APSA

What Should We Mean by “Pattern of Political Violence”?

What Should We Mean by “Pattern of Political Violence”? Repertoire, Targeting, Frequency, and Technique by Francisco Gutiérrez-Sanín,  Universidad Nacional de Colombia, and Elisabeth Jean Wood, Yale University  To leverage the full range of observed variation in patterns of violence […]

APSA

Presidents, Baseball, and Wins above Expectations

Presidents, Baseball, and Wins above Expectations: What Can Sabermetrics Tell Us about Presidential Success?: Why Ronald Reagan is like Bobby Cox and Lyndon Johnson is like Joe Torre by Manuel P. Teodoro, Texas A&M University and Jon […]

APSA

Left Pessimism and Political Science

Left Pessimism and Political Science by Jennifer L. Hochschild,  Harvard University I examine why contemporary social scientists on the political left are relatively pessimistic about the public arena and its trajectory. To develop an answer, I explore […]

APSA

Rhetorical Adaptation and Resistance to International Norms

Rhetorical Adaptation and Resistance to International Norms by Jennifer M. Dixon, Villanova University Scholarship on states’ responses to international norms has focused on commitment, compliance, and noncompliance; paying insufficient attention to responses that fall outside these categories. […]

Event

Recharge with APSA Following the March for Science

APSA members in Washington, DC, for the March for Science on Saturday, April 22, are invited to APSA’s offices in Dupont Circle for an open house to mark the event. Light refreshments, including coffee, tea, water, and […]