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  • [ June 9, 2026 ] Meet DFP Spring Fellow, Cameron Thomas-Shah, Johns Hopkins University Diversity Fellowship Program
  • [ June 8, 2026 ] 2026 Short Course Highlight: Causal Inference with Observational Data APSA Annual Meeting
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HomeMidterm Elections

Midterm Elections

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 […]

Best Practices in Encouraging Student Registration Voting and Democratic Engagement: Week 2

Getting Millennials to the Polls: An Extra-Credit Assignment on Voting and Citizenship

November 14, 2019 Comments Off on Getting Millennials to the Polls: An Extra-Credit Assignment on Voting and Citizenship

Jeffrey Isaac, Professor at Indiana University, Bloomington, has agreed to allow APSA to repost this piece (originally featured on Public Seminar) for the RAISE the Vote Campaign. The views expressed in the posts and articles […]

APSA Member Spotlight

APSA Member of the Month: Dr. Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University

April 19, 2019 Comments Off on APSA Member of the Month: Dr. Nadia E. Brown, Purdue University

Dr. Nadia E. Brown Purdue University Department of Political Science & African American Studies and Research Center Member since 2003 Dr. Nadia E. Brown (Ph.D., Rutgers University) is a University Scholar and Associate Professor of […]

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Recent Posts

  • 2026 Short Course: Connecting Campaign Finance Scholars and Reformers: Building a Research Agenda
  • Meet DFP Spring Fellow, Cameron Thomas-Shah, Johns Hopkins University
  • 2026 Short Course Highlight: Causal Inference with Observational Data
  • Meet DFP Spring Fellow, Elina Rodriguez, University of California, Berkeley
  • 2026 Short Course: How to Use NVivo for Qualitative Data Analysis

Journals

  • Could Slave Raids Have Strengthened States? Evidence from Eastern Europe

    June 3, 2026 0
    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 Deborah Saki, covers the new article by Volha Charnysh [...]
  • 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 [...]

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