American Political Science Review

Can Candidates Get Away with Bad Spanish?

In the APSA Public Scholarship Program, graduate students in political science produce summaries of new research in the American Political Science Review. This piece, written by Leann Mclaren, covers the article by Marques G. Zárate, […]

Call for Submissions

Call for Book Review Editor(s): Perspectives on Politics

The American Political Science Association (APSA) invites applications and nominations for a new book review editor for Perspectives on Politics.  One of the Association’s three flagship journals, and now in its 20th year of publication, […]

American Political Science Review

Rebel Motivations and Repression

Rebel Motivations and Repression By Ethan Bueno de Mesquita, University of Chicago and Mehdi Shadmehr, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill How do different types of motivation influence the politics of collective action? We […]

American Political Science Review

Rationalizing Democracy: The Perceptual Bias and (Un)Democratic Behavior

Rationalizing Democracy: The Perceptual Bias and (Un)Democratic Behavior By Suthan Krishnarajan, Aarhus University Democracy often confronts citizens with a dilemma: stand firm on democracy while losing out on policy or accept undemocratic behavior and gain […]

American Political Science Review

Call for Applications: 2023-2024 Public Scholarship Program – Deadline Extended: July 7th

APSA is accepting applications to join the fifth cohort of the Public Scholarship Program fellows. This program offers remote part-time fellowships that introduces political science graduate students to the intellectual and practical aspects of presenting academic scholarship to […]

American Political Science Review

Political Solutions to Discriminatory Behavior

Political Solutions to Discriminatory Behavior By Thorbjørn Sejr Guul, University of Southern Denmark, Discriminatory treatment of minorities by public authorities remains a serious challenge and breaks with the central principles of impartiality. However, little research […]

Journals

On the Outside Looking In: Ethnography and Authoritarianism

On the Outside Looking In: Ethnography and Authoritarianism By David R. Stroup, University of Manchester and J. Paul Goode, Carleton University Despite the common assumption that ethnography is most successful where researchers achieve recognition as […]