The presence of elections in a regime that is not outright authoritarian has long been thought to be a black and white indication of a democratic regime. However, in the last fifteen years, the language used to classify...
This article investigates why, in two different political and institutional contexts, leftist governing parties became agents of empowered inclusion, boosting the capacity of subordinate social actors to shape the agenda of...
In recent debates about hegemonic knowledge in the modern world, a number of basic assumptions have emerged that allow us to characterize the dominant conception of knowledge as Eurocentric (Lander 2000a). After providing a...
Mitchell, Kristine. European Identity and Diffuse Support for the European Union in a Time of Crisis : What Can We Learn From University Students? In European Identity Revisited: New Approaches and Recent Empirical...
Published as:Mitchell, Kristine. The European Trade Union Confederation at 40: Integration and Diversity in the European Labor Movement.Labor History 55, no. 4 (2014): 403-426....
Is grading polarized in political science classrooms? We offer experimentalevidence that suggests it is not. Many have argued that instructors’ gradingin political science classrooms is skewed by the political characteristics...
Zhou Enlai was not referring to the effects of the French Revolution of 1789 when he delivered his famous verdict in 1972 that it was too early to say, but to the May 1968 uprising in France. Today we are at an only slightly...
Marshall, Emily C., James W. Saunoris, and T. Daniel Woodbury. The Flypaper Sticks Even When Aid Travels Overseas. Public Finance Review 49, no. 5 (2021): 717-753....