American Political Science Review

APSA: Home for the Political Science Community

APSA is Home to the Political Science Community The American Political Science Association (APSA) brings together political scientists from all fields of inquiry, regions, and occupational endeavors within and outside academe to deepen our understanding […]

Journals

“I Hope to Hell Nothing Goes Back to The Way It Was Before”: COVID-19, Marginalization, and Native Nations

“I Hope to Hell Nothing Goes Back to The Way It Was Before”: COVID-19, Marginalization, and Native Nations By Raymond Foxworth, First Nations Development Institute, Laura E. Evans, University of Washington,  Gabriel R. Sanchez, The […]

Journals

“An Unacceptable Surrender of Fiscal Sovereignty”: The Neoliberal Turn to International Tax Arbitration

“An Unacceptable Surrender of Fiscal Sovereignty”: The Neoliberal Turn to International Tax Arbitration By Martin Hearson, The Institute of Development Studies and Todd N. Tucker, The Roosevelt Institute The growth of inequality over the past […]

Journals

Voice and Balancing in US Congressional Elections

Voice and Balancing in US Congressional Elections By Till Weber, Baruch College If the median voter wrote the Constitution, every Tuesday would be Election Day. Consider the case of the United States: Halfway into a […]

Journals

The Politics of Immigration

The Politics of Immigration By Michael Bernhard and Daniel O’Neill, University of Florida In 2016, Donald J. Trump was elected President of the United States after a primary season in which he declared that “Lyin’ […]

Journals

How Non-Majoritarian Institutions Make Silent Majorities Vocal: A Political Explanation of Authoritarian Populism

How Non-Majoritarian Institutions Make Silent Majorities Vocal: A Political Explanation of Authoritarian Populism By Michael Zürn, Social Science Center Berlin Why did we witness such a strong growth of anti-liberal forces twenty-five years after the […]