In the News

  1. November 11, 2019
    • Headshot of Javed Ali

    “ISIS will focus on ensuring that its toxic worldview persists and survives, despite all the setbacks it has suffered the past few years. … With this certainty, ISIS’ propaganda and recruiting techniques will likewise find currency with vulnerable refugee populations caught up in Syria’s war-torn landscape,” co-wrote Javed Ali, the Towsley Policymaker in Residence at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy.

    The Hill
  2. November 11, 2019
    • Photo of Roya Ensafi
    • J. Alex Halderman

    Research by Roya Ensafi, assistant professor of electrical engineering and computer science, and colleagues shows that Russia is succeeding in imposing a highly effective internet censorship regime across thousands of disparate, privately owned providers in an effort also aimed at making government snooping pervasive. “As other governments decide to crack down on the free flow of information online, they may follow Russia’s game plan,” said Alex Halderman, professor of electrical engineering and computer science, who was not involved with the study.

    The Associated Press
  3. November 8, 2019
    • Photo of Gabriel Ehrlich

    “There’s a real disconnect between the manufacturing economy and the rest of the economy right now, and our Michigan economy is more manufacturing-heavy than the nation as a whole. I don’t think we’re in a psychological crisis zone in Michigan but I think the key is to avoid letting it get much worse,” said Gabriel Ehrlich, director of the Research Seminar in Quantitative Economics, on Michigan’s slowing economy and soft labor market.

    The Washington Post
  4. November 8, 2019
    • Photo of Michael Traugott

    Michael Traugott, professor emeritus of communication and political science, and research professor emeritus at the Institute for Social Research, says election poll results sound so definitive, like the results of a running race. But polling and the statistical modeling underlying the results involve a set of assumptions that are not usually made explicit, such as figuring out how representative survey respondents are of the general population and the people who will turn out to vote, he says.

    The Christian Science Monitor
  5. November 8, 2019
    • Photo of Betsey Stevenson

    “I think people don’t care as much about taxes as they care about how their life is going. … We’ve continued to see the gains go disproportionately to the top. And we’ve continued to see the bottom 90 percent — it’s just not all working for them,” said Betsey Stevenson, professor of public policy and economics, who helped develop a list of possible tax increases and spending cuts that presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren drew on to fund her health care proposal.

    The New York Times
  6. November 7, 2019
    • Photo of Kate Andrias

    The U.S. system of enterprise collective bargaining, where unions bargain only with one company at a time, has become a mismatch with the way the economy is organized, says Kate Andrias, professor of law. She points out that wages are higher and income inequality is lower in countries like France and Germany where sectoral bargaining is common.

    Marketplace
  7. November 7, 2019
    • Headshot of Daniel Genkin
    • Photo of Sara Rampazzi

    Associate professor Kevin Fu, assistant professor Daniel Genkin and colleagues in computer science and engineering, including research investigator Sara Rampazzi and graduate student Benjamin Cyr, showed that Smart speakers like Alexa, Siri and Google Home can be hacked from hundreds of feet away by attackers shining laser pointers at the devices’ microphones to unlock a smart lock-protected front door, open a connected garage door, shop on e-commerce websites, and unlock and start a connected vehicle. “This opens up an entirely new class of vulnerabilities,” Fu said. “It’s difficult to know how many products are affected, because this is so basic.”

    The New York Times
  8. November 7, 2019
    • Photo of Dorceta Taylor

    Environmental nonprofits need to be more transparent about the demographics of their employees and leaders “if we are ever going to increase the diversity of the environmental movement,” said Dorceta Taylor, professor of environmental sociology, whose research shows that less than 4 percent of environmental nonprofits disclose data about the gender of their staff and less than 3 percent share data on racial demographics.

    The Chronicle of Philanthropy
  9. November 6, 2019
    • Headshot of John Cheney-Lippold

    John Cheney-Lippold, associate professor of American culture, says the massive algorithms that drive Google, Amazon and Facebook try to predict, or even influence, behavior in ways that give value to them. This may be at odds with how we actually are. But they help narrow down the myriad choices faced when people are deciding on a product to buy, or even a place to eat, which is not necessarily a bad thing, he says.

    CBC Radio
  10. November 6, 2019
    • Photo of Barbara mcQuade

    Barbara McQuade, professor from practice at the Law School, says there is no standard for impeachment: “There can be some crimes that are not impeachable, like littering or jaywalking, and then there are some that are impeachable but not criminal, such as abusing one’s power for personal purposes as opposed to acting in the best interests of the country.”

    The Washington Post