American Political Science Review

Fickle Prosociality: How Violence against LGBTQ+ People Motivates Prosocial Mass Attitudes toward LGBTQ+ Group Members

Fickle Prosociality: How Violence against LGBTQ+ People Motivates Prosocial Mass Attitudes toward LGBTQ+ Group Members By Marcel F. Roman, Harvard University and Jack Thompson, University of Leeds We present a Fickle Prosocial Violence Response Model […]

Journals

The Bureaucratic Origins of Political Theory: Administrative Labor in the “Other Half” of the History of Political Thought

The Bureaucratic Origins of Political Theory: Administrative Labor in the “Other Half” of the History of Political Thought By Douglas I. Thompson, University of South Carolina The earliest works of political theory precede Athenian democracy—the […]

American Political Science Review

Fairness According to Whom? Divergent Perceptions of Fairness among White and Black Americans and Its Effect on Trade Attitudes

Fairness According to Whom? Divergent Perceptions of Fairness among White and Black Americans and Its Effect on Trade Attitudes By Daniel Lobo, University of California, Berkeley and Ryan Brutger, University of California, Berkeley Racial divides […]

American Political Science Review

Efficacy of Congressional Oversight

Efficacy of Congressional Oversight By Pamela Ban, University of California, San Diego and Seth J. Hill, University of California, San Diego Oversight, scholars argue, allows Congress to control the executive agents it empowers to implement […]

American Political Science Review

Dating Apps and the Digital Sexual Sphere

Dating Apps and the Digital Sexual Sphere By Elsa Kugelberg, University of Oxford The online dating application has in recent years become a major avenue for meeting potential partners. However, while the digital public sphere has gained […]