American Political Science Review

It’s Not about Race: Good Wars, Bad Wars, and the Origins of Kant’s Anti-Colonialism

It’s Not about Race: Good Wars, Bad Wars, and the Origins of Kant’s Anti-Colonialism by Inés Valdez, Ohio State University This article offers a new interpretation of Kant’s cosmopolitanism and his anti-colonialism in Toward Perpetual Peace. Kant’s […]

American Political Science Review

Democratic partisanship: From theoretical ideal to empirical standard

Democratic partisanship: From theoretical ideal to empirical standard by L.E. Herman, Sciences Po In recent years, there has been a renewed interest for political parties and partisanship in normative democratic theory. A growing number of scholars […]

Journals

Experiential Learning and Pathways to Carbon Neutrality

Experiential Learning and Pathways to Carbon Neutrality by Sara Rinfret, University of Montana, Missoula To date, over 650 university presidents across the United States have become signatories of the American College and University Presidents’ Climate […]

American Political Science Review

Economic Development, Mobility, and Political Discontent: An Experimental Test of Tocqueville’s Thesis in Pakistan

Economic Development, Mobility, and Political Discontent: An Experimental Test of Tocqueville’s Thesis in Pakistan by Andrew Healy, Loyola Marymount University, Katrina Kosec, International Food Policy Research Institute, Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, Vanderbilt University We consider the thesis of Alexis de […]

Journals

Merging Graphics and Text to Better Convey Experimental Results: Designing an “Enhanced Bar Graph”

Merging Graphics and Text to Better Convey Experimental Results: Designing an “Enhanced Bar Graph” by William D. Berry, Florida State University, and Matthew Hauenstein, Florida State University Over the last two decades, randomized experiments have […]

American Political Science Review

Electoral Accountability for State Legislative Roll-Calls and Ideological Representation

Electoral Accountability for State Legislative Roll-Calls and Ideological Representation By Steven Rogers, Saint Louis University State legislatures have considerable authority over American’s lives.  Legislators determine who has the opportunity to vote, go to college, and even get […]

Journals

Making Embedded Knowledge Transparent: How the V-Dem Dataset Opens New Vistas in Civil Society Research

Making Embedded Knowledge Transparent: How the V-Dem Dataset Opens New Vistas in Civil Society Research by Michael Bernhard, University of Florida, Dong-Joon Jung, Seoul National University, South Korea, Eitan Tzelgov, University of East Anglia, Michael Coppedge, University of […]