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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 May 2016
Scholars, scientists, and policymakers converged last fall at the annual meeting of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences (APLS) held on the Indiana University campus in Bloomington from October 14–16, 2010. Founded in 1980, the association uniquely merges evolutionary, genetic, and ecological knowledge with the study of political behavior, public policy, and ethics. This year's annual meeting celebrated the diversity of scholarship embodied by the association with the theme, “Toward Consilience: Thirty Years of the Association for Politics and the Life Sciences.”
This conference report was compiled from a series of individual reports produced by the students in Erik Bucy's Communication and Politics graduate seminar at Indiana University in the fall of 2010. Many thanks to the thoughtful comments and detailed summaries provided by Ozen Bas, Kathleen Brophy, Kioko Ireri, Hongyuan Jiang, Isabell Rhenwrick, Brian Steward, Shuo Tang, and William Taylor. Google Scholar