The 2024 Sondermann Presidential Symposium: Democracy in This MomentÂ
The Sondermann Presidential Symposium is named for esteemed Professor of Political Science, Fred Sondermann, who taught at CC from 1953 until his untimely death in 1978. Sondermann was a legendary teacher and nationally recognized scholar who made many creative contributions to college programs. He conceived the idea for a presidential symposium and directed the first one in 1968. His aim was to discuss current political issues but also to analyze the role of the presidency in modern American politics, both domestic and foreign. The symposium’s success was such that the Department of Political Science made a commitment to offer a presidential symposium in subsequent presidential election years. Sondermann continued to direct them through 1976.
The 2024 Sondermann Presidential Symposium is the 15th in the series that has become a signature college program, drawing a broad range of scholars, journalists, and political figures including Newt Gingrich, David Axelrod, Gwen Ifill, Marc Hetherington, Jamelle Bouie, Donna Brazile, John Kasich, and many others. This year’s symposium will offer events with Associate Professor of Mathematics Dr. Beth Malmskog, Dr. Eddie Glaude Jr., Wesley Lowery, and a panel of experts from CC and other higher ed institutions.
The Sondermann Presidential Symposium is generously sponsored by the Fred A. Sondermann Memorial Fund, the McHugh Fund, and the Marianne Lannon Lopat Memorial Lecture Fund.
2024 Sondermann Presidential Symposium Events
First Monday Block 2 - Colorado in Context: Democracy, Representation, Fairness, and Math
Monday, September 23, 2024 | 11:15 a.m. - 12:00 p.m.
Join us for the Block 2 First Monday, "Colorado in Context: Democracy, Representation, Fairness, and Math." CC Associate Professor Beth Malmskog will discuss how math can help identify and prevent partisan gerrymandering and share her research group's work for fair maps in Colorado's 2021 redistricting process. We will also look briefly at what mathematics can say about other ways to pursue better representation, including alternative voting methods and multi-member districts. Math can offer surprising insights into democracy and fairness.
Dr. Beth Malmskog is an Associate Professor of Mathematics at CC. Before joining the college in 2017, she was an Assistant Professor at Villanova University, a Visiting Assistant Professor at CC, and a Van Vleck Visiting Assistant Professor at Wesleyan University. She earned her PhD with Dr. Rachel Pries at Colorado State University and her research focuses on arithmetic geometry, number theory, combinatorics, coding theory, and cryptography, as well as mathematical aspects of fair redistricting.
Malmskog is passionate about teaching and talking about math. She co-led a Math Circle and taught Math for Liberal Arts at Graterford (now Phoenix) State Correctional Institution, near Philadelphia, PA. She is now part of the Liberal Arts in Correctional Facilities program at CC, teaching at the Youthful Offender System institution in Pueblo, Colorado.
Sondermann Presidential Symposium - Race, Democracy, and the Transformative Power of Imagination
Thursday, October 3, 2024 | 4:00 p.m. - 5:30 p.m.
Please join us to hear esteemed author and political commentator Dr. Eddie Glaude Jr. present a picture of race and democracy that is colored by current events and framed by African American history. Bearing witness to the difficult truth in our country today, Dr. Glaude lays bare the tangled web of race, trauma, and memory, and what we all must ask of ourselves to call forth a new America. Along the way, Dr. Glaude shares stories about the transformative power of imagination. “We must resist those voices who urge us to settle for the world as it is and call us to imagine a better world,” Dr. Glaude says.
Dr. Eddie Glaude Jr. is an author, political commentator, public intellectual, and passionate educator who examines the complex dynamics of the American experience. He is the James S. McDonnell Distinguished University Professor, the former Chair of the Department of African American Studies at Princeton University, and a member of the Morehouse College Board of Trustees. He frequently appears in the media, as a columnist for TIME Magazine and as an MSNBC contributor.
Glaude’s writings include Democracy in Black: How Race Still Enslaves the American Soul and In a Shade of Blue: Pragmatism and the Politics of Black America. His most recent book, Begin Again: James Baldwin’s America and Its Urgent Lessons for our Own, takes a wide look at Black communities, the difficulties of race in the United States, and the challenges we face as a democracy.
Sondermann Presidential Symposium - Building a Multiracial Democracy
NOTE: Due to unforeseen circumstances, this event has been canceled. We hope to reschedule this winter. Thank you for your understanding.
Tuesday, October 29, 2024 | 12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.
Please join us to hear Pulitzer-Prize-winning journalist Wesley Lowery discuss “Building a Multiracial Democracy.” In the 1960s, the Civil Rights marchers in Selma created a multiracial democracy. For the first time in American history, democratic participation was not limited based on racial caste. In the half-century since, our nation has grappled with what it wants to be. Do we want to embrace our newfound status as a multiracial democracy, or do we want to return to a racial caste system as we were for most of our history? Lowery will speak on the work of building a multiracial democracy amid the rise of nativism and racial division, looking at the unique tensions of this moment and how they correspond with similar periods throughout American history.
Wesley Lowery is one of the nation's leading reporters on issues of race and justice. He is the executive editor of The Investigative Reporting Workshop, a Journalist-in-Residence at the CUNY Newmark Graduate School of Journalism, and a contributing editor at The Marshall Project. He began his career covering politics but was sent to Ferguson, Mo. in 2014 to cover the police killing of Michael Brown for the Washington Post. In the years since, he’s chronicled the early years of the Black Lives Matter movement, writing a bestselling book and launching Fatal Force, a Pulitzer-Prize-winning real-time national database of people shot and killed by the police.
Lowery has led and contributed to investigative projects that examined unsolved homicides in major American cities, what happens to fired police officers, repeat offender criminal defendants, fentanyl overdoses in major cities, the failures to catch the deadliest serial killer in American history, and what happens to people who are shot by the police and survive. His latest book, American Whitelash, chronicles the rise in white supremacist violence in the years since Barack Obama's election.
Sondermann Presidential Symposium - Decoding the 2024 Election
Thursday, November 7, 2024 | 12:30 p.m. - 2:00 p.m.
A collection of Colorado Front Range scholars with diverse areas of expertise within US elections and politics will gather to analyze and decode the results of the 2024 election cycle.
Panelists:
-
Associate Professor Elizabeth Coggins, ºÚÁϳԹÏ, Department of Political Science
-
Professor Douglas Edlin, ºÚÁϳԹÏ, Department of Political Science
-
Assistant Professor Michael Greenberger '17, University of Denver, Department of Political Science
-
Professor Anand Sokhey, University of Colorado Boulder, Department of Political Science
-
Associate Professor Dana Wolfe, ºÚÁϳԹÏ, Department of Political Science