American Political Science Review
1906 - 2025
From Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press, UPH, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS UK. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Kirk Stebbing (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 113, issue 4, 2019
- Who Leads? Who Follows? Measuring Issue Attention and Agenda Setting by Legislators and the Mass Public Using Social Media Data pp. 883-901

- Pablo Barberá, Andreu Casas, Jonathan Nagler, Patrick J. Egan, Richard Bonneau, John T. Jost and Joshua A. Tucker
- Persuading the Enemy: Estimating the Persuasive Effects of Partisan Media with the Preference-Incorporating Choice and Assignment Design pp. 902-916

- Justin de Benedictis-Kessner, Matthew A. Baum, Adam J. Berinsky and Teppei Yamamoto
- The Party or the Purse? Unequal Representation in the US Senate pp. 917-940

- Jeffrey R. Lax, Justin H. Phillips and Adam Zelizer
- Pitch Perfect: Vocal Pitch and the Emotional Intensity of Congressional Speech pp. 941-962

- Bryce J. Dietrich, Matthew Hayes and O’brien, Diana Z.
- Do Fairer Elections Increase the Responsiveness of Politicians? pp. 963-979

- George Kwaku Ofosu
- Why Some Persistent Problems Persist pp. 980-996

- Robert Powell
- Investment in the Shadow of Conflict: Globalization, Capital Control, and State Repression pp. 997-1011

- Mehdi Shadmehr
- Can Violent Protest Change Local Policy Support? Evidence from the Aftermath of the 1992 Los Angeles Riot pp. 1012-1028

- Ryan D. Enos, Aaron Kaufman and Melissa L. Sands
- Ethnic Riots and Prosocial Behavior: Evidence from Kyrgyzstan pp. 1029-1044

- Anselm Hager, Krzysztof Krakowski and Max Schaub
- Mass Purges: Top-Down Accountability in Autocracy pp. 1045-1059

- B. Pablo Montagnes and Stephane Wolton
- BARP: Improving Mister P Using Bayesian Additive Regression Trees pp. 1060-1065

- James Bisbee
- Political Theory in an Ethnographic Key pp. 1066-1070

- Matthew Longo and Bernardo Zacka
- Does Public Opinion Constrain Presidential Unilateralism? pp. 1071-1077

- Dino P. Christenson and Douglas L. Kriner
- Concentrated Burdens: How Self-Interest and Partisanship Shape Opinion on Opioid Treatment Policy pp. 1078-1084

- Justin de Benedictis-Kessner and Michael Hankinson
Volume 113, issue 3, 2019
- Deliberative Democracy in an Unequal World: A Text-As-Data Study of South India’s Village Assemblies pp. 623-640

- Ramya Parthasarathy, Vijayendra Rao and Nethra Palaniswamy
- Establishing the Rule of Law in Weak and War-torn States: Evidence from a Field Experiment with the Liberian National Police pp. 641-657

- Robert A. Blair, Sabrina M. Karim and Benjamin S. Morse
- Wealth, Slaveownership, and Fighting for the Confederacy: An Empirical Study of the American Civil War pp. 658-673

- Andrew B. Hall, Connor Huff and Shiro Kuriwaki
- Policy Ideology in European Mass Publics, 1981–2016 pp. 674-693

- Devin Caughey, O’grady, Tom and Christopher Warshaw
- Electoral Reform and Trade-Offs in Representation pp. 694-709

- Michael Becher and Irene Menéndez González
- The Fingerprints of Fraud: Evidence from Mexico’s 1988 Presidential Election pp. 710-726

- Francisco Cantú
- Partisan Poll Watchers and Electoral Manipulation pp. 727-742

- Sergio J. Ascencio and Miguel R. Rueda
- Are Moderates Better Representatives than Extremists? A Theory of Indirect Representation pp. 743-761

- John W. Patty and Elizabeth Maggie Penn
- Signaling with Reform: How the Threat of Corruption Prevents Informed Policy-making pp. 762-777

- Keith E. Schnakenberg and Ian R. Turner
- Imperial Politics, English Law, and the Strategic Foundations of Constitutional Review in America pp. 778-795

- Sean Gailmard
- Making Offenders Vote: Democratic Expressivism and Compulsory Criminal Voting pp. 796-809

- Andrei Poama and Tom Theuns
- The Politics of Decolonial Interpretation: Tradition and Method in Contemporary Arab Thought pp. 810-823

- Yasmeen Daifallah
- Constructivism and the Logic of Political Representation pp. 824-837

- Thomas Fossen
- Declaring and Diagnosing Research Designs pp. 838-859

- Graeme Blair, Jasper Cooper, Alexander Coppock and Macartan Humphreys
- Individual Life Horizon Influences Attitudes Toward Democracy pp. 860-867

- Marie Lechler and Uwe Sunde
- Yes, Human Rights Practices Are Improving Over Time pp. 868-881

- Christopher J. Fariss
- When Do Citizens Respond Politically to the Local Economy? Evidence from Registry Data on Local Housing Markets – CORRIGENDUM pp. 882-882

- Martin Vinæs Larsen, Frederik Hjorth, Peter Thisted Dinesen and Kim Mannemar Sønderskov
Volume 113, issue 2, 2019
- “Judge Lynch” in the Court of Public Opinion: Publicity and the De-legitimation of Lynching pp. 293-310

- Michael Weaver
- Misdemeanor Disenfranchisement? The Demobilizing Effects of Brief Jail Spells on Potential Voters pp. 311-324

- Ariel White
- Through the Grapevine: Informational Consequences of Interpersonal Political Communication pp. 325-339

- Taylor N. Carlson
- Is Position-Taking Contagious? Evidence of Cue-Taking from Two Field Experiments in a State Legislature pp. 340-352

- Adam Zelizer
- Using a Probabilistic Model to Assist Merging of Large-Scale Administrative Records pp. 353-371

- Ted Enamorado, Benjamin Fifield and Kosuke Imai
- Local News and National Politics pp. 372-384

- Gregory J. Martin and Joshua McCRAIN
- Democratization and the Conditional Dynamics of Income Distribution pp. 385-404

- Michael Dorsch and Paul Maarek
- How Do Immigrants Respond to Discrimination? The Case of Germans in the US During World War I pp. 405-422

- Vasiliki Fouka
- Diversity, Institutions, and Economic Outcomes: Post-WWII Displacement in Poland pp. 423-441

- Volha Charnysh
- Does Exposure to the Refugee Crisis Make Natives More Hostile? pp. 442-455

- Dominik Hangartner, Elias Dinas, Moritz Marbach, Konstantinos Matakos and Dimitrios Xefteris
- Cosmopolitan Immigration Attitudes in Large European Cities: Contextual or Compositional Effects? pp. 456-474

- Rahsaan Maxwell
- Information Provision, Voter Coordination, and Electoral Accountability: Evidence from Mexican Social Networks pp. 475-498

- Eric Arias, Pablo Balán, Horacio Larreguy, John Marshall and Pablo Querubín
- When Do Citizens Respond Politically to the Local Economy? Evidence from Registry Data on Local Housing Markets pp. 499-516

- Martin Vinæs Larsen, Frederik Hjorth, Peter Thisted Dinesen and Kim Mannemar Sønderskov
- Demand Effects in Survey Experiments: An Empirical Assessment pp. 517-529

- Jonathan Mummolo and Erik Peterson
- Participation, Government Legitimacy, and Regulatory Compliance in Emerging Economies: A Firm-Level Field Experiment in Vietnam pp. 530-551

- Edmund Malesky and Markus Taussig
- Elite Defection under Autocracy: Evidence from Russia pp. 552-568

- Ora John Reuter and David Szakonyi
- Mass Repression and Political Loyalty: Evidence from Stalin’s ‘Terror by Hunger’ pp. 569-583

- Arturas Rozenas and Yuri M. Zhukov
- Legitimacy in Criminal Governance: Managing a Drug Empire from Behind Bars pp. 584-606

- Benjamin Lessing and Graham Denyer Willis
- Family Matters? Voting Behavior in Households with Criminal Justice Contact pp. 607-613

- Ariel White
- An Asymmetrical “President-in-Power” Effect pp. 614-620

- Davide Morisi, John T. Jost and Vishal Singh
- Legislative Staff and Representation in Congress – ERRATUM pp. 621-621

- Alexander Hertel-Fernandez, Matto Mildenberger and Leah C. Stokes
Volume 113, issue 1, 2019
- Legislative Staff and Representation in Congress pp. 1-18

- Alexander Hertel-Fernandez, Matto Mildenberger and Leah C. Stokes
- Does Private Regulation Preempt Public Regulation? pp. 19-37

- Neil Malhotra, Benoît Monin and Michael Tomz
- Does Party Trump Ideology? Disentangling Party and Ideology in America pp. 38-54

- Michael Barber and Jeremy C. Pope
- The Informational Theory of Legislative Committees: An Experimental Analysis pp. 55-76

- Marco Battaglini, Ernest K. Lai, Wooyoung Lim and Joseph Wang
- Preventive Repression: Two Types of Moral Hazard pp. 77-87

- Tiberiu Dragu and Adam Przeworski
- The Countervailing Effects of Competition on Public Goods Provision: When Bargaining Inefficiencies Lead to Bad Outcomes pp. 88-107

- Jessica Gottlieb and Katrina Kosec
- Enhancing Electoral Equality: Can Education Compensate for Family Background Differences in Voting Participation? pp. 108-122

- Karl-Oskar Lindgren, Sven Oskarsson and Mikael Persson
- (Under What Conditions) Do Politicians Reward Their Supporters? Evidence from Kenya’s Constituencies Development Fund pp. 123-139

- J. Andrew Harris and Daniel N. Posner
- The Psychology of State Repression: Fear and Dissent Decisions in Zimbabwe pp. 140-155

- Lauren E. Young
- The Credibility of Public and Private Signals: A Document-Based Approach pp. 156-172

- Azusa Katagiri and Eric Min
- From Isolation to Radicalization: Anti-Muslim Hostility and Support for ISIS in the West pp. 173-194

- Tamar Mitts
- Theopolitics Contra Political Theology: Martin Buber’s Biblical Critique of Carl Schmitt pp. 195-208

- Charles H. T. Lesch
- Candidate Entry and Political Polarization: An Experimental Study pp. 209-225

- Jens GROßER and Thomas R. Palfrey
- The Endurance of Politicians’ Values Over Four Decades: A Panel Study pp. 226-241

- Donald D. Searing, William G. Jacoby and Andrew H. Tyner
- Legislative Review and Party Differentiation in Coalition Governments pp. 242-247

- David Fortunato
- Elections Activate Partisanship across Countries pp. 248-253

- Shane P. Singh and Judd R. Thornton
- Education and Anti-Immigration Attitudes: Evidence from Compulsory Schooling Reforms across Western Europe pp. 254-263

- Charlotte Cavaille and John Marshall
- Public Attitudes toward Young Immigrant Men pp. 264-269

- Dalston G. Ward
- Effects of Divisive Political Campaigns on the Day-to-Day Segregation of Arab and Muslim Americans pp. 270-276

- William Hobbs and Nazita Lajevardi
- Partisan Affect and Elite Polarization pp. 277-281

- Daniel Diermeier and Christopher Li
- Tactical Extremism pp. 282-286

- Jon Eguia and Francesco Giovannoni
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