political event was held in Gwinnett County at their public library. For those who do not know where Gwinnett County is located, it is in Suwannee,...
by Sara Rosendorf | Apr 27, 2019 | Georgia State University
For this blog post, I will be covering a “digital event” while currently residing in Utrecht, the Netherlands. I will explore the works done by the League of Women Voters, with an emphasis to the Georgia chapter of their organization. To fully understand the agendas,...
by Kenneth Coleman | Apr 26, 2019 | University of Chicago
Muller posits that, in order to hold an accountable government, “it is crucial that citizens be well informed about politics” [1]. There is a common sense truth to this statement. A democracy is, after all, an “arrangement [of...
by Stiv Mucollari | Apr 20, 2019 | Suffolk University
During the communist era in Albania, the Party of Labor controlled the media. Albania had only one-state owned television station and two daily newspapers, and foreign TV broadcasts were jammed.[1] After the collapse of the communist regime, freedom of the press was...