American Political Science Review

Precolonial Elites and Colonial Redistribution of Political Power

Precolonial Elites and Colonial Redistribution of Political Power By Allison S. Hartnett, University of Southern California, and Mohamed Saleh, London School of Economics and Political Science Studies of colonialism often associate indirect colonial rule with […]

APSA Annual Meeting

Call for Proposals: 2026 APSA Department Chairs Mini-Conference at APSA Annual Meeting | Deadline: January 14, 2026

Call for Proposals Open 2026 APSA Department Chairs Mini-Conference Theme: Strengthening Political Science Departments 2026 APSA Annual Meeting & Exhibition Friday, September 4, 2026 | Boston, MA Submission Deadline: January 14, 2026, 11:59 p.m. Pacific […]

American Political Science Review

Partisans of Color: Asian American and Latino Party ID in an Era of Racialization and Polarization

Partisans of Color: Asian American and Latino Party ID in an Era of Racialization and Polarization By Efrén Pérez, University of California, Los Angeles, Jessica Hyunjeong Lee, College of the Holy Cross, Gustavo Mártir Luna, […]

American Political Science Review

Group Prototypicality and Boundary Definition: Comparing White and Black Perceptions of Whether Latinos Are American

Group Prototypicality and Boundary Definition: Comparing White and Black Perceptions of Whether Latinos Are American By Angie N. Ocampo-Roland, University of Pittsburgh Examining group boundaries is instrumental to understanding intergroup relations, particularly differences in boundary […]

American Political Science Review

Political Emancipation and Modern Jewish National Identity

Political Emancipation and Modern Jewish National Identity By Carles Boix, Princeton University and University of Barcelona Following the rise of liberalism and nationalism during the nineteenth century, Jewish national identity varied across countries. While Western […]

APSA Publications

PS Call for Papers: Special Issue on Forecasting the 2026 US Midterm Elections | Deadline: July 17, 2026 

Who will win the next midterm election?   Beyond public curiosity, forecasting lets scholars test theories against real outcomes in real time. With expanded data sources and tools, from polls and structural indicators to markets, […]