Month: October 2024
Censoring the Intellectual Public Space in China: What Topics Are Not Allowed and Who Gets Blacklisted?
Censoring the Intellectual Public Space in China: What Topics Are Not Allowed and Who Gets Blacklisted? By Xiaojun Yan and La Li, University of Hong Kong Censorship is one of the main forms of political coercion […]
APSA Resources on the 2024 US Elections
In this collection of resources on the 2024 United States Elections, APSA aims to provide political science faculty with tools and resources that encourage registration, voting, and democratic engagement, provide concrete steps and best practices […]
APSA Pracademic Fellowship Program Accepting Proposals | Applications on Rolling Basis
APSA’s Centennial Center for Political Science & Public Affairs is accepting proposals for the APSA Pracademic Fellowship Program on a rolling basis. The Pracademic Fellowship Program aims to bridge the gap between academia and the […]
Critical Race Theory: How Policy Language Differentially Engages Symbolic Racism and Partisanship
Critical Race Theory: How Policy Language Differentially Engages Symbolic Racism and Partisanship By Mia Carbone, University of California, Los Angeles, Allison Harell, Université du Québec à Montréal and Stuart Soroka, University of California, Los Angeles […]
Diversity on the Bench: A Conservative’s Advantage?
In the APSA Public Scholarship Program, graduate students in political science produce summaries of new research in the American Political Science Review. This piece, written by Irem B. A. Örsel, covers the new article by […]
Does Political Diversity Inhibit Blood Donations?
Does Political Diversity Inhibit Blood Donations? By Sung Eun Kim, Korea University and Krzysztof Pelc, Oxford University Does political diversity affect the prevalence of selfless behavior across a society? According to a recurrent finding from […]
Embracing the Crisis of Research Design: How the Collapse of Case Selection in the Field Can Uncover New Discoveries
Embracing the Crisis of Research Design: How the Collapse of Case Selection in the Field Can Uncover New Discoveries By Rachel A. Schwartz, University of Oklahoma Political science has seen a welcome increase in guidance […]