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HomeAPSA Annual MeetingTheme Panel: Enhancing Pluralism by Understanding Systemic Biases

Theme Panel: Enhancing Pluralism by Understanding Systemic Biases

July 27, 2021 APSA Annual Meeting, Theme Panels Comments Off on Theme Panel: Enhancing Pluralism by Understanding Systemic Biases

Enhancing Pluralism by Understanding Systemic Biases

In-Person Full Paper Panel

Participants:

  • (Chair) Sonja M. Amadae, University of Helsinki;
  • (Discussant) Jared Clemons, Duke University

  • View all 2021 Annual Meeting theme panels
  • Register for the APSA Annual Meeting
  • View the Online Program

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Recent Posts

  • Independent Letter from APSA Presidents to Senate on FY2026 Federal Budget Appropriations
  • Meet DFP Spring Fellow, Niko Dawson, Washington University in St. Louis
  • Making the Founding Documents Relevant in the 21st Century: APSA’s Engaging America’s 250th Webinar Series
  • Meet DFP Spring Fellow, Sashi Juarez-Galindo, University of Maryland, College Park
  • APSA Statement on the Dismissal of the National Science Board

Journals

  • 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 [...]
  • Political Symbols and Social Order: Confederate Monuments and Performative Violence in the Post-Reconstruction U.S. South

    May 8, 2026 0
    Political Symbols and Social Order: Confederate Monuments and Performative Violence in the Post-Reconstruction U.S. South By Lee-Or Ankori-Karlinsky, Brown University Violent conflicts are often accompanied by symbols commemorating past violence. I argue that political symbols [...]

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