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Chris Gilson

January 1st, 2024

Happy New Year 2024 from LSE USAPP!

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 1 minute

Chris Gilson

January 1st, 2024

Happy New Year 2024 from LSE USAPP!

0 comments

Estimated reading time: 1 minute

We’d like to thank all of our readers for reading LSE USAPP in 2023, our tenth full year of publishing commentary on US politics and policy.

To celebrate ten years of LSE USAPP, in August, we asked some of our authors to reflect on the blog and their contributions. You can read these here.

Nearly 4,800 of you now follow us on Twitter (but there’s always room for more!) and we have nearly 1,900 followers on Facebook. Many of you have signed up to receive one of our weekly email updates – click here to sign up to get USAPP posts straight into your inbox.

2024 is a US presidential election year. We’ll be bringing you more expert commentary from academic experts on the election with our ‘The 2024 Electionsseries curated by Peter Finn (Kingston University).  You can also look out for continued coverage of important US policy issues and more interviews with academic experts as part of our regular podcast, The Ballpark.

We’re always keen for your feedback, so please keep commenting on our articles, and let us know what you’d like us to cover in 2024.

Remember that you can Follow us on Twitter (@LSEUSAblog), get updates from our Facebook page and Subscribe to weekly email updates.

You can also get in touch by emailing the Managing Editor, Chris Gilson at c.h.gilson@lse.ac.uk – we’d love to hear from you.

Featured image: Photo by Kajetan Sumila on Unsplash

About the author

Chris Gilson

Chris Gilson is the Managing Editor of USAPP, the Phelan US Centre's daily blog on US politics and policy. He was previously Managing Editor of the LSE's British Politics and Policy blog , and of EUROPP- the LSE's European Politics and Policy blog, both for the LSE's Public Policy Group. In 2012, Chris was the recipient of a UK Times Higher Education Leadership and Management Award for Knowledge Exchange/Transfer Initiative of the Year for the LSE’s blog initiatives. He is the co-author, with Amy Mollett, Cheryl Brumley, and Sierra Williams, of Communicating Your Research with Social Media: A Practical Guide to Using Blogs, Podcasts, Data Visualisations and Video (Sage, 2017). He has a undergraduate and a Masters degree in Geography, and a postgraduate diploma in Strategic Management, all from the University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand.

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