• Home
    • APSA Public Statements
    • APSA Annual Meeting
    • 2024 US Elections
    • APSA Website
  • Journals
    • American Political Science Review
    • PS: Political Science & Politics
    • Perspectives on Politics
    • Journal of Political Science Education
    • Political Science Today
    • Public Scholars
    • Cambridge University Press
    • All Journals
  • Awards
    • Awards & Recognition
    • Centennial Center
    • Grants
  • People
    • Political Science Scholars
    • Career Paths
    • Member Spotlight ★
    • Obituaries
  • Diversity & Inclusion
    • APSA Oral History Project
    • Ralph Bunche Summer Institute
    • Diversity Fellowship Program
    • Fund for Latino Scholarship
    • First-Generation Scholars
  • Teaching
    • APSA Educate
    • Teaching Conference
    • Webinars
    • Workshops
    • Public Engagement
  • Tell Us Your Story!
Latest News
  • [ April 24, 2026 ] A Precolonial Paradox? Rethinking Political Centralization and Its Legacies American Political Science Review
  • [ April 24, 2026 ] Meet 2026 RBSI Scholar, Camila Armas, Howard University Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
  • [ April 24, 2026 ] Silencing the Press in Criminal Wars: Why the War on Drugs Turned Mexico into the World’s Most Dangerous Country for Journalists Journals
  • [ April 23, 2026 ] Land, Power, and Property Rights: The Political Economy of Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa American Political Science Review
  • [ April 23, 2026 ] Meet 2026 RBSI Scholar, Mohamed Aljahmi, CUNY Queens College Diversity, Equity and Inclusion
  • [ April 23, 2026 ] Structure, Agency, and Structural Reform: The Case of the European Central Bank Journals
HomeAuthorsAPSA

Articles by APSA

Election Reflections

2018 Election Reflection Series: Navigating Partisan Differences in Class Discussions

January 25, 2019 Comments Off on 2018 Election Reflection Series: Navigating Partisan Differences in Class Discussions

2018 Election Reflection Series Background Prior to the 2018 election, APSA’s Diversity and Inclusion Programs Office issued a call for submissions for a new PS Now series entitled 2018 Election Reflections. The views expressed in this series are […]

Journals

The Political Science 400: With Citation Counts by Cohort, Gender, and Subfield

January 25, 2019 Comments Off on The Political Science 400: With Citation Counts by Cohort, Gender, and Subfield

The Political Science 400: With Citation Counts by Cohort, Gender, and Subfield by Hannah June Kim, University of California, Irvine and Bernard Grofman, University of California, Irvine Using a unique database we created that contains Google Scholar citation […]

Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th — Meet RBSI Scholar Michael Strawbridge

January 18, 2019 Comments Off on 2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th — Meet RBSI Scholar Michael Strawbridge

Apply for the APSA 2019 Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) by January 18th Michael Strawbridge is a junior at Beloit College double majoring in political science and media studies. Michael currently serves as the vice […]

Career Paths

Brookings Fellow Molly Reynolds Shares Thoughts on Working Beyond the Academy

January 17, 2019 Comments Off on Brookings Fellow Molly Reynolds Shares Thoughts on Working Beyond the Academy

Brookings Fellow Molly Reynolds Shares Thoughts on Working Beyond the Academy Molly Reynolds is a senior fellow in Governance Studies at The Brookings Institution. She studies Congress, with an emphasis on how congressional rules and […]

Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th – Meet RBSI Scholar Catalina Udani

January 17, 2019 Comments Off on 2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th – Meet RBSI Scholar Catalina Udani

Apply for the APSA 2019 Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) by January 18th Catalina Udani is an honors junior at the University of Central Florida studying human communication, intelligence and national security, and terrorism studies. […]

Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th – Meet RBSI Scholar Alfredo Y. Hernandez

January 16, 2019 Comments Off on 2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th – Meet RBSI Scholar Alfredo Y. Hernandez

Apply for the APSA 2019 Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) by January 18th Alfredo Y. Hernandez is an honors student at Loyola Marymount University (LMU), majoring in political science with a minor in economics. A […]

Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th – Meet RBSI Scholar Michael Herndon

January 15, 2019 Comments Off on 2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th – Meet RBSI Scholar Michael Herndon

Apply for the APSA 2019 Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) by January 18th Michael Herndon is a rising senior and first-generation Chicano college student at the University of Nebraska at Omaha (UNO). Michael is double […]

Diversity, Equity and Inclusion

2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th – Meet RBSI Scholar Michelle Henderson

January 14, 2019 Comments Off on 2019 APSA RBSI Applications Due January 18th – Meet RBSI Scholar Michelle Henderson

Apply for the APSA 2019 Ralph Bunche Summer Institute (RBSI) by January 18th Michelle Henderson is a student at New York University majoring in politics and minoring in Linguistics. Michelle is an AmeriCorps member and […]

Posts pagination

« 1 … 268 269 270 … 500 »

Follow Us

  • X
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube

Recent Posts

  • A Precolonial Paradox? Rethinking Political Centralization and Its Legacies
  • Meet 2026 RBSI Scholar, Camila Armas, Howard University
  • Silencing the Press in Criminal Wars: Why the War on Drugs Turned Mexico into the World’s Most Dangerous Country for Journalists
  • Land, Power, and Property Rights: The Political Economy of Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Meet 2026 RBSI Scholar, Mohamed Aljahmi, CUNY Queens College

Journals

  • A Precolonial Paradox? Rethinking Political Centralization and Its Legacies

    April 24, 2026 0
    A Precolonial Paradox? Rethinking Political Centralization and Its Legacies By Martha Wilfahrt, University of California, Berkeley A paradox has emerged in the growing literature on the legacies of the precolonial past: areas home to precolonial [...]
  • Silencing the Press in Criminal Wars: Why the War on Drugs Turned Mexico into the World’s Most Dangerous Country for Journalists

    April 24, 2026 0
    Silencing the Press in Criminal Wars: Why the War on Drugs Turned Mexico into the World’s Most Dangerous Country for Journalists By Guillermo Trejo and Natán Skigin, University of Notre Dame This article examines the [...]
  • Land, Power, and Property Rights: The Political Economy of Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa

    April 23, 2026 0
    Land, Power, and Property Rights: The Political Economy of Land Titling in Sub-Saharan Africa By Matthew K. Ribar, Stanford University Only 15% of African households possess a formal title for their agricultural land, despite the [...]

Copyright © I American Political Science Association

360640706
 

Loading Comments...