2023

Schuetze, B. and Hussein, H. (2023) “The geopolitical economy of an undermined energy transition: the case of Jordan”, Energy Policy, 180.
Harding, R. et al. (2023) “Buying a blind eye: campaign donations, regulatory enforcement, and deforestation”, American Political Science Review, 118(2), pp. 635–653.
Thornton, P. (2023) “When grid meets web: how COVID extended the Party-state’s capacity for social control at the grassroots”, China Leadership Monitor, 2023(76).
Northmore-Ball, K. and Tertytchnaya, K. (2023) “The long-term effects of voting for autocracy: evidence from Russia”, Electoral Studies, 83.
Leopold, D. (2023) “Classical Marxism: an intellectual history”, Catalyst. A Journal of Theory and Strategy [Preprint].
Haas, V. et al. (2023) “Can wedge strategies by mainstream parties cross-cut the anti-immigration far right vote?”, Electoral Studies, https://www.sciencedirect.com/journal/electoral-studies(83).
Azevedo, F. et al. (2023) “Social and moral psychology of COVID-19 across 69 countries”., Scientific data, 10(1), p. 272.
Tavits, M. et al. (2023) “Fathers’ leave reduces sexist attitude”, American Political Science Review, 118(1), pp. 488–494.
Mont’Alverne, C. et al. (2023) “‘Fair and balanced’: what news audiences in four countries mean when they say they prefer impartial news ”, Journalism Studies, 24(9), pp. 1131–1148.
Prelec, T. and Soares de Oliveira, R. (2023) “Enabling African loots: tracking the laundering of Nigerian kleptocrats’ ill-gotten gains in western financial centres”, Journal of International Relations and Development, 26(2), pp. 272–300.
Lindvall, J., Rueda, D. and Zhai, H. (2023) “When parties move to the middle: the role of uncertainty”, British Journal of Political Science, 53(4), pp. 1208–1229.
Yan, A. and Bernhard, R. (2023) “The silenced text: field experiments on gendered experiences of political participation”, American Political Science Review, 118(1), pp. 481–487.
Ross Arguedas, A. et al. (2023) News for the powerful and privileged: how misrepresentation and underrepresentation of disadvantaged communities undermines their trust in news. Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.
Batista, M., Power, T. and Zucco, C. (2023) “Be careful what you wish for: portfolio allocation, presidential popularity, and electoral payoffs to parties in multiparty presidentialism”, Party Politics [Preprint].
GONZALEZ OCANTOS, E. et al. (2023) Prosecutors, Voters, and the Criminalization of Corruption in Latin America. Cambridge University Press.
Chadi, T. et al. (2023) “International Studies and Struggles for Inclusion”, International Studies Review, 25(2), p. viad018.
Ejaz, W. and Najam, A. (2023) “The Global South and Climate Coverage: From News Taker to News Maker”, Social Media + Society, 9(2), p. 20563051231177904.
Wheeler, J. et al. (2023) “Space conservation: a plea for urgency”, Astronomy and Geophysics, 64(2), pp. 2.14 – 2.18.
Hussein, H. and Ezbakhe, F. (2023) “The Water–Employment–Migration nexus: buzzword or useful framework?”, Development Policy Review, 41(3).
Billingham, P. and Taylor, A. (2023) “Can civic friendship ground public reason?”, Philosophical Quarterly, 74(1), pp. 24–45.
Chiru, M. (2023) “Seniority and ideological proximity? A longitudinal analysis of the appointment of party group coordinators in the European Parliament”, Journal of Common Market Studies, 62(1), pp. 127–141.
Genovese, F. and Vassallo, S. (2023) “Ideological polarization, policy continuity: back to the majoritarian principle?”, Contemporary Italian Politics, 15(2), pp. 124–139.
Adams, K. et al. (2023) Race and leadership in the news media 2023: evidence from five markets. Reuters Insitute for the Study of Journalism.
Sullivan De Estrada, K. (2023) “US retreat, Indian reform: multilateralism under Trump and Modi”, India Review, 22(2), pp. 139–149.
Adams, K. et al. (2023) Women and leadership in the news media 2023: evidence from 12 markets. Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.