Results 271 to 280 of about 118,019 (352)
Transnational readings in the Trumpocene: Kim Stanley Robinson's <i>New York 2140</i> and Chris Beckett's <i>America City</i>. [PDF]
Resano D.
europepmc +1 more source
Empirical realism and democratic equality
Abstract Recently, empirical political scientists have challenged presuppositions about voter behavior that they take to be widespread in normative democratic theory, charging that democratic theory is unmoored from empirical reality. For their part, many normative democratic theorists have rejected empiricists’ characterizations of their subfield and ...
Emma Saunders‐Hastings
wiley +1 more source
The Power of 'Publicness' Discourse: An Analysis of Counter-Hegemonic Formation Against Health System Privatisation. [PDF]
Ha J, Kim CY.
europepmc +1 more source
An anatomy of worldmaking: Sukarno and anticolonialism from post‐Bandung Indonesia
Abstract This article analyzes the anticolonial worldmaking of postcolonial Indonesia's first president Sukarno, during Guided Democracy (1959–1965). Using worldmaking as a conceptual interface, the article offers three interconnected interventions.
Say Jye Quah
wiley +1 more source
Falling behind whom? Economic geographies of right-wing populism in Europe. [PDF]
Schraff D, Pontusson J.
europepmc +1 more source
Persuasive lobbying and the value of connections
Abstract The inflow of money into politics and the influence of interest groups on policies are well‐documented, but the monetary value of accessing policymakers is less well‐understood. As a result, it is unclear what inferences researchers can draw from lobbying expenditures about interest groups' strategies and their ideological alignment with ...
Emiel Awad, Clement Minaudier
wiley +1 more source
TO THE POWER THROUGH THE PEOPLE! APPOACHES OF POPULISM VIA DISCOURSE THEORY
Sergiu Mișcoiu
openalex +1 more source
Partisan sorting, fatalism, and Supreme Court legitimacy
Abstract This paper studies the contours of Supreme Court legitimacy. First, we construct a data set of surveys from 2012 to 2024 to show that diffuse support now diverges among partisans; we then analyze an original, six‐wave panel survey that reveals the stability of this partisan sorting.
Nicholas T. Davis, Matthew P. Hitt
wiley +1 more source