APSA Annual Meeting

Theme Panel: Europe’s Perfect Storm

Europe’s Perfect Storm Europe is facing an intertwined set of crises that threaten national liberal democracies and have shaken the project of European integration to its very core. Britain’s Brexit referendum outcome triggered a process […]

American Political Science Review

Between Means and Ends: Reconstructing Coercion in Dewey’s Democratic Theory

Between Means and Ends: Reconstructing Coercion in Dewey’s Democratic Theory by Alexander Livingston, Cornell University John Dewey’s democratic theory is celebrated as a classic statement of the theory of deliberative democracy. This article challenges deliberative appropriations […]

American Political Science Review

Childhood Skill Development and Adult Political Participation

Childhood Skill Development and Adult Political Participation by John B. Holbein, Brigham Young University Recent child development research shows that the psychosocial or noncognitive skills that children develop—including the ability to self-regulate and integrate in social […]

APSA Annual Meeting

Theme Panel: Global Populisms

Global Populisms What are the origins, manifestations and consequences of populism? Populist parties and leaders are surging across the world, in both developed and developing democracies, and yet not enough attention has been paid to […]

Campus Teaching Award

Campus Teaching Award Winner: Marc Weiner

Excellence in teaching political science is essential to the discipline. This interview series highlights campus teaching award winners who have been recognized by APSA for their achievements. If you or a colleague has won a […]