User:MyaW27/Mae C. King

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'''King went on what was originally meant to be a one-year sabbatical from American Political Science Association to Nigeria in 1975. There, she joined the department of political science at the University of Benin. This one-year sabbitical turned into a 14-year stay when she left that faculty in 1989. Upon return, King joined the political science department at Howard University, where she had previously taught until the year 2017'''.

'''King's early interests in the Congressional black Caucus stemmed from her involvement in the first CBC dinner in 1971. This interest developed into research about the caucus.' She studied of the history of the Congressional Black Caucus, and for what Sherri L. Wallace et al.'' termed "her groundbreaking interventions on Black women in politics". 'King was invited to share her contributions in a chapter of The Conscience of the Congress: How the Congressional Black Caucus Change America, Stephanie J. Jones, editor, 2012.'' Her article, titled “The Struggle for Change: the CBC and US Foreign Policy,” is featured to detail the work the Congressional Black Caucus has contributed to public policy when it had reached its 40-year mark. '''