Faculty Awards
Congratulations to the following faculty on their
recent achievements!
Michael
McCann awarded Guggenheim Fellowship.
Two UW professors are among 189 artists, scholars,
and scientists chosen as Fellows by the John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation. Michael McCann, Gordon Hirabayashi professor
for the advancement of citizenship; and Ann Gale, associate
professor of art, were selected from among 2,800 applicants
for the prestigious fellowships.
McCann, a former chair of political science, is the founding
director of both the interdisciplinary Comparative Law and
Society Studies Center, and the undergraduate Law, Societies
and Justice program. Two books he's authored or co-authored
have won six major book awards from professional academic
associations.
Among his present research projects is a study of the cultural
backlash against rights claims of disadvantaged groups in
the U.S, and especially its impact on public interest litigation
related to issues of personal injury and health. McCann teaches
a variety of undergraduate and graduate courses on law and
society topics, for which he received a University-wide Distinguished
Teaching Award in 1988. His Guggenheim project is entitled
"Public Interest Litigation and the Politics of Responsibility."
The Guggenheim Foundation offers fellowships to further
the development of scholars and artists by assisting them
to engage in research in any field of knowledge and creation
in any of the arts, under the freest possible conditions.
Guggenheim Fellows are appointed on the basis of distinguished
achievement in the past and exceptional promise for future
accomplishment. This year's grants total $7,600,000.
Peter
J. May received the American Society for Public
Administration’s William E. Mosher and Fredrick C. Mosher
award for best article by an academic in the 2005 volume of
the Public Administration Review for an article entitled "“Regulation
and Motivations: Examining Different Approaches."
Peter J. May received honorable mention for the 2007 University
of Washington's Marsha Landolt Graduate Mentor Award.
Michael
McCann wins the APSA Law and Courts'
Wadsworth
Award for his book, Rights at Work: Pay Equity and
the Politics of Legal Mobilization (Chicago U Press,
1994). The Wadsworth Award is given annually for a book that
in the last ten years has had the greatest influence on the
field of public law.
Michael
McCann won two annual best book awards -- the
Pritchett
Award from the Law & Courts section of APSA, and the
Jacob
Prize from the Law & Society Association -- this past
year for his co-authored book, Distorting the Law: Politics,
Media, and the Litigation Crisis (Chicago).
Margaret
Levi, Jere L. Bacharach Professor of International
Studies and former President of the American Political Science
Association, has been named as the editor of the Annual Review
of Political Science.
Chris
Adolph won the American Political Science Association's
Mancur
Olson Award, which is given for the best dissertation
completed and accepted in the previous two years in Political
Economy.
David
Olson received the UW
2005 S. Sterling Munro Public Service Teaching Award which
is awarded to faculty who have demonstrated extraordinary
leadership in community-based instruction, service learning
as well as public service and community projects.
Steve
Hanson received the UW
2004 Distinguished Teaching Award. This award is given
to University faculty who show a mastery of their subject
matter, extraordinary intellectual rigor and devotion to their
teaching. |