American Political Science Review

Selecting for Masculinity: Women’s Under-Representation in the Republican Party

Selecting for Masculinity: Women’s Under-Representation in the Republican Party By Christopher F. Karpowitz, Brigham Young University; J. Quin Monson, Brigham Young University; Jessica R. Preece, Brigham Young University; Alejandra Aldridge, Brigham Young University. The gap between […]

Asia Workshops

Call for Applications: 2025 JPSA-APSA Working Group on Civically Engaged Research for Critical Issues in Society “Political Transitions in Aging Societies”

The American Political Science Association (APSA) and the Japanese Political Science Association (JPSA) are pleased to announce a Call for Applications for early-career scholars from the US and Japan who are interested in conducting civically […]

American Political Science Review

Reawakening a Revolutionary Party: The Ancient and Modern Princes in Wang Hui’s Political Theory

Reawakening a Revolutionary Party: The Ancient and Modern Princes in Wang Hui’s Political Theory By Simon Sihang Luo, Stanford University. Recent political theory has seen a revived interest in theorizing the political party, and, in particular, […]

2024 US Elections

2024 Post-Election Reflection Series: Decline of Progressive Congressional Challengers in 2024 Suggests there Won’t be Another AOC

Prior to the 2024 US Presidential Election, APSA’s Diversity and Inclusion Programs Department issued a call for submissions, entitled 2024 APSA Post-Election Reflections, for a PSNow blog series of political science scholars who reflect on […]

Dissertation Workshops

2025 Dissertation Workshop on Fieldwork Approaches in Comparative Politics: MENA region | Deadline: April 27, 2025

Fieldwork Approaches in Comparative Politics: MENA Region (Virtual) | Apply Here Join us for a virtual dissertation workshop held in October 2025 (exact dates and times will be determined once participants are selected). Co-Leaders: Ozlem […]

Awards

Max Gallien Receives the 2025 APSA-IPSA Theodore J. Lowi First Book Award for “Smugglers and States: Negotiating the Maghreb at Its Margins”

The APSA-IPSA Theodore J. Lowi First Book Award is presented annually to honor a book in any field of political science that exemplifies qualities of broad ambition, high originality, and intellectual daring, showing promise of having a substantive impact […]

American Political Science Review

Moving toward the Median: Compulsory Voting and Political Polarization

Moving toward the Median: Compulsory Voting and Political Polarization By Alexandra Oprea, University at Buffalo, Lucy Martin, University of North, Carolina at Chapel Hill, Geoffrey H. Brennan, Australian National University Should turning out to vote […]