Read More Why Do Mass Expulsions Still Happen?January 30, 2023 Guest post by Meghan Garrity January 30, 2023 marks 100 years since the signing of the Lausanne Convention—a… Read More 7 0 0
Read More Explaining Public Attitudes Toward RefugeesDecember 9, 2022 Guest post by Burcu Pinar Alakoc Political discourse around refugees and forced migration matters. Research shows that elite… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Civil Society Faces an Uphill Struggle to Defend DemocracyOctober 31, 2022 Guest post by Marianne Dahl, Sirianne Dahlum, Hanne Fjelde, and Ida Rudolfsen The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded this… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Political Anger and DivisionOctober 10, 2022 Guest post by Steven W. Webster, Elizabeth C. Connors, and Betsy Sinclair Americans are politically divided on numerous… Read More 0 0 0
Read More The Politics of Nostalgia and PopulismAugust 23, 2022 Guest post by Ezgi Elçi Does nostalgia boost populism? Populist leaders worldwide often exploit nostalgia by referring to… Read More 1 0 0
Read More Terrorism and Political Tolerance Toward “Fellow Travelers”July 26, 2022 Guest post by Mark Peffley, Marc L. Hutchison, and Michal Shamir During President Biden’s recent trip to Israel,… Read More 0 0 0
Read More Who Should Pay for Refugees?June 17, 2022 Guest post by Lester Zeager and Richard Ericson When a record number of Middle Eastern refugees made their… Read More 4 0 0
Read More The Anatomy of Backsliding: Why is Democracy Consuming Itself?March 3, 2021 Guest post by Stephan Haggard and Robert R. Kaufman Well before 2016, the United States was becoming increasingly… Read More 1 0 0
Read More The Local Politics of Policing: The Case of Duterte’s Drug WarJanuary 11, 2021 Guest post by Nico Ravanilla, Renard Sexton, and Dotan Haim Last month, a brutal police killing in the… Read More 0 0 0
Read More The Threat in America is Destroying Democracy from WithinSeptember 28, 2020 By Stephen M. Saideman Because of Donald Trump’s statements, and news that his campaign staff has been seeking… Read More 60 0 0