Annual Conference

Theme Panel: New Approaches to Corruption

New Approaches to Corruption: Theory, Method, and Measurement Following the end of the Cold War, scholars and policymakers alike have paid increasing attention to the importance of corruption in economic and political development. Recent work […]

No Picture
APSA

Maximizing Benefits from Survey-Based Research

Maximizing Benefits from Survey-Based Research by Noam Lupu, Vanderbilt University and Elizabeth J. Zechmeister, Vanderbilt University Despite the best of intentions, many social science studies end up unpublished or with few citations, and few studies are […]

No Picture
APSA

Why Did Women Vote for Donald Trump?

Why Did Women Vote for Donald Trump? by Mark Setzler, High Point University and Alixandra B. Yanus, High Point University Popular accounts of the 2016 election attribute Donald Trump’s victory to his mobilization of angry white […]

Annual Conference

Theme Panel: Democracy in America?

Democracy in America? Benjamin Page and Martin Gilens’ work on American democracy has garnered both scholarly acclaim and significant public attention. In “Democracy in America?” they address “what has gone wrong and what we can […]

Journals

Call for Papers: The Failure Issue of JPSE

The editors of the Journal of Political Science Education invite submissions for a special issue dedicated to all those great ideas that just didn’t work.  We might call them failed experiments, mishaps, or just unfulfilled […]

APSA

Do Introductory Political Science Courses Contribute to a Racial “Political Efficacy Gap”? Findings from a Panel Survey of a Flagship University

Do Introductory Political Science Courses Contribute to a Racial “Political Efficacy Gap”? Findings from a Panel Survey of a Flagship University by Miguel Centellas, University of Mississippi and  Cy Rosenblatt, University of Mississippi In a panel […]