Main Content Region

extremism

CGI building, faculty in the news
February 7, 2022

Marc Robinson (history), Lesley Leighton (music), Kathryn Ervin (theatre arts) and Brian Levin (criminal justice) were included in recent news coverage.

College of Natural Science/Chem Science bldg, faculty in the news
February 4, 2022

Khalil Dajani (computer science) talks about building bridges to benefit CSUSB students, Annika Anderson (sociology) shared the university’s plans for its Black History Month celebration, and Brian Levin (criminal justice) was interviewed about topics related to hate crimes and extremism.

SBS building, Faculty in the News
February 3, 2022

Annika Anderson (sociology) talked the university’s plans for its Black History Month celebration, and Brian Levin (criminal justice) was interviewed about topics related to hate crimes and extremism.

CGI building, faculty in the news
February 2, 2022

Brian Levin (criminal justice) was interviewed on the sharp rise in hate crimes in Los Angeles and other large cities, the recent bomb threats made against historically black colleges and universities, and an American woman who was once part of the terrorist group ISIS.

Pfau Library, Faculty in the News
January 28, 2022

Brian Levin (criminal justice) was included in a segment about International Holocaust Remembrance Day that featured Holocaust survivor Joseph Alexander and asked the question of whether something like it could happen again.

SBS building, Faculty in the News
January 10, 2022

Brian Levin, director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, was interviewed about the possibility of extremist violence during the midterm elections and was enlisted to fact check a conservative commentator’s statement regarding the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.

Faculty in the News
January 7, 2022

Barbara Sirotnik (information and decision sciences) was quoted about the steady growth of inland manufacturing and the inland economy, and Brian Levin (criminal justice) was interviewed in several outlets about the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol insurrection. 

Faculty in the News
January 6, 2022

In a radio segment about several HBCUs receiving bomb threats, Brian Levin, criminal justice professor and director of the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism, said threats to marginalized populations must be taken especially seriously, and in another segment about political violence, Levin said most of the violence in California comes from a small group of far-right extremists.

Faculty in the News
January 4, 2022

Brian Levin (criminal justice) said the threat of domestic extremism remains, Anthony Silard (public administration) wrote about the role of a common theme in developing new friendships, and Peter Sturgeon and Mike Singer (Palm Desert Campus) were featured in the ‘Men in Philanthropy’ issue of Desert Charities News.