American Political Science Review

Crediting Invisible Work: Congress and the Lawmaking Productivity Metric (LawProM)

Crediting Invisible Work: Congress and the Lawmaking Productivity Metric (LawProM) By Mandi Eatough, University of Michigan and Jessica R. Preece, Brigham Young University Congressional observers have long been interested in the distinction between legislative “workhorses” […]

American Political Science Review

Elite Cues and Noncompliance

Elite Cues and Noncompliance By Zachary P. Dickson and Sara B. Hobolt, London School of Economics Political leaders increasingly use social media to speak directly to voters, but the extent to which elite cues shape […]

American Political Science Review

Geo-Political Rivalry and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment: A Conjoint Experiment in 22 Countries

Geo-Political Rivalry and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment: A Conjoint Experiment in 22 Countries By Andreas Wimmer, Columbia University, Bart Bonikowski, New York University, Charles Crabtree, Dartmouth College, Zheng Fu, Columbia University, Matt Golder, Pennsylvania State University, and […]

American Political Science Review

Legacies of Wartime Sexual Violence: Survivors, Psychological Harms, and Mobilization

Legacies of Wartime Sexual Violence: Survivors, Psychological Harms, and Mobilization By Summer Lindsey, Rutgers University and Carlo Koos, University of Bergen What are the psychological, social, and political legacies of sexual violence in armed conflicts? […]

American Political Science Review

Liberals and Conservatives Rely on Very Similar Sets of Foundations When Comparing Moral Violations

Liberals and Conservatives Rely on Very Similar Sets of Foundations When Comparing Moral Violations By Jack Blumenau and Benjamin E. Lauderdale, University College London Applications of moral foundations theory in political science have revealed differences […]

American Political Science Review

Misinformation and Support for Vigilantism: An Experiment in India and Pakistan

Misinformation and Support for Vigilantism: An Experiment in India and Pakistan By Sumitra Badrinathan, American University, Simon Chauchard, University Carlos III of Madrid and Institute Carlos 3-Juan March and Niloufer Siddiqui, University at Albany—SUNY Vigilante […]

American Political Science Review

Senate Countermajoritarianism

Senate Countermajoritarianism By C. Lawrence Evans, William & Mary This article is the first comprehensive treatment of countermajoritarian roll call outcomes in the U.S. Senate, 1789–2022. Divergences from majoritarian principles are rooted in part in […]

American Political Science Review

Separate but Unequal: Ethnocentrism and Racialization Explain the “Democratic” Peace in Public Opinion

Separate but Unequal: Ethnocentrism and Racialization Explain the “Democratic” Peace in Public Opinion By Brian C. Rathbun, University of Southern California, Christopher Sebastian, University of California, Santa Barbara and Parker Caleb Pomeroy, Stanford University Why […]