2021

Chiru, M. (2021) “Does electoral reform change MPs’ behavior? Evidence from Romania”, Political Studies Review, 19(3), pp. 355–375.
Al-Saidi, M. and Hussein, H. (2021) “The water-energy-food nexus and COVID-19: Towards a systematization of impacts and responses”., The Science of the total environment, 779, p. 146529.
Johnson, D. and Bulbulia, J. (2021) “Can evolution make sense of fear? Lessons from Bonhoeffer and Darwin”, The Bonhoeffer Legacy: An International Journal, 7(1 and 2), pp. 59–80.
Perez Sandoval, J. (2021) “Agustina Giraudy, Eduardo Moncada and Richard Snyder (Eds.), Inside countries: Subnational research in comparative politics, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2019, 374 pp”., Perfiles Latinoamericanos, 29(58).
Gallego, A. et al. (2021) “Technological risk and policy preferences”, Comparative Political Studies, 55(1), pp. 60–92.
Harding, R. and Eggers, A. (2021) “Rallying in fear? Estimating the effectof the UK COVID-19 lockdown with a natural experiment”, European Journal of Political Research, 61(2), pp. 586–600.
Billingham, P. and Chaplin, J. (2021) “Introduction to the special issue on religious diversity, political theory, and theology: public reason and Christian theology”, Social Theory and Practice, 47(3), pp. 451–456.
Newman, N. et al. (2021) The Reuters Institute digital news report 2021. Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.
Chiru, M. and De Winter, L. (2021) “The allocation of committee chairs and the oversight of coalition cabinets in Belgium”, Government and Opposition [Preprint].
Hood, C. and Piotrowska, B. (2021) “Who loves input controls? what happened to ‘Outputs Not Inputs’ in UK public financial management, and why?”, Public Administration, 101(1), pp. 303–317.
Laborde, C. (2021) “On the parity between religious and secular reasons”, Social Theory and Practice, 47(3), pp. 575–587.
Stemplowska, Z. (2021) “Is humanity under a duty to deliver socioeconomic human rights?”, Journal of Applied Philosophy, 39(2), pp. 202–211.
Dill, J. and Schubiger, L. (2021) “Attitudes toward the use of force: Instrumental imperatives, moral principles, and international law”, American Journal of Political Science, 65(3), pp. 612–633.
Chaisty, P. and Power, T. (2021) “Does Power Always Flow to the Executive? Interbranch Oscillations in Legislative Authority, 1976-2014”, Government and Opposition: an international journal of comparative politics [Preprint].
Chiru, M. and Enyedi, Z. (2021) “Who wants technocrats? A comparative study of citizen attitudes in nine young and consolidated democracies”, The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 24(1), pp. 95–112.
Soares De Oliveira, R. (2021) “Researching Africa and the offshore world”, The Oxford Martin Programme on African Governance [Preprint]. University of Oxford.
Gledhill, J., Caplan, R. and Meiske, M. (2021) “Developing peace: the evolution of development goals and activities in United Nations peacekeeping”, Oxford Development Studies, 49(3), pp. 201–229.
Schleiter, P. et al. (2021) “Social Democratic Party exceptionalism and transnational policy linkages”, World Politics, 73(3 ), pp. 512–544.
Bernhard, R. and de Benedictis-Kessner, J. (2021) “Men and women candidates are similarly persistent after losing elections”., Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(26), p. e2026726118.
Green, J. (2021) “Attention! The meanings of attention to politics in surveys”, Electoral Studies, 72.
Yadgar, Y. (2021) “On the Uses and Abuses of Tradition”, in When Politics are Sacralized. Cambridge University Press (CUP), pp. 88–112.
Peterson, S. (2021) “Heresthetic and strategic choice in a constitutional moment: the abdication of Edward VIII”, British Politics, 19(4), pp. 609–626.
Caplan, R. (2021) “The peace continuum: what it is and how to study it”, Perspectives on Politics, 19(2), pp. 594–596.
Caplan, R. (2021) “Critical dialogue: Review of Christian Davenport etc’s ’Peace Continuum’ and response to Christian Davenport’s review of Caplan’s ’Measuring Peace’”, Perspectives on Politics, 19(2), pp. 593–594.
Ejaz, W. et al. (2021) “Factors associated with the belief in COVID-19 related conspiracy theories in Pakistan”, Health Risk & Society, 23(3-4), pp. 162–178.