APSA

Building from Within: Family and the Political Membership of Immigrants

Building from Within: Family and the Political Membership of Immigrants by Marcela García-Castañon, San Francisco State University This study argues that the central mechanism for pushing back is the interconnected nature of an immigrant’s experience, particularly as […]

APSA Annual Meeting

Short Course: #MeToo PoliSci

#MeToo PoliSci Nadia Brown Full Day Started by Tarana Burke in 2007 to stand with young women of color who survived sexual assault, the MeToo campaign was intended to let women know that they were […]

APSA

Meet 2018 RBSI Scholar, Zoe Walker

Zoe Walker, University of Notre Dame Zoe Walker is a junior at the University of Notre Dame studying English and political science. Passionate about both research and community involvement, Zoe has devoted her time at Notre […]

American Political Science Review

Anonymity and Democracy

Anonymity and Democracy: Absence as Presence in the Public Sphere by Hans Asenbaum, University of Westminster Although anonymity is a central feature of liberal democracies, as evident in the secret ballot, democratic theory is surprisingly quiet […]

APSA

Back in the Shadows, Back in the Streets

Back in the Shadows, Back in the Streets by Melissa R. Michelson, Menlo College, and Jessica L. Lavariega Monforti, California Lutheran University  Although barred from voting in US elections, undocumented immigrants potentially can participate in the political arena in […]