Duke’s Political Science BS equips changemakers with quantitative tools (from causal inference to text analytics) and qualitative insight (ethnography, archival sleuthing) to decode power. Students build election-forecast models, map disinformation networks, and draft policy memos under former ambassadors in residence. Simulated UN Security Council crises sharpen diplomacy skills, while civic-tech labs develop open-source tools that boost voter access.
Field experiment testing voter-registration chatbot efficacy
Network analysis of campaign-finance flows across state lines
Sentiment mining of legislative speeches on climate bills
Geo-spatial model of protest diffusion after police-violence events
Interactive dashboard tracking authoritarian AI surveillance exports
Podcast debriefing youth delegates at global summits
Machine-learning early-warning system for election violence
Comparative study of ranked-choice voting impacts in U.S. cities
Crowdsourced database of women peace negotiators
Blockchain proposal for transparent foreign-aid auditing
Game-theoretic simulation of cyber-deterrence doctrines
VR training module for humanitarian-ceasefire mediation
Policy brief on regulating deep-fake use in campaigns
Ethnographic film on local governance in informal settlements
Text-as-data analysis of constitutional conventions worldwide
Interactive civic-education game teaching budget trade-offs
Meta-analysis of term-limit effects on corruption indices
Participatory design sprint for municipal participatory budgeting
Leverage evidence to lead and legislate with Duke Political Science.
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