American Political Science Review

What Do “Left Behind Communities” Want? A Qualitative Study in the United Kingdom using Photo Elicitation

What Do “Left Behind Communities” Want? A Qualitative Study in the United Kingdom using Photo Elicitation By Matthew Wood, University of Sheffield, Ivanka Antova, Human Rights Commission, Northern Ireland, Mark Flear, Queen’s University Belfast and […]

American Political Science Review

UN Peacekeeping and Democratization in Conflict-Affected Countries

UN Peacekeeping and Democratization in Conflict-Affected Countries By Robert a. Blair, Brown University, Jessica Di Salvatore, University of Warwick, and Hannah M. Smidt, University of St. Gallen and University of Zurich Does UN peacekeeping promote […]

American Political Science Review

The Politics of Respectability and Black Americans’ Punitive Attitudes

The Politics of Respectability and Black Americans’ Punitive Attitudes By Hakeem Jefferson, Stanford University Existing research largely ignores Black support for punitive policies that target group members, even as this support challenges expectations of in-group […]

American Political Science Review

Strategic Reporting: A Formal Model of Biases in Conflict Data

Strategic Reporting: A Formal Model of Biases in Conflict Data By Michael Gibilisco, California Institute of Technology, and Jessica Steinberg, Indiana University During violent conflict, governments may acknowledge their use of illegitimate violence (e.g., noncombatant […]