American Political Science Review

Gendered Perceptions and the Costs of Political Toxicity: Experimental Evidence from Politicians and Citizens in Four Democracies

Gendered Perceptions and the Costs of Political Toxicity: Experimental Evidence from Politicians and Citizens in Four Democracies By Gregory Eady, University of Copenhagen, and Anne Rasmussen, University of Copenhagen Politicians frequently face toxic behaviors. We […]

Journals

Chloe Thurston and Mary McGrath join the Perspectives on Politics editorial team as Associate Editors

APSA is happy to announce that Chloe Thurston, Associate Professor of Political Science and Mary McGrath are joining the Perspectives on Politics editorial team as Associate Editors in American Politics. Chloe Thurston, Associate Professor of Political Science; […]

American Political Science Review

The Global Network of Liberty: Toward a New Framework for Understanding the History of Political Concepts

The Global Network of Liberty: Toward a New Framework for Understanding the History of Political Concepts By Shoufu Yin, University of British Columbia This article contends that liberty was already a globally connected concept during […]

American Political Science Review

Empowered Minipublics for Democratic Renewal? Evidence from Three Conjoint Experiments in the United States, Ireland, and Finland

Empowered Minipublics for Democratic Renewal? Evidence from Three Conjoint Experiments in the United States, Ireland, and Finland By Saskia Goldberg, KU Leuven, Marina Lindell,  Åbo Akademi University, Finland, and André Bächtiger, University of Stuttgart This […]

American Political Science Review

The Class Ceiling in Politics

The Class Ceiling in Politics By Olle Folke, Uppsala University, and Johanna Rickne, Stockholm University Prior studies have documented that working-class individuals rarely become parliamentarians. We know less about when in the career pipeline to parliament workers […]

American Political Science Review

Ideology at Work? Rethinking Reproduction

Ideology at Work? Rethinking Reproduction By Alyssa Battistoni, Barnard College The low value of reproductive labor, and the related “crisis of care,” are often attributed to gendered attitudes about work. This article traces this explanation […]

American Political Science Review

Civic Organizations and the Political Participation of Cross-Pressured Americans: The Case of the Labor Movement

Civic Organizations and the Political Participation of Cross-Pressured Americans: The Case of the Labor Movement By Alexander Hertel-Fernandez, Columbia University Civic associations underpin American democracy. How can politically cross-cutting associations engage members who hold divergent […]

American Political Science Review

I’m a Survivor: Political Dynamics in Bureaucratic Elites’ Partisan Identification

I’m a Survivor: Political Dynamics in Bureaucratic Elites’ Partisan Identification By Benny Geys, BI Norwegian Business School, Per Lægreid, University of Bergen, Zuzana Murdoch, University of Bergen, and Susan Webb Yackee, University of Wisconsin-Madison This […]