Government graduate students receive CCSS QuIRI small grants

Seven Graduate Students in the Department at Cornell University were awarded Qualitative and Interpretive Research Institute (QuIRI) small grants from Cornell Center for Social Sciences (CCSS) in Fall 2021.

 

QuIRI brings together researchers from across Cornell who are teaching, employing, and developing rigorous qualitative research methodologies. The qualitative and interpretive social science faculty at Cornell University are among the very best in the world. QuIRI creates opportunities for collaboration and excellence in interpretive social science research and training.

The CCSS QuIRI Small Grants Program is intended to provide up to $2,000.00 in funding for qualitative research expenses (such as participant compensation, travel, equipment, transcription software, research assistants, publishing costs, etc.) to Cornell faculty, post-docs, & doctoral students in the social sciences. Projects which may lead to other funding or help move a project to completion and/or publication will be given priority. Doctoral students must be post-A-exam to receive a grant. Grad students can apply pre-A exams, but the funds will not be transferred until the A exams have been successfully completed. You can read more about QuIRI here.

 

Trevor Brown

Trevor Brown,
Democracy Deindustrialized?: The Political Economy of the Fall of Industry and the Rise of the Service Economy, 1960-2019

 

 

 

Alex Dyzenhaus

 

 

Alex Dyzenhaus,
Conceptions of Justice: Obstacles to Land Restitution in South Africa’s Putfontein Community

 

 

 

Naomi Egel

 

 

Naomi Egel,
Regulating Destruction: the Politics of Multilateral Weapons Governance

 

 

 

Thalia Gerzso

 

 

Thalia Gerzso,
Judicial Resistance: The Role of Courts in Electoral Disputes

 

 

 

Eun A. Jo

 

 

Eun A Jo,
Narrating Enemies in World Politics

 

 

 

Joseph Lasky

 

 

Joseph Lasky
Shadows and Silence: Identity and Legacies of Cameroon’s Hidden War

 

 

 

Hui-Yuan Neo

 

 

Hui-Yuan Neo,
Revolution from the Ivory Tower?: The Knowledge Economy and Political Destabilization in Authoritarian Regimes

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