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  • [ May 14, 2026 ] How Confederate Monuments Shaped Violence in America American Political Science Review
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HomeCivic Engagement

Civic Engagement

Civic Engagement

Unfair Treatment by the Police May Matter Even More Than We Thought When It Comes to African Americans and the Legal System: Lessons from ‘Black and Blue’

July 28, 2020 Comments Off on Unfair Treatment by the Police May Matter Even More Than We Thought When It Comes to African Americans and the Legal System: Lessons from ‘Black and Blue’

In 2018, we published Black and Blue: How African Americans Judge the U.S. Legal System (Oxford University Press). Based on a nationally representative survey of African Americans, this book presents one of the most comprehensive […]

APSA Educate

An Experiment of Community-Based Learning Effects on Civic Participation

July 24, 2020 Comments Off on An Experiment of Community-Based Learning Effects on Civic Participation

An Experiment of Community-Based Learning Effects on Civic Participation by Taedong Lee, Jungbae An, Hyodong Sohn, Yonsei University & In Tae Yoo, Chonbuk National University How does community-based learning (CBL) influence student attitudes toward civic participation? […]

2020 Elections

Will Trump & Congressional Republicans Benefit from White Racial Attitudes in 2020?

July 22, 2020 Comments Off on Will Trump & Congressional Republicans Benefit from White Racial Attitudes in 2020?

Was the election of 2016 the new normal? Or will Donald Trump’s successful campaign formula of racialized appeals and anti-establishment messaging be forgotten with the GOP reverting to its previous form after his presidency? On […]

Civic Education

Teaching the Power of Local Political Participation

July 15, 2020 Comments Off on Teaching the Power of Local Political Participation

By Melissa Michelson My Menlo College students are generally concerned with current events and politics at the federal level—including Supreme Court decisions and actions taken by Congress or the President—and it can be challenging to […]

2018 Elections

Racial Liberalism: Connecting Protest and Electoral Politics Today

July 9, 2020 Comments Off on Racial Liberalism: Connecting Protest and Electoral Politics Today

The year is 2020, not 1968. There has been extensive commentary about the protests over the recent murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police suggesting parallels to the black insurgency of the late 1960s, including […]

2020 Elections

Equal Votes, Better Participation? Exploring how the National Popular Vote Compact Could Affect Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections

July 2, 2020 Comments Off on Equal Votes, Better Participation? Exploring how the National Popular Vote Compact Could Affect Voter Turnout in Presidential Elections

By Alice Malmberg The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact (NPVIC) proposes an alternative to how the United States currently elects its president by tying the outcome of the national popular vote to each state’s electoral […]

2018 Elections

Mapping the Geography of Gubernatorial Campaigns Using Social Media

June 2, 2020 Comments Off on Mapping the Geography of Gubernatorial Campaigns Using Social Media

What do a clam bake in Crisfield, Maryland, a Fourth of July parade in Windsor Heights, Iowa, and a minor league baseball game in Jacksonville, Florida have in common? They all represent public social events […]

Campaign

Do (Nasty) Campaigns Mobilize?

May 28, 2020 Comments Off on Do (Nasty) Campaigns Mobilize?

High turnout matters. It is one of the three key indicators of good democratic performance of a country as famously identified by Powell,[1] and its absence is often seen as an indicator of generalized political […]

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Recent Posts

  • APSA Statement on the Dismissal of the National Science Board
  • Meet DFP Spring Fellow, Taylor Gibson Campbell, Temple University
  • Meet DFP Spring Fellow, Yasir Kuoti, Boston University
  • How Confederate Monuments Shaped Violence in America
  • Meet DFP Spring Fellow, Zabdi Velasquez Zavalza, University of California, Los Angeles

Journals

  • Criminal Communication: Public Representations, Repertoires, and Regimes of Criminal Governance

    May 12, 2026 0
    Criminal Communication: Public Representations, Repertoires, and Regimes of Criminal Governance By Philip Luke Johnson, Flinders University Criminal actors are widely assumed to maintain a low profile, exerting power through coercion and clandestine networks. Scholarship addressing [...]
  • Bent into Submission? Domestic Investors and Populist Governments

    May 11, 2026 0
    Bent into Submission? Domestic Investors and Populist Governments By Alison L. Johnston, Oregon State University and Juliet Johnson, McGill University Do populist governments bend their economic policies to the preferences of bondholders? Populist governments should [...]
  • Political Symbols and Social Order: Confederate Monuments and Performative Violence in the Post-Reconstruction U.S. South

    May 8, 2026 0
    Political Symbols and Social Order: Confederate Monuments and Performative Violence in the Post-Reconstruction U.S. South By Lee-Or Ankori-Karlinsky, Brown University Violent conflicts are often accompanied by symbols commemorating past violence. I argue that political symbols [...]

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