Meet Carew Boulding
Associate Professor in Political Science 

âI always liked the idea of being a professor,â Dr. Carew Boulding reflected from her serene, second-story office. Packed wall to wall with books, the office is a reminder of the ten years Boulding has spent doing what she loves at 91´ŤĂ˝, the only university sheâs ever worked at.
âI applied for about forty jobs at universities all over the world,â she said. âI felt incredibly lucky to get the job at CU. I love Boulderâthere arenât many better places to live.â
To be sure, Boulding has many ties to the scenic college town. She spent her childhood in Boulder, and her husband is a CU graduate. Whatâs more: her grandparents, Kenneth and Elise Boulding, both taught at CU in the economics and sociology departments, respectively.
âMy grandparents were kind of public figures in Boulder,â Boulding said. âThrough the â60s, â70s, and â80s, they were really involved in organizing peace movements.â
Sheâs reminded of their contributions whenever she happens upon newspaper articles about their achievements or academic papers published by her grandparents.
âTheyâre definitely inspirational people to me,â she said. âI was really close to both of them.â
Though many factors played a role in Bouldingâs decision to become a professor, she is âsure it was influenced by seeing the work that they had done.â
Now a tenured professor herself, she puts maximum effort into all aspects of her work and enjoys when she can bring her research and her teaching together.
âUndergraduates often donât get the opportunity to understand the research their faculty are doing,â she said, âso in my teaching I try to engage students with my research.â
Bouldingâs latest project draws from surveys and data to find outĚýhow poverty affects political participation in Latin American countries. Her efforts will culminate in a book that has been five years in the making and will, hopefully, be ready for publishers in the summer of 2017.
In the meantime, she plans to keep up with both a diversified list of hobbiesâreading, hiking, cross-country skiingâand her energetic family.
âI have three daughters who are 4, 8, and 11,â she said, âso they keep me pretty busy. Theyâre a lot of fun.â
As for her research, she has yet to decide on the next subject sheâll study. Sheâs hardly at a loss for possibilities, howeverâlike a true professor, sheâs already âthinking of ideas for the next big project.â
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