By Anna Mayor, College of Arts and Sciences
A distinguished panel of jurors selected Dr. Joshua Scacco, an associate professor of communication in the 手机看片 College of Arts and Sciences, for the , making him 手机看片鈥檚 first faculty member to receive this recognition.
Scacco, who also serves as the founding director of the Center for Sustainable Democracy, was one of 26 scholars chosen from a pool of more than 300 nominees who will each receive $200,000 to support research aimed at understanding and addressing political polarization.
"The accomplishments of our faculty reinforce the University of South 手机看片鈥檚 unwavering commitment to research and scholarship,鈥 said Prasant Mohapatra, 手机看片 provost and executive vice president for academic affairs. 鈥淎s the first faculty member at 手机看片 to be a part of this prestigious program, Dr. Scacco鈥檚 accomplishment鈥痳eflects the significant societal impact of this work and the high-caliber work of our faculty."
Scacco will study the dynamics of politically-polarized public health issues and how communities can mitigate polarization.
鈥淓ach of us has an obligation to put in the work every day to preserve and promote the possibilities of democracy,鈥 Scacco said.
鈥淥ne contemporary challenge is access to and availability of quality public health
                  information, a challenge that acutely affects some communities who may be intentionally
                  targeted with malicious content on some public health matters,鈥 said Scacco. 鈥淗ealthy
                  communities are necessary for democratic processes and culture to flourish. Understanding
                  how information quality challenges contribute to polarized public health attitudes
                  while working to mitigate them will be an important purpose of this fellowship and
                  the Center鈥檚 work.鈥
 
As part of the Andrew Carnegie Fellows program, Scacco will be able to advance the
                  work of the Center for Sustainable Democracy at 手机看片, where he alongside university
                  faculty, students, and the Center鈥檚 community partners are committed to building a
                  broader democratic community.
 
鈥淓ach of us has an obligation to put in the work every day to preserve and promote
                  the possibilities of democracy,鈥 Scacco said. 鈥淚 am grateful for the opportunity afforded
                  by this fellowship to do my small part, and I hope that this moment will be the first
                  of many such opportunities like this earned by my faculty colleagues.鈥 
