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Grants & Fellowships

IJPM will make available grant money to promote scholarly study in the areas of law, politics, and the media. These opportunities include Research Fellowships and Project Grants.

Research Fellowships
Each year, IJPM will distribute Research Fellowships to support interdisciplinary, law-oriented research.

Research that examines issues at the intersection of law, politics, and the media are preferred. Research that addresses questions related to law and politics or to law and the media will also be considered. Qualitative, as well as quantitative, research is welcome. Research that makes use of the data or research tools provided by Syracuse University's Transactional Record Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) is encouraged.

In the 2007-08 and 2008-09, IJPM distributed Reseach Fellowships to full-time faculty and full-time graduate students across Syracuse University.  Beginning in 2009-10, IJPM will no longer support a campus-wide fellowship program.  Instead, IJPM will partner with the College of Law to distribute Research Fellowships to law faculty that meet the fellowship criteria.

Recipients of Research Fellowships will be listed, along with a description of their research, on our webpage as "IJPM Research Fellows." Research Fellowship recipients will be required to acknowledge IJPM's support in any published work that flows from their research proposal, and to make the details of their completed research available to IJPM in a timely fashion for advertising and promotion. Fellowship recipients will also be required to present their work in an IJPM-sponsored colloquia series organized specifically for the Research Fellows.

For a listing of this year's Research Felllowship recipients as well as links to the Fellows Presentation Schedule and a list of Past Research Fellows, please go here.

For questions regarding IJPM's Research Fellowships, please contact Shannon Johanni at sfjohann@syr.edu.

 

Project Grants
Each year, IJPM will distribute one $2500 Project Grant to support interdisciplinary research in our areas of interest. 

The Project Grants will be awarded to the College of Law, Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, and S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications in successive years.

Lisa A. Dolak, Board of Advisors Professor of Law and IJPM Associate Director, used the 2007 Project Grant to launch a study of how the mass media portrays intellectual property rights (IPR). The recent dramatic expansion of IPR acquisition and exploitation around the globe has made IPR a pressing issue of policy debate and regular item on the Supreme Court's docket. The surge in IPR activity has also drawn increased media attention, including extensive coverage of several high-profile IPR disputes. Professor Dolak assessed this coverage, examining the images of IPR constructed by the media as well as how these media images shaped popular understanding and influenced judicial decisionmaking.  Professor Dolak's work served as the basis for the "Creators vs. Consumers" conference organized by IJPM on October 26, 2007.

Mark Obbie, Associate Director of the Carnegie Reporting Program at Newhouse, is using the 2008 Project Grant to help fund a Legal Reporting Fellowship program for freelance journalists.  The four Fellowship recipients will receive up to $3,000 each as well as support from student research assistants.  Click here to learn more about the Legal Reporting Fellowships.

Keith Bybee, IJPM Director, is the recipient of the 2009 Project Grant. Professor Bybee will use his grant to launch a "Law, Politics, and the Media" subject matter journal on the Social Science Research Network.  Watch this space for further details, including instructions on how to subscribe to the journal.

What's Happening at IJPM?
IJPM Executive Director named to SU's first Judiciary Studies Professorship

On October 30th, Professor Keith Bybee was recognized as the first Judiciary Studies Professor in the newly created Paul E. and The Hon. Joanne F. Alper ’72 Judiciary Studies Professorship at Syracuse University College of Law.  The professorship was created through the leadership and financial commitment of Paul E. and the Hon. Joanne F. Alper and it will fund Bybee's scholarly work, research, and academic initiatives relating to judicial legitimacy, court independence and the intersections of law, politics, and the media.  Judge Alper has been an active supporter and proponent of IJPM since it's inception.

IJPM Co-Sponsors Law and Media Conference for federal judges with the Federal Judicial Center and SU College of Law

September 24-25, IJPM, together with the Federal Judicial Center and SU College of Law, hosted a Law and Media seminar for more than forty federal judges from across the country.  The judges heard from IJPM Director Keith Bybee who presented on public perceptions of judiciary.  IJPM Associate Director Lisa Dolak discussed her case study on legal reporting, "Intellectual Property Law in the Media Mirror," and IJPM Senior Advisor Mark Obbie presented about the quality of legal journalism and how to improve it. The first day concluded with a conversation with the Honorable Jon Feldman, U.S. District Court, Western District of New York, and the Honorable Leonie Brinkema, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia, about managing high profile trials.  The second day of the conference, Professor Rakesh Anand discussed judicial ethics and maintaining faith in the rule of law and professors Paula Johnson and Janis McDonald discussed the Cold Case Justice Initiative as an example of collaborative relationship with the judiciary and the media.

IJPM Executive Director and Associate Director Participate in ABA's Academic Reading Group to Review Sotomayor's Qualifications for Supreme Court Position

Syracuse University College of Law provided one of the two academic reading groups that evaluated now Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor's written work as part of the American Bar Association's evaluation of her qualifications for the position of Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.  IJPM Associate Director Lisa Dolak acted as chair of this group and IJPM Director Keith Bybee also served on this reading group.  Sotomayor's qualifications were reviewed in the areas of integrity, professional competence, and judicial temperament; the criteria on which the ABA's Standing Committee on the Federal Judiciary (SCFJ) rates all federal judicial nominees.  This marks the second time the SCFJ has tapped the College of Law to support its evaluation of a Supreme Court nominee.  The first time was in 2005 for Justice Samuel Alito.

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