American Political Science Review

The Urban/Rural Divide in Athenian Political Thought

The Urban/Rural Divide in Athenian Political Thought By Charles Nathan, Duke University Contemporary analyses of Athenian democracy have focused on binaries such as mass/elite, free/slave, and male/female, overlooking the urban/rural divide. In this article, I […]

American Political Science Review

Richard Rorty and the Demands of Liberalism

Richard Rorty and the Demands of Liberalism By Robert Lamb, University of Exeter In this article, I show that Richard Rorty’s unduly neglected normative political theory advances a far more distinct and demanding form of […]

American Political Science Review

Reframing the Guardianship Dilemma: How the Military’s Dual Disloyalty Options Imperil Dictators

Reframing the Guardianship Dilemma: How the Military’s Dual Disloyalty Options Imperil Dictators By Jack Paine, University Of Rochester Dictators confront a guardianship dilemma: military agents are needed to defeat mass outsider movements, but these agents […]

American Political Science Review

Preventing Rebel Resurgence after Civil War: A Field Experiment in Security and Justice Provision in Rural Colombia

Preventing Rebel Resurgence after Civil War: A Field Experiment in Security and Justice Provision in Rural Colombia By Robert A. Blair, Brown University, Manuel Moscoso-Rojas, Brown University, Andrés Vargas Castillo, Comparativa and Michael Weintraub, Universidad […]

American Political Science Review

Power Sharing and Authoritarian Stability: How Rebel Regimes Solve the Guardianship Dilemma

Power Sharing and Authoritarian Stability: How Rebel Regimes Solve the Guardianship Dilemma By Anne Meng, University of Virginia and Jack Paine, University of Rochester Regimes founded in rebellion are, typically, extremely durable. We propose that […]

American Political Science Review

Migration and the Demand for Transnational Justice

Migration and the Demand for Transnational Justice By Leslie Johns, Máximo Langer and Margaret E. Peters, University of California, Los Angeles Domestic courts sometimes prosecute foreign nationals for severe crimes—like crimes against humanity, genocide, torture, […]