Items where department is "LSE"

University Structure (106206) LSE (106206) Academic Departments (62869) Institutes (1114) Research Centres (22374) Other Academic (34) Former organisational units (1364)
Number of items: 2341.
Article
  • Baum-Snow, Nathaniel, Brandt, Loren, Henderson, J. Vernon, Turner, Matthew A., Zhang, Qinghua (2017). Roads, railroads and decentralization of Chinese cities. Review of Economics and Statistics, 99(3), 435-448. https://doi.org/10.1162/REST_a_00660
  • Beiser-McGrath, Liam F., Bernauer, Thomas (2017). How strong is public support for unilateral climate policy and what drives it? Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 8(6). https://doi.org/10.1002/wcc.484
  • Beiser-Mcgrath, Liam (2017). Insuring against past perils: the politics of post-currency crisis foreign exchange reserve accumulation. Political Science Research and Methods, 5(3), 427 - 446. https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2016.9
  • Bernal, Raquel, Meléndez, Marcela, Eslava, Marcela, Pinzón, Alvaro (2017). Switching from payroll taxes to corporate income taxes: firms’ employment and wages after the 2012 Colombian tax reform. Economía, 18(1), 41 - 74. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.51 picture_as_pdf
  • Bursten, Julia (2017). Book review: Eric Scerri and Grant Fisher // essays in the philosophy of chemistry. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science,
  • Buskell, Andrew (2017). Book review: Andy Clark // surfing uncertainty: prediction, action, and the embodied brain. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science,
  • Cardona-Sosa, Lina, Medina, Carlos (2017). The effects of in utero programs on birth outcomes: the case of Buen Comienzo. Economía, 17(2), 93 - 134. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.67 picture_as_pdf
  • Chapa, Joana, Ortega, Araceli (2017). Identifying the main emitters of carbon dioxide in Mexico: a multi-sectoral study. Economía, 17(2), 135 - 172. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.69 picture_as_pdf
  • Charonis, Antonios, Kyriopoulos, Ilias-Ioannis, Spanakis, Manos, Zavras, Dimitris, Athanasakis, Kostas, Pavi, Elpida, Kyriopoulos, John (2017). Subjective social status, social network and health disparities: empirical evidence from Greece. International Journal for Equity in Health, 16(40), 1-7. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12939-017-0533-y
  • Chiu, Urania (2017). A robust restatement of the presumption of capacity under the Mental Capacity Act 2005: WBC (Local Authority) v Z, X, Y. LSE Law Review, 2, 93-99. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.1q96d2d7j1vj
  • Cucunuba, Zulma M., Sicuri, Elisa, Diaz, Diana, Basanez, Maria-Gloria, Nouvellet, Pierre, Conteh, Lesong (2017). Estimating the costs and cost-effectiveness of early diagnosis and treatment of Chagas Disease in Colombia. American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 95(5), p. 364.
  • Currie, Adrian (2017). Book review: Sabina Leonelli // data-centric biology: a philosophical study. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science,
  • Cylus, Jonathan, Avendano, Mauricio (2017). Receiving unemployment benefits may have positive effects on the health of the unemployed. Health Affairs, 36(2), 289-296. https://doi.org/10.1377/hlthaff.2016.1040
  • Cylus, Jonathan, Papanicolas, Irene, Smith, Peter C. (2017). Identifying the causes of inefficiencies in health systems. Eurohealth, 23(2), 3-7.
  • Dupré, John (2017). Book review: D. M. Walsh // organisms, agency and evolution. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science,
  • Faulkner-Gurstein, Rachel (2017). The social logic of naloxone: peer administration, harm reduction, and the transformation of social policy. Social Science & Medicine, 180, 20-27. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2017.03.013
  • Fernández, Cristina, Villar, Leonardo (2017). The impact of lowering the payroll tax on informality in Colombia. Economía, 18(1), 125 - 155. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.53 picture_as_pdf
  • GBD 2016 Healthcare Access and Quality Collaborators, (including Kadel, Rajendra) (2017). Global, regional, and national incidence, prevalence, and years lived with disability for 328 diseases and injuries for 195 countries, 1990–2016: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2016. The Lancet, 390(10100), 1211-1259. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(17)32154-2
  • Ganau, Roberto, Rodríguez-Pose, Andrés (2017). Industrial clusters, organized crime and productivity growth in Italian SMEs. Journal of Regional Science, https://doi.org/10.1111/jors.12354
  • Gani, J. K. (2017). The erasure of race: cosmopolitanism and the illusion of Kantian hospitality. Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 45(3), 425-446. https://doi.org/10.1177/0305829817714064 picture_as_pdf
  • García-Herrero, Alicia, Girardin, Eric, dos Santos, Enestor (2017). Do as I do, and also as I say: monetary policy impact on Brazil’s financial markets. Economía, 17(2), 65 - 92. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.66 picture_as_pdf
  • Gasparini, Leonardo, Marchionni, Mariana (2017). Deceleration in female labor force participation in Latin America. Economía, 18(1), 197 - 224. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.55 picture_as_pdf
  • Ginsburg, Ophira, Bray, Freddie, Coleman, Michel P, Vanderpuye, Verna, Eniu, Alexandru, Kotha, S Rani, Sarker, Malabika, Huong, Tran Thanh, Allemani, Claudia & Dvaladze, Allison et al (2017). The global burden of women’s cancers: a grand challenge in global health. The Lancet, 389(10071), 847-860. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736 picture_as_pdf
  • Gold, Natalie, Kyratsous, Michalis (2017). Self and identity in borderline personality disorder: agency and mental time travel. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23(5), 1020 - 1028. https://doi.org/10.1111/jep.12769 picture_as_pdf
  • Gómez-Zamudio, Luis M., Ibarra, Raúl (2017). Are daily financial data useful for forecasting GDP? Evidence from Mexico. Economía, 17(2), 173 - 203. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.70 picture_as_pdf
  • Hanrieder, Tine (2017). The public valuation of religion in global health governance: spiritual health and the faith factor. Contemporary Politics, 23(1), 81 - 99. https://doi.org/10.1080/13569775.2016.1213076 picture_as_pdf
  • Howson, Colin (2017). How pseudo-hypotheses defeat a non-Bayesian theory of evidence: reply to Bandyopadhyay, Taper, and Brittan. International Studies in the Philosophy of Science, 30(3), 299-306. https://doi.org/10.1080/02698595.2017.1316111
  • Husovec, Martin (2017). Holey cap! CJEU drills (yet) another hole in the e-Commerce Directive's safe harbours. Journal of Intellectual Property Law and Practice, 12(2), 115 - 125. https://doi.org/10.1093/jiplp/jpw203
  • Husovec, Martin (2017). Doctrine of trademark use in European Union and Japan. Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review, 21(1). picture_as_pdf
  • Husovec, Martin, van Dongen, L (2017). Website blocking, injunctions and beyond: view on the harmonization from the Netherlands. Journal of Intellectual Property Law and Practice, 12(8), 695 - 707. https://doi.org/10.1093/jiplp/jpx129 picture_as_pdf
  • Kanavos, Panos, Wouters, Olivier J. (2017). Health care after the Great Recession: financing options for sustainable and high-quality health systems. Global Policy, 8(S2), 5-6. https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-5899.12389
  • Kucko, Magdalena (2017). The Status of Natural or Legal Persons According to the Annulment Procedure Post-Lisbon. LSE Law Review, 2, 101-191. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.9z9efpt1etlk
  • Kugler, Adriana D., Kugler, Maurice D., Herrera-Prada, Luis O. (2017). Do payroll tax breaks stimulate formality? Evidence from Colombia’s reform. Economía, 18(1), 3 - 40. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.50 picture_as_pdf
  • Kuha, Jouni, Butt, Sarah, Katsikatsou, Myrsini, Skinner, Chris J. (2017). Probing of "don't know'' responses in surveys. MethodsNews, 3(2017), p. 6.
  • Magud, Nicolás E., Sosa, Sebastián (2017). Corporate investment in emerging markets: the role of commodity prices. Economía, 18(1), 157 - 195. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.54 picture_as_pdf
  • McLean, Neil, Price, Linda (2017). Identity formation among novice academic teachers: a longitudinal study. Studies in Higher Education, 1-14. https://doi.org/10.1080/03075079.2017.1405254 picture_as_pdf
  • Morales, Leonardo Fabio, Medina, Carlos (2017). Assessing the effect of payroll taxes on formal employment: the case of the 2012 tax reform in Colombia. Economía, 18(1), 75 - 124. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.52 picture_as_pdf
  • Myrskylä, Mikko, Barclay, Kieron, Goisis, Alice (2017). Advantages of later motherhood. Der Gynäkologe, 50(10), 767-772. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00129-017-4124-1
  • Nayagam, Shevanthi, Sicuri, Elisa, Lemoine, Maud, Easterbrook, Philippa, Conteh, Lesong, Hallett, Timothy B., Thursz, Mark (2017). Economic evaluations of HBV testing and treatment strategies and applicability to low and middle-income countries. BMC Infectious Diseases, 17(1), 107-116. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12879-017-2778-x picture_as_pdf
  • Papanicolas, Irene, Cylus, Jonathan (2017). The challenges of using cross-national comparisons of efficiency to inform health policy. Eurohealth, 23(2), 8-11.
  • Pérez-Cervantes, Fernando, Sandoval-Hernández, Aldo (2017). Short-run market access and the construction of better transportation infrastructure in Mexico. Economía, 18(1), 225 - 250. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.56 picture_as_pdf
  • Sampson, Alice, Villela, Maria Rita (2017). How young people peacefully challenge community norms embedded with violence in a Brazilian favela. British Journal of Criminology, 57(3), 684-703. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjc/azv132
  • Scalvini, Marco (2017). UK’s new drug strategy ignores social and cultural contexts. BMJ, (358), https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.j4404
  • Schröter, Nico (2017). Order, Authority, and Law: On the Development of Modern Conceptions of Political Order, Legitimate Rule, and Law and How They are Challenged. LSE Law Review, 2, 24-44. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.3c69t61j97xy
  • Scîntee, Gabriela, S, Vlădescu, Cristian, Hernández-Quevedo, Cristina (2017). New measures to increase the health budget in Romania. Eurohealth, 32(2), 28-31.
  • Shellum, Alex (2017). The Case for a Human Rights Act Based Approach to Unfair Dismissals Engaging Convention Rights: Challenging Judicial Attitudes and Assessing Potential. LSE Law Review, 2, 1-22. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.l6iqa0ijw4ik
  • Soares, Rodrigo R., Viveiros, Igor (2017). Organization and information in the fight against crime: the integration of police forces in the state of Minas Gerais, Brazil. Economía, 17(2), 29 - 63. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.64 picture_as_pdf
  • Stalla-Bourdillona, Sophie, Rossati, Eleonora, Turk, Karmen, Angelopolous, Christina, Kuczerawy, Aleksandra, Peguera, Miquel, Husovec, Martin (2017). An academic perspective on the copyright reform. Computer Law and Security Review, 33(1), 3 - 13. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.clsr.2016.12.003
  • Stein, Ernesto, Caro, Lorena (2017). Ideology and taxation in Latin America. Economía, 17(2), 1 - 27. https://doi.org/10.31389/eco.63 picture_as_pdf
  • Su, Meng, Zhang, Qiuli, Bai, Xueke, Wu, Chaoqun, Li, Yetong, Mossialos, Elias, Mensah, George A, Masoudi, Frederick A, Lu, Jiapeng & Li, Xi et al (2017). Availability, cost, and prescription patterns of antihypertensive medications in primary health care in China: a nationwide cross-sectional survey. The Lancet, 390(10112), 2559 - 2568. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(17)32476-5 picture_as_pdf
  • Taylor, Elanor (2017). Book review: Carl Gillett // reduction and emergence in science and philosophy. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science,
  • Troitiño, David Ramiro, Färber, Karoline, Boiro, Anni (2017). Mitterrand and the great European design—from the Cold War to the European Union. Baltic Journal of European Studies, 7(2), 132-147. https://doi.org/10.1515/bjes-2017-0013
  • Van Ingen, Michiel (2017). Conflict studies and causality: critical realism and the nomothetic/idiographic divide in the study of civil war. Civil Wars, 18(4), 387-416. https://doi.org/10.1080/13698249.2017.1297049
  • Vanden Berghe, Bruno (2017). Enforceability of OECD Linking Rules in the Light of EU Law. LSE Law Review, 2, 63-92. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.8lxb966y66rd
  • Wenham, Clare (2017). What we have learnt about the World Health Organization from the Ebola outbreak. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 372(1721). https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2016.0307
  • Williams, Helen K. R. (2017). Ever evolving: Metadata Services and repository involvement at LSE. Catalogue and Index, (187), 2-4.
  • Winchell, Mareike (2017). Remapping. Fieldsights: Theorizing the Contemporary, Cultural Anthropology Online,
  • Winchell, Mareike (2017). Economies of obligation: patronage as relational wealth in Bolivian gold mining. HAU: Journal of Ethnographic Theory, 7(3), 159 - 183. https://doi.org/10.14318/hau7.3.011 picture_as_pdf
  • Audio/visual resource
  • Rubins, Karen, Shah, Alpa (2017). Cartoon abstract: Ethnography? Participant observation, a potentially revolutionary praxis.
  • Book
  • Fung, Dilly (2017). A connected curriculum for higher education. UCL Press.
  • Chapter
  • Al-Rasheed, Madawi (2017). Sectarianism as counter-revolution: Saudi responses to the Arab Spring. In Hashemi, Nader, Postel, Danny (Eds.), Sectarianization: Mapping the New Politics of the Middle East . Hurst Publishers (London, England).
  • Brown, Jennifer (2017). Understanding the antecedents of the domestic violence perpertrator using the archers coercive controlling behaviour storyline as a study. In Courage, Cara, Headlam, Nicola (Eds.), Custard, culverts and cake; academics on life in The Archers. (pp. 307-328). Emerald Publishing.
  • Bryant, Peter (2017). Generating learning through the crowd: the role of social media practices in supporting students as producers at scale. In Partridge, H., Davis, K., Thomas, J. (Eds.), Me, Us, IT! Proceedings ASCILITE2017: 34th International Conference on Innovation, Practice and Research in the Use of Educational Technologies in Tertiary Education (pp. 197-207). ASCILITE.
  • Bryant, Peter (2017). It doesn't matter what is in their hands: understanding how students use technology to support, enhance, and expand their learning in a complex world. In Kommers, Piet, Issa, Tomayess, Isaías, Pedro, Hol, Ana (Eds.), Proceedings of the 5th International Conference on Educational Technologies (ICEduTech 2017) (pp. 67-74). IADIS: International Association for Development of the Information Society. picture_as_pdf
  • Dodd, Nigel (2017). Utopian moneys: complementary currencies, Bitcoin and the social life of money. In Bandelj, Nina, Wherry, Frederick F., Zelizer, Viviana, A (Eds.), Money talks: explaining how money really works (pp. 230-248). Princeton University Press.
  • Freeman, Emily, Knapp, Martin, Somani, Ami (2017). Long-term care organization and financing. In Quah, Stella R. (Ed.), International Encyclopedia of Public Health (pp. 469-476). Academic Press. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-803678-5.00258-7
  • Hyman, Richard (2017). British trade unions and the ETUC. In Ciampani, Andrea, Tilly, Pierre (Eds.), A Multilevel Social Relations History: Unions into ETUC and ETUC into European societies . European Trade Union Institute.
  • Kyriakidou, Maria, Olivas Osuna, José Javier, Hänska, Max (2017). The indignados in the European press: beyond the protest paradigm? In Wimmer, Jeffrey, Wallner, Cornelia, Winter, Rainer, Oelsner, Karoline (Eds.), (Mis)Understanding Political Participation: Digital Practices, New Forms of Participation and the Renewal of Democracy . Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315620596
  • Rossner, Meredith (2017). Restorative justice in the 21st century: making emotions mainstream. In Liebling, Alison, Maruna, S., McAra, Lesley (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Criminology . Oxford University Press.
  • Sampson, Alice (2017). From Paki-bashing to Muslim bashing: extremism policies considered. In Hobbs, Dick (Ed.), Mischief, Morality and Mobs: Essays in Honour of Geoffrey Pearson (pp. 44-60). Routledge.
  • Conference or Workshop Item
  • Freeman, Emily, Coast, Ernestina (2017-02-16 - 2017-02-19) Understanding conscientious objection to abortion in Zambia [Paper]. International Health Policy Conference 2017, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Li, Boyi, Rong, K. (2017-06-21 - 2017-06-24) Business ecosystems in Asian context: the challenges of social embeddedness [Other]. European Academy of Management conference 2017: Making Knowledge Work, Glasgow, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Sochas, Laura (2017-04-27 - 2017-04-29) Did removing user fees improve access to maternal health care in Zambia? A difference-in-difference study [Other]. Population Association of America Annual Meeting, Chicago, United States, USA.
  • Stewart, Neil (2017-02-20 - 2017-02-23) Charles Booth's London: bringing together maps and archives on the web [Paper]. 12th International Digital Curation Conference (IDCC) 2017, IDCC17, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Stewart, Neil (2017-03-08 - 2017-03-10) Charles Booth’s London: opening up collections on the web [Other]. RLUK Conference 2017: The Future of Research, London, United Kingdom, GBR. video_file
  • Williams, Helen K. R. (2017-10-17 - 2017-10-18) Much Ado About Everything meets Agile Sprints [Other]. Taxonomy Boot Camp London 2017, London, United Kingdom, GBR. desktop_windows
  • Dataset
  • Ahlfeldt, Gabriel M., McMillen, Daniel (2017). Replication Data for: "Tall Buildings and Land Values: Height and Construction Cost Elasticities in Chicago, 1870 – 2010". [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/ffpaxw
  • Benoit, Kenneth, Bräuninger, Thomas, Debus, Marc, Bernauer, Julian (2017). Polidoc.net CODEBOOK: National and Regional Manifestos and other Political Documents Collected for the Research Projects "Representation in Europe: Congruence between Preferences of Elites and Voters" (REPCONG) and "The Impact of EU Cohesion Policy on European Identification" (COHESIFY). [Dataset]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1067700
  • Blumenau, Jack, Lauderdale, Benjamin (2017). Replication Data for: Never Let A Good Crisis Go To Waste: Agenda Setting and Legislative Voting in Response to the EU Crisis. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/sodvhz
  • Brice, Jeremy, Donaldson, Andrew, Midgley, Jane (2017). Making provisions: Anticipation in the UK food system. [Dataset]. UK Data Service. https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-852796
  • Bryan, Gharad, Karlan, Dean, Zinman, Jonathan (2017). Referrals: Peer Screening and Enforcement in a Consumer Credit Field Experiment. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/pbqe5a
  • Campbell, Catherine (2017). Multi-method study of the role of schools in supporting children affected by HIV in Zimbabwe. [Dataset]. UK Data Service. https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-851367
  • Caruana-Galizia, Paul, Caruana-Galizia, Matthew (2017). Replication Data for: Political Land Corruption: Evidence from Malta - the European Union's Smallest member State. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/tfinur
  • Chwieroth, Jeffrey M. (2017). Fashions and Fads in Finance: The Political Foundations of Sovereign Wealth Fund Creation. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/g1flry
  • Cirone, Alexandra, Van Coppenolle, Brenda (2017). Replication Data for: Cabinets, Committees and Careers: The Causal Effect of Committee Service. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/f1vlbi
  • Conway, Declan, Stainforth, David, Bhave, Ajay Gajanan, Dessai, Suraje (2017). Water Evaluation And Planning (WEAP) model for the Cauvery River Basin in Karnataka, India. [Dataset]. Research Data Leeds. https://doi.org/10.5518/303
  • Cummins, Neil (2017). Lifespans of the European Elite, 800-1800. [Dataset]. OpenICPSR. https://doi.org/10.3886/e100492v1
  • Fischer, Greg (2017). Experimental microfinance data on contract structure, risk sharing and investment choice. [Dataset]. UK Data Service. https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-851466
  • Hangartner, Dominik, Bechtel, Michael, Schmid, Lukas (2017). Replication data for: "Compulsory Voting, Habit Formation, and Political Participation". [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/qkp9ej
  • Hangartner, Dominik, Dinas, Elias, Marbach, Moritz, Matakos, Konstantinos, Xefteris, Dimitrios (2017). Pre-analysis Plan for Study of the Impact of Refugee Arrivals on Natives' Attitudes in Greece. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/ffeueh
  • Hangartner, Dominik, Rodon, Toni, Riera, Pedro, Dinas, Elias, Jurado, Ignacio (2017). State Violence and Support for Secessionism: Evidence from an OECD Democracy. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/bfilvt
  • Hangartner, Dominik, Ward, Dalston, Boes, Stefan, Schmid, Lukas (2017). Preregistered Analysis Plan: How Education Affects Political Attitudes and Behaviors. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/uncroq
  • Henderson, Vernon, Squires, Tim, Storeygard, Adam, Weil, David (2017). Replication Data for: "The Global Distribution of Economic Activity: Nature, History, and the Role of Trade". [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/mo6rjt
  • Hershcovis, Sandy (2017). Witnessing Wrongdoing: The Effects of Observer Power on Incivility Intervention in the Workplace. [Dataset]. Mendeley Data. https://doi.org/10.17632/jxkznffwsw.1
  • Hix, Simon, Goodwin, Matthew, Pickup, Mark (2017). Replication Data for: For and Against Brexit: A Survey Experiment of the Impact of Campaign Effects on Public Attitudes toward EU Membership. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/pzb01g
  • Hobolt, Sara (2017). Cross-national survey module on attribution of responsibility within the European Union. [Dataset]. UK Data Service. https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-852634
  • Hobolt, Sara, Tilley, James, Neundorf, Anja (2017). Replication Data for "When the Pound in People’s Pocket Matters: How changes to personal financial circumstances affect party choice". [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/tlbbux
  • Jablonski, Ryan, Hyde, Susan, Hafner-Burton, Emilie (2017). Replication Data for: Surviving Elections: Election Violence, Incumbent Victory, and Post-Election Repercussions. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/n5loqn
  • Kleine, Mareike, Minaudier, Clement (2017). Replication Data for: Negotiating under political uncertainty: national elections and the dynamics of international cooperation. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/v7qqcr
  • Koenig-Archibugi, Mathias, Hale, Thomas (2017). Replication Data for: Could global democracy satisfy diverse policy values? An empirical analysis. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/oolfgp
  • LSE, Dataset Person (2017). Constructing AcTive CitizensHip with European Youth (CATCH-EyoU): Policies, Practices, Challenges and Solutions. [Dataset]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.3030/649538
  • Lauderdale, Ben, Hanretty, Chris, Vivyan, Nick (2017). Replication Data for: "Dyadic Representation in a Westminster System". [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/uxfnfn
  • Lauderdale, Benjamin, Hanretty, Chris, Vivyan, Nick (2017). Replication Data for: Decomposing Public Opinion Variation into Ideology, Idiosyncrasy and Instability. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/khbdwu
  • Leeper, Thomas J., Sochat, Vanessa (2017). expfactory/expfactory: The Experiment Factory Version 3.1 Release. [Dataset]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1117203
  • Machin, Stephen, Bell, Brian, Bindler, Anna (2017). Replication data for: "Crime Scars: Recessions and the Making of Career Criminals". [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/dzuvzg
  • Meseguer, Covadonga, Escribà-Folch, Abel, Wright, Joseph (2017). Remittances and Democratization. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/nfmgfd
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: A New Moral Hazard? Military Intervention, Peacekeeping and Ratification of the International Criminal Court, Journal of Peace Research, 46 (5), 2009, pp. 659-670. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/6a3gda
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: An empirical test of the neo-Malthusian theory of fertility change, Population and Environment, 27 (4), 2006, pp. 327-336. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/qdyfwr
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Are Stricter Investment Rules Contagious? Host Country Competition for Foreign Direct Investment through International Agreements (with Peter Nunnenkamp and Martin Roy), Review of World Economics 152, 2016, pp. 177-213. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/aueji6
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Asylum Destination Choice: What Makes some European Countries more Attractive than Others?, European Union Politics, 5 (2), 2004, pp. 155-180. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/nuju6t
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Asylum Recognition Rates in Western Europe - Their Determinants, Variation and Lack of Convergence, Journal of Conflict Resolution, 49 (1), 2005, pp. 43-66. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/d5fwjn
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Bogus Refugees? The Determinants of Asylum Migration to Western Europe, International Studies Quarterly 49 (4), 2005, pp. 389-409. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/gz8533
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Competing for Scarce Foreign Capital: Spatial Dependence in the Diffusion of Double Taxation Treaties (with Fabian Barthel), International Studies Quarterly, 56 (4), 2012, pp. 645-660. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/fugtdt
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Competition for Export Markets and the Allocation of Foreign Aid: The Role of Spatial Dependence among Donor Countries (with Fabian Barthel, Peter Nunnenkamp and Pablo Selaya), World Development, 64 (12), 2014, pp. 350-365. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/yxu76k
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Death Penalty Abolition and the Ratification of the Second Optional Protocol, International Journal of Human Rights, 12 (1), 2009, pp. 3-21. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/ousqtr
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Disarming Fears of Diversity: Ethnic Heterogeneity and State Militarization, 1988-2002 (with Indra de Soysa), Journal of Peace Research, 45 (4), 2008, pp. 497-518. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/m3xtgn
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Do Democracies Exhibit Stronger International Environmental Commitment?, Journal of Peace Research, 39 (2), 2002, pp. 139-164. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/mj8a6e
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Do Governments Mean Business When They Derogate? Human Rights Violations During Notified States of Emergency, Review of International Organizations, 8 (1), 2013, pp. 1-31. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/jqrnfc
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Do bilateral investment treaties increase foreign direct investment to developing countries? (with Laura Spess), World Development, 33 (10), 2005, pp. 1567-1585. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/hqjn8g
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Do double taxation treaties increase foreign direct investment to developing countries?, Journal of Development Studies, 43 (8), 2007, pp. 1501-1519. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/mdxvsl
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Do human rights matter in bilateral aid allocation? A quantitative analysis of 21 donor countries, Social Science Quarterly, 84 (3), 2003, pp. 650-666. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/4rem6p
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Do international human rights treaties improve respect for human rights?, Journal of Conflict Resolution, 49 (6), 2005, pp. 925-953. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/gql6vj
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Does Legalized Prostitution Increase Human Trafficking? (with Seo-Young Cho and Axel Dreher), World Development, 41 (1), 2013, pp. 67-82. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/mdx1kb
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Does the 'California effect' operate across borders? Trading- and investing-up in automobile emission standards (with Richard Perkins), Journal of European Public Policy, 19 (2), 2012, pp. 217-237. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/ygtlkv
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Earthquake Propensity and the Politics of Mortality Prevention (with Phil Keefer and Thomas Plümper), World Development, 39 (9), 2011, pp. 1530-1541. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/j02usc
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Environmental regulation and the cross-border diffusion of new technology: Evidence from automobile patents (with Antoine Dechezleprêtre and Richard Perkins), Research Policy, 44 (1), 2015, pp. 244-257. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/fvqxmb
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Environmentalism, Democracy, and Pollution Control (with Richard Damiana, Per G. Fredriksson and Scott Gates), Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 49 (2), 2005, pp. 343-365. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/jt5hki
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Examining the Impact of Demographic Factors On Air Pollution (with Matthew A. Cole), Population and Environment, 26 (1), 2005, pp. 5-21. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/n4xmxe
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Extra-territorial interventions in conflict spaces: Explaining the geographies of post-Cold War peacekeeping (with Richard Perkins), Political Geography, 27 (8), 2008, pp. 895-914. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/5pjsve
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Famine Mortality and Rational Political Inactivity (with Thomas Plümper), World Development, 37 (1), 2009, pp. 50-61. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/rwf4kn
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Fear of Floating and De Facto Exchange Rate Pegs with Multiple Key Currencies (with Thomas Plümper), International Studies Quarterly, 55 (4), 2011, pp. 1121-1142. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/blnjzn
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Foreign Terror on Americans (with Thomas Plümper), Journal of Peace Research, 48 (1), 2011, pp. 1-12. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/dfntk0
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Globalization and Women's Empowerment: An Analysis of Spatial Dependence via Trade and Foreign Direct Investment (with Indra de Soysa), World Development, 39 (7), 2011, pp. 1065-1075. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/vv168a
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Globalization and the Right to Free Association and Collective Bargaining: An Empirical Analysis (with Indra de Soysa), World Development, 34 (1), 2005, pp. 31-44. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/vboyl0
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Globalization, Women's Economic Rights and Forced Labour (with Indra de Soysa), World Economy, 30 (10), 2007, pp. 1510-1535. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/vqvz0b
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Good Policy can Lower Violent Crime: Evidence From Fixed Effects Estimation in a Cross-National Panel of Homicide Rates, 1980-97, Journal of Peace Research 40 (6), 2003, pp. 619-640. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/0iffyz
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Health Spending, Out-of-Pocket Contributions, and Mortality Rates (with Thomas Plümper), Public Administration, 91 (2), 2013, pp. 403-418. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/pqca6m
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Inequality and Violent Crime: Evidence from Data on Robbery and Violent Theft, Journal of Peace Research, 42 (1), 2005, pp. 101-112. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/6uafwa
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Is the allocation of food aid free from donor interest bias?, Journal of Development Studies , 41 (3), 2005, pp. 394-411. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/skfrmh
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Is the internet really new after all? The determinants of telecommunications diffusion in historical perspective (with Richard Perkins), The Professional Geographer, 63 (1) 2011, pp. 55-72. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/ekk05g
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Kyoto Protocol Cooperation: Does Government Corruption Facilitate Environmental Lobbying? (with Per G. Fredriksson and Gergely Ujhelyi), Public Choice, 133 (1-2), 2007, pp. 231-251. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/exrz9y
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Natural Resources and Civil War: Another Look with New Data (with Indra De Soysa), Conflict Management and Peace Science, 24(3), 2007, pp. 201-218. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/3icrmi
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Qualified ratification: Explaining reservations to international human rights treaties, Journal of Legal Studies, 36 (2), 2007, pp. 397-430. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/k7a6nw
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Recessions Lower Some Mortality Rates: Evidence from Germany, Social Science & Medicine, 58 (6), 2004, pp. 1037-1047. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/y142cb
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Regional Inequalities in Premature Mortality in Great Britain (with Thomas Plümper and Denise Laroze), PLOS One, 13 (2). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193488. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/aq3wmc
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Spatial Dependence in Asylum Migration (with Fabian Barthel), Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, 41 (7), 2015, pp. 1131-1151. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/r36wdb
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Strategic Delaying and Concessions Extraction in Accession Negotiations to the World Trade Organization, World Trade Review, 12 (4), 2013, pp. 669-692. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/off1to
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: The Impact of Violence on Tourism - Dynamic Econometric Estimation in a Cross-National Panel, Journal of Conflict Resolution 48 (2), 2004, pp. 259-281. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/cgk7mp
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: The Level of Democracy during Interregnum Periods: Recoding the polity2 Score (with Thomas Plümper), Political Analysis, 18 (2), 2010, pp. 206-226. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/eeunp1
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: The Political Economy of Natural Disaster Damage (with Thomas Plümper and Fabian Barthel), Global Environmental Change, 24, 2014, pp. 8-19. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/w8us2q
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: The determinants of aid allocation by regional multilateral development banks and United Nations agencies, International Studies Quarterly 47 (1), 2003, pp. 101-122. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/krcff4
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Trade Openness, Foreign Direct Investment and Child Labor (with Indra De Soysa), World Development, 33 (1), 2005, pp. 43-63. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/6haxgp
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Transnational spatial dependencies in the geography of non-resident patent filings (with Richard Perkins), Journal of Economic Geography, 11 (1), 2011, pp. 37-60. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/g6brnv
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Unequal Access to Foreign Spaces: How States Use Visa Restrictions to Regulate Mobility in a Globalised World, Transactions of the British Institute of Geographers 31 (1), 2006, pp. 72-84. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/gpuux9
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: Visa restrictions and bilateral travel, The Professional Geographer, 62 (2), 2010, pp. 1-11. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/pz5tnr
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication Data for: What factors determine the allocation of aid by Arab countries and multilateral agencies?, Journal of Development Studies, 39 (4), 2003, pp. 134-147. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/rwc7fl
  • Neumayer, Eric (2017). Replication data for: Does the 'resource curse' hold for growth in genuine income as well?, World Development, 32 (10), 2004, pp. 1627-1640. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/5qatmz
  • Neumayer, Eric, Troeger, Vera Eva, Plümper, Thomas (2017). Replication Data for: Case selection and causal inferences in qualitative comparative research. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/3h5edp
  • Rising, James, Campbell, Kayleigh (2017). Travel Times by Transportation Mode in Nairobi, Kenya. [Dataset]. Zenodo. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1134019
  • Shami, Mahvish (2017). Replication Data for: Connectivity, Clientelism and Public Provision. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/sc5uin
  • Silva, Olmo, Strange, William C., Faggio, Giulia (2017). Replication Data for: "Heterogeneous Agglomeration". [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/ox8skx
  • Waldinger, Fabian, Iaria, Alessandro, Schwarz, Carlo (2017). Replication Data for: 'Frontier Knowledge and Scientific Production: Evidence from the Collapse of International Science'. [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/sh1ke7
  • Waldinger, Fabian, Parey, Matthais, Ruhose, Jens, Netz, Nicolai (2017). Replication data for: "The Selection of High-Skilled Emigrants". [Dataset]. Harvard Dataverse. https://doi.org/10.7910/dvn/a9dlqq
  • Report
  • Al-Rasheed, Madawi (2017). King Salman and his son: Winning the US losing the rest. (LSE Middle East Paper Series). LSE Middle East Centre. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.y2aovg6lnrqx
  • Gill, Jennifer, Albanell, Joan, Avouac, Bernard, Berger, Karin, Boerlum Kristensen, Finn, Bucher, Heiner C., Duncombe, Robert, Fink-Wagner, Antje-Henriette, Hutton, John & Jahnz-Różyk, Karina et al (2017). RWE in Europe Paper III: A Roadmap for RWE. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Kanavos, Panos, Fontrier, Anna-Maria, Gill, Jennifer, Efthymiadou, Olina, Boekstein, Nicola (2017). The Impact of External Reference Pricing within and across Countries. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Kanavos, Panos, Fontrier, Anna-Maria, Gill, Jennifer, Kyriopoulos, Dionysis, Boekstein, Nicola (2017). The Implementation of External Reference Pricing within and across Country Borders. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Wilson, Emma, Roger, Kris, Ney, Sarah (2017). The Clement House rotunda project: an evaluation of six informal learning spaces at LSE. Learning Technology and Innovation, The London School of Economic and Political Science.
  • Other
  • Minogue, Noonie (2017). Kenneth Robert Minogue: Published works 1957-2013.
  • Thesis
  • Grove, Lynda (2017). The effects of funding policies on academic research [Doctoral thesis]. University College London.
  • Online resource
  • Abbas, Rameez (2017). Internal migrants in India experience a lesser citizenship status and curtailed rights.
  • Abbas, Tahir (2017). Contemporary Turkey in conflict: how ethnic, political and religious conflicts will define Turkey’s future.
  • Abbas, Tahir (2017). Long read review: the enemy within: a tale of Muslim Britain by Sayeeda Warsi.
  • Abbas, Tahir (2017). Repression, terrorism and fear: Erdoğan’s Turkey heads for the brink.
  • Abbas, Tahir (2017). A personality cult that plays on popular fears: how Erdoğan won the Turkish referendum.
  • Abbasi, Asad (2017). Book review: after Piketty: the agenda for economics and inequality edited by Heather Boushey, J. Bradford DeLong and Marshall Steinbaum.
  • Abbasi, Asad (2017). Book review: prison narratives by Akhtar Baloch.
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2017). The Iranian Presidential Election: Will Rouhani be Stopped by the Conservatives?
  • Abidin, Crystal (2017). Micro-microcelebrity: famous babies and business on the internet.
  • Acolin, Arthur, Vitiello, Domenic (2017). Population change means fewer Asians are living in Chinatowns, but more Asians now own properties within them.
  • Adams, Brian (2017). Going local – but does decentralisation actually make for more innovative policy?
  • Addas, Shamel (2017). Don’t curse the inflow of emails: It can help you do your job better.
  • Adebowale, Lord, Kippin, Henry (2017). From public services to “services to the public”: the three elements of contemporary welfare.
  • Adema, Janneke, Moore, Samuel A. (2017). The Radical Open Access Collective: building alliances for a progressive, scholar-led commons.
  • Adema, Janneke, Stone, Graham (2017). Taking back control: the new university and academic presses that are re-envisioning scholarly publishing.
  • Adena, Maja, Harke, Julian (2017). A quality certificate increases trust and donations to a charity.
  • Adeney, Katharine (2017). India's federal success: recognition is the way forward.
  • Adler, Joanna R. (2017). When is a toothbrush not just a toothbrush?
  • Adriaensen, Johan (2017). The future of EU trade negotiations: what has been learned from CETA and TTIP?
  • Afonso, Alexandre, Devitt, Camilla (2017). If the UK wants to cut immigration, it must change its model of capitalism.
  • Ahlfeldt, Gabriel (2017). Who benefits from neighbourhoods designated as conservation areas?
  • Ahmad, Nafees (2017). India should reconsider its decision not to participate in the belt and road initiative.
  • Ahmed, Wasim (2017). Using Twitter as a data source: an overview of social media research tools (updated for 2017).
  • Aitchison, Guy (2017). Book review: the ethics and politics of immigration: core issues and emerging trends edited by Alex Sager.
  • Akkerman, Tjitske (2017). Populism is overrated - if there is a threat to democracy, it's from authoritarian nationalism.
  • Al-Ghazzi, Omar (2017). The Islamic State FAQs.
  • Al-Kaisy, Aida (2017). Book review: Arab national media and political change: recording the transition by Fatima El-Issawi.
  • Al-Sarihi, Aisha (2017). Why is there almost no renewable energy in Oman?
  • Alagappa, Harish (2017). India @ 70: From inauspicious beginnings to a superpower in the making.
  • Alagappa, Harish (2017). India @ 70: does forced philanthropy work?
  • Alagappa, Harish (2017). Looking forward to India @ 70: LSE India Summit 2017.
  • Alagappa, Harish, Campion, Sonali (2017). India @70: citizenship and the constitution of India.
  • Albertazzi, Daniele (2017). Forget about Strasbourg, it’s Rome that will make or break the Five Star Movement.
  • Albertazzi, Daniele (2017). Italy’s looming election: will the Five Star Movement really form the next government?
  • Alderighi, Marco, Gaggero, Alberto A., Piga, Claudio A. (2017). The hidden sides of ‘dynamic pricing’ for airline tickets.
  • Aldrich, Howard, Al-Turk, Akram (2017). Four strategies to increase the likelihood of creating and sustaining successful research teams.
  • Alexander, Nicholas, Doherty, Anne Marie (2017). Tiffany & Co.: a nineteenth century American retailer in Paris and London.
  • Alexander Shaw, Kate (2017). Will Labour’s ‘six tests’ hold the government to account on the UK’s Brexit deal?
  • Alexander Shaw, Kate (2017). jkldfjadlkfjlasdkjf.
  • Alexandropoulos, Alexandros (2017). France reaction: Macron wins, but he will lead a divided country.
  • Alexandropoulos, Alexandros (2017). Prelude to a political crisis? Why France now has an abstention problem in legislative elections.
  • Alexandropoulos, Alexandros (2017). The manifesto everyone hates to love.
  • Alfani, Guido (2017). The long-run tendency for wealth to concentrate in a few hands.
  • Alhashel, Bader (2017). Do sovereign wealth funds bring value to their investments?
  • Ali, Sultana, Rehman Cheema, Abdur (2017). Counting the uncounted: the economic contributions of women in rural Sindh.
  • Ali Shah, Nadir, Cheema, Abdur Rehman (2017). Stolen childhoods: the dilemma of child marriage in rural Sindh.
  • Ali Siyal, Ghamz E (2017). Analysing the reality of climate-induced migration in Pakistan's semi-arid regions.
  • Allbeson, Janet (2017). Government has quietly published reports on the impact of child maintenance reforms. Here’s what you need to know.
  • Allen, Andy (2017). The ‘academy revolution’ is ousting governors. We need to hold these schools accountable.
  • Allen, Graham (2017). In defence of representative democracy: How I will be voting on the Article 50 bill, by Graham Allen MP.
  • Allen, Graham (2017). In defence of representative democracy: How I will be votingon the Article 50 bill, by Graham Allen MP.
  • Allen, Graham (2017). In defence of representative democracy: how I will be voting on the Article 50 bill, by Graham Allen MP.
  • Allen, Graham, Blick, Andrew (2017). Protecting even prime ministers from themselves: why fixed-term parliaments seem a good idea.
  • Allen, Peter (2017). Choosing uncertainty: why rational decision-making doesn't always work in politics.
  • Allen, Peter, Böttcher, Julia, Skokan, Jozef (2017). Report of the large-scale Structures in random graphs workshop.
  • Allen, Peter, Cutts, David (2017). Do women and men support women’s representation equally?
  • Allen, Tim, Parker, Melissa (2017). Debunking delusions around deworming.
  • Allègre, Guillaume (2017). Macron vs Le Pen: a referendum on globalisation?
  • Alonso Alonso, Lucas Juan Manuel (2017). Greece: any better times or more pitfalls ahead?
  • Alonso Alonso, Lucas Juan Manuel (2017). Rerouting Globalisation: from economic to human development.
  • Alper, Meryl (2017). Making the familiar strange: studying the Syrian refugee crisis.
  • Amboko, Julians (2017). Ghana won’t be able to fix its economy if it uses last decade’s rule book.
  • Amboko, Julians (2017). Sluggish recovery by low-income countries could be Africa's next big challenge.
  • Amboko, Julians (2017). The Southern African wild card: High foreign debt, weak currencies and default risk.
  • Amboko, Julians (2017). What the South African anti-foreign riots say about the country’s economy.
  • Amboko, Julians (2017). Why the pressure for higher minimum wages is gaining traction in Africa.
  • Amerian, Sirous (2017). Don’t let diplomacy down.
  • Ancarani, Alessandro, Ayach, Ali A., Di Mauro, Carmela, Mancuso, Paolo, Gitto, Simone (2017). Is religious diversity good for team performance?
  • Anciaes, Paulo Rui (2017). Book review: justice and fairness in the city: a multidisciplinary approach to ‘ordinary’ cities edited by Simin Davoudi and Derek Bell.
  • Andersen, Jon Aarum (2017). Is leadership research betraying leaders?
  • Andersen, Jon Aarum (2017). Leadership studies: all bridges have been burned.
  • Anderson, Harry (2017). Classed spaces – Harry Anderson.
  • Anderson, Paul (2017). Catalonia’s independence referendum: the stage is set for yet another political and legal battle.
  • Anderson, Paul (2017). Indyref2: a bold but unsurprising move from Nicola Sturgeon.
  • Anderson, Paul (2017). Scotland, Brexit and Spain: A special deal for Scotland is unlikely.
  • Andow, James (2017). Book review: philosophy within its proper bounds by Edouard Machery.
  • Aneez, Zeenab (2017). Digital transitions in the newsroom: how are Indian language papers adapting differently?
  • Ang, Geraldine (2017). What's holding back investment and innovation in renewable energy?
  • Angelo, Paul (2017). In a Trumpian world, the UK and the EU need to agree on greater commitments to collective security.
  • Angier, Tom (2017). The British Left are desperate for good news – Macron and Schulz will disappoint them.
  • Angier, Tom (2017). What French philosophy can tell us about the EU, nationhood, and the decline of social democracy.
  • Anguelov, Nikolay (2017). How the new digital world is changing how we conceive of soft power.
  • Anil, Pratinav (2017). Book review: army and nation: the military and Indian democracy since independence by Steven I. Wilkinson.
  • Anwar, Samra, Cheema, Abdur Rehman (2017). The future of FATA: when reforms come knocking.
  • Aragón, Fernando, Rud, Juan Pablo (2017). Where mining takes place, food production takes a hit in Ghana.
  • Arat, Alp (2017). We need to talk about mindfulness: the changing face of religion and the secular in the public sphere.
  • Arimatus, Louise, Chinkin, Christine (2017). International Women’s Day 2017: Moving forward in a time of uncertainty and upheaval.
  • Arndt, Christoph, Rennwald, Line (2017). Workers in smaller companies are more likely to vote conservative.
  • Arnesen, Sveinung (2017). Election reaction: Norway's government secures a fragile second term.
  • Arrebola, Carlos (2017). The European Commission's Google decision will affect competition law.
  • Arrebola, Carlos, Deller, Rosemary (2017). Book review: reading list: 5 recommended classics on European integration to read in the age of Brexit.
  • Arrébola, Carlos A. (2017). How do LSE blogs impact the academic sphere? Blogs as citable items in scholarly publications.
  • Arrébola, Carlos A., Mollett, Amy (2017). How do LSE Blogs impact the academic sphere? Exploring the effects of blogging on published research.
  • Arrébola, Carlos A., Mollett, Amy (2017). Introducing the Impact of LSE Blogs project!
  • Arya, Rina (2017). Cultural appropriation: analysing the use of Hindu symbols within consumerism.
  • Arza, Valeria, López, Emanuel (2017). Embedding open science practices within evaluation systems can promote research that meets societal needs in developing countries.
  • Askoy, Cevat Giray, Carpenter, Christopher S., Frank, Jefferson (2017). How your sexual orientation affects your salary in the UK.
  • Asparouhova, Elena, Bossaerts, Peter (2017). Dark markets: does private information make price formation less efficient?
  • Atchison, Amy (2017). Making research articles freely available can help to negate gender citation effects in political science.
  • Athanassiou, Cerelia (2017). Trump’s Russia connections show the need for continued vigilance over money laundering.
  • Attoh, Kafui (2017). How poor public transit makes idiots of us all.
  • Au, Anson (2017). A social ecological approach for ethnography: Flexibilizing roles and remembering social embeddedness.
  • Aubin, Barbara (2017). Book review: lobbying for change: find your voice to create a better society by Alberto Alemanno.
  • Author, Unkown (2017). The Ballpark podcast Episode 2.7 The Rural-Urban Divide.
  • Avlijaš, Sonja (2017). How economic growth strategies affect female employment: the case of Eastern Europe.
  • Avril, Emmanuelle (2017). New Labour and after: the toxic consequences of cynical party management.
  • Baatsaikhan, Uuriintuya, Schoenmaker, Dirk (2017). Can EU actors keep using common law after Brexit?
  • Bacon, Linda (2017). Eating for the environment.
  • Bailey, David, Driffield, Nigel, Karoglou, Michail (2017). Brexit means inward investment to the UK will fall.
  • Bailey, David, Driffield, Nigel, Karoglou, Michail (2017). With Brexit, inward investment will fall in the UK.
  • Bailey, Kate (2017). LSE Lit Fest 2017 book review: age of anger: a history of the present by Pankaj Mishra.
  • Baird, Adam (2017). Breaking bad: recognising the role of masculinities can help prevent gang formation in Latin America and the Caribbean.
  • Baker, Catherine (2017). Book review: transnationalism, diaspora and migrants from the former Yugoslavia in Britain by Gayle Munro.
  • Baker, Catherine (2017). Eurovision 2017 was remarkable for its lack of politics.
  • Baker, Catherine (2017). Why were Bosniaks treated more favourably than today’s Muslim refugees? On differing narratives of identity, religion and security.
  • Bakhtsiyarava, Maryia (2017). Immigrants from Mexico are more likely to be exposed to industrial pollution in wealthy regions of the US.
  • Balafoutas, Loukas (2017). Taking uninformed consumers for a ride.
  • Baldwin, James (2017). Book review: rebel law, insurgents, courts and justice in modern conflict by Frank Ledwidge.
  • Bale, Tim (2017). Friends with benefits? Nine things worth knowing about the links between centre-left parties and trade unions.
  • Ballas, Dimitris, Dorling, Danny, Hennig, Benjamin (2017). An atlas with a positive message for a European people united in diversity.
  • Ballesteros, Isolina (2017). Book review: in permanent crisis. Ethnicity in contemporary European media and cinema by Ipek A. Celik.
  • Ban, Cornel, Gabor, Daniela (2017). The state, inequality and the politics of economic ideas: three blind spots in shadow banking.
  • Bangham, George (2017). Is the national living wage improving living standards?
  • Banks, Antoine (2017). Anger makes ethnocentrism among whites a stronger predictor of racial and immigration policy opinions.
  • Banks, Mark (2017). BBC pay: we need equality all the way down - not just for the elite.
  • Bannerman, Gordon (2017). Is Liam Fox’s ‘free-trading nation’ of the past a model for post-Brexit Britain?
  • Bansak, Kirk, Hainmueller, Jens, Hangartner, Dominik (2017). Europeans would accept more Refugees—if the asylum system were fair.
  • Bao, Te, Hommes, Cars, Makarewicz, Tomasz (2017). Bubbles and crashes: A vicious cycle of self-fulfilling investor sentiment.
  • Barbour, Virginia, Bloom, Theodora, Lin, Jennifer, Moylan, Elizabeth (2017). Minor, substantial or wholesale amendments: it’s time to rethink changes to published articles and avoid unnecessary stigma.
  • Barlow, Jordan B., Dennis, Alan R. (2017). ‘Collective intelligence’ is not necessarily present in virtual groups.
  • Barnard, Catherine, Ludlow, Amy (2017). The view from East Anglia: Brexit messages to Theresa May.
  • Barneback Andersen, Thomas, Bentzen, Jeanet, Dalgaard, Klaus Guimarães (2017). Weber may have been wrong in tracing the hard work ethic to Protestantism.
  • Barnett, Steven (2017). Press regulation: three reasons why a 30 year old campaign must continue.
  • Barnett, Steven (2017). Press regulation: three reasons why a 30 year old campaignmust continue.
  • Baron, Samantha (2017). A Grand challenge initiative for social work: a call for action to the social sciences.
  • Barrett, Gavin (2017). How Article 127 of the EEA Agreement could keep the UK in the single market.
  • Barslund, Mikkel, Busse, Matthias, Lenaerts, Karolien, Ludolph, Lars, Renman, Vilde (2017). The integration of Bosnian refugees: an encouraging story that provides lessons for the current migration crisis.
  • Barwise, Patrick (2017). Disrupting the digital giants – advertisers and traditional media push back.
  • Basedow, Robert (2017). How international regulatory cooperation can ease a ‘hard’ Brexit.
  • Basta, Karlo (2017). The Catalan endgame: how we got to where we are.
  • Basta, Karlo (2017). Catalonia's referendum on independence: clarity in uncertainty.
  • Basu, Shrabani, Campion, Sonali (2017). “The Indian soldiers were desperately homesick, they longed to go home and who can blame them?” – Shrabani Basu.
  • Bauer, Paul C., Schulte-Cloos, Julia (2017). Measuring the diversity of each party's candidates in the German election.
  • Baviskar, Amita, Bowers, Rebecca (2017). “Cities have gained water at the expense of the countryside in India” – Amita Baviskar.
  • Baynes, Grace (2017). Collaboration and concerted action are key to making open data a reality.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2017). Bulgaria heads to the polls – and the tide may be turning against Boyko Borisov.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2017). Election reaction: the status quo wins in Bulgaria.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2017). No hope in Turkey.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2017). The West needs to call Russia’s bluff in the Balkans.
  • Bechev, Dimitar, Gordy, Eric, Avlijaš, Sonja, Bojar, Abel, Prelec, Tena, Kmezić, Marko, Tomic, Slobodan (2017). Experts react: Aleksandar Vučić wins Serbia’s presidential election.
  • Becker, Elizabeth (2017). Book review: Eisenhower and Cambodia: diplomacy, covert action and the origins of the second Indochina war by William J. Rust.
  • Becker, Sascha O., Fetzer, Fetzer, Novy, Dennis (2017). Unemployment, reliance on factory jobs and low income explain Brexit.
  • Becker, Sascha O., Fetzer, Thiemo, Novy, Dennis (2017). Unemployment, reliance on factory jobs and low income explain the Brexit vote.
  • Beckwith, Karen (2017). Cabinets and concrete floors: the women in Macron’s cabinet strengthen the case for gender parity in government.
  • Beel, David (2017). How can 'civil society' actors influence local devolution? The case of Greater Manchester.
  • Beer, David (2017). Book review: radicals: outsiders changing the world by Jamie Bartlett.
  • Beer, David (2017). Data-led politics: do analytics have the power that we are led to believe?
  • Beer, David (2017). Measuring and engineering influence on social media: what does this mean for political power?
  • Begg, Iain (2017). Expect a backlash if the £50bn offer doesn't move negotiations on.
  • Begg, Iain (2017). Juncker's State of the Union signals that interest in Brexit is declining across the EU.
  • Begg, Iain (2017). May in Florence: renaissance or resistance?
  • Begg, Iain (2017). The productivity gap adds to the concerns about how Brexit can be navigated.
  • Behr, Adam, Negus, Keith, Street, John (2017). Understanding musical copyright in the digital age.
  • Behuria, Pritish (2017). The cautious return of import substitution in Africa.
  • Behuria, Pritish (2017). The youth in Africa: Opportunities, resistance and transformation.
  • Belcher, Erica (2017). Inequality in Mexico and how to address it.
  • Bell, Lauren C. (2017). Trump is casting a long shadow over the narrow race for Virginia governor.
  • Bell, Lauren C. (2017). Why blocking Gorsuch’s Supreme Court nomination may be damaging for Democrats in the long term.
  • Benedikter, Roland, Karolewski, Ireneusz Pawel (2017). The EU at 60: why there is hope the future will be brighter than many expect.
  • Benedikter, Roland, Karolewski, Ireneusz Pawel (2017). Italy’s migration crisis is a clear threat to European unity.
  • Benedikter, Roland, Tsedze, Mensa (2017). Symbolic emancipation and present challenges in Togo.
  • Benedikter, Roland, Tsedze, William Mensa (2017). ‘Progress for the Few’ – a retrospective of democratisation and development in Togo.
  • Benedikter, Roland, Zlosilo, Miguel (2017). Chile's 2017 presidential election: evaluating the second Bachelet government.
  • Benedikter, Roland, Zlosilo, Miguel (2017). Chile's 2017 presidential election: who will win and why?
  • Bergemann, Dirk, Bonatti, Alessandro, Smolin, Alex (2017). How to design and price information for sale to others.
  • Berman, Sheri (2017). Europe’s centre-left risks irrelevance if it can’t respond to the populist challenge.
  • Bernal, Paul (2017). Self-regulation of internet intermediaries: public duty versus private responsibility.
  • Bernile, Gennaro, Bhagwat, Vineet, Rau, Raghavendra (2017). The experience of an early-life disaster affects how a CEO relates to risk.
  • Berry, Richard (2017). Book review: Populism: a very short introduction by Cas Mudde and Cristóbal Rovira Kaltwasser.
  • Besim, Fatmir (2017). How structural reforms and European integration can help aid the convergence of Western Balkan states with the EU.
  • Beugelsdijk, Sjoerd, Klasing, Mariko J., Milionis, Petros (2017). Growing social value polarisation harms economic development.
  • Bezila, Kieran (2017). Working-class whites may be rejecting Democrats’ economic policies because they see them as reckless and immoral.
  • Bhambra, Gurminder K. (2017). Why are the white working classes still being held responsible for Brexit and Trump?
  • Bhaskar, V, Linacre, Robin, Machin, Stephen (2017). Dark web: The economics of online drugs markets.
  • Bhatia, Arjun (2017). India @ 70: constraints and opportunities for an emerging superpower.
  • Bhatia, Arjun (2017). India @ 70: is ‘virtual water’ a useful concept for India?
  • Bhatia, Arjun (2017). India’s star shines bright: assessing future potential on the 70th anniversary of independence.
  • Bhatia, Arjun (2017). Partition Museum Project: creating a refuge for the memories of Partition.
  • Bhattacharya, Aveek (2017). Why we don’t need the alcohol industry for a strong economy.
  • Bhattacharya, Kaushik, Mitra, Siddhartha, Pal, Sarmistha, Saha, Bibhas (2017). Reviving the informal sector from the throes of demonetisation.
  • Bhopal, Kalwant (2017). How to start dismantling white privilege in higher education.
  • Bhujel, Shema (2017). Looking forward to the first ever LSE Pakistan Summit.
  • Bieber, Florian (2017). Trump and the Balkan Princes: what Trump’s presidency means for South East Europe.
  • Biedenkopf, Katja (2017). Why Trump's pull-out of the Paris Agreement may open the door for state Governors to push their own climate action.
  • Biegert, Thomas (2017). A generous welfare state can help reduce unemployment - if there are good job opportunities for the jobless.
  • Bignon, Vincent, Avaro, Maylis (2017). How the Bank of France increased liquidity at no fiscal risk in the 1800’s.
  • Bilić, Paško (2017). The hidden human labour behind search engine algorithms.
  • Birkhead, Nathaniel A., Hershey, Marjorie Randon (2017). Why it's unfair to tar all party activists with the same brush of extremism.
  • Bizopoulou, Aspasia (2017). Even holding the same job title, men and women play different roles at work.
  • Bjeloš, Maja (2017). Who are the protesters in Serbia, and what do they really want?
  • Bjerg, Ole (2017). The butcher, the brewer, the ba(n)ker and the nature of money.
  • Bjørnland, Hilde C., Anders Thorsrud, Leif (2017). The ‘Dutch disease’ reexamined: Resource booms can benefit the wider economy.
  • Blackmore, Kara (2017). Curating impact: a process for new knowledge creation through arts #LSEreturn.
  • Blakeley, Grace (2017). Budget 2017: the flawed math behind corporation tax (and the Government’s messed up priorities).
  • Blakeley, Grace (2017). Is UK economy really as strong as the government says it is?
  • Blakeley, Grace (2017). Is the UK's economy really as strong as the government says it is?
  • Blatter, Joachim (2017). Britain cannot and should not imitate the Swiss model of sectoral bilateralism with the EU.
  • Bleaney, Michael, Mizen, Paul, Veleanu, Veronica (2017). When EU corporate bond spreads widen, recession may be around the corner.
  • Blick, Andrew (2017). Good idea, bad outcome: whatever happened to fixed-term parliaments?
  • Blick, Andrew (2017). There May be trouble ahead: post-EU referendum instability will keep afflicting the UK.
  • Bliznakovski, Jovan (2017). Macedonia has a new government: what next for the crisis-ridden state?
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). Apex Tower: modern prefab construction techniques delivering housing London needs.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). Built to Rent: a solution to London housing problem?
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). Housing in manifestos: the good, the bad, and the implications.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). How to nourish the Build to Rent sector to meet housing needs in the UK.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). LSE London’s response to the Fixing our broken housing market consultation.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). Migration and the transformation of London – Project Archive.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). On devolution and why it’s what London needs.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). Our written evidence submitted to CLG Select Committee’s Housing for older people inquiry.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). Overseas investors and London’s housing market.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2017). Social housing in England after the GFC: affordable vs ‘affordable’.
  • Bloom, Nicholas, Mizen, Paul (2017). Why Brexit could hit productivity in the UK.
  • Bode, Leticia (2017). Twitter allows political campaigns to respond to emerging issues in real-time.
  • Boeva, Yana (2017). Book review: disrupt this! MOOCs and the promise of technology by Karen Head.
  • Boeva, Yana (2017). Book review: unreal objects: digital materialities, technoscientific projects and political realities by Kate O'Riordan.
  • Bohnenberger, Fabian (2017). Britain's ambitious trade plans are barely off the drawing board.
  • Boiten, Christiaan R. (2017). Trump's protectionism could allow the EU to seize opportunities in key markets.
  • Bojar, Abel (2017). Hungary in 2017: could the left and far-right unite to keep Orban out of power?
  • Bojar, Abel (2017). In defence of polls: A few high-profile misses should not overshadow the many times pollsters called it right.
  • Bojar, Abel (2017). In defence of polls: a few high profile misses shouldn’t overshadow the many times pollsters called it right.
  • Bolander, Willy, Plouffe, Christopher R., Cote, Joseph A., Hochstein, Bryan (2017). Is the customer king?
  • Boldt, Ethan D. (2017). How playing on public concerns about crime became Republicans' electoral Trump card.
  • Bongardt, Annette, Codogno, Lorenzo, Torres, Francisco (2017). Germany's election: behind consensus politics lie conflicting ideas of Europe.
  • Bonhomme, Stéphane, Hospido, Laura (2017). The link between wage inequality and the housing market's boom and bust in Spain.
  • Bonneau, Chris W., Jarrod, Kelly, Pronin, Kira, Redman, Shane, Zarit, Matt (2017). Supreme Court judgments based on reasons outside the law are unlikely to harm its legitimacy.
  • Bonotti, Matteo (2017). Brexit could mean greater freedom, but also international domination over the UK.
  • Book Reviews, LSE (2017). New reading list: 10 recommended revolutionary reads from #LSELitFest 2017.
  • Book Reviews, LSE (2017). Reading list: 6 recommended LGBT+ reads from LSE’s spectrum for international day against homophobia, biphobia and transphobia (#IDAHOBIT2017).
  • Book Reviews, LSE (2017). #WorldBookDay 2017: announcing the LSE Lit Fest 2017 competition winners.
  • Booluck, Kieran (2017). How can blogging help research make an impact beyond academia? Illustrative examples from the LSE blogs.
  • Borah, Porismita (2017). Despite Trump’s adversarial relationship with the media, he needs them, and they need him.
  • Bordignon, Fabio (2017). In and out: Emmanuel Macron’s anti-populist populism.
  • Bordignon, Fabio (2017). Italy’s municipal elections: the beginning of the end for the Five Star Movement?
  • Borell Porta, Mireia (2017). Europe can't remain silent over the Catalan crisis.
  • Borrell Porta, Mireia, Olivas, Jose Javier, Trillas, Francesc, Rodon Casarramona, Toni (2017). Catalonia’s referendum: four views on whether the vote should go ahead.
  • Bosco, Andrea (2017). June 1940: Britain’s forgotten attempt to build a European Union.
  • Bosco, Andrea (2017). June 1940: Britain’s forgotten attempt to build a EuropeanUnion.
  • Bosswell, Christina, Hampshire, James (2017). Taking back control of ideas: How politicians can shape public debates on immigration.
  • Boswell, John (2017). Evidence-based policy-making: ultimately a myth, but one we should believe in.
  • Bougery, Théo, Procoudine-Gorsky, Hélène, Siddharth, Rajgopalan (2017). SuperGov – empowering citizens with super governance.
  • Boumparis, Perikilis, Milas, Costas, Panagiotidis, Theodore (2017). Fair or not? How credit rating agencies calculated their ratings during the Eurozone crisis.
  • Bounegru, Liliana (2017). Three ways in which digital researchers can shed light on the information politics of the “post-truth” era.
  • Bourne, Stephen (2017). Fighting proud: the untold story of the gay men who served in two world wars.
  • Bouçek, Francoise (2017). Put Le Pen and Macron to one side – it’s the June legislative elections that will decide how France is governed.
  • Bovens, Luc (2017). The Last Hope Part 1: A worthwhile life.
  • Bovens, Mark, Wille, Anchrit (2017). Globalisation has made education the new political cleavage in Europe.
  • Bovens, Mark, Wille, Anchrit (2017). A not so universal suffrage: how Europe's political elites have become educational elites.
  • Bowers, Rebecca (2017). While Gandhi's thought can at times seem paradoxical, it had an extraordinary resonance among Indians and indeed many others during his own lifetime - Dr Faisal Devji.
  • Bowers, Rebecca, Aga, Anu (2017). “The challenge is to find the right cause and not just write out a cheque” – Anu Aga on corporate social responsibility in India.
  • Bown, Alfie (2017). LSE RB feature essay: opening capitalist realism by Alfie Bown.
  • Braben, Don, Dowler, Rod (2017). Peer review processes risk stifling creativity and limiting opportunities for game-changing scientific discoveries.
  • Braben, Donald, Dowler, Rod (2017). Peer review processes risk strangling economic growth.
  • Bradley, Daniel, Gokkaya, Sinan, Liu, Xi (2017). Thinking of becoming an equity analyst? Get relevant industry experience first.
  • Brandt, Reuven (2017). Family ties.
  • Branson, Nick (2017). Book Review – We, the People: Insights of an Activist Judge by Albie Sachs.
  • Branson, Nick (2017). Book review: the horn of Africa: state formation and decay by Christopher Clapham.
  • Branson, Nick (2017). Book review: understanding Zimbabwe: from liberation toauthoritarianism by Sara Rich Dorman.
  • Braunstein, Ruth, Chambliss, Julian C., Ambrosius, Joshua D. (2017). Reflecting on Michael McQuarrie's 'revolt of the rust belt'.
  • Bray, Rose (2017). Young people online: encounters with inappropriate content.
  • Breimaier, Silke (2017). Work 4.0: How Germany is shaping the future of work.
  • Bremer, Björn (2017). The crisis of the SPD: where now for Germany's social democrats?
  • Brett, Daniel (2017). Romania’s protests: a response to a three-pronged assault on anti-corruption measures.
  • Brierly, Sarah, Kramon, Eric, Ofosu, George (2017). The impact of parliamentary debates on Ghana's 2016 elections.
  • Bristow, Jennie (2017). From Brexit to the pensions crisis, how did the Baby Boomers get the blame for everything?
  • Bristow, Jennie (2017). From Brexit to the pensions crisis, how did the Baby Boomers get the blame for everything?
  • Broackes, Victoria (2017). LSE Lit Fest 2017: curator Victoria Broackes introduces 5 Key Objects in V & A Exhibition, ‘You Say You Want a Revolution?: Records and Rebels 1966-1970’.
  • Broadbent, Elizabeth (2017). How we interact with robots reveals parts of who we are.
  • Brooks, Eleanor (2017). The ‘last chance for social Europe’: the European Pillar of Social Rights can only work if integrated into the EU’s existing policies.
  • Broughton Micova, Sally (2017). Ofcom should review Sky deal also because it’s a broadband supplier.
  • Broughton Micova, Sally (2017). Rupert Murdoch’s Sky bid: why Ofcom should review the deal.
  • Brown, Daniel (2017). The death of Vine, and the volatile nature of new media.
  • Brown, Jennifer (2017). Make America cruel again?: a pragmatic analysis of why torture does not work.
  • Brown, Josh, Meadows, Alice (2017). Persistent identifiers – building trust and supporting openness in digital scholarship.
  • Brown, Stuart A. (2017). Illustrating the spectacular decline of Labour in Scotland and the revival of the Scottish Conservatives.
  • Brown Coverdale, Helen (2017). Prison doesn’t work: why don’t we care?
  • Broxton, Anthony (2017). Why should the people wait any longer? How Labour built the NHS.
  • Bruckner, Till (2017). How funder pressures can torpedo the credibility of research: the cautionary tale of Google and New America.
  • Bruckner, Till (2017). Think tanks, evidence and policy: democratic players or clandestine lobbyists?
  • Brusenbauch Meislová, Monika (2017). Can the Visegrad Four hold its line over Brexit: or will the splits show?
  • Brusenbauch Meislová, Monika (2017). Shaped by pragmatism: what the Czechs want to get out of Brexit.
  • Bruter, Michael, Sarah, Harrison (2017). Desire for change and rejection of a 'hard Brexit' motivated young people in the General Election.
  • Bryson, Alex, MacKerron, George (2017). Work improves general happiness, but are you happy while you work?
  • Bua, Adrian (2017). Book review: popular democracy: the paradox of participation by Gianpaolo Baiocchi and Ernesto Ganuza.
  • Bueltmann, Tanja (2017). Abused in the street, invited to a Brexit BBQ: the limbo of being German in the UK.
  • Bueltmann, Tanja (2017). First bargaining chips, now stocktaking: the plan to register EU citizens.
  • Buitenhek, Mark (2017). Blockchain: Will it ever be as big as the buzz?
  • Bulat, Alexandra (2017). 'The brightest and best', us - and the rest: desirable and undesirable migration in EU referendum leaflets.
  • Bullock III, Charles S., Wilk, Eric M., Lamb, Charles M. (2017). State and local agencies are more effective than the federal government in housing discrimination enforcement.
  • Burbidge, Ian (2017). Paying Attention? An enquiry into the impact of interruptions on task performance and well-being.
  • Burchard, Jason (2017). My journey from LSE student to global entrepreneur.
  • Burgess, Richard (2017). African Pentecostal churches in Britain’s urban spaces.
  • Burgess, Rochelle (2017). In honour of everyday Heroes #IWD2017 #BeBoldforChange.
  • Burgess, Rochelle (2017). Why do women’s rights advance more quickly after major conflict? #IWD2017.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2017). By co-opting an ultra-right wrecking crew, Donald Trump is sending the US back to the 1920s.
  • Burrell, Kathy, Badcock, Matt (2017). Freedom in the skies: secondary mobility and Brexit.
  • Burri, Michael (2017). As the economy takes off in Austria, voters remain torn between economic optimism and anti-immigration politics.
  • Burton, Sarah (2017). Book review: go home? The politics of immigration controversies by Hannah Jones et al.
  • Busch, Berthold, Diermeier, Matthias, Goecke, Henry, Hüther, Michael (2017). Not punishment or revenge, but stone-cold sober calculations: the EU will drive a hard bargain.
  • Busher, Joel (2017). Brits in Spain: four broad Brexit narratives (though sometimes it's best to avoid the topic).
  • Busse, Matthias, Barslund, Mikkel (2017). Has Brexit made the UK less attractive to high-skilled EU migrants? New evidence.
  • Busse, Matthias, Barslund, Mikkel (2017). Is EU talent being chased away from the UK by Brexit?
  • Busso, Mattias, Cristina, Julian, Hincapie, Diana, Messina, Julián, Ripani, Laura (2017). Combating inequalities amongst children and the active workforce can boost skills and productivity in Latin America and the Caribbean.
  • Bustamante, Maria Cecilia (2017). Firms in less competitive industries are riskier investments.
  • Butler-Bowdon, Tom (2017). Book Review: 50 Economics Classics by Tom Butler-Bowdon.
  • Byrne, Chris, Randall, Nick, Theakston, Kevin (2017). A disjunctive Prime Minister: assessing David Cameron’s legacy.
  • Byrne, Chris, Randall, Nick, Theakston, Kevin (2017). A disjunctive Prime Minister: assessing David Cameron’slegacy.
  • Cadywould, Charlie (2017). On the merits of the UK staying in Erasmus post-Brexit – and why the programme must look beyond university students.
  • Cadywould, Charlie (2017). Three challenges Labour must grapple with before it can deliver a progressive majority.
  • Cadywould, Charlie (2017). Why the UK should stay in Erasmus – and why the programme must look beyond students.
  • Cairney, Paul (2017). Second Scottish referendum: is independence now inevitable?
  • Campbell, Ross (2017). Against the odds: the improbable journey of Die Linke through unified Germany.
  • Campbell, Ross (2017). German consensus politics must adapt to the adversarial approach of the AfD.
  • Campion, Elizabeth (2017). Ensuring free movement of data after Brexit is crucial, but looks unlikely at the moment.
  • Campion, Sonali (2017). Art history, philosophy and literature are not institutionally valued in Pakistan so people don't pursue them. It's a vicious circle - Iftikhar Dadi.
  • Campion, Sonali (2017). "Campaigns to change the law have made it part of state policy to favour women's rights and combat violence against women" - Hina Jilani.
  • Campion, Sonali (2017). If you don't understand the river system, all efforts to rejuvenate it will be wrong or incomplete - Manoj Misra.
  • Campion, Sonali (2017). India needs to drastically cut the amount of water used in agriculture without compromising food production - Biksham Gujja.
  • Campion, Sonali (2017). "It's very difficult to think for yourself when you're too busy hating your own brother" - Hameed Haroon.
  • Campion, Sonali (2017). "The goal is to create a relationship with people on a mass level through art" - Farida Batool.
  • Campion, Sonali, Taylor, Ros (2017). Audit 2017: how effectively is the representation of minorities achieved in UK public and political life?
  • Campos, Nauro (2017). Only foreign direct investment can save Europe.
  • Cann, Damon (2017). Why Utah's Senate seat may be Mitt Romney's to take in 2018.
  • Cannon, Barry (2017). From Chávez to Trump, must we really talk about populism?
  • Caplan, Jane (2017). What the history of fascism can tell us about Donald Trump’s rise.
  • Caplan, Pat (2017). Food poverty and food aid in 21st century UK: a view from anthropology.
  • Capparelli, Daniel (2017). The downsides of the UK eventually joining NAFTA.
  • Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo (2017). Kosovo election: When the elites teamed up to see through their KLA troubles.
  • Carattini, Stefano, Tavoni, Alessandro (2017). Think locally, act globally.
  • Carden, Siún (2017). Book review: hackerspaces: making the maker movement by Sarah R. Davies.
  • Carel, Havi (2017). Breathing life into a phenomenology of illness, part II.
  • Carling, Jørgen (2017). A PhD by publication allows you to write for real and varied audiences, inviting intellectual exchanges that benefit your research.
  • Carmel, Emma (2017). Division, austerity, the gig economy: migration isn’t our biggest labour market problem.
  • Carmichael, Dottie, Caspers, Heather, Davis, Nicola, Marchbanks, Trey, Naufal, Geroge, Wood, Steve (2017). The money bail system places undue burden on the incarcerated poor- but risk informed release can change that.
  • Carnes, Nicholas, Lupu, Noam (2017). The rich get elected – but it’s not because voters necessarily prefer them.
  • Carpenter, Griffin, Kleinjans, Richard (2017). EU common fisheries policy is bound for a Brexit shake-up.
  • Carpenter, Griffin, Kleinjans, Richard (2017). Fishing quotas in Europe: who gets the right to fish?
  • Carrol, Peter (2017). Book review: dark money: the hidden history of the billionaires behind the rise of the radical right by Jane Mayer.
  • Carrol, Peter (2017). Book review: democracy for realists: why elections do not produce responsive government by Christopher H. Achen and Larry M. Bartels.
  • Carrol, Peter (2017). Book review: hillbilly elegy: a memoir of a family and culture in crisis by J.D. Vance.
  • Carrol, Peter (2017). Book review: utopia for realists and how we can get there by Rutger Bregman.
  • Carroll, Georgie (2017). The best bookshops in Mumbai, India.
  • Carton, Guillaume, Ungureanu, Paula (2017). To wear many different hats: how do scholar-practitioners span boundaries between academia and practice?
  • Caruana-Galizia, Paul (2017). Book review: analysing corruption: an introduction by Dan Hough.
  • Caruana-Galizia, Paul (2017). Book review: places in need: the changing geography of poverty by Scott W. Allard.
  • Caruana-Galizia, Paul (2017). Book review: the violence of austerity edited by Vickie Cooper and David Whyte.
  • Caruana-Galizia, Paul (2017). Book review: trading barriers: immigration and the remaking of globalization by Margaret E. Peters.
  • Cascardi, Elisa, Hathaway, Adrienne, Silva Méndez, Jorge Luis, Ortiz, Diana, Rounseville, Megan, Vargas, Juan (2017). Colombia can smooth the road to peace by taking justice to victims of conflict.
  • Cascardi, Elisa, Hathaway, Adrienne, Silva Méndez, Jorge Luis, Ortiz, Diana, Rounseville, Megan, Vargas, Juan (2017). Colombia puede allanar el camino hacia la paz llevando justicia hasta las víctimas del conflicto.
  • Cassese, Erin C. (2017). Why Donald Trump never really had a “woman” problem among Republican voters.
  • Cassino, Dan (2017). President Trump’s approval ratings are being driven down by his ‘tweetstorms’.
  • Casson, Catherine, Casson, Mark, Lee, John, Phillips, Katie (2017). Compassionate capitalism: Lessons from medieval Cambridge.
  • Castelar, Roberto A. (2017). Book review: rebooting Clausewitz: on war in the 21st century by Christopher J. Coker.
  • Castelar, Roberto A. (2017). LSE Lit Fest 2017 Book Review: the French Revolution: from enlightenment to tyranny by Ian Davidson.
  • Caygill, Thomas (2017). Post-legislative scrutiny: what recommendations are committees making, and are they being accepted?
  • Cayli, Baris (2017). Book review: Mafia life: love, death and money at the heart of organised crime by Federico Varese.
  • Cayton, Adam (2017). Legislators flip-flop on passing a bill when they think voters want them to, but only when it’s visible.
  • Cech, Erin A. (2017). Trump supporters' resistance to social justice efforts is driven by their meritocratic ideology, not bias.
  • Celik Rappas, Ipek (2017). Book review: French-language road cinema: borders, diasporas, migration and 'New Europe' by Michael Gott.
  • Ceron, Andrea (2017). What an algorithm for expelling rebels and rewarding a party’s loyal MPs could look like.
  • Cesari, Jocelyne (2017). Islam as a political force: more than belief.
  • Chadi, Adrian, Jeworrek, Sabrina, Mertins, Vanessa (2017). Meaningless work threatens job performance.
  • Chagnon, Nicholas, Chesney-Lind, Meda, Johnson, David T. (2017). Hawaii movement illustrates the importance of video evidence and gender violence in police reform.
  • Chakrabarti, Shami (2017). Shami Chakrabarti: "Not guaranteeing the rights of EU nationals isn't politics - it's cruelty".
  • Chalari, Athanasia, Sealey, Clive (2017). Contrasting Greek and UK youths’ subjective responses to austerity: lessons for other European countries.
  • Chalise, Bishal K (2017). Localising development: will decentralisation help or hinder Nepal's growth?
  • Chalmers, Adam William, Dellmuth, Lisa Maria (2017). All spending is not equal: How the EU can increase public support for the EU.
  • Chalmin-Pui, Lauriane Suyin (2017). Book review: ice bear: the cultural history of an arctic icon by Michael Engelhard.
  • Chalmin-Pui, Lauriane Suyin (2017). Book review: the animal game: searching for wildness at the American zoo by Daniel E. Bender.
  • Chambers, Ali (2017). How Black fraternities are actually harmful to Black culture in the US.
  • Chandola, Tarani (2017). Is any job really better than no job at all?
  • Chandola, Tarani (2017). Is any job really better than no job at all?
  • Chandra, Gauri (2017). Are there alternatives to charging 5p for reducing plastic bag use?
  • Chanfreau, Jenny, Acciari, Louisa, Holvikivi, Aiko (2017). About that march on Saturday 21st.
  • Charle, Christophe (2017). Is history repeating itself? Nationalism in Europe and the breakdown of the old order.
  • Charnoz, Pauline, Lelarge, Claire, Trevien, Corentin (2017). High-speed rail boosts corporate profits but centralises high-skill jobs in big cities.
  • Chatterji, Aaron, Belenzon, Sharon, Daley, Brendan (2017). Naming a firm after its owner is risky, but can pay off handsomely.
  • Chatzinikolaou, Panos (2017). Could Grexit follow Brexit?
  • Chavarro, Diego, Ràfols, Ismael (2017). Journal-based research assessments marginalise regions like Latin America and the issues most relevant to them.
  • Chavarro, Diego, Ràfols, Ismael (2017). Research assessments based on journal rankings systematically marginalise knowledge from certain regions and subjects.
  • Chen, Heng (2017). Why middle class activism surprises economists.
  • Chen, Kai (2017). Book Review: International Organizations and Military Affairs by Hylke Dijkstra.
  • Chen, Zhongxia (2017). Multinationals in China: How ‘local’ should management go?
  • Chetty, Raj (2017). Social mobility in the United States depends heavily on where you live.
  • Chiappetta, Kathleen (2017). Book Review: Water: Abundance, Scarcity and Security in the Age of Humanity by Jeremy J. Schmidt.
  • Chinkin, Christine (2017). Giving voice and visibility to victims of sexual violence has the potential to drive cultural change in Colombia.
  • Chisholm, Jennifer (2017). Who's invading whom? The complex battle for Rio de Janeiro's informal settlements on federal land.
  • Cholbi, Michael (2017). Identity Threat.
  • Chopra, Vrinda (2017). Can SMEs address the agenda of radical economic transformation in South Africa?
  • Chopra, Vrinda (2017). The inadequacy of South Africa’s black economic empowerment policy.
  • Chowdhury, Anir, Beresford, Nick (2017). How a2i is using empathy to foster innovation in Bangladesh.
  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2017). Creating a ‘multi-speed Europe’ would divide the EU and diminish it as a foreign policy actor.
  • Chu, Johan, Davis, Jerry (2017). When board interlock fell apart, so did political moderation in the boardroom.
  • Chérel-Robson, Milasoa (2017). Book review: cotton by Adam Sneyd.
  • Claassen, Ryan L., Ensley, Michael J. (2017). Mine is a likable rogue, yours is a degenerate criminal. When it comes to 'dirty campaign tricks' partisans tend to ignore bad news about their own.
  • Clark, Alistair (2017). Conservative election expenses: the problem with attacking electoral regulators.
  • Clark, Colin (2017). How the youth of Britain’s Roma, Gypsy, and Traveller communities fight the injustices they face.
  • Clark, Terhas, Carvajal, Alejandra (2017). Ecuador's election of the Global South's first wheelchair-using president can drive vital debate on disability and development.
  • Clarke, Harold D., Goodwin, Matthew, Whiteley, Paul (2017). Why Britain voted to leave (and what Boris Johnson had to do with it).
  • Clayton, David, Higgins, David (2017). The ineffectiveness of ‘Buy British’ campaigns.
  • Clemens, Jeffrey, Gottlieb, Joshua (2017). Medicare’s payments system affects the whole US healthcare sector.
  • Clemens, Michael (2017). The economic effects of refugees are largely down to decisions made by the countries which take them.
  • Clements, Ben (2017). Catholic voters in Britain: what are their political preferences?
  • Clements, Ben (2017). The referendums of 1975 and 2016 illustrate the continuity and change in British Euroscepticism.
  • Clingingsmith, David (2017). Even with the internet, we’re not any closer to everyone speaking the same language.
  • Coban, Mehmet Kerem (2017). Book review: rethinking the new world order by Georg Sørensen.
  • Codagnone, Cristiano (2017). Digital labour markets: the hard questions.
  • Codiroli Mcmaster, Natasha (2017). Book review: the equality effect: improving life for everyone by Danny Dorling.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo, Monti, Mara (2017). Is Italy’s recent support to its banks the start of a new wave of public intervention in the EU?
  • Cohen, Philip (2017). The next stage of SocArXiv's development: bringing greater transparency and efficiency to the peer review process.
  • Colburn, Gregg, Allen, Ryan (2017). After the Great Recession, many low and middle-income households are struggling to pay the rent.
  • Collingwood, Loren, Lajevardi, Nazita, Oskooii, Kassra (2017). Protests against Trump’s immigration executive order may have helped shift public opinion against it.
  • Collins, John (2017). Donald Trump's interim Opioid Commission report did not mention drug courts. Here's why that's a positive step.
  • Collins, John (2017). Trump's return to 'drug war' rhetoric is unlikely to succeed in a region that has largely rejected its effectiveness.
  • Collins, John (2017). The effectiveness of Trump's revived 'drug war' rhetoric has already been rejected in Latin America.
  • Collins, John, Soderholm, Alexander (2017). The Ballpark podcast Episode 2.8 Where did the opioid epidemic come from?
  • Colombo, Céline, Kriesi, Hanspeter (2017). Referendum campaigns can end up convincing voters that their preferred party is right.
  • Colombo, Pietro, Ferrari, Elena (2017). New big data platforms are more efficient, but pose a serious threat to privacy.
  • Colton, Timothy J. (2017). Book Review: Russia: What Everyone Needs to Know by Timothy J. Colton.
  • Connolly, John (2017). Mapping the British public’s views ahead of the general election: how Labour could pick off the UKIP vote.
  • Connolly, John (2017). UK expertise on health security could be a strong card in the Brexit negotiations - but few seem to realise.
  • Connolly, John (2017). UK expertise on health security could be a strong card in the Brexit negotiations - but few seem to realise it.
  • Cooper, Davina (2017). The materiality of research: what do we write to convey? By Davina Cooper.
  • Cooper, Kerris, Stewart, Kitty (2017). If we want to improve social mobility, we have to address child poverty.
  • Copus, Colin (2017). Could local government govern? Rethinking the role of councillors.
  • Cordella, Antonio, Cordella, Tito (2017). Pay for performance risks discouraging motivated employees.
  • Correia, Sarah (2017). Book review: re-making Kozarac: agency, reconciliation and contested return in post-war Bosnia by Sebina Sivac-Bryant.
  • Corry, Dan, Stoker, Gerry (2017). Giving civil society a boost: a progressive path to the ‘shared society’.
  • Costa-Cabral, Francisco (2017). Strong consumer data protection can be a disruptive innovation.
  • Costa-i-Font, Joan (2017). Warning: the cost of Brexit could seriously damage your health service.
  • Costa-i-Font, Joan, Flèche, Sarah (2017). Sleep deprivation, even when moderate, hurts employment.
  • Costello, Anthony (2017). Ireland and Brexit: turning potential negative consequences into bargaining leverage.
  • Cottakis, Michael (2017). Brexit and the First ‘European’ Generation.
  • Cottakis, Michael (2017). The Prime Minister has confirmed that Brexit is a step towards irrelevance.
  • Cottakis, Michael (2017). Tackling Populism: the 89ers and the battle for the future.
  • Cottakis, Michael, Dunin-Wąsowicz, Roch (2017). Calling all millennials: share your ideas and help to shape Brexit.
  • Cotter, Richard (2017). Book review: doing research in the business world by David E. Gray.
  • Courtney, Steven J, McGinity, Ruth, Jones, Steven, Hindle, Robert, Rayner, Stephen M, Hughes, Belinda (2017). A response to the House of Commons Education Committee report on Multi-Academy Trusts.
  • Cowan, David (2017). The best bookshops in Boston and Cambridge, MA, USA.
  • Cowley, Philip (2017). What makes a Tory MP rebel: and what are their red lines on Brexit?
  • Cox Han, Lori, Calfano, Brian (2017). How the 'ESPN effect' of framing politics as a conflict benefits more combative candidates like Trump and Sanders.
  • Craven, Robert (2017). Endless online distraction is hurting leaders’ ability to make decisions.
  • Crawley, Andrew (2017). Regional development: Forget the Silicon Valley approach and play to local strengths.
  • Crawshaw, Steve (2017). Does protest really work in cosy democracies?
  • Credit, Kevin (2017). Why public transit can be good for business, even in the auto-oriented Sunbelt.
  • Crines, Andrew (2017). So MPs have backed the Article 50 bill – what happens now?
  • Crines, Andrew S. (2017). 'A conservatism that keeps the British dream alive' - the rhetoric of Theresa May's conference speech.
  • Cristofis, Nikos (2017). Book review: under the shadow: rage and revolution in modern Turkey by Kaya Genç.
  • Crockford, Susannah (2017). For many undocumented migrants at the US-Mexico border, in the absence of federal government help, faith groups offer the only hope.
  • Crockford, Susannah (2017). Visa overstayers in Northern Arizona reveal complex motivation behind undocumented migration.
  • Crombez, Christophe (2017). The election of Antonio Tajani as EP President: A backroom deal that creates clarity.
  • Crosbie, Thomas (2017). Trump's transgender ban reminds us that the US military does not float above politics.
  • Croucher, Richard, Rizov, Marian, Lange, Thomas (2017). National minimum wages improve productivity.
  • Cudby, Danielle (2017). Brexit and local government: the implications and the opportunities.
  • Cullinane, Carl (2017). Comprehensive in name only: social selectivity and school places.
  • Cullinane, Carl (2017). What a fairer tuition fees system would look like and how it may be achieved.
  • Cunningham, Michael (2017). EU membership was a cultural symbol which Remainers approved and Leavers disliked.
  • Curtis, April (2017). Book review: understanding the imaginary war: culture, thought and nuclear conflict, 1945-90 edited by Matthew Grant and Benjamin Ziemann.
  • Custódio, Leonardo (2017). Book review: black skin, white Masks by Frantz Fanon.
  • Czifra-Tóth, Erzsébet, Tennant, Jon (2017). A number of freely available tools can help you improve your literature review routine and stay on top of published research.
  • Daddow, Oliver (2017). Delusions and meddling: 30 years of Tory Euroscepticism are coming to the fore.
  • Daddow, Oliver (2017). It's time designing for the colour blind became a more integrated component of academic and media training.
  • Daddow, Oliver (2017). What I teach about Brexit to my (so far distinctly Eurosceptical) students.
  • Daguerre, Anne (2017). How Obama's welfare legacy helps explain the roots of Trump supporters' rage.
  • Daguerre, Anne (2017). In Trump's America, universities' solidarity with Muslim students has become even more important.
  • Dahlberg, Stefan, Solevid, Maria (2017). Does political corruption put people off voting? (Not if it’s really bad).
  • Damian, Alexandru (2017). Eastern Partnership summit: Moldova's difficult path toward European integration.
  • Damiani, Marco (2017). The crisis of the French Socialist Party: Does the PS still have a future?
  • Damiani, Marco (2017). The transformation of Jean-Luc Mélenchon: from radical outsider to populist leader.
  • Damkjaer, Maja Sonne (2017). The ‘joys’ of digital media in new parenting.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2017). 2016: the death of the left.
  • Darchen, Sébastien (2017). Adaptive re-use is helping to change the way we think about how we can remake urban spaces.
  • Darnell, Nicole, Stritch, Justin, Bretschneider, Stuart, Hsueh, Lily, No, Won (2017). US cities’ buy-green schemes reduce their environmental liabilities and costs.
  • Datta, Ankur (2017). In search of a contemporary narrative for Kashmir.
  • Datta, Biplab (2017). Authentic leaders tend to be effective as managers.
  • Datta, Nikhil, Dhingra, Swati (2017). Post-Brexit UK trade policy remains a wish list.
  • Datzberger, Simone (2017). Film Review: N.G.O. – Nothing Going On.
  • David, Maxine (2017). Amidst criticism of the peer review process, the valuable contributions of reviewers should be defended.
  • Davies, Marc (2017). Biometrics, surveillance technologies and the rise of the ‘security state’ in South Africa.
  • Davies, William (2017). LSE RB feature essay: populism and the limits of neoliberalism by William Davies.
  • De Bruycker, Iskander (2017). How business lobbyists thrive in the EU's depoliticised media world.
  • De Lyon, Josh, Dhingra, Swati, Machin, Stephen (2017). The Brexit vote has caused a significant rise in UK prices, especially food.
  • De Lyon, Josh, Dhingra, Swati, Machin, Stephen (2017). The Brexit vote has caused a significant rise in prices, especially food.
  • Deb, Nikhilendu (2017). Book review: facing the planetary: entangled humanism and the politics of swarming by William E. Connolly.
  • Deckman, Melissa (2017). How the Resist Trump movement could transform into the Tea Party of the left.
  • Dedios Sanguineti, Maria Cecilia (2017). Poor health outcomes amongst Afro-Colombians are driven by discrimination as well as economic disadvantage.
  • Defty, Andrew (2017). Good for the Conservatives, bad for the country: Four reasons why a snap election is a bad idea.
  • Defty, Andrew (2017). Plagued by delays: the June election is bad news for the Intelligence and Security Committee.
  • Delatolla, Andrew (2017). Re-orienting Western notions of the state: From the Ottoman Empire to the present.
  • Deletant, Dennis (2017). Romania: reflections on the street protests and the country’s communist past.
  • Delmelle, Elizabeth (2017). In recent decades, the clustering of rich and poor neighborhoods in America has continued, expanding inequality.
  • Delmestri, Giuseppe, Greenwood, Royston (2017). How to turn a Cinderella product into a market queen.
  • Demary, Markus (2017). Will the review of the Dodd-Frank Act start a regulatory competition with the EU?
  • Den Haan, Wouter, Ilzetzki, Ethan, Ellison, Martin (2017). Global risks from rising debt and asset prices.
  • Dennison, James, Geddes, Andrew, Talo, Teresa (2017). The Dutch aren’t turning against immigration – the salience of the immigration issue is what drives Wilders’ support.
  • Derbez Fernández, Claudia (2017). The invisible poor door: Claudia Derbez Fernández.
  • Dermineur, Elise M. (2017). How Emmanuel Macron could still lose the French presidential election.
  • Derous, Eva, Pepermans, Roland, Ryan, Ann Marie (2017). Ethnic discrimination during resume screening: mind the job.
  • Deschacht, Nick (2017). Me, myself, and I: self-citation rates are higher in individualist cultures than in collectivist cultures.
  • Devanny, Joe (2017). Book review: debriefing the president: the interrogation of Saddam Hussein by John Nixon.
  • Devine, Elaine (2017). What are researchers' expectations and experiences of the peer review process? Findings from recent research.
  • Deyshappriya, N. R. Ravindra (2017). Sri Lanka-China trade relations: time to focus on unexplored Chinese markets.
  • Deyshappriya, N.P. Ravindra (2017). China is Sri Lanka's biggest source of FDI, but there is room for more.
  • Dhingra, Swati, De Lyon, Josh (2017). Florence speech falls short on the details of a bespoke arrangement with the EU.
  • Di Fiore, Alessandro, Rosani, Gabriele (2017). For 3D printing to go mainstream, it needs a platform.
  • Di Fiore, Alessandro, Rosani, Gabriele (2017). Heavy industries may become the next frontier for the platform revolution.
  • Di Massa, Elettra, Von Oosterhout, Sjoukje, Jokinen, Olli, Stratton, Hugo (2017). LSE students write: young people deserve a say on the Brexit negotiations.
  • Diamond, Patrick (2017). Three key lessons from Labour’s campaign – and how the party needs to change.
  • Diamond, Patrick (2017). The trouble with Jeremy Corbyn: five tests the Labour leader is failing.
  • Diessner, Sebastian (2017). LSE Continental Breakfast 5: Britain's financial obligations to the EU.
  • Dixit, Ashutosh M. (2017). Rising to the SDGs: how can Nepal make meaningful progress by 2030?
  • Dixit, Ashutosh Mani (2017). Understanding the economics of inclusion: a perspective on Nepal.
  • Dixit, Ashutosh Mani, Chalise, Bishal (2017). Strengthening infrastructure governance in Nepal.
  • Djankov, Simeon (2017). How ready is the UK for Brexit?: 9%.
  • Djankov, Simeon (2017). How ready is the UK for Brexit?: 9%.
  • Djankov, Simeon (2017). Introducing the Brexit readiness score.
  • Djankov, Simeon (2017). Investment banks are already leaving London. Other jobs will follow.
  • Djupe, Paul A., McClurg, Scott D., Sokhey, Anand E. (2017). Exposure to discussion and disagreement does not discourage women from political participation any more than men.
  • Doherty, David, Stancliffe, James (2017). Americans’ support for freedom of speech depends on who’s doing the speaking and their message.
  • Dolan, Paul (2017). Would you choose to be happy?
  • Donnelly, Brendan (2017). Is Labour's new Brexit stance a step in the right direction?
  • Donnelly, Brendan (2017). No good choices for the British government in the Brexit negotiations.
  • Donnelly, Brendan (2017). A chaotic Brexit is still a possibility.
  • Donnelly, Martin (2017). A new high-level policy analysis sheds more light on Europe's open data and open science policies.
  • Dorey, Peter (2017). More than just 'dreamers' and 'students': where did Labour's support come from in 2017?
  • Dotson-Renta, Lara N. (2017). Labors of Love: Nurturing resistance.
  • Dowler, Rod (2017). Why robots aren’t the enemy.
  • Dowler, Rod (2017). A tentative, ‘me-too’ approach to industrial strategy will lead us nowhere.
  • Downer, John (2017). Book review: close calls: managing risk and resilience in airline flight safety by Carl Macrae.
  • Downing, Joseph (2017). End of Frexit, bad for Brexit? Macron’s win signals France’s resurgence in Europe.
  • Drake, Helen (2017). May’s ‘Global Britain’: the decline and fall of European Studies.
  • Dreyer, Philipp (2017). LSE continental breakfast 3: Whitehall feels the strain.
  • Dryzek, John (2017). Gender equality in Parliament: how random selection could get us there.
  • Drzensky, Frank, Heinz, Matthias (2017). The hidden cost of downsizing: demotivating the remaining employees.
  • Dsouza, Zahra (2017). The Panama Papers verdict and political accountability in Pakistan.
  • Duncan, Green (2017). If academics are serious about research impact they need to learn from monitoring, evaluation and learning teams.
  • Dunn, Katelan (2017). Book review: parole in Canada: gender and diversity in the federal system by Sarah Turnbull.
  • Dunne, Derek (2017). The materiality of research: this device is licensed’: the material and immaterial bureaucracy of research by Derek Dunne.
  • Dupraz, Yannick, Rueda, Valeria (2017). There is No "Case for Colonialism": insights from the colonial economic history.
  • Dusso, Aaron (2017). Our personality affects our ability to connect our policy preferences to the correct political party- and that's a problem for democracy.
  • Dyson, Stephen Benedict, Parent, Matthew J. (2017). Trump holds more positive views toward Vladimir Putin than both his predecessor and his own foreign policy team.
  • Eastaway, Montserrat Pareja (2017). ‘Co-operate not speculate’, -London Co-operative Housing Group.
  • Eberl, Jakob-Moritz, Zeglovits, Eva, Sickinger, Hubert (2017). Austria election preview: Sebastian Kurz and the rise of the Austrian 'anti-party'.
  • Edalere-Henderson, Anthea (2017). Is there a ‘family factor’ in mediation? A Jamaican perspective.
  • Edgerton, Barton (2017). Book review: a short history of the Russian revolution by Geoffrey Swain.
  • Edgerton, Barton (2017). Book review: behavioural economics: a very short introduction by Michelle Baddeley.
  • Edgerton, Barton (2017). Book review: evidence-based policy making in the social sciences: methods that matter edited by Gerry Stoker and Mark Evans.
  • Edwards, Alison (2017). The pace of academic life is not the problem—the lack of autonomy is.
  • Egan, Michelle (2017). For President Trump, tearing up trade agreements may be easier said than done.
  • Eggert, Jennifer Philippa (2017). International Women’s Day (#IWD2017) book review: living in refugee camps in Berlin: women’s perspectives and experiences edited by Hansjörg Dilger and Kristina Dohrn in collaboration with International Women’s Space.
  • Eggert, Jennifer Philippa (2017). The ‘Real Housewives of ISIS’ sketch: When funny is harmful.
  • Ehsan, Rakib (2017). What the Democrats can (and must) learn from their unexpected defeat.
  • Eichhorn, Jan (2017). Brexit alone will not decide a second Scottish referendum – but its perceived economic impact may.
  • Einarsdóttir, Anna (2017). Guessing our colleagues’ gay and lesbian identities can be harmful.
  • El Sehrawey, Amani (2017). Book review: Islamophobia and securitization: religion, ethnicity and the female voice by Tania Saeed.
  • El-Sahli, Zouheir, Upward, Richard (2017). Dockworkers and the introduction of containers in UK shipping in the late 1960’s.
  • Elfer, James (2017). FTSE100 gender balance: Why ‘best practices’ may be counter-productive.
  • Elfer, James (2017). Performance needs purpose.
  • Elgawly, Marina (2017). Uganda’s exceptional approach to the refugee challenge.
  • Ellington, Michael, Milas, Costas (2017). Budget 2017 and the economy: bad news all round.
  • Ellington, Michael, Milas, Costas (2017). How will a Bank of England interest rate hike affect the economy?
  • Ellington, Michael, Milas, Costas (2017). Why the Bank of England should change how it publishes the future path of interest rates.
  • Elliott, Rebecca (2017). It's not a lack of information that stops many Americans from adapting to flood risks; it's a lack of cash.
  • Enderlein, Henrik, Letta, Enrico, De Geus, Aart (2017). Seizing the moment for euro area reform: a three-step action plan.
  • Enyedi, Zsolt (2017). Five views: Is populism really a threat to democracy?
  • Er Tan, Wenn (2017). “Who will pay for the concierge?”— ‘Place-making’ and its exclusion in Whitechapel Wenn Er Tan.
  • Eriksen, Erik O. (2017). 'You'll hate it': why the Norway option amounts to self-inflicted subservience to the EU.
  • Erisen, Cengiz, Redlawsk, David P., Erisen, Elif (2017). Challenging people's political views and values makes them think even harder and produce better arguments to defend themselves.
  • Escobar Arango, Mariana (2017). Los Programas de Desarrollo con Enfoque Territorial pueden transformar la ruralidad y fortalecer la paz en Colombia.
  • Escobar Arango, Mariana (2017). Territorially Focused Development Plans can transform the countryside and strengthen peace in Colombia.
  • Eshbaugh-Soha, Matthew, McGauvran, Ronald J. (2017). Even in today's fragmented media environment, the president still has the power to lead the debate on income inequality.
  • Espinoza, Marcia Vera, Sandelind, Clara, Ni Ghráinne, Ghráinne (2017). “Safe return review” refugee policy: counter-productive and morally indefensible.
  • Etherington, Stuart (2017). Charities must have a voice in Brexit – for the sake of the disaffected people they help.
  • Evans, Jules (2017). Book review: U thrive: how to succeed in college (and life) by Daniel Lerner and Alan Schlechter.
  • Evans, Jules (2017). U Thrive: How to Succeed in College (and Life) - Book Review.
  • Eve, Martin (2017). The starting pistol has been fired – now is the time to heed the drive towards open access books.
  • Fankhauser, Sam, Matikainen, Sini (2017). How green are the manifestos? GE2017 and climate change.
  • Farooqui, Usmaan (2017). Where is the water crisis?
  • Farrer, Benjamin, Klein, Graig R. (2017). Words and deeds: electoral success for Greens in the US leads to less environmental sabotage.
  • Farrington, Conor (2017). "All that is solid...": the destructive tendencies of the Conservative Party.
  • Farías Pelcastre, Iván (2017). Book review: on the move: changing mechanisms of Mexico-US migration by Filiz Garip.
  • Farías Pelcastre, Iván (2017). Book review: thinking like a political scientist: a practical guide to research methods by Christopher Howard.
  • Fasan, Olu (2017). Like the West, Africa must be guarded in its relations with China.
  • Fay, Daniel (2017). How legislators use state constitutions to block policy changes they oppose.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2017). Brexit is dividing our society like never before.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2017). Was that it? May's speech suggests she is the prisoner of her Cabinet.
  • Fecher, Benedikt, Friesike, Sascha, Peters, Isabella, Wagner, Gert G. (2017). Rather than simply moving from “paying to read” to “paying to publish”, it’s time for a European Open Access Platform.
  • Feinstein, Leon (2017). On genetics and social mobility: why Toby Young’s structural inequality argument is not science.
  • Felt, Ulrike (2017). More work is required to make academic “timescapes” worth inhabiting and to open up space for creative work.
  • Fenwick, John (2017). Why is running the North so complicated?
  • Fenzl, Michele (2017). Book review: Singapore and Switzerland: secrets to small states success edited by Yvonne Guo and Jun Jie Woo.
  • Ferrari, Elena (2017). New big data platforms are more efficient, but pose a serious threat to privacy.
  • Field, Bonnie N., Barrio, Astrid (2017). Without a drastic change in approach, further conflict appears inevitable in Catalonia.
  • Filindra, Alexandra (2017). White Americans are much more likely to support gun rights than their non-white counterparts, but not because they want arms for self-protection.
  • Fireman, Ken (2017). Beware Big Brother in the family room?
  • Fireman, Ken (2017). Business accelerators: A user’s manual for entrepreneurs.
  • Fireman, Ken (2017). How to avoid becoming the next late-night punchline.
  • Fireman, Ken (2017). Is free trade an economic example of asymmetrical warfare?
  • Fireman, Ken (2017). On family leave, companies ‘step up’ to fill the vacuum.
  • Fireman, Ken (2017). The underground economy casts an ever-longer shadow.
  • Fisher, Calum (2017). Book Review: Malawi’s Lost Years (1964-1994): And Her Forsaken Heroes by Kapote Mwakasungura and Douglas Miller.
  • Fisk, Nathan W. (2017). Book release: framing internet safety.
  • Fitzpatrick, Caroline (2017). In Canada, where children attend school may have an effect on their health and the choices that are available to them.
  • Fitzpatrick, Suzanne (2017). Can homelessness happen to anyone? Don't believe the hype.
  • Flanagan, Dimity (2017). LSE's "request a copy" service: widening access to research both within and beyond academia.
  • Flinders, Matt (2017). What kind of democracy is this? Scholars must look beyond the populist signal.
  • Flynn, Niall (2017). Book review: finite media: environmental implications of digital technologies by Sean Cubitt.
  • Fokas, Effie, Markoviti, Margarita (2017). Religious pluralism and education in Greece.
  • Foley, Neil, Dedman, Robert, Dedman, Nancy, Crockford, Susannah (2017). The Ballpark podcast episode 2.6: racism towards Latinos: past, present, and future.
  • Folkman, Peter, Froud, Julie, Johal, Sukhedev, Tomaney, John, Williams, Karel (2017). Manchester’s transformation over the past 25 years: why we need a reset of city region policy.
  • Ford, Michael R. (2017). In Milwaukee, school vouchers have helped many private schools to fail.
  • Forestal, Jennifer (2017). Trolling democracy: anonymity doesn’t cause conflicts, bad site design does.
  • Fornell, Claes, Morgeson, Forrest, Hult, Tomas (2017). Companies that do better by their customers also do better in the stock market.
  • Forrester, Amy, Björk, Bo-Christer, Tenopir, Carol (2017). New web services are helping authors make data-driven decisions when choosing which journal to submit to.
  • Forstenzer, Joshua (2017). Will the ‘front républicain’ carry Macron to power?
  • Fosten, Gerald K. (2017). In Tennessee, crime really does pay - for private prison providers.
  • Foster, Yolanda (2017). Women demand better access to truth, justice and reparations in Sri Lanka.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2017). Courts as local civil authority in South Sudan.
  • Fouweather, Ian (2017). Using big data to transform operations management: Hype, hope or has-been?
  • Fowler, Dan (2017). Excel is threatening the quality of research data — data Packages are here to help.
  • Fowler, Linda, Marshall, Bryan W. (2017). More than ever, Congress was forming super-majorities to circumvent the possibility of a presidential veto when political interests were at stake.
  • Fowler, Luke (2017). Local governments are hidden but important partners in air quality management.
  • Fox, Sean (2017). Neglected drivers of urbanisation in Africa.
  • Foxen, Sarah (2017). Women academics and those from BAME backgrounds engage less with Parliament. But why?
  • Fraccaroli, Nicolò (2017). Italy’s ‘trilemma’: how to balance integration, sovereignty and democracy following the constitutional referendum.
  • Fraile, Marta, Gómez, Raul (2017). Bridging the gender gap: how to address low levels of political interest among women.
  • Frailing, Kelly (2017). Drug courts that serve mostly Hispanics may benefit from having a bilingual judge.
  • Franchi, Marina (2017). Gender and the news industry: why it's important to focus on mainstream newspapers.
  • Franko, William W. (2017). Income inequality has been growing for decades and Americans are taking note.
  • Franzmann, Simon (2017). A right-wing populist party founded by economists: the strange case of Germany’s AfD.
  • Franzmann, Simon (2017). A right-wing populist party founded by economists: the strange case of Germany’s AfD.
  • Fras, Max (2017). Four takeaways from Albania’s EU visa liberalisation journey for Georgia.
  • Fras, Max (2017). Prime Minister Edi Rama takes total control in Albania, but who can keep him in check?
  • Fras, Max (2017). Weak but stable: the future of the EU's Eastern Partnership ahead of the 2017 summit.
  • Fraser Riehle, Catherine, Kaye, Merinda (2017). Undergraduate researchers report only moderate knowledge of scholarly communication: they must be offered more support.
  • Frazier, Erica (2017). Book review: a sharing economy: how social wealth funds can reduce inequality and help balance the books by Stewart Lansley.
  • Frazier, Erica (2017). Book review: the greens in British politics: protest, anti-austerity and the divided left by James Dennison.
  • Free, Alex (2017). Jomo Kenyatta, LSE and the independence of Kenya.
  • Freedman, Matthew (2017). America's earliest economic development initiatives provide perspective on recent battles over jobs.
  • Freer, Courtney (2017). Concerts, cinemas and comics in the Kingdom: Revising the social contract after Saudi Vision 2030.
  • Freiburg, Tina, Böhmelt, Tobias (2017). A model for predicting future EU enlargements - and why most candidate states could be waiting some time.
  • Frey, Valerie, Borgonovi, Francesca (2017). Changing policies, changing minds: Using public policy to transform gender stereotypes.
  • Froio, Caterina (2017). Three ways in which the French presidential election reflects Western European trends.
  • Frydman, Carola, Hilt, Eric (2017). The interlock between company boards and investment banks in the early 1900’s.
  • Fuller, Steve (2017). Mastering Trump’s mastermind: Sebastian Gorka and the struggle between Islam and the West.
  • Fuller, Steve (2017). Transhumanism and the future of capitalism: the next meaning of life.
  • Fumarola, Andrea (2017). The European Union has an obligation to protect civil society in Hungary.
  • Funk, Alexandra (2017). Let’s be clear: this is a Muslim ban.
  • Furtado, Francisco (2017). Simulating shared mobility in Helsinki.
  • Gadd, Elizabeth (2017). Are universities finally waking up to the value of copyright?
  • Gadd, Elizabeth (2017). Post-publication blues: how getting published can be the beginning and not the end of your publication woes.
  • Gale, Chrissie (2017). Mind the implementation gap: how child care can be improved globally.
  • Gallagher, Justin (2017). Insurance and government assistance means that homeowners often have less debt following a flood disaster.
  • Gallo, Alberto (2017). Don’t give up on Europe as an investment destination.
  • Galvin, Daniel J. (2017). Wage theft is widespread, but politics and policies can play a powerful role in reducing it.
  • Gani, Jasmine (2017). Why Trump’s Syria strike may have been a positive step.
  • Garcia-Cueva, Carlos (2017). Trump: what comes next for Mexico?
  • Garcia-Rios, Sergio, Oskooii, Kassra, Walker, Hannah (2017). Allies in name only? Latino-only leadership on DACA may trigger implicit racial biases among White liberals.
  • García, Juana (2017). The UN's new role in Colombia can strengthen the peace process during its most vulnerable phase.
  • Gardner, Joseph, Woolley, John T. (2017). Enhancing the Fed’s transparency didn’t hurt its deliberations.
  • Gardner, Zoe (2017). LSE continental breakfast #2: migration and Brexit.
  • Garlick, Alex (2017). In considering Judge Gorsuch’s nomination, the Senate should take the long view.
  • Garnsey, Eliza (2017). The justice of art at South Africa’s constitutional court.
  • Garry, John (2017). Northern Ireland: how will the political stalemate end, and will there be a referendum to leave the UK?
  • Garzia, Diego, Cicchi, Lorenzo (2017). Evidence suggests that issues may have mattered more than expected in the 2016 US presidential elections.
  • Gashi, Krenar (2017). Kosovo’s early elections are reviving its ‘war’ and ‘peace’ camps.
  • Gaskell, Adi (2017). The West should stay away from Asia’s workaholism.
  • Gaskell, Kevin (2017). Leadership: the measurable impact of inspiring a sense of purpose.
  • Gastinger, Markus (2017). Donald Trump’s flawed plan to strong-arm other countries into “one-on-one” trade deals.
  • Gavrankapetanović-Redžić, Jasmina (2017). The national museum of Bosnia-Herzegovina – or culture lost in transition?
  • Gavron, Jessica (2017). By decriminalising domestic violence Russia takes a step backwards.
  • Geddes, Marc, Meakin, Alexandra, Thompson, Louise (2017). Weak government, strong parliament? A preview of Theresa May’s legislative challenges.
  • Geddes, Mike, Dommett, Katharine, Prosser, Brenton (2017). ‘Rubbing shoulders’: an understanding of networks, relationships and everyday practices is key to parliamentary engagement.
  • Generation, Brexit (2017). Generation Brexit officially launches in six new languages.
  • Genovese, Taylor R. (2017). Book review: placing outer space: an earthly ethnography of other worlds by Lisa Messeri.
  • Geybullayeva, Arzu (2017). Mehriban Aliyeva: the many faces of Azerbaijan’s First Lady and new Vice President.
  • Ghatak, Maitreesh (2017). A murder is a murder, whatever the context.
  • Gheaus, Anca (2017). The chain of love and duty.
  • Ghose, Katie (2017). We’re taking back control – but who’s going to wield it?
  • Ghosh, Aniruddha, Bandyopadhyay, Sujan (2017). As scaling effects of research productivity diminish, India must step up R&D investment.
  • Ghosh, Aniruddha, Bandyopadhyay, Sujan (2017). Clues for India: looking at the puzzle of total factor productivity and capital flows.
  • Giannetti, Mariassunta, Yue Wang, Tracy (2017). When corporate scandal hits retail investors close to home.
  • Giannino, Domenico (2017). The Catalan crisis is about politics, not constitutional law - and it requires a political solution.
  • Gibson, Andrew, Hazelkorn, Ellen (2017). Government policies favouring research for economic returns can overlook existing strengths in arts and humanities.
  • Giest, Sarah, Ansgar, Koene (2017). Engaging with citizens online: civic apps must offer dynamic interactions in order to be truly effective.
  • Gil, Suelen (2017). Obstetric violence and human rights in Brazil: what happened, Mrs. Adelir de Goés?
  • Gilmartin, David, Campion, Sonali (2017). “New visions of control over the environment really shook the way political orders were created on both sides of the border after Partition” – David Gilmartin.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). Mapping the Trump-Russia network, the death of Purple America, and everybody hates Trumpcare: roundup of US academic political blogging for 4 – 10 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). Ryan’s health care bill struggle, why NAFTA’s not a big deal, and how to reduce fatal police shootings: roundup of US academic political blogging for 11 – 17 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 1 September: Christie's approval hits new lows, Indiana's online tax grab, and California's new political rivalry.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 10 November: The end of the Christie-Guadagno era in New Jersey, Republicans lose in Virginia, and South Dakota's GOP Governor joins the 'war on coal'.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 13 October: Vermont syringe exchanges' success, Florida's slavery memorial plans and Missouri's 'cartoon Trump'.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 15 September: New York's poor primary turnout, Heitkamp courts Trump, and an Idaho city forgets 5 million levy.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 17 November: Arizona's McSally appeals to Trump, #SealMageddon in South Carolina, and would the "Shelby stratagem" work in Alabama?
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 20 October: New Jersey's vulnerable voting machines, Nelson woos Puerto Ricans in Florida, and Friess doesn't understand Wyoming.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 22 September: Christie's 240m opioid plan, #NukeGate in South Carolina, and Michigan passes "Citizens United on Steroids".
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 24 November: New Jersey's segregated schools, North Carolina cities take climate change action, and New Mexico's preemption problem.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 27 October: Pennsylvania's judicial roulette, Oklahoma legislators facing pay cut, and 'Republican-lite' in California.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 29 September: Murphy's New Jersey spending plans, how Moore won in Alabama, and does California polarize America?
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 3 November: Maryland's "grovelling" Democrats, Iowa's "Ag-gag" law challenged, and lobbying in Montana.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 6 October: Virginia Governor's race gets dirty, Idaho Freedom Caucus plans fall flat, and California's Sanctuary State symbolism.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States for 8 September: Vermont's new marijuana panel, South Dakota purges voter rolls, and making sense of Montana's budget.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States: Florida legislature’s war, Oklahoma’s continuing earthquake crisis, and how Oregon can balance its budget: 25 February – 3 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). State of the States: Virginia’s bellwether Circuit Court vote, Iowa Democrats in the wilderness, and is L.A.’s Garcetti in a dead-end job?: 4 – 10 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). Today is Labor Day. Here are ten important posts on jobs, work, workers' rights and wages.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2017). Trump’s “quietly radical” address, the age of existential politics, and the “24 trillion dollar bezzle”: roundup of US academic political blogging for 25 February – 3 March.
  • Giorgi, Simona (2017). How audiences come to embrace and support new products, ideas or politicians.
  • Giragosian, Richard (2017). Armenia’s election aftermath: few street protests, but the new government is set for a bumpy ride.
  • Giragosian, Richard (2017). Armenia’s watershed election: more free, but less fair.
  • Giragosian, Richard (2017). A Pyrrhic victory in Yerevan? Understanding Armenia’s one party dominance.
  • Giray Aksoy, Cavet, Carpenter, Christopher S., Frank, Jefferson (2017). How your sexual orientation affects your salary.
  • Glaser, Florian, Risius, Marten (2017). The side effect of scrutinising traders in social trading platforms.
  • Glencross, Andrew (2017). The Brexit talks aren't just about power, they're about legitimacy - and the UK urgently needs a vision for the future.
  • Glencross, Andrew (2017). What Macron’s victory means for Brexit.
  • Global Kids Online (2017). Bulgaria: are children empowered to benefit from the internet?
  • Global Kids Online (2017). Collaborating with UNICEF India on child online safety.
  • Global Kids Online (2017). Highlights from 18 months of Global Kids Online.
  • Glover, Danni (2017). Book review: Samuel Richardson and the theory of tragedy: Clarissa’s caesuras by J. A. Smith.
  • Gluckman, David (2017). How the UK came to adore branded wine Le Piat d'Or.
  • Glück, Thorsten, Füss, Roland (2017). Contrary to common belief, market correlations between assets are constant.
  • Goes, Eunice (2017). As electoral disaster looms, Labour should start preparing for the post-Corbyn era.
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2017). Afghanistan: losses, setbacks and impending challenges (part 1).
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2017). Afghanistan: losses, setbacks and impending challenges (part 2).
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2017). Despite security challenges, Afghanistan's education system has come a long way.
  • Golder, Sona N., Stephenson, Laura B., van der Straeten, Karine, Blais, André, Bol, Damien, Harfst, Philipp, Laslier, Jean-François (2017). Good news: fielding women candidates doesn’t put parties at a disadvantage in elections.
  • Gonenc, Defne (2017). The Sardar Sarovar dam: drowning out citizens but who benefits?
  • Gonzales Hernando, Marcos, Stone, Diane, Pautz, Hartwig (2017). Think tanks can transform into the standard-setters and arbiters of quality of 21st century policy analysis.
  • Gonzalez Hernando, Marcos (2017). Book review: Gramsci’s common sense: inequality and its narratives by Kate Crehan.
  • Good, Darren J., Lyddy, Christopher J. (2017). Explaining how mindfulness consistently brings positive workplace outcomes.
  • Goodchild, Philip (2017). Does money make us selfish?
  • Goode, Sigi, Hoehle, Hartmut, Venkatesh, Viswanath, Bro, Susan A. (2017). What to do when your clients' data is breached: the case of Sony Playstation.
  • Goodman, Emma (2017). How has media policy responded to fake news?
  • Goodwin, Mark, Bates, Stephen, Geddes, Marc (2017). The Remainers who now chair select committees will harry the government over Brexit.
  • Goozee, Rhianna (2017). Systemic changes within institutions are needed to promote greater gender equity in STEM.
  • Gopal, Ram D., Hidaji, Hooman, Patterson, Raymond A., Rolland, Erik, Zhdanov, Dmitry (2017). Our private data and the market for third-party providers of functionality to websites.
  • Gordon, Claire E (2017). It's time students took to the barricades over Brexit.
  • Gormley, Lisa (2017). 1000+ days of #BringBackOurGirls – reflections on the possibilities of social media and girls’ human rights.
  • Goss, Kristin A. (2017). In an age of populism and government failure, elite “policy plutocrats” are playing an increasing role in remaking society.
  • Gould, Eric, Klor, Esteban (2017). The post-9/11 backlash against Muslims reduced assimilation.
  • Graham, Jack (2017). Is Trump using the ‘fake news’ controversy as an opportunity to keep the media in line?
  • Grant, Wyn (2017). Who will pick fruit and harvest vegetables after Brexit? Reviving SAWS could be a solution.
  • Grasso, Anthony (2017). Why pursuing more rehabilitative policies may actually lead to harsher punishments for prisoners.
  • Gray, Caroline (2017). Relying on Basque nationalists, but still in power: Where next for Spain's 'weak' government?
  • Gray, Caroline (2017). A tale of changing destinies: why the Catalans are pushing for independence rather than the Basques.
  • Grayling, A.C. (2017). The EU referendum was gerrymandered.
  • Greatrick, Aydan, Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, Elena (2017). ‘Travelling fear’ in global context: exploring everyday dynamics of in/security and im/mobility.
  • Green, Duncan (2017). Book review: how China escaped the poverty trap by Yuen Yuen Ang.
  • Green, Duncan (2017). The NGO-Academia interface: obstacles to collaboration, lessons from systems thinking and suggested ways forward.
  • Green, Duncan (2017). Want to ensure your research influences policy? Advice from a government insider.
  • Green, Harriett, Courtney, Angela (2017). Digital collections offer researchers opportunities to develop new skills and scholarly communications networks.
  • Green, Jane, Jennings, Will (2017). Will Brexit be another Black Wednesday for the Conservatives? Lessons from the ERM crisis.
  • Green, Toby (2017). It's time for "pushmi-pullyu" open access: servicing the distinct needs of readers and authors.
  • Greene, Zachary, Haber, Matthias (2017). How electoral competition explains preference convergence and divergence in pre-electoral coalitions.
  • Greene, Zachary, Spoon, Jae-Jae, Williams, Christopher (2017). Tactical voting in referendums: did SNP’s mixed signals encourage those for independence to vote for Brexit?
  • Greshake, Bastian (2017). A closer look at the Sci-Hub corpus: what is being downloaded and from where?
  • Griffith, Liz (2017). Online advertising meets behavioural science – the story of my Master’s dissertation.
  • Grimmel, Andreas, My Giang, Susanne (2017). Why China’s ‘One Belt, One Road’ initiative should be taken more seriously by the EU.
  • Grimmel, Andreas, My Giang, Susanne (2017). Why China’s ‘One Belt, One Road’ initiative should be taken more seriously by the EU and how it can be an interregional success.
  • Grodach, Carl, Foster, Nicole, Murdoch, James (2017). Arts industries do not cause gentrification- they tend to chase it.
  • Grogan, Joelle (2017). The Article 50 case explained in sticky notes.
  • Grogan, Joelle (2017). The Article 50 notification explained in sticky notes.
  • Grogan, Joelle (2017). The Great Repeal Bill explained in sticky notes.
  • Grogan, Joelle (2017). Legislation that is, and is not: the deeply problematic Repeal Bill.
  • Grogan, Joelle (2017). The Supreme Court’s ruling on Article 50 – in sticky notes.
  • Grogan, Joelle (2017). The (not so) great repeal bill, part 1: only uncertainty is certain.
  • Grogan, Joelle (2017). The (not so) great repeal bill, part 2: how Henry VIII clauses undermine Parliament.
  • Grossman, Emiliano, Sauger, Nicolas (2017). Why do the French hate their politicians so much?
  • Grossman, Wendy (2017). Book review: American girls: social media and the secret lives of teenagers.
  • Grous, Alexander (2017). Connectivity will create a multibillion-dollar opportunity for the global airline industry.
  • Groves, Antony (2017). Book review: the makerspace librarian’s sourcebook edited by Ellyssa Kroski.
  • Growth Commission, LSE (2017). More talent, please: a blueprint for the UK’s future migration policy.
  • Growth Commission, LSE (2017). What trading outside the Single Market looks like.
  • Grueter, Gerhard (2017). Fintechs have advantages over established banks, but regulation is a major challenge.
  • Gstöhl, Sieglinde, Frommelt, Christian (2017). Although Britain won't rejoin EFTA, it can learn a great deal from its experience.
  • Guardado, Jenny (2017). Development for Sale: 18th Century Spanish Colonial Administrators and Long-Run Subnational Disparities in Peru.
  • Guberek, Tamy (2017). Calling death by its name: breaking the silence of Guatemala's National Police Archive.
  • Gudgin, Graham (2017). How bad will Brexit really be for the UK?
  • Gudgin, Graham (2017). How bad will Brexit really be for the UK?
  • Guerra, Simona (2017). Euroscepticism has taken hold across the EU - but it has many different roots.
  • Guerrina, Roberta (2017). ‘Legsit’ is no joke. It’s symptomatic of a reactionary Brexit political culture.
  • Guest, Matthew (2017). Increasing REF’s impact weighting could offer incentive for institutions to address societal, economic and global challenges.
  • Gulliver, Kevin (2017). Racial discrimination in UK housing has a long history and deep roots.
  • Gupta, Abhinav, Wowak, Adam (2017). The elephant (and the donkey) in the boardroom.
  • Gupta, Kuhika, Ripberger, Joseph T., Wehde, Wesley (2017). Advocacy groups use Twitter to build policy narratives featuring heroes, villains and victims.
  • Gurdgiev, Constantin, Corbet, Shaen (2017). Hacking the market: Systemic contagion from cybersecurity breaches.
  • Gutterman, Ellen (2017). How policy framing shaped UK strategy on transnational bribery.
  • Guzmán, Jaime (2017). Book review: Latino city: urban planning, politics, and the grassroots by Erualdo R. González.
  • Gwata, Dorcas, Endale, Tarik (2017). Will the appointment of Tedros Ghebreyesus mark a turning point for WHO?
  • Gélvez, Juan David, Weintraub, Michael (2017). Cuando el descabezamiento del crimen organizado funciona: el caso del Clan del Golfo en Colombia.
  • Gélvez, Juan David, Weintraub, Michael (2017). Is it wise to decapitate organised armed groups? The case of Colombia's Clan del Golfo.
  • Hackett, Ursula (2017). This major church-state case makes direct funding of religious organizations more likely.
  • Haddad, Nader (2017). The City plans for a tough Brexit divorce.
  • Haegeli, Jérôme (2017). Strengthening private capital markets: less of the same is more.
  • Haeussier, Mathias (2017). British newspapers and the EU: was it always about sovereignty and crooked bananas?
  • Hagemeister, Kristen (2017). An open letter to Mark Zuckerberg: Africa deserves more from your IT initiatives.
  • Hahnel, Mark (2017). Open-source, commercial, non-profit, for-profit: what power have you got?
  • Haider-Markel, Don, Joslyn, Mark (2017). Democrats are more likely than Republicans or Independents to blame genetics for obesity – including their own.
  • Hale-Ross, Simon (2017). Do we need more counter-terrorism powers? Why Theresa May’s ‘four-point’ plan is redundant.
  • Halikiopoulou, Daphne, Nanou, Kyriaki, Vasilopoulou, Sofia (2017). Changing the policy agenda? The impact of the Golden Dawn on Greek party politics.
  • Hamid, Sadek (2017). Young, Muslim and British: between rhetoric and realities.
  • Hammal (2017). Book review: ethnography at the frontier: space, memory, and society in Southern Balochistan by Ugo E.M. Fabietti.
  • Hammarfelt, Björn, de Rijcke, Sarah, Rushforth, Alex, Wallenburg, Iris, Bal, Roland (2017). Advancing to the next level: the quantified self and the gamification of academic research through social networks.
  • Hammershøj, Lars Geer (2017). There’s no innovation without anger (think Lars von Trier and Steve Jobs).
  • Hammersley, John (2017). Real-time data on global collaboration networks can support new research and create further connections.
  • Hampton, James (2017). Book review: diploma democracy: the rise of political meritocracy by Mark Bovens and Anchrit Wille.
  • Han, Yao (2017). Book review: breaking the WTO: how emerging powers disrupted the neoliberal project by Kristen Hopewell.
  • Han, Yao (2017). Book review: unlikely partners: Chinese reformers, Western economists and the making of global China by Julian Gewirtz. picture_as_pdf
  • Hanley, Seán (2017). Czech election preview: is Andrej Babiš heading for a Pyrrhic victory?
  • Hannah, A. Lee, Mallinson, Daniel J. (2017). Uncooperative federal government has led to innovation on marijuana policy in more liberal, less religious states.
  • Harrison, James, Richardson, Ben, Campling, Liam, Smith, Adrian, Barbu, Mirela (2017). Workers’ rights are now a basic element of trade deals. What stance will Britain take?
  • Harrison, Roy M. (2017). Air quality at risk: Brexit and lobbying from member states could stall progress on reducing pollution.
  • Harter, Nathan (2017). Looking for leadership guidance in classic philosophy.
  • Hartley, Dilys (2017). Statelessness and the Syrian conflict.
  • Hartley, James, Cabanac, Guilaume (2017). Why has submitting a manuscript to a journal become so difficult? A call to simplify an overly complicated process.
  • Harvey, Malcolm (2017). Audit 2017: how democratic are the central institutions of devolved government in Scotland?
  • Harvey, Malcolm (2017). Scots are not becoming more conservative: three factors behind the Tory 'revival' in North East Scotland.
  • Hassan, Gary (2017). Independence in the Age of Disruption: questions for Scotland's main parties.
  • Hassan Manazir, Sharique (2017). Union Budget 2017-18: leading India towards a digital economy.
  • Hatch, Mary Jo, Schultz, Majken (2017). How a beer found success with an authentic use of history.
  • Hatfield, Polly (2017). Extreme weather events in the Caribbean call for a rethink of how Official Development Assistance is allocated.
  • Hawes, Daniel (2017). White, middle-class social capital helps to incarcerate African-Americans in racially diverse states.
  • Hayes, Aneta (2017). The UK’s Teaching Excellence Framework does not foster the inclusion of international students as equals.
  • Hayes, Matthew, Hibbing, Matthew (2017). Satisfaction with public policy decisions is dependent on the racial composition of decision-makers, not only on the decisions themselves.
  • Hayes, Nathan (2017). Public-Private Partnerships in Emerging Markets.
  • Hayes, Nathan (2017). The impact of China’s one belt one road initiative on developing countries.
  • Hayes, Thomas, Scruggs, Lyle (2017). How increasing wealth concentration and inequality leads to less generous state welfare policies.
  • Haynes, Nell (2017). Bridging time between home and the mine: parenting through social media in northern Chile.
  • Hayton, Richard (2017). A fundamentally Conservative document: what have we learnt from May’s manifesto?
  • Hayward, Katy (2017). The Irish border is not a technical issue but a political one.
  • Hayward, Katy (2017). A hard Irish border is quite possible, a frictionless one is an oxymoron.
  • Hayward, Katy (2017). A hard Irish border is quite possible, a frictionless one is an oxymoron.
  • Hayward, Katy, Phinnemore, David (2017). This Brexit juncture is a critical moment for the Good Friday Agreement.
  • He, Sylvia (2017). Better schools lead to higher house prices, which can price out lower income families.
  • Heasman, Brett (2017). Employers may discriminate against autism without realising.
  • Heath, Oliver, Goodwin, Matthew (2017). Why Theresa May's gamble at the polls failed.
  • Heaton-Harris, Chris (2017). A happy Brexit? We should rather brace ourselves for a dramatic change in our democratic freedom - for the worse.
  • Heere, Cees (2017). Japanese Immigration and the Dark Prehistory of Donald Trump’s Muslim Ban.
  • Heersmink, Richard (2017). Claims that the Internet damages our memory and cognition may be unfounded.
  • Heffernan, Anne (2017). Book Review – Pioneers of the Field: South Africa’s Women Anthropologists by Andrew Bank.
  • Helen, Kara (2017). Reading List: 8 Books on Indigenous Research Methods recommended by Helen Kara.
  • Henaghan, Caroline (2017). Book review: in search of criminal responsibility: ideas, interests and institutions by Nicola Lacey.
  • Henaghan, Caroline (2017). International Women’s Day (#IWD2017) book review: the persistence of gender inequality by Mary Evans.
  • Henderson, Alisa (2017). Which referendum exactly will GE 2017 be about in Scotland?
  • Hendrick, Carl (2017). Why students should not be taught general critical-thinking skills.
  • Hennekam, Sophie, Bennett, Dawn (2017). Sexual harassment in the creative industries.
  • Hennig, Alicia (2017). How Daoism can make a difference in business.
  • Henwood, Melanie (2017). The Conservative manifesto and social care: policy-making on the hoof.
  • Henwood, Melanie (2017). NHS Continuing Healthcare funding: anomalous, irregular, and often baffling.
  • Henwood, Melanie (2017). The UK’s problem with long-term care: short-term thinking.
  • Herbeć, Aleksandra (2017). The scandal of CSI, the little-known loophole used to deny EU citizens permanent residency.
  • Herman, Lise (2017). Europhiles should temper their enthusiasm about Macron’s win.
  • Herndon, Jay (2017). Equality, one stitch at a time.
  • Herndon, Jay (2017). The case for profit: entrepreneurial approaches to addressing India's agrarian crisis.
  • Hick, Rod (2017). The Troika gave Ireland more autonomy over social security cuts than is commonly recognised.
  • Hickson, Kevin, Williams, Ben (2017). Why John Major’s premiership deserves more credit than it is usually given.
  • Hidalgo, Javier (2017). The ethics of New Zealand selling citizenship to tech investor Peter Thiel.
  • Hill, Ginny (2017). Yemen’s urban–rural divide and the ultra localisation of the Civil War.
  • Hillier-Broadley, Meghann, Blore, Francis (2017). Materiality of research: without end: documents of research by Meghann Hillier-Broadley and Francis Blore.
  • Hills, John (2017). Our lives keep on changing – yet the welfare myth of “them” and “us” persists.
  • Hind, Katie (2017). Grenfell Tower: why aren't more women covering big news stories?
  • Hix, Simon, Kaufmann, Eric, Leeper, Thomas J. (2017). UK voters, including Leavers, care more about reducing non-EU than EU migration.
  • Hlaak, Hussam (2017). Hussam Hlaak: ‘Tech companies need to know who their clients are’.
  • Hobbs, Renee (2017). Creating the future of digital learning in the US.
  • Hochstetler, Kathy (2017). Does the Brazilian presidential system shape environmental policy there?
  • Hockley, Tony (2017). What the 2017 Conservative manifesto should say about the NHS.
  • Hockley, Tony (2017). The manifestos on the NHS: sticking plasters for health and social care.
  • Hodgkin, Adam (2017). Book review: critical theory of communication: new readings of Lukacs, Adorno, Marcuse, Honneth and Habermas in the age of the internet by Christian Fuchs.
  • Hodgson, Geoffrey M. (2017). Globalisation won’t do away with variations in capitalism.
  • Hoerner, Julian (2017). The Brexit talks have started, but have the French and British elections changed the tone?
  • Hoerner, Julian (2017). Significant concessions to the UK in any Brexit deal are increasingly unlikely.
  • Hoerner, Julian, Hobolt, Sara (2017). The AfD succeeded in the German election by mobilising non-voters on the right.
  • Hogwood, Patricia (2017). German election reaction: Merkel wins, but her fourth term won't be an easy one.
  • Holcombe, Alex, Wilson, Mark C. (2017). Fair open access: returning control of scholarly journals to their communities.
  • Holland, Emily, Aron, Hadas (2017). The ‘Trump Dossier’ is aimed at taking down American democracy, not Donald Trump.
  • Holland, Stephen P., Mansur, Erin T., Muller, Nicholas Z., Yates, Andrew J. (2017). Why electric cars aren’t always environmentally sound.
  • Holman, Daniel, Lynch, Rebecca, Reeves, Aaron (2017). The impact of social sciences on health behaviour interventions has diminished – more interdisciplinary, culture-focused research is needed.
  • Holmberg, Pär (2017). Six practical actions for organisations to achieve gender balance.
  • Holmberg, Pär (2017). A minor change in market trading rules could save taxpayers billions of dollars.
  • Holmes, Bev J. (2017). On the co-production of research: why we should say what we mean, mean what we say, and learn as we go.
  • Holmwood, John, Eve, Martin (2017). Five minutes with John Holmwood and Martin Eve – discussing the future of academic publishing.
  • Holroyd, Alexandre (2017). Alexandre Holroyd: “Macron’s Presidency will not have a huge impact on Brexit per se, but on the future of the EU”.
  • Holt, Alison (2017). The big data revolution: embrace it but proceed with caution.
  • Holyoke, Thomas T., LaPira, Timothy M. (2017). Lobbying is growing in the US - more information may be the best regulation.
  • Hossain, Naomi, Campion, Sonali (2017). “If you don’t have food security what development can you have?” – Naomi Hossain.
  • Howard, Stephen (2017). Book review: Socrates tenured: the institutions of 21st-century philosophy by Robert Frodeman and Adam Briggle.
  • Hoxhaj, Andi (2017). Albania’s election: a country in need of a new political narrative as it aims to open EU accession talks.
  • Hoyos, Maria (2017). Business and truth telling: the bittersweet case of the Colombian peace process.
  • Hudson, Bob (2017). Inside the ‘new NHS’: where are the citizens?
  • Huff, Connor, Kertzer, Joshua D. (2017). People are more likely to describe a violent event as terrorism if the perpetrator is Muslim and has policy goals.
  • Hug, Sven E., Brändle, Martin P. (2017). Microsoft Academic is on the verge of becoming a bibliometric superpower.
  • Hunt, Jo (2017). When EU laws are repatriated, will all the power go to Westminster?
  • Hunter, David J (2017). Is a ‘strong leader’ really what the country needs?
  • Hurley, Gail (2017). Building back better in the Caribbean requires supportive international finance.
  • Hurley, Gail (2017). Cuba’s strong tradition of medical internationalism looks set to continue despite upheaval in the Americas.
  • Hurrell, Scott A., Scholarios, Dora, Richardson, James (2017). Employers beware: Generation Y loves social media, but to a point.
  • Huws, Ursula (2017). Future of work: taking the blinkers off to see new possibilities.
  • Huxley, Gervas, Peacey, Mike (2017). Do UK universities collude in ways that inhibit genuine competition?
  • Hwang, Gina (2017). Greetings from Gina, Chair of the MPA Student Association!
  • Hänska, Max (2017). Against Anti-Pluralism.
  • Hänska, Max, Bauchowitz, Stefan (2017). How the General Election 2017 Campaign is shaping up on Twitter.
  • Hänska, Max, Siddiqui, Afzal S. (2017). The Economics of Brexit needn’t be quixotic: Towards a green industrial strategy for Britain.
  • Hölsgens, Sander (2017). Book review: after uniqueness: a history of film and video art in circulation by Erika Balsom.
  • Hölsgens, Sander (2017). Book review: anthropology of the arts edited by Gretchen Bakke and Marina Peterson.
  • Hölsgens, Sander (2017). Book review: cloud and molecular aesthetics by Lanfranco Aceti.
  • Hüttl, Pia (2017). Inflation is back.
  • Ibreck, Rachel, de Waal, Alex (2017). Ending impunity in South Sudan.
  • Ieng Tak Lou, Loretta (2017). Book review: the anthropology of China: China as ethnographic and theoretical critique by Charlotte Bruckermann and Stephan Feuchtwang.
  • Inckle, Kay (2017). National self-injury awareness day: social justice, user-led interventions and challenging stigma.
  • Indulska, Marta, Sadiq, Shazia (2017). In order to fully realise the value of open data researchers must first address the quality of the datasets.
  • Innes, Abby (2017). The economy and the Conservative manifesto: economic imagination in a time warp.
  • Innes, Abby (2017). The political economy of the Conservative Manifesto: a hallucinatory celebration of the state.
  • InternationalDevelopment@LSE (2017). Being Bold for Change on International Women’s Day 2017.
  • Iob, Elizabeth (2017). Book review: paper tiger: law, bureaucracy and the developmental state in Himalayan India by Nayanika Mathur.
  • Ioncică, Diana-Eugenia, Petrescu, Eva-Cristina (2017). Slow economics: shifting the focus to sustainability and quality of life.
  • Iro, Konstantinou (2017). Apathy or lack of civic education? Why young people don’t vote.
  • Irving, James (2017). Catalonia's declaration of independence: what comes next?
  • Irving, Lucy (2017). Park life: Aldgate parks a public space for all the people? Lucy Irving.
  • Irving Jackson, Pamela, Doerschler, Peter (2017). Multiculturalism is unpopular with the majority – even though it makes for happier societies.
  • Irving Jackson, Pamela, Doerschler, Peter (2017). Multiculturalism is unpopular with the majority – even though it makes for happier societies.
  • Islam, Mohammad Tarikul (2017). How can Bangladesh utilise human security for rural development?
  • Islam, Mohammad Tarikul (2017). Understanding the effectiveness of Union Parishad standing committee: a perspective on Bangladesh. picture_as_pdf
  • Ivanova, Katya (2017). It's all relatives: the trouble with post-Brexit family reunification plans.
  • Ivanova, Katya, Turculet, Georgiana (2017). Breaking up families is easy to do: family reunification post-Brexit.
  • Izci, Burku, Yalcin, Yasin, Bahcekapili, Tugba, Jones, Ithel (2017). Seeking high-quality digital content for children in Turkey.
  • Jackson-Preece, Jennifer (2017). Britain risks securitising its future relationship with the EU.
  • Jagger, Carol (2017). Living longer, but with more care needs: late-life dependency and the social care crisis.
  • Jahangir, Rukhsana (2017). Whitechapel field trip report by Rukhsana Jahangir.
  • Jain, Mahima A. (2017). "We have some critical national security interests, and you have to be respectful of those interests" - General Haq.
  • James, Toby, Rennard, Chris, Dell, Josh (2017). Now they’re on a roll: how to get the missing millions onto the electoral register.
  • James, Toby, Rennard, Chris, Dell, Josh (2017). Too late for GE2017 – but now universities will have to play a role in registering students to vote.
  • James, Weinberg (2017). What do we mean by the “political class” – and are they all the same?
  • Jancic, Davor (2017). Why the European Court of Justice isn’t going away.
  • Jarman, Alex (2017). Austria focuses on the short term, Germany the long term, in responding to populism.
  • Jarvis, James (2017). Cybersecurity is the defining business challenge of the 21st century.
  • Jarvis, Lee (2017). What can the UK learn from President Trump’s travel ban?
  • Jay, Zoë (2017). Why Britain (usually) obeys the European Court of Human Rights.
  • Jay, Zoë (2017). The reluctant role model: why Britain (usually) obeys the European Court of Human Rights.
  • Jeffrey, David (2017). It was Thatcher wot lost it – or was it? Conservative electoral decline in Liverpool since 1945.
  • Jenkins, Willis (2017). Trump, climate change and white US Evangelicalism.
  • Jennifer, Jackson-Preece (2017). Divorce doesn't have to be bloody difficult.
  • Jessop, David (2017). Caribbean 'Citizenship by Investment' is becoming a dangerous race to the bottom.
  • Jessop, David (2017). The future of Caribbean sugar will depend on the region's capacity for cooperation.
  • Jhutti-Johal, Jagbir (2017). Research on the Sikh community in the UK is essential to better inform policy, but surveys must be improved.
  • Johnson, Craig (2017). How Wales is understood in the UK is a problem – strengthening Welsh media is part of the solution.
  • Johnson, David V (2017). A democracy deficit plagues the US and the European Union.
  • Johnson, Michael (2017). Unpicking the “no deal is better than a bad deal” mantra: what would a ‘bad deal’ look like?
  • Johnson, Michael (2017). Unpicking ‘no deal is better than a bad deal’: not just meaningless, but unhelpful.
  • Johnson, Richard (2017). Cross-party agreement on the Brexit process is a triumph for the British left.
  • Johnson, Stefanie K. (2017). The effects of good looks on professional success: It’s complicated.
  • Johnston, Ron (2017). The long read: the working class hasn’t gone away by Ron Johnston.
  • Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles, Rossiter, David (2017). How UKIP’s election strategy is boosting Theresa May’s chances of a big majority.
  • Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles, Rossiter, David (2017). The case of the missing marginals: how big will May’s majority be?
  • Jokela, Juha (2017). Losing an ally in the EU: the view on Brexit from Finland.
  • Jonathan, Wadsworth (2017). Post-Brexit work visa quotas on EU nationals are likely to favour graduates.
  • Jones, Angharad (2017). From high street retailer to provider of community eyecare? The future of the optical professions.
  • Jones, Ed (2017). Book Review: Anthropologists in the Stock Exchange: A Financial History of Victorian Science by Marc Flandreau.
  • Jones, Ed (2017). Book review: anthropologists in the stock exchange: a financial history of Victorian science by Marc Flandreau.
  • Jones, Ed (2017). Book review: blood and faith: the purging of Muslim Spain, 1492-1614 by Matthew Carr.
  • Jones, Ed (2017). Book review: duress: imperial durabilities in our times by Ann Laura Stoler.
  • Jones, Ed (2017). Book review: the Chinese typewriter: a history by Thomas S. Mullaney.
  • Jones, Ed (2017). Long read review: the impossible grammar of civil war by Ed Jones.
  • Jones, Lee (2017). The Mail's 'Brexit bias' witch-hunt is wrong, but raises uncomfortable home truths.
  • Jones, Stephanie Olivia Penney (2017). Book review: participation and non-participation in student activism: paths and barriers to mobilising young people for political action by Alexander Hensby.
  • Jordan, Jennifer (2017). The materiality of research: towards a sociology of plants by Jennifer Jordan.
  • Juan Pablo, Vazquez Sampere (2017). If Trump’s ‘America First’ takes hold, expect disruptive innovation.
  • Judd, Gleason (2017). Taking unilateral action can improve a president's re-election chances, but it may not be good for the country.
  • Juliano, Hansley A. (2017). Book review: global poverty: deprivation, distribution and development since the Cold War by Andy Sumner.
  • Juma, Linet (2017). Book Review: Perspectives on Uganda – Reflections of an ODI Fellow by Prajakta Kharkar Nigam.
  • Jäschke, Robert, Linek, Stephanie B., Hoffmann, Christian P. (2017). New media, familiar dynamics: academic hierarchies influence academics' following behaviour on Twitter.
  • Kabeer, Naila, Santos, Ricardo (2017). Could Brazil's success in tackling intersecting inequalities be a model for the rest of the world?
  • Kabeer, Naila, Santos, Ricardo (2017). Pode o sucesso do Brasil na resposta à intersec\cão de desigualdades ser um modelo para o resto do mundo?
  • Kakar, Asmat (2017). Local government and Pakistan’s reluctant political elite.
  • Kalaf-Hughes, Nicole, Kear, Andrew (2017). Republicans will vote against fracking - if the issue is framed the right way.
  • Kallestrup, Jesper (2017). Who knows?
  • Kalpokas, Ignas (2017). Book review: the mediated construction of reality by Nick Couldry and Andreas Hepp.
  • Kane, Kevin (2017). In Los Angeles, the geography of where people work has been experiencing rapid change.
  • Kannabiran, Kalpana, Bowers, Rebecca (2017). “I don’t see what is happening within universities as separate from what is happening in the political arena” – Kalpana Kannabiran.
  • Kantack, Benjamin (2017). In New York, minor-party candidates win elections all the time – because they’re also major-party candidates.
  • Kao, M. Bob (2017). Book review: the myth of the litigious society: why we don’t sue by David M. Engel.
  • Kassimeris, George (2017). Boris Johnson has demonstrated a capacity for scheming that Machiavelli would have applauded.
  • Kassimeris, George (2017). The London attack traumatised all of us living in the UK, but we must not allow it to poison and divide us.
  • Kassimeris, George (2017). What does Trump’s war on the media mean for the future of political journalism?
  • Kassimeris, George (2017). What monsters like General Mladić can teach us about human conflict.
  • Kato, Daniel (2017). Political philosophy suggests that Trump will either double down on his behavior or eventually give in to institutional opposition.
  • Katsuva, Masika (2017). “They think when they’re raped their lives are shattered. But we’d like them to know that it’s not the end of the world.” – Masika Katsuva.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2017). Interview with Eric Kaufmann: cultural values and the rise of right-wing populism in the West.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2017). Interview with Eric Kaufmann: cultural values and the rise of right-wing populism in the West.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2017). Is tribalism racist? Antiracism norms and immigration.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2017). Why Trump’s Wall is not racist, the Muslim ban is, and why the difference matters.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2017). Why the fear of Islamization is driving populist right support – and what to do about it.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2017). Why the fear of Islamization is driving populist right support, and what to do about it.
  • Kaufmann, Eric, Klass, Brian (2017). The Ballpark podcast Episode 2.1: populism and the new political spectrum.
  • Kaye, Simon, Chin, Clayton (2017). Donald Trump’s use of post-truth double-think politics is a threat to liberal democratic norms.
  • Kearns, Oliver (2017). Public “traces” of drone strikes are reshaping what it means to witness warfare.
  • Keating, Avril (2017). What young Britons really think about Brexit and their prospects outside the EU.
  • Keating, Michael (2017). The lesson from Catalonia: we need better principles on who has the right to self-determination and how.
  • Keating, Vincent Charles, Thrandardottir, Erla (2017). Challenging the accountability agenda: what increases an NGO’s trustworthiness?
  • Keeves, Gareth, Westphal, James, McDonald, Michael (2017). Office politics: When managers flatter the CEO, but undermine him with journalists.
  • Kendall, Chris (2017). Going it alone on trade is like bringing a chocolate spoon to a knife fight.
  • Kenealy, Daniel, MacLennan, Stuart (2017). Sturgeon’s case for Indyref2 is a shaky one.
  • Kennedy, Paul (2017). Dialogue of the deaf? How Catalonia and Spain can be brought back from the brink.
  • Kenny, Michael (2017). After Brexit: the English question surfaces?
  • Kenway, Peter, Corry, Dan (2017). Post-Brexit Industrial Strategy: a curious complacency hovers over the General Election.
  • Kenway, Peter, Corry, Dan, Barwick, Steve (2017). Not left behind? Five questions that need answering before the Copeland and Stoke by-elections.
  • Kettell, Steven (2017). A secularist response to CORAB: recommendations at odds with the realities of twenty-first century life in Britain.
  • Kettler, Jaclyn J. (2017). How Democrats can build on their 2017 victories to win in 2018.
  • Khan, Danish (2017). Beyond corruption: re-conceptualising the political economy of Pakistan.
  • Khan, Saad, Adeel, Muhammad (2017). The curious case of urban population in Pakistan.
  • Khanom, Ayesha, Islam, Shakhwatul (2017). Addressing the migrant skills gap in Bangladesh through mobile and e-learning solutions.
  • Khosla, Madhav, Spalding, Alexander (2017). “The great tragedy in India today is that there is little political will to do away with conservative laws” – Madhav Khosla.
  • Kickert, Conrad, vom Hofe, Rainer (2017). On both sides of the Atlantic, downtown shops need to stick together to survive.
  • Kidambi, Prashant, Campion, Sonali (2017). “The theoretical possibility of equality on the cricket field was a radical idea in a colonised, hierarchical and deeply divided society” – Prashant Kidambi.
  • Kienzle, Benjamin, von Weitershausen, Inez (2017). Brexit has given an impetus to reshape Europe’s foreign, security and defence policies.
  • Killick, Anna (2017). Education or knowledge? We need to rethink how we measure people's understanding of politics.
  • Killock, Jim (2017). The Law Commission’s dangerous proposals would turn whistleblowers and journalists into ‘spies’.
  • Kim, Sung Eun, Margalit, Yotam (2017). Unions don’t just channel the political preferences of their workers, they influence them as well.
  • Kincaid, John (2017). The symbolic politics behind why sane people vote for (seemingly) insane things.
  • King, Russell (2017). ‘What have I done to deserve this?’ The aftershocks of Brexit for London’s EU migrants.
  • King, William (2017). A brief history of chemical warfare: from Sparta to Syria.
  • Kingman, David (2017). Generation Brexit: a chance for Millennials to have their say on Brexit.
  • Kingston, Thomas (2017). Book review: generation HK: seeking identity in China's shadow by Ben Bland.
  • Kirchmaier, Thomas, de Gauna de Santiago, Nerea Ruiz (2017). Data on electricity demand shows a slowdown in manufacturing post-Brexit.
  • Kirilenko, Andrei, Kyle, Albert, Samadi, Mehrdad, Tuzun, Tugkan (2017). ‘Flash Crash’: The first market crash in the era of algorithms and automated trading.
  • Kirkland, Christopher (2017). Britain in crisis: how societal divisions exist in the formation and resolution of crises.
  • Kirkpatrick, L. Owen (2017). Donald Trump is poised to do great harm to US cities (but not for the reasons you might think).
  • Klasnja, Marko (2017). Voters’ ignorance means that many corrupt politicians get to stay in office.
  • Klein, Martin, Van de Sompel, Herbert (2017). Content referenced in scholarly articles is drifting, with negative effects on the integrity of the scholarly record.
  • Klein, Menachem (2017). Book review: enemies and neighbours: Arabs and Jews in Palestine and Israel, 1917-2017 by Ian Black.
  • Klinger, Jochen (2017). Brexit may herald a serious threat to Germany: its negotiating position will reflect that.
  • Knott, Judith (2017). Autumn 2017 Budget: a predictable one for business taxes.
  • Knott, Judith (2017). What might we expect for business taxes in the Autumn Budget?
  • Kochanova, Anna, Hasnain, Zahid, Larson, Bradley (2017). E-government can be good for business.
  • Koehn, Daryl (2017). How beneficial are benefit corporations?
  • Koh, Sin Yee (2017). Book review: capital without borders: wealth managers and the one percent by Brooke Harrington.
  • Koh, Sin Yee (2017). Book review: platform capitalism by Nick Srnicek.
  • Kohler, Wilhlem, Müller, Gernot (2017). Brexit, the four freedoms and the indivisibility dogma.
  • Kolpinskaya, Ekaterina, Fox, Stuart (2017). To Brussels via Rome: how Eurosceptical are British Christians?
  • Koning, Ashley (2017). Fatigued by Trump-era national politics, New Jerseyans have mostly tuned out of a crucial gubernatorial election.
  • Kostanyan, Hrant, Barslund, Mikkel (2017). Will Trump matter for the EU’s policy priorities?
  • Kostovicova, Denisa (2017). For whom does justice work? The Mladić verdict and prospects for reconciliation in the Balkans.
  • Kovac, Matthew (2017). Book review: gender and the Great War edited by Susan R. Grayzel and Tammy M. Proctor.
  • Kranz, Maciej (2017). Industrial applications are the juicy part of the Internet of Things.
  • Krasniqi, Yllka (2017). The heart of volunteering is to create a positive impact on society.
  • Krauss, Alexander (2017). The limits of overly simplistic theory in textbook economics: the case of child labour.
  • Krawczyk, Michał (2017). Female scientists are considerably more likely to be mistakenly cited as if they were males than vice versa.
  • Krishna, Ananye (2017). Aadhaar and the mid day meal scheme: a denial of basic rights.
  • Krishna, Ananye (2017). Violence against doctors: a subtle violation of human rights.
  • Kucirkova, Natalia (2017). Supporting and developing parents’ strategies for children’s use of digital media at home.
  • Kucirkova, Natalia, Flewitt, Rosie (2017). Call for regulation on securing children’s data in personalised reading.
  • Kumar, Nagothu Naresh (2017). Book review: the new sectarianism: the Arab uprisings and the rebirth of the Shi’a-Sunni divide by Geneive Abdo.
  • Kumar Jha, Mithilesh (2017). Book review: performing politics: media interviews, debates and press conferences by Geoffrey Craig.
  • Kurian, Trishna (2017). What can you learn from an undergraduate research internship?
  • Kuronen, Tuomas (2017). Why do unethical leaders thrive, despite all talk to the contrary?
  • König, Pascal D. (2017). How the Eurosceptics brought down David Cameron: a serious case of supplier lock-in.
  • LSE, Psychology (2017). PBS present at internal launch of new global health initiative research platform.
  • LSE, Researching Sociology (2017). Self-care for students.
  • LSE, Team (2017). Calling all British Politics and Policy at LSE contributors – we need your help!
  • Laborde, Cécile (2017). Is the liberal state secular? How much state-religion separation is necessary to secure liberal-democratic ideals.
  • Laboure, Marion, Braunstein, Jürgen (2017). The gaps of nations & the rise of far-right populism.
  • Lacatus, Corina (2017). Is Romania at risk of backsliding over corruption and the rule of law?
  • Lackner, Helen (2017). Yemen’s rural population: Ignored in an already-forgotten war.
  • Lahtinen, Hannu, Hiilamo, Heikki, Wass, Hanna (2017). If your parents didn’t vote, chances are you won’t either – unless you move up the social ladder.
  • Laker, Ben (2017). Four communication lessons we learn from Casey Affleck’s Oscar speech.
  • Lam, Chelsea (2017). Applying blockchain technology to online reviews.
  • Lam, Rico (2017). How leaders can enable employees to voice more and quit less.
  • Lambe, Lucy (2017). Academic Book Week 2017 at LSE Library.
  • Lambe, Lucy (2017). Feature: academic book week 2017 at LSE Library.
  • Lamborn, Chase C., Smith, Jordan W. (2017). Asking for a fee - even a small one - changes the way people use the outdoors, especially for those with low incomes.
  • Lampadarios, Evripidis, Kyriakidou, Niki, Smith, Gordon (2017). Developing a new framework for small business success.
  • Lamrani, Myriam (2017). Book review: a persistent revolution: history, nationalism and politics in Mexico since 1968 by Randal Sheppard.
  • Lane, Joe (2017). Book review: the financial diaries: how American families cope in a world of uncertainty by Jonathan Morduch and Rachel Schneider.
  • Langan, Steve (2017). Despite major cyberattacks, businesses have been slow to react.
  • Langevin, Mark (2017). The Temer government in Brazil lacks the legitimacy required to reform its way back to recovery.
  • Langevin, Mark S. (2017). Book review: aspirational power: Brazil on the long road to global influence by David R. Mares and Harold A. Trinkunas.
  • Langevin, Mark S. (2017). Brazil's crisis of political legitimacy has opened the door to rant-and-rave populist Jair Bolsonaro.
  • Langevin, Mark S. (2017). Brazilian foreign policy in the Trump era: a chance as much as a challenge.
  • Laniray, Pierre, de Vaujany, François-Xavier, Vitaud, Laetitia (2017). Employees v. entrepreneurs: Have the two categories become irrelevant?
  • Lapuente, Victor (2017). What will happen to Catalans after 1 October?
  • Lardier Jr., David T., Herr, Kathryn G., Barrios, Veronica R., Garcia-Reid, Pauline, Reid, Robert J. (2017). The American Dream eludes many urban youth of color. And they think it's their own fault.
  • Latner, Michael, McGann, Anthony, Smith, Charles Anthony, Keena, Alex (2017). The Supreme Court's quiet gerrymandering revolution and the road to minority rule.
  • Lau, Richard, Andersen, David, Ditonto, Tessa, Kleinberg, Mona, Redlawsk, David (2017). How negative ads from diverse right-wing media makes conservative voters dislike Democratic candidates even more.
  • Lawlor, Andrea, Crandall, Erin (2017). Canada and the UK can learn from one another in how to regulate money in politics.
  • Lea, Ruth (2017). Post-Brexit trade can thrive under WTO rules.
  • Leahey, Erin (2017). Interdisciplinary research may lead to increased visibility but also depresses scholarly productivity.
  • Ledger, Robert (2017). Book review: John Major: an unsuccessful Prime Minister? Reappraising John Major edited by Kevin Hickson and Ben Williams.
  • Ledger, Robert (2017). Book review: how to stop Brexit (and make Britain great again) - Nick Clegg.
  • Ledger, Robert (2017). Book review: how to stop Brexit (and make Britain great again) by Nick Clegg.
  • Ledger, Robert (2017). Book review: the despot’s accomplice: how the West is aiding and abetting the decline of democracy by Brian Klaas.
  • Lee, Emmanuel (2017). Policymaking must become more empathetic rather than continuing its current overreliance on economic measures.
  • Lee, Lois (2017). What of nonreligion in the public sphere?
  • Lee, Michael (2017). Do economists change the financial system, or does the financial system change economists?
  • Lee, TN (2017). Traditional firms are opening up to blockchain and its decentralised apps.
  • Lee, Wonhyung (2017). In neighborhoods that struggle economically, supporting community cohesion is key to the formation of Business Improvement Districts.
  • Lee, Wooyoung (2017). London’s segregated neighbourhoods by Wooyoung Lee.
  • Leeper, Thomas J., Oliver, Tim, Schmieding, Holger, Hayward, Katy, Dennison, James (2017). Disappointment all round: experts respond to the Florence speech.
  • Lees, David (2017). We haven’t heard the last of the Le Pens.
  • Lehman, Karsten (2017). On the complex relationship between the religious and the secular – proposing the notion of sedimentation.
  • Leonard, Meghan E. (2017). Despite Trump’s attempts to delegitimize them, the Courts are checking executive power exactly as they should.
  • Lequesne, Christian (2017). Macron demonstrates that liberalism is still alive and well in Europe.
  • Leskanich, Alexandre (2017). Book review: the great derangement: climate change and the unthinkable by Amitav Ghosh.
  • Leslie, Patrick, Taflaga, Maria (2017). Marriage from hell: what can Australia’s coalition tell us about the Tory-DUP government?
  • Leston-Bandeira, Cristina (2017). What is the point of petitions in British politics?
  • Lewallen, Jonathan (2017). Why Congressional Republicans may come to regret moving so quickly with their Obamacare repeal and replacement bill.
  • Lewanika, McDonald (2017). How Zimbabwe can embrace the future of work.
  • Lewin, Sian (2017). A latecomer to political protest.
  • Lewis, Jenny M. (2017). Barriers to research collaboration: are social scientists constrained by their desire for autonomy?
  • Lewis, Joanna (2017). Book review: ivory: power and poaching in Africa by KeithSomerville.
  • Lien, Hung-Ya (2017). The best bookshops in Fukuoka, Japan.
  • Lima, Valesca (2017). Brexit threatens UK-Latin America cooperation in higher education, but both sides can help to ensure it continues.
  • Lindebaum, Dirk (2017). Emancipating ourselves from emotional repression at work.
  • Lingelbach, Jochen (2017). Book review- Nation on Board: Becoming Nigerian at Sea by Lynn Schler.
  • Lisi, Marco (2017). There is no alternative, or is there? The historic experiment of the left-wing government in Portugal.
  • Lisi, Marco (2017). The first post-crisis elections in Portugal? The implications of the socialist victory in the 2017 local elections.
  • Little, Ben, Winch, Alison (2017). Why the idea of 'generation' needs to be articulated more carefully in politics.
  • Liu, Helena (2017). The media play a role in deciding who is an authentic leader.
  • Liu, Laurin (2017). “Protecting the nation from foreign terrorist entry” and other bogeymen: is Trump’s populism compatible with the rule of law?
  • Liu, Rebecca (2017). Book Review: The Financial Imaginary: Economic Mystification and the Limits of Realist Fiction by Alison Shonkwiler.
  • Liu, Zhongzhi, Prajogo, Daniel, Oke, Adegoke (2017). Why do supply chain technologies sometimes fail to improve a firm’s performance?
  • Livermore, Michael A., Rockmore, Daniel (2017). Changes to the appointment process could fix the Supreme Court.
  • Livingstone, Sonia, Ólafsson, Kjartan, Maier, George (2017). A complex web of factors influence children's commercial media literacy.
  • Loader, Reina-Marie (2017). Book review: the environmental documentary: cinema activism in the 21st century by John A. Duval.
  • Loffman, Reuben (2017). In the shadow of the 'Great Helmsman': Mobutu Sese Seko's life and legacy in the DR Congo.
  • Lombard, Daniel (2017). Direct payments in residential care.
  • Lombardi, Michele, Miyagishima, Kaname, Veneziani, Roberto (2017). The contradiction of classical liberalism and libertarianism.
  • Longden, Vanessa (2017). Book review: the militant muse: love, war and the women of surrealism by Whitney Chadwick.
  • Longlands, Sarah (2017). Taking back control post-Brexit isn't about redesigning the democratic system.
  • Longlands, Sarah (2017). Taking back control – one year on. But control of what?
  • Lorimer, Marta (2017). The Amazing Race: tracking the twists and turns in France’s presidential election.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2017). En Marche? Who is Emmanuel Macron and why he stands a chance to win the French presidency.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2017). The French legislative election: outlook for the first round on 11 June.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2017). I'm not British - why should I care about Brexit?
  • Lorimer, Marta (2017). Macron has won the presidency – now he must turn his attention to the ‘third round’ in June.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2017). Where does Florian Philippot's resignation leave the Front National?
  • Louwerse, Tom (2017). The 2017 Netherlands election: polls suggest mid-sized parties are now the new norm in Dutch politics.
  • Loveday, Barry (2017). The worrying state of policing in England and Wales after seven years of austerity.
  • Low, Adrian (2017). In some respects the Brexit referendum was a violation of human rights.
  • Low, Adrian (2017). In some respects the Brexit referendum was a violation of human rights.
  • Lowery, Patrick (2017). How negative stereotypes about poor black youth may be leading to stiffer juvenile court sanctions.
  • Ludlow, N. Piers (2017). Hopes of a softer Brexit are probably in vain – though I’d love to be proved wrong.
  • Ludlow, N. Piers (2017). 'Swallow the lot, and swallow it now': Britain is, and was, deluded about its negotiating power with the EU.
  • Lundin, Emma (2017). Book review: a woman's work by Harriet Harman.
  • Lup, Daniela (2017). Job satisfaction differs between men and women after they're promoted to managers.
  • Lupton, Deborah (2017). “Remember a condition of academic writing is that we expose ourselves to critique” – 15 steps to revising journal articles.
  • Lyamlahy, Khalid (2017). Moroccan Francophone literature in translation: Abdellatif Laâbi’s in praise of defeat & Abdelkebir Khatibi’s tattooed memory.
  • Lymperopoulou, Kitty, Finney, Nissa (2017). Who, where and what should be the focus of addressing deprivation and ethnic inequality to promote integration?
  • Lynch, Michael S., Bright, Chelsie L.M. (2017). How advertising campaigns can help to mitigate the negative effects of voter ID laws on turnout.
  • López Solé, Marta (2017). Book review: on extremism and democracy in Europe by Cas Mudde.
  • Lützow-Holm Myrstad, Finn (2017). When your eyes betray you: is virtual reality too close for comfort?
  • Macchiarelli, Corrado, Monti, Mara, Vedolin, Andrea (2017). Assessing the impact of the ECB's Corporate Sector Purchase Programme on SMEs.
  • Macdonald, Anna (2017). The politics of return: an agenda for research #LSEreturn.
  • Machin, Richard (2017). Four reasons why welfare reform is a delusion.
  • Machin, Stephen, Costa, Rui (2017). What’s happening with real wages and living standards in the UK?
  • Macquarie, Rob (2017). Populism, nationalism, and the elite: A weekend at Cumberland Lodge.
  • Madge, Nicola, Hemming, Peter J. (2017). Non-religious young people in Britain possess a range of different identities.
  • Mahtani, Anna (2017). Philosophy of language for decision theory part 1: credences and preferences.
  • Maier, George (2017). Book review: the contradictions of capital in the twenty-first century: the Piketty opportunity edited by Pat Hudson and Keith Tribe.
  • Makar, Johannes (2017). Book review: surrealism in Egypt: modernism and the art and liberty group by Sam Bardaouil.
  • Makouezi, Elsa (2017). Benefits for all? How the UK can shape trade relations to promote African development and economic transformation.
  • Malby, Steven (2017). COP23: introducing a new toolkit to help support the Paris Agreement.
  • Mallett, Tory (2017). Seattle's public funding for candidates experiment may be both good and bad for democracy.
  • Maloney, William, Caicedo, Felipe Valencia (2017). The population centres that Columbus found in 1492 persist as major cities in the Americas.
  • Manby, Bronwen (2017). Book review: Nigeria: a new history of a turbulent centuryby Richard Bourne.
  • Mangen, Claudine (2017). Economic shocks affect how a CEO is evaluated.
  • Manger, Mark S. (2017). Following May’s speech, we now have a clear picture of what an EU-UK free trade agreement could look like.
  • Manger, Mark S., Vayalinkal, Atom (2017). The EU isn't protectionist - it's one of the most open economies in the world.
  • Manley, Julian (2017). Local democracy with attitude: the Preston model and how it can reduce inequality.
  • Mansbridge, Jane, Taylor, Ros (2017). Lend us your ears: fixing the crisis of legitimacy in politics.
  • Manubarwala, Aditya (2017). Revisiting India’s obligations against custodial torture.
  • Manwaring, Rob, Kennedy, Paul (2017). Why the left loses: explaining the decline of centre-left parties.
  • Maragno, Marco (2017). “Modernity” is outdated. Bring on the new modern!
  • Marangozov, Rachel (2017). The Conservatives’ 100k net migration target is an act of self-harm.
  • March, Luke (2017). Contrary to popular opinion, there is no populist upsurge in Britain.
  • Marcus, Scott, Clarke, Robert G. (2017). Can mobile roaming be saved after Brexit?
  • Marelli, Enrico, Signorelli, Marcello (2017). Deepening the economic and monetary union: what the commission missed in its reflection paper.
  • Margulies, Ben (2017). Book review: the global rise of populism: performance, political style and representation by Benjamin Moffitt.
  • Margulies, Ben (2017). Donald Trump's speech to the Boy Scouts Jamboree: why he says the same things to very different audiences.
  • Margulies, Ben (2017). Soft Brexit, soft landing? Interpreting Labour’s Brexit strategy.
  • Margulies, Ben (2017). The Trump administration is likely not made up of Holocaust deniers. But they do need the support of those who are.
  • Margulies, Ben (2017). A few reasons why Le Pen could win the French presidential election, and a few more why she’ll still fall short.
  • Mark, Simpson (2017). More devolution rather than independence: time for the SNP to rediscover the 'middle way'.
  • Marshall, Leigh (2017). The British Social Attitudes survey: how public opinion drives policy in the UK.
  • Marshall, Nadine, Cvitanovic, Chris (2017). Ten top tips for social scientists seeking to influence policy.
  • Marta, Santoboni, von Schorlemer, Celestine, Abu Yassien, Dalia, Schlingheider, Annika (2017). Reflections on LSE Refugee’s Week’s Panel Discussion: The UK’s Response.
  • Martill, Benjamin (2017). What makes Britain 'Great'? The end of the postwar consensus of liberal internationalism.
  • Martin, Brian (2017). Fostering greater awareness of how universities operate can serve them well when their integrity comes under attack.
  • Mason, Susan (2017). Science is simply one element out of many in public policy decision making.
  • Masthay, Theodore J., Overby, L. Marvin (2017). Republicans prefer to serve in the Senate over the House: for them, it represents the ultimate realistic office.
  • Matczak, Anna (2017). Judicial reforms in Poland - getting the public on board.
  • Mates, Jet (2017). Integration, integration, integration.
  • Matthews, Felicity (2017). A drift away from majoritarianism: constitutional reform and the Coalition Government of 2010-2015.
  • Matthews, Jodie (2017). Book review: humankind: solidarity with nonhuman people by Timothy Morton.
  • Matthews, Kent (2017). How can Brexit be an economic success when the economics establishment is united in predicting a disaster?
  • Matthews, Peter (2017). Book review: gentrifier by John Joe Schlichtman, Jason Patch and Marc Lamont Hill.
  • Matthews, Peter, Poyner, Chris (2017). Your tenants are gay, get over it!: how housing services discriminate against LGBT+ users.
  • May, Christopher (2017). Book review: following Searle on Twitter: how words create digital institutions by Adam Hodgkin.
  • May, Christopher (2017). Book review: how economics professors can stop failing us: the discipline at a crossroads by Steven Payson.
  • May, Christopher (2017). Book review: the limits of the market: the pendulum between government and market by Paul de Grauwe.
  • Mayer, Michael, Hautz, Julia, Stadler, Christain, Whittington, Richard (2017). Was British business destined to leave the EU?
  • Mayer, Michael, Hautz, Julia, Stadler, Christain, Whittington, Richard (2017). A close look at British business: Was it destined to leave the EU?
  • Mayer, Micheael, Hautz, Julia, Stadler, Christain, Whittington, Richard (2017). While corporate UK was for Remain, their business strategies tell a different story.
  • Mazanderani, Fawzia Haeri (2017). Book review: academic conferences as neoliberal commodities by Donald J. Nicolson.
  • Mazanderani, Fawzia Haeri (2017). Book review: air & light & time & space: how successful academics write by Helen Sword.
  • Mazanderani, Fawzia Haeri (2017). Book review: crumpled paper boat: experiments in ethnographic writing edited by Anand Pandian and Stuart McLean.
  • McAndrew, Siobhan (2017). Religion and party liking: how members of different faith communities feel about different political parties.
  • McArthur, Jenny (2017). Book review: the new urban crisis: gentrification, housing bubbles, growing inequality and what we can do about it by Richard Florida.
  • McConalogue, Jim (2017). Book Review: The Cabinet Office: 1916-2016.
  • McConalogue, Jim (2017). Book review: the Cabinet Office: 1916-2016 by Anthony Seldon with Jonathan Meakin.
  • McCulloch, Sharon (2017). The importance of being REF-able: academic writing under pressure from a culture of counting.
  • McDonald, Paula (2017). Why have the gender divisions of work and care been so slow to change?
  • McElroy, Ruth (2017). The future of media in Wales: policy challenges.
  • McFeeters, Ashleigh (2017). Book review: ex-combatants, gender and peace in Northern Ireland: women, political protest and the prison experience by Azrini Wahidin.
  • McGann, Anthony J., Smith, Charles Anthony, Latner, Michael, Keena, Alex (2017). Gerrymandering the Presidency: Why Trump could lose the popular vote in 2020 by 6 percent and still win a second term.
  • McGaughey, Ewan (2017). Donald Trump is fascism-lite. We have the US Supreme Court to thank for it.
  • McGaughey, Ewan (2017). Ending shareholder monopoly: why workers’ votes promote good corporate governance.
  • McGuire, David, Cunningham, James, Garavan, Thomas (2017). Positive and inclusive language and imagery can help candidates win over voters in times of crisis.
  • McGuire, David, MacKenzie, Abbi, Kissack, Heather (2017). The use of gendered language in speeches made by Trump and Clinton adhered to stereotypes of the roles of male and female leaders.
  • McKenzie, Lisa (2017). Book review: know your place: essays on the working class by the working class edited by Nathan Connolly.
  • McKenzie, Lisa (2017). ‘Stuck in their ways’: how we blame the poor for their failure to embrace globalisation.
  • McKnight, Abigail, Reeves, Richard (2017). Glass floors and slow growth: a recipe for deepening inequality and hampering social mobility.
  • McLean, Dylan (2017). Shooting for freedom: what guns teach us about US political culture.
  • McNeill, Jenny (2017). Gamers or victims: how can you ‘play the game’ on benefits if you don’t know the rules?
  • McNeill, Jenny (2017). Gamers or victims: how can you ‘play the game’ on benefits ifyou don’t know the rules?
  • McQuaid, Ronald (2017). Youth unemployment produces multiple scarring effects.
  • McQuarrie, Michael (2017). Michael McQuarrie on writing for blogs: "the most utility comes from allowing me to think through a problem that is bugging me and then publish something about the result".
  • McSherry, Madeline (2017). Book review: a little history of economics by Niall Kishtainy.
  • McStay, Andrew (2017). Tech firms want to detect your emotions and expressions, but people don't like it.
  • McWilliams, Douglas (2017). Economic consequences of limiting migration are shocking.
  • Mcdonnell, Hugh (2017). The ‘grey zone’ of Vichy France: understanding Marine Le Pen’s latest comments on the Second World War.
  • Meadows, Anna (2017). Getting over the hill – encouraging middle-aged Singaporean women to exercise.
  • Medford, Wayne (2017). Solidarity that cuts across racial and gender lines: reflections upon the Grunwick strike.
  • Meeks, Geoff (2017). Engineering financial distress: transplanting banking techniques to the NHS?
  • Meeks, Geoff (2017). Engineering financial distress: transplanting bankingtechniques to the NHS?
  • Meeks, Geoff (2017). Understanding pension obligation figures (though your boss might not want you to).
  • Mehrabyan, Lusine (2017). Piecing together a paradigm and the “power of free”.
  • Mendes, Mariana S. (2017). The Catalan crisis owes much to the actions of self-interested politicians on both sides.
  • Mendes, Mariana S. (2017). Making sense of the uncertainty following Catalonia's declaration of independence.
  • Menger, Andrew, Stein, Robert M. (2017). Officials can nudge public behavior by showing that they are responding to people's demands.
  • Mhoumadi, Taman (2017). Building a bridge between the European bubble and citizens via social leaders.
  • Middelburg, Annemarie (2017). Book review: Making the Mark; Gender, Identity, and Genital Cutting by Miroslava Prazak.
  • Middelburg, Annemarie (2017). Book review: making the mark; gender, identity, and genitalcutting by Miroslava Prazak.
  • Middle East Centre Blog (2017). ‘Multitudes’ Exhibition – Celebrating contemporary female artists from the MENA region.
  • Middlemiss, Lucie (2017). How the Labour vote reflects a values-based realignment of the British electorate.
  • Middlemiss, Lucie (2017). Who will be cold this winter? Addressing the complex problem of fuel poverty in England.
  • Miler, Kristina (2017). Committee membership makes Representatives better lawmakers, benefitting Congress as a whole.
  • Miles, Matthew R. (2017). Appeals to voters’ moral foundations can be an effective rhetorical strategy for presidents.
  • Miller, Jared (2017). Reducing the effects of insomnia on the workplace.
  • Miller, Noah (2017). The tyranny of numbers on social media during Kenya's 2017 elections. picture_as_pdf
  • Mills, Eleanor (2017). British society sees itself through a predominantly old, white male gaze.
  • Mills, Eleanor (2017). Eleanor Mills: Women are still portrayed through the lens of an old, male, pale, stale establishment.
  • Milne, Claire (2017). How safe should digital products be, and who should ensure this?
  • Milner, Susan (2017). Emmanuel Macron and the building of a new liberal-centrist movement.
  • Milner, Susan (2017). Emmanuel Macron may win the presidential election, but turbulent waters lie ahead.
  • Milner, Susan (2017). Universal basic income and a tax on robots – the rise of French socialist candidate Benoît Hamon.
  • Minas, Stephen (2017). Book review: before Babylon, beyond Bitcoin: from money that we understand to money that understands us by David Birch.
  • Minde, Nicodemus (2017). Book review: Julius Nyerere by Paul Bjerk.
  • Miranda, Shaila, Young, Amber, Yetgin, Emre (2017). Is the digital media a panacea for the ills of mass media concentration?
  • Mirza, Cameron, Al-Ubaydil, Omar (2017). Making the best use of consultants in the GCC.
  • Misgar, Umar Lateef (2017). Trampling human rights in Kashmir.
  • Mishra, Devershi, Khare, Komal (2017). Responsibility of the first world nations to protect refugees: non-refoulement as an obligation erga omnes.
  • Mitchell, James (2017). Audit 2017: how democratic is local government in Scotland?
  • Moiseienko, Anton (2017). Book review: dictators without borders: power and money in Central Asia by Alexander Cooley and John Heathershaw.
  • Moiseienko, Anton (2017). Book review: tomorrow's lawyers: an introduction to your future (2nd ed.) by Richard Susskind.
  • Mollerup, Jacob (2017). Why did quality media lose trust?
  • Mollett, Amy, Brumley, Cheryl, Gilson, Christopher, Williams, Sierra (2017). By producing podcasts you can reach wider audiences, occupy your niche and create new items of research.
  • Mollett, Amy, Brumley, Cheryl, Gilson, Christopher, Williams, Sierra (2017). Four questions you should ask yourself before undertaking a multimedia research project.
  • Mollett, Amy, Brumley, Cheryl, Gilson, Christopher, Williams, Sierra (2017). Science communication and social media: from iconic NASA moon landings to Instagramming astronauts.
  • Mollett, Amy, Brumley, Cheryl, Gilson, Christopher, Williams, Sierra (2017). So you’ve decided to blog? These are the things you should write about.
  • Mollett, Amy, Brumley, Cheryl, Gilson, Christopher, Williams, Sierra (2017). “Words divide, pictures unite” – great historic examples of the use of data visualisation for research communication.
  • Molloy, Andrew (2017). Book review: general intellects: twenty-one thinkers for the twenty-first century by McKenzie Wark.
  • Molyneux, Philip (2017). Why UK banks are like public utilities - and should be regulated as such.
  • Mondshein, Rory P. (2017). It is time.
  • Monheim, Kai (2017). Lessons from Paris 2015: in multilateral negotiations, process is key.
  • Monnery, Neil (2017). Hong Kong’s postwar transformation shows how fewer data can sometimes boost growth.
  • Monogan, Jamie, Gilson, Christopher (2017). The Ballpark podcast Episode 2.2: do state governments even matter?
  • Monogan III, James E., Konisky, David M., Woods, Neal D. (2017). How states make their own air pollution somebody else’s problem.
  • Monoghan, Jamie (2017). Why the upcoming election in Georgia’s Sixth District will not be a referendum on Trump.
  • Montacute, Rebecca (2017). Over half of MPs went to comprehensives: but a career in politics is still far from accessible.
  • Montaigne, Maxine (2017). Book review: the econocracy: the perils of leaving economics to the experts by Joe Earle, Cahal Moran and Zach Ward-Perkins.
  • Montaigne, Maxine (2017). The Econocracy: The Perils of Leaving Economics to the Experts.
  • Moore, Martin (2017). The Risks of Abandoning Leveson.
  • Moore, Matin, Ramsay, Gordon (2017). Acrimonious and divisive: the role the media played in Brexit.
  • Morar, Pia (2017). How do western democracies cope with the challenge of diversity?
  • Mordechay, Kfir (2017). The demographics of America's schools are changing, and policymakers need to be up to the challenge.
  • Moreh, Chris (2017). Book review: asylum after empire: colonial legacies in the politics of asylum seeking by Lucy Mayblin.
  • Moreh, Chris (2017). Book review: reconstructing Karl Polanyi: excavation and critique by Gareth Dale.
  • Moreh, Chris (2017). Book review: why the UK voted for Brexit: David Cameron’s great miscalculation by Andrew Glencross.
  • Moreno, Luis (2017). Catalonia: the end of the independence road?
  • Moreno, Luis (2017). What Catalonia's suspended declaration of independence means for Catalonia and Spain.
  • Morgan, Candice (2017). Modern slave or illegal worker? The haze around modern slavery and its implications.
  • Moriarty, Philip (2017). Rules of engagement: seven lessons from communicating above and below the line.
  • Morillas, Pol (2017). The EU should abandon ‘ever closer union’ in favour of ‘flexible differentiation’ after Brexit.
  • Morillas, Pol (2017). Juncker's State of the Union: where now for multispeed Europe?
  • Morisi, Davide (2017). Risk-takers and referendums: what happens when voters are better-informed?
  • Morphet, Janice (2017). Beyond Brexit: how the OECD could replace the EU as a driver of UK public policy.
  • Morphet, Janice (2017). Northern Ireland illustrates the threat Brexit poses for the UK’s political stability.
  • Morphet, Janice (2017). Now Article 50 has been triggered, will the United Kingdom survive?
  • Morris, Emily (2017). The Cuban economy is less vulnerable to a reversal of US rapprochement than many realise.
  • Morrison, Chris, Secker, Jane (2017). The publishing trap! A game of scholarly communication.
  • Morrison, James (2017). The May-Trump special relationship may be defined by how Donald Trump views women.
  • Morrow, Duncan (2017). Brexit has blown open the unreconciled divisions in Northern Ireland.
  • Morse, Sir Amys (2017). When ‘more for less’ becomes ‘less for less’: the implications of central decision-making for the delivery of frontline services.
  • Morsy, Leila, Rothstein, Richard (2017). High rates of parental incarceration among African-Americans means that criminal justice reform is now education reform.
  • Mortimer, Josiah (2017). We need to make it easier for people to vote, not harder – and registering is still a big problem.
  • Morvan, Hervé (2017). The Bombardier-Boeing dispute goes to the heart of the debate over what constitutes state aid and price dumping.
  • Mottram, Sir Richard (2017). There may be trouble ahead: the Civil Service in a post-truth world.
  • Moullin, Sophie (2017). ‘They can move’ – or can they? Freedom of movement, Brexit and working-class stasis.
  • Moury, Catherine, Standring, Adam (2017). How Portugal’s leaders exploited the bail out to pass measures they already supported.
  • Mueller, Sean (2017). Tinker, tailor, soldier... Foreign Minister? The runners and riders for Switzerland's new federal councillor.
  • Mugnai, Iacopo (2017). Matteo Renzi’s disastrous leadership risks splitting Italy’s Democratic Party.
  • Muhandiram, Niroshika Liyana, Gupta, Mohit (2017). Exploring regional solutions to fishermen disputes in South Asia.
  • Mulgan, Tim (2017). What if God is just not that into you?
  • Mullen, Antony (2017). Book review: the Tories and television, 1951–1964: broadcasting an elite by Anthony Ridge-Newman.
  • Mullin, Annabel (2017). Outsourcing democracy to an algorithm: the tyranny of the tactical voting site.
  • Mullinix, Kevin J. (2017). Political parties shape public opinion, but their influence is limited.
  • Mulvey, Antonia (2017). Female Genital Mutilation should be prosecuted as a crime against humanity.
  • Mulvey, Antonia (2017). Female Genital Mutilation should be recognised as a form of torture.
  • Mumford, Andrew (2017). Donald Trump’s presidency may lead to a reassessment of the “American Empire”.
  • Munro, Gayle (2017). Book review: refuge: transforming a broken refugee system by Alexander Betts and Paul Collier.
  • Murkens, Jo (2017). Miller in the Supreme Court: a welcome reminder of the function of a constitution and the rule of law.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2017). The Supreme Court ruling explained: The government requires primary legislation before it can change the constitution.
  • Murray-Evans, Peg (2017). How Brexit could harm African economies that trade with the UK and disrupt regional integration.
  • Musick, Kelly, Meier, Ann, Flood, Sarah (2017). US parents enjoy time with children—but moms feel more strain.
  • Muthukrishna, Michael (2017). In Latin America as in the wider world, corruption is rooted in our relationships.
  • Myant, Martin (2017). Upwards convergence: why wage growth should be a priority for central and eastern Europe.
  • Myers, Robert (2017). Dissolving the line between client and staff spaces.
  • Mühlböck, Monika, Tosun, Jale (2017). How EU member states have tried (and failed) to reach agreement on GMOs - and what it could mean for EU decision-making.
  • Mülhausen, Michelle, Tuck, Emma, Zimmerman, Heather (2017). Health care under fire, says who?
  • Müller, Jörg (2017). Engaging with sensor-based methods for social sciences research is necessary, overdue and potentially rewarding.
  • Naish, Stephen (2017). Book review: 1996 and the end of history by David Stubbs.
  • Nall, Clayton, Schneer, Benjamin, Carpenter, Daniel (2017). Canvassers tend to seek out supporters who are like themselves, and that's not good for political participation.
  • Nandagiri, Rishita (2017). Why feminism: some notes from ‘the field’ on doing feminist research.
  • Nangiro, Saum (2017). The Karamojong women and extreme insecurity.
  • Narasimhan, Mridulya, Arun, Advitha (2017). Shifting gears: randomised control trials and the future of development evaluation.
  • Narkowicz, Kasia (2017). A third way? Why Poland needs an alternative to right-wing populism and western liberalism.
  • Nasta, Susheila, Campion, Sonali (2017). “Before independence there was a synergy between India and Britain that came from a shared language which persists today” – Susheila Nasta.
  • Natarajan, Kalathmika (2017). Book review: citizenship in question: evidentiary birthright and statelessness edited by Benjamin N Lawrance and Jacqueline Stevens.
  • Nathan, Max (2017). The fast growth of co-working spaces in London.
  • Natt, Avtar (2017). The methodology used for the Times Higher Education World University Rankings' citations metric can distort benchmarking.
  • Nazir-Ali, Michael, Campion, Sonali (2017). “What we need to acknowledge from people like Iqbal is that you can have debate within a context of familiarity and friendship” – Bishop Nazir-Ali.
  • Ndaka, Caleb (2017). Online child protection in rural Kenya.
  • Neenan, Joanne, Chinkin, Christine (2017). International law and the continuum of gender-based violence.
  • Nektarios, Milton, Tinios, Platon, Simeonidis, George (2017). A pension system for younger workers in Greece: a proposal for growth.
  • Nell, Miranda (2017). Book review: open data and the knowledge society by Bridgette Wessels, Kush Wadhwa, Rachel L. Finn and Thordis Sveinsdottir.
  • Nepal, Srijana, Uprety, Neha, Prasai, Apekshya (2017). Reflections on researching women’s economic empowerment in post-earthquake Kathmandu.
  • Netto, Gina (2017). How to increase affordable housing: six innovative options.
  • Neumann, Pamela (2017). Women’s rights in retrograde: understanding the contentious politics of gender violence law in Nicaragua.
  • Neundorf, Anja, Scotto, Thomas J. (2017). Young voters and their "never Tory" mindset: the making of a Labour generation?
  • Neuner, Fabian G., Wratil, Christopher (2017). The myth of the 'boring election': populism and the 2017 German election.
  • Nevin, Seamus (2017). Gig economy: Disruption can bring benefits for workers and consumers.
  • Newton, Lina (2017). Trump’s ban on Muslim immigrants has been called “un-American,” but history shows that exclusion is a very American practice.
  • Newton, Philip M, Draper, Michael J (2017). University students are buying assignments – what could, or should, be done about it?
  • Neylon, Cameron (2017). Blacklists are technically infeasible, practically unreliable and unethical. Period.
  • Ngai, Rachel, Petrongolo, Barbara (2017). How the rise of the service sector boosted the demand for women workers.
  • Nicholas, Dave (2017). A system that prioritises publications means early career researchers’ scholarly attitudes and behaviours remain conservative.
  • Nickels, Ashley E. (2017). How state takeovers undermine the principle of municipal home rule.
  • Nikander, Pirjo, Piattoeva, Nelli (2017). Writing a coherent integrative chapter is crucial for a successful PhD by publication.
  • Nikore, Mitali (2017). Supporting motherhood – or discouraging parenthood? A curious case of the extended maternity leave in India.
  • Norris, Clive M. (2017). Sophisticated financial management underpinned 18th century Methodism.
  • Norris, Pippa (2017). It’s even worse than the news about North Carolina: American elections rank last among all Western democracies.
  • Norris, Pippa (2017). Why populism is a threat to electoral integrity.
  • Novaes, Catarina Dutilh (2017). Logical gaps.
  • Novotná, Tereza (2017). Will Donald Trump shoot down TTIP or rebrand it as the ‘Trump Trade and Investment Partnership’?
  • Nownes, Anthony J. (2017). Celebrity endorsements affect voters' feelings of anger and anxiety towards political candidates.
  • Ntonta, Denise (2017). Call for more diversification in AGRA’s vision of agriculture modernisation.
  • Nuebert, Mitchell (2017). Putting servant leadership to the test and doing away with scepticism.
  • Nuijten, Michèle B. (2017). Journal policies that encourage data sharing prove extremely effective.
  • Ní Mhurchú, Aoileann, McLeod, Laura, Collins, Stephanie, Siles-Brügge, Gabriel (2017). The REF’s focus on linear and direct impact is problematic and silences certain types of research.
  • O'Grady, Tom (2017). How politicians created, rather than reacted to, negative public opinion on benefits.
  • O'Leary, Brendan (2017). Now Brexit cannot mean UKEXIT – because the DUP won’t tolerate a hard border.
  • Ochab, Ewelina U. (2017). UN General Assembly assisting the UN Security Council.
  • Odinkalu, Chidi Anselm (2017). Après Zuma: can the African Union save itself? #28thAUSummit.
  • Olberding, Amy (2017). The moral gravity of mere trifles.
  • Oldenburg, Philip K., Campion, Sonali (2017). “At critical moments in history the balance of power favoured non-democratic forces in Pakistan, while favouring democratic forces in India” – Philip K Oldenburg.
  • Olivas, Jose Javier (2017). Does the Catalan independence movement really ‘love democracy’?
  • Oliver, Tim (2017). Book review: guilty men: Brexit edition by Cato the Younger.
  • Oliver, Tim (2017). Book review: the European Union in crisis.
  • Oliver, Tim (2017). Britain's approach to Brexit is a textbook example of failed strategic thinking.
  • Oliver, Tim (2017). An English Foreign Policy: Little England or Little Britain?
  • Oliver, Tim (2017). A U-turn on a hard Brexit should not be entirely disregarded.
  • Orduna-Malea, Enrique, Martín-Martín, Alberto, Thelwall, Mike, López-Cózar, Emilio Delgado (2017). The ResearchGate Score rewards academics' active participation on the platform above their publications and citations.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2017). Brexit as a strategic shift.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2017). The moral question in Italian politics.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2017). The politics of post-truth.
  • Oser, Jennifer, Hooghe, Marc (2017). How do attitudes toward redistribution differ between Europe and the United States?
  • Oser, Jennifer, Hooghe, Marc (2017). Public opinion is less supportive of redistribution and social security in the US than in Europe - but many US citizens want to see more done to reduce poverty and inequality.
  • Oser, Jennifer, Hooghe, Marc (2017). Strong partisans trust the political system, but not other people.
  • Oshri, Odelia, Shenhav, Shaul (2017). How the EU shapes and hones its identity through the language of its treaties.
  • Oshri, Odelia, Shenhav, Shaul (2017). How the EU shapes and hones its identity through the language of its treaties.
  • Osman, Tarek (2017). The importance of being political.
  • Osotimehin, Sophie (2017). The 'cleansing effect' of recessions: Inefficient firms fail, average productivity goes up.
  • Otero-Iglesias, Miguel (2017). Italy’s struggle with the euro straitjacket.
  • Otjes, Simon, Rasmussen, Anne (2017). No longer going steady, but playing the field: trade unions and the decline of social democracy.
  • Ovens, Bethan (2017). UK permanent residence: where can EU students get information?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2017). CEP study: The UK areas that will be hit most (and least) by Brexit.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2017). The UK areas that will be hit most (and least) by Brexit.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2017). Which British regions will suffer most - and least - from Brexit?
  • Owen, John (2017). Break for recovery.
  • O’Leary, Brendan, Salih, Khaled (2017). Why journalists should not use the expression 'semi-autonomous' (or 'semiautonomous').
  • O’Loughlin, Ben, Chaban, Natalia, Miskimmon, Alister (2017). The EU tells a good story about itself, but its Asian partners may not be hearing it.
  • PSSRU, Organising Team (2017). Autism through an Arts Lens: Comments on PSSRU’s LSE Literary Festival Session.
  • Pace, Roderick (2017). Will the assassination of Daphne Caruana Galizia lead to wholesale institutional reform in Malta?
  • Packer, Richard (2017). Britain will break free of the Common Agricultural Policy – but we still need to subsidise farmers.
  • Padró i Miquel, Gerard (2017). The historical roots of the Catalan crisis: how we got to where we are.
  • Padula, Danielle (2017). Three ways to support the democratisation of academic journals.
  • Page, Douglas (2017). Assessing the EU's role in the struggle for gender equality.
  • Pailey, Robtel Neajai, Williams, Korto Reeves (2017). Is Liberia's Sirleaf really standing up for women? #LiberiaDecides.
  • Panagiotidis, Theodore, Chisiridis, Konstantinos (2017). Economic growth for Greece’s trade partners and Greek export growth.
  • Pannini, Elisa (2017). Book review: the great regression edited by Heinrich Geiselberger.
  • Papacostas, Savvas (2017). A bit of madness is good for leadership potential.
  • Papazoglou, Alexis (2017). What conspiracy theories can tell us about politics in Greece.
  • Pappas, Takis S. (2017). So-called ‘populist’ parties have many different grievances. Lumping them together won’t help defeat them.
  • Pappas, Takis S. (2017). They had a dream. Now Trump will scrub the melting pot clean.
  • Parajuli, Abhishek (2017). A bittersweet legal victory in India helps privacy but could hurt the economy.
  • Pareja-Eastaway, Montserrat (2017). Reflections from an outsider – Older Women’s Cohousing (OWCH, Barnet, North London).
  • Park, Hyoungjoo, Wolfram, Dietmar (2017). Formalised data citation practices would encourage more authors to make their data available for reuse.
  • Parker, Charles F. (2017). The silver lining in Trump’s Paris pullout: a chance for the EU and China to take the leadership mantle.
  • Parker, Charles F., Karlsson, Christer (2017). Assessing the EU’s global climate change leadership: From Copenhagen to the Paris agreement.
  • Parmar, Inderjeet (2017). Despite Trump’s election, a groundswell for radical change in the US remains.
  • Parry, Mark E., Kawakami, Tomoko (2017). Why e-readers succeeded as a disruptive innovation in the US, but not in Japan.
  • Parry, Samuel (2017). Yes Cymru: the debate on Welsh independence has begun for good.
  • Parsons, Nick (2017). The French presidential elections and the death of social dialogue.
  • Parsons, Nick (2017). Macron gambles on reducing unemployment through greater flexibility for employers.
  • Parsons, Nick (2017). Macron looks set for a huge majority, but does he have popular support?
  • Parsons, Nick (2017). Macron won a huge majority, but he is supported by only one in five voters.
  • Parsons, Nick (2017). Macron’s victory: a historic break with the past, or simply the postponement of real change?
  • Pasanen, Tiina, Harvey, Blane (2017). Eight lessons on fostering learning in large research and development programmes.
  • Pascali, Luigi (2017). Great Divergence: The steamship gives us clues on the impacts of globalisation.
  • Pascoe, Polly (2017). Focus on buy-in might be the reason your change efforts keep failing.
  • Pascoe, Polly (2017). To improve change management, the NHS needs to discard outdated models.
  • Patel, Raj (2017). Gained in translation: adding value to research to inform policy.
  • Patrick, Ruth (2017). Inaccurate, exploitative, and very popular: the problem with ‘Poverty Porn’.
  • Pattie, Charles, Johnston, Ron (2017). Scottish national identity: why the question of Europe could actually keep the UK together.
  • Pattie, Charles, Johnston, Ron, Hartman, Todd K. (2017). Party canvassers don’t change people’s opinions, but they do persuade them to vote.
  • Pauwels, Teun, Haute, Emilie van (2017). Caught between mainstreaming and radicalisation: tensions inside the populist Vlaams Belang in Belgium.
  • Pavlović, Srđa (2017). West is best: how ‘stabilitocracy’ undermines democracy building in the Balkans.
  • Pedaliu, Effie G. H. (2017). The Marshall Plan speech at 70 – and the lessons it can provide for today’s challenges.
  • Pels, Dick (2017). Lies are fast, truth is slow: the importance of mastering the rhythms of academic life and work.
  • Pemberton, Hugh (2017). Industrial strategy: some lessons from the past.
  • Perdigao, Yovanka (2017). Book review: Africa's media image in the 21st Century: from the "Heart of Darkness" to "Africa Rising".
  • Perdigao, Yovanka (2017). Book review: migrant, refugee, smuggler, savior by Peter Tinti and Tuesday Reitano.
  • Perley, Sara (2017). Book review: Charlemagne by Johannes Fried.
  • Persaud, Randolph B. (2017). The rise of Donald Trump’s “White Wall” means that 2017 will not be a good year for politics.
  • Persson, Anders (2017). Why Europe holds unique normative power in the Israeli-Palestine conflict.
  • Perzigian, Aaron B., Afacan, Kemal, Justin, Whitney, Wilkerson, Kimber L. (2017). African American and disabled youth are overrepresented in behavior-focused and academic remediation schools.
  • Petersen, Marie Juul, Arhb Moftah, Osama (2017). The Marrakesh declaration: a Muslim call for protection of religious minorities or freedom of religion?
  • Petersen, Marie Juul, í Skorini, Heini (2017). Freedom of expression vs. defamation of religions: protecting individuals or protecting religions?
  • Pettifor, Ann (2017). To really ‘take back control’, democracies must reclaim power over the production of money.
  • Pettitt, Robin (2017). Losing Momentum? The power struggles that are hobbling the Corbyn movement.
  • Pettitt, Robin (2017). No one won this General Election – and Labour’s internal wrangles are far from over.
  • Pettitt, Robin (2017). No ‘suicide note’: Jeremy Corbyn, not his manifesto, is what holds Labour back.
  • Phillips, Jacob (2017). #LSEreligionLecture: “the West has two approaches available: ‘religious rights’ or ‘religious toleration’ ” – John Milbank.
  • Phinnemore, David (2017). May said nothing new that was positive regarding the Irish dimension of Brexit.
  • Phinnemore, David (2017). There's no such thing as 'associate membership' of Euratom.
  • Phinnemore, David (2017). There's no such thing as 'associate membership' of Euratom - but there may be other solutions.
  • Phinnemore, David (2017). The language of 'flexible and imaginative' solutions is unique to the Irish dimension of Brexit.
  • Photiadou, Artemis, Prelec, Tena (2017). Shami Chakrabarti: not guaranteeing the rights of EU nationals is not politics - it's cruelty.
  • Photiadou, Artemis, Prelec, Tena, Chakrabarti, Shami (2017). Five minutes with Shami Chakrabarti: "not guaranteeing the rights of EU nationals isn't politics - it's cruelty".
  • Picton, John (2017). Book review: Robert McNamara's other war: the World Bank and international development by Patrick Allan Scharma.
  • Picton, John (2017). Book review: Robert McNamara's other war: the World Bank and international development by Patrick Allan Sharma.
  • Pierson, Charon, Moylan, Elizabeth (2017). Addressing ethical issues in peer review - new guidelines available from COPE.
  • Pike, Karl (2017). What does it mean to be Labour? Understanding the party’s ethos.
  • Piwowar, Heather, Priem, Jason (2017). Announcing Unpaywall: unlocking #openaccess versions of paywalled research articles as you browse.
  • Pochet, Phillipe (2017). The European Pillar of Social Rights in historical perspective.
  • Pohl, Rebecca (2017). Book review: the new nature writing: rethinking the literature of place by Jos Smith.
  • Polizzi, Gianfranco (2017). The blue whale game paradox, digital literacy and fake news.
  • Poovey, Mary (2017). The post-fact world: six steps you can take to fight back.
  • Popescu, Diana (2017). Mrs Lucretia’s protest: a story of identity and politics on the streets of Bucharest.
  • Popovikj, Misha (2017). Violence in the Macedonian parliament: what happened and how should the EU respond?
  • Potlogea, Andrei, Cheng, Wenya (2017). The Chinese cities that trade built.
  • Potter, Andrew (2017). Why a hard border with Ireland would put Welsh ports at risk.
  • Pountney, Laura (2017). Bringing social media into the curriculum: new ways of teaching and learning?
  • Pow, James (2017). Audit 2017: how democratic is local government in Northern Ireland?
  • Power, Nicola, Alison, Laurence (2017). How multi-agency teams made decisions in a simulated terror attack.
  • Preece, Jessica (2017). If party leaders want more women to run, they need to convince them that the “old boys’ network” will support them too.
  • Prelec, Tena (2017). Book review: rival power: Russia in Southeast Europe by Dimitar Bechev.
  • Prelec, Tena (2017). Has the Western Balkans 6 process become a 'surrogate for the real thing'?
  • Prelec, Tena (2017). Serbian presidential election 2017: can Vučić pull a Putin-Medvedev?
  • Prelec, Tena (2017). Serbian presidential elections: the diaspora vote.
  • Pressman, Amy (2017). Amy Pressman: ‘The really disruptive companies are ingesting a tonne of data from customers’.
  • Price, Sophia (2017). Where will the UK's aid budget go when it stops contributing to the EU?
  • Priestland, Andreas (2017). Mind the Gap: Making a difference, four questions at a time.
  • Pring, Ben (2017). The coming jobs boom in the age of intelligent machines.
  • Provan, Bert (2017). How 'Help to Buy' helps mainly the privileged.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2017). Disgusted by Donald Trump? Turning away from the spectacle isn't an option.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2017). Donald Trump’s first weeks as president evoke Boschian visions of destruction and spectacle.
  • Pugliese, Joseph (2017). How drones are gamifying war in America's casino capital.
  • Purdam, Kingsley, Richards, Dave, Turnbull, Nick (2017). Are political statecraft and populism compatible? Lessons from Corbyn and Trump.
  • Quinn, Adam (2017). The UK should expect no favors from the new president: Trump will look out for Trump.
  • Quiroz Flores, Alejandro (2017). US disaster protection is not up to scratch in the states which are most vulnerable to hurricanes.
  • Rabindrakumar, Sumi, Allbeson, Janet (2017). How the government’s new child maintenance service leaves domestic abuse survivors out in the cold.
  • Rackney, John D., Peay, P.C. (2017). Why Senate Democrats should vote for cloture on Gorsuch’s nomination.
  • Radice, Henry (2017). For many individuals, the prospect of Brexit has caused genuine suffering.
  • Radice, Henry (2017). The conflicting identity politics of Brexit.
  • Raghunath, Preeti (2017). South Asia’s new satellite: signaling public engagement for sustainable regional diplomacy?
  • Ragins, Belle Rose, Ehrhardt, Kyle, Lyness, Karen S., Murphy, Diane, Capman, John (2017). Like second-hand smoke, racial discrimination at work can affect bystanders.
  • Rahali, Miriam (2017). Tiger mom 2.0: (over)parenting for a digital future?
  • Rahman, Tasmiah (2017). Are apps the future of NGO service delivery?
  • Rahman, Tasmiah (2017). Will there ever be a Women’s March in Bangladesh?
  • Rainsford, Emily (2017). A glance at the future of British politics: what we know about parties’ youth factions.
  • Rakhra, Kanica (2017). Nuclear suppliers group: finding entry points.
  • Ramanathan, Usha, Nachiappan, Subramanian, Parrott, Guy (2017). Social media and successful retail operations in the hyper-customisation era.
  • Rams, Dagna (2017). Book review: learning from the curse: Sembene's Xala by Richard Fardon and Senga la Rouge.
  • Randles, Jennifer M. (2017). Government “Healthy Marriage” programs should focus less on the benefits of marriage and more on helping couples to cope.
  • Ranson, Gillian (2017). Understanding fatherhood in the digital age.
  • Rasnača, Zane (2017). The European Pillar of Social Rights: What is being proposed and the challenges ahead.
  • Rasnača, Zane (2017). Social summit preview: can the European Pillar of Social Rights deliver on its promises?
  • Rathgeb, Philip, Wolkenstein, Fabio (2017). Third-way à la française: what do Macron’s reforms involve and how likely are they to succeed?
  • Rathi, Sanjana (2017). Why education is the key to global peace and prosperity.
  • Ratnayake, Rapti (2017). ‘Diplomacity’ in the 21st century: why Sri Lanka’s local mayors must become global players.
  • Raymond, Christopher D. (2017). Do MPs' votes in Parliament represent personal or constituency preferences?
  • Razzu, Giovanni (2017). Women on company boards: time for the government to adopt legislative quotas.
  • Reddy, P. Avanash (2017). Battle of Mosul: mass displacement of natives and a blatant violation of international humanitarian laws.
  • Reddy, Sneha (2017). Book review: combatants of Muslim origin in European armies in the twentieth century: far from Jihad edited by Xavier Bougarel, Raphaëlle Branche and Cloé Drieu.
  • Reddy, Sneha (2017). The best bookshops in St Andrews, Scotland.
  • Reedy, Justin (2017). What if postal votes were a great way to boost political engagement?
  • Reeves, Aaron, Friedman, Sam (2017). The dogged persistence of the British 'old boy': how private school alumni reach the elite.
  • Reeves, Andrée E. (2017). Alabama's Senate runoff election mirrors the national struggle for the heart and soul of the Republican Party.
  • Reeves, Andrée E. (2017). Long read: why the Alabama Senate race is now everyone's problem.
  • Regus, Max (2017). The Indonesian Ahmadis: no place for praying.
  • Rehman Cheema, Abdur, Ali, Sultana (2017). Beyond Tayyaba: tackling rural poverty to reduce child labour.
  • Reid, Andrew (2017). Book review: hate speech and democratic citizenship by Eric Heinze.
  • Reid, Andrew (2017). Book review: the populist radical right: a reader edited by Cas Mudde.
  • Renwick, Alan (2017). The Citizens' Assembly on Brexit: reflections on the first weekend.
  • Renwick, Alan (2017). What would voters be asked in a second EU referendum – and would they get it?
  • Renwick, Alan, McKee, Rebecca (2017). Forty-five people, two weekends: the Citizens' Assembly on Brexit.
  • Restuccia, Diego, Santaeulàlia-Llopis, Raül (2017). How inefficient land allocation in Malawi is severely depressing agricultural productivity.
  • Reverchon, Marie (2017). Bursting the bubble and fixing fake news in France.
  • Reynolds, Barnabas (2017). Brexit is a win-win opportunity for the City of London.
  • Reynolds, Michael (2017). Keeping people in the dark about the consequences of Brexit is poor diplomacy.
  • Rez, Ali, Khalid, Assam, Syed, Hasna, Campion, Sonali (2017). “Not A Bug Splat turned the tables on who was watching whom. The pressure brought about real change in drone policy” – Ali Rez.
  • Richards, Dave, Smith, Martin (2017). ‘Things were better in the past’: Brexit and the Westminster fallacy of democratic nostalgia.
  • Richards, Lindsay, Heath, Anthony (2017). Red lines and compromises: how flexible is public opinion about Brexit negotiations?
  • Riechert, Patrick, Dubois, Frédéric (2017). Open abstracts: a new peer review feature that helps scholars develop connections and encourages transdisciplinarity.
  • Risso, Linda (2017). Putin’s approach to the West should encourage us to reflect on the nature of our own democracy.
  • Ritter, Gary (2017). There is no evidence to suggest that charter schools increase school segregation.
  • Rivas, Carol (2017). Patient experience feedback: we need to engage with the issues of using big data methods to capture the human voice.
  • Rivera-Burgos, Viviana, Lasala-Blanco, Narayani, Shapiro, Robert Y. (2017). Poor weather doesn’t dissuade voting in noncompetitive elections – not even Hurricane Sandy did in 2012.
  • Robbins, Peter (2017). Book review: law and the economy in colonial India by Tirthankar Roy and Anand V. Swamy.
  • Roberts, Danielle (2017). ‘Mum-of-two, 40’: but women rise to the top in Northern Irish politics.
  • Roberts, Ivor, Prelec, Tena (2017). Sir Ivor Roberts: Milosevic was a pyromaniac and a firefighter – but he would never admit to being the former.
  • Roberts, Sean (2017). For the Russian authorities, the threat of Navalny lies in the message not the man.
  • Roberts, Syamala (2017). Book review: the age of noise in Britain: hearing modernity by James G. Mansell.
  • Robinson, Michael A. (2017). From the Slave Codes to Mike Brown: the brutal history of African Americans and law enforcement.
  • Rocco, Philip (2017). With their Obamacare replacement, Republicans are jumping blindfolded through the policy window.
  • Rodima-Taylor, Daivi (2017). Land mortgage: a device for rural restructuring in transitional settings?
  • Rodríguez Gómez, Erika (2017). From suffrage to insurgency, female rebelliousness has always been crucial to peace in Colombia.
  • Rodríguez-Teruel, Juan, Barrio, Astrid, Barbera, Oscar (2017). Podemos: is a maverick leftist party mutating into the standard bearer of devolution?
  • Roelofs, Portia (2017). Book Review: Humour, silence and civil society in Nigeria by Ebenezer Obadare.
  • Roelofs, Portia, Gallien, Max (2017). Clickbait and impact: how academia has been hacked.
  • Rogers, Andrew (2017). How are black majority churches growing in the UK? A Londonborough case study.
  • Rogers, Chris, Clarke, Chris (2017). ‘Socially useful’ finance and the regulation of peer-to-peer lending in the United Kingdom.
  • Rogers, Chris, Clarke, Chris (2017). ‘Socially useful’ finance and the regulation of peer-to-peerlending in the United Kingdom.
  • Rohac, Dalibor (2017). Book review: the complacent class: the self-defeating quest for the American Dream by Tyler Cowen.
  • Room, Graham (2017). From Brexit to European renewal: the fracture of the social contract underlies the current turmoil.
  • Ropek Hewson, Sofia (2017). Book review: cultural studies 1983: a theoretical history by Stuart Hall (edited by Jennifer Daryl Slack and Lawrence Grossberg).
  • Roquen, Jeff (2017). Book review: Park Chung Hee and modern Korea: the roots of militarism, 1866-1945 by Carter J. Eckert.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2017). Book review: international express: New Yorkers on the 7 train by Stéphane Tonnelat and William Kornblum.
  • Rosani, Gabriele (2017). How large companies can adopt lean thinking in research and development.
  • Roseanne, McManus, Gerard, Eileen, Ranaweera, Vinuri, Sztanga, Olivia (2017). Trump’s foreign policy is unlikely to benefit from a “Madman” advantage.
  • Ross, Ryan (2017). Book review: public inquiries: wrong route on Bloody Sunday by Louis Blom-Cooper.
  • Ross-Hellauer, Tony (2017). Open peer review: bringing transparency, accountability, and inclusivity to the peer review process.
  • Ross-Hellauer, Tony (2017). OpenAIRE can form the basis for a truly public European Open Access Platform.
  • Ross-Hellauer, Tony, Fecher, Benedikt (2017). Journal flipping or a public open access infrastructure? What kind of open access future do we want?
  • Rossi, Federico M. (2017). De los sindicatos a los movimientos sociales, las dinámicas políticas en Sudamérica han seguido un patrón de olas de incorporación.
  • Roth, Philip, Goldberg, Caren, Thatcher, Jason (2017). I vote left, you vote right: How can we work together?
  • Roth, Philip, Goldberg, Caren, Thatcher, Jason (2017). I vote left, you vote right: how can we work together?
  • Rovny, Jan (2017). Election reaction: the Czech Republic shifts toward the Polish and Hungarian model.
  • Rowland, Deborah (2017). Change starts with a leader’s ability to look inward.
  • Rowland, Deborah (2017). Leaders get the teams they deserve.
  • Roy-Chaudhury, Rahul (2017). A new, emerging Indian security doctrine in the Indian Ocean is set to challenge the narrative and impact of China's influence - Rahul Roy-Chaudhury.
  • Rubio, Diego (2017). Historical amnesia is undermining European democracy.
  • Rubio, Diego (2017). Historical amnesia is undermining European democracy.
  • Rudd, Roland, Taylor, Ros (2017). ‘The public mood could change’: Q&A with Roland Rudd, chair of Open Britain.
  • Ruedin, Didier (2017). Why automated coding of party positions from manifestos may produce misleading conclusions in political research.
  • Russell, Annelise (2017). On Twitter, Republican Senators are more polarizing than Democrats.
  • Rutterford, Janette, Sotiropoulos, Dimitris (2017). What Victorian households can teach us about financial decision-making.
  • Ryan, John (2017). Brussels may have agreed to accelerate Brexit negotiations - but Merkel's priorities are elsewhere.
  • Ryan, John (2017). Brussels may have agreed to accelerate the Brexit negotiations - but Merkel's priorities lie elsewhere.
  • Ryan, John (2017). A German 'Jamaica' coalition will hinder Eurozone reform, but make little difference to Brexit.
  • Ryan, John (2017). The German election result will slow down the Brexit process.
  • Ryan, John (2017). If you didn't laugh, you'd cry ... Brexit and the renaissance of British humour.
  • Ryan, John (2017). What a Jamaica coalition could mean for Eurozone reform.
  • Ryan, Louise (2017). EU citizens in the UK: after the shock comes the strategy to secure status.
  • Ràfols, Ismael, Robinson-García, Nicolas, van Leeuwen, Thed (2017). How to make altmetrics useful in societal impact assessments: shifting from citation to interaction approaches.
  • Sager, Alex (2017). Book review: against the grain: a deep history of the earliest states by James C. Scott.
  • Sager, Alex (2017). Book review: theory of the border by Thomas Nail.
  • Sager, Alex (2017). Focusing on migration’s ‘good’ or ‘bad’ influences on your country alone can be a harmful oversimplification.
  • Sager, Alex (2017). The end of progress: decolonizing the normative foundations of critical theory by Amy Allen.
  • Sailor, Jim (2017). Using Behavioural Science to help understand technology adoption risk perception.
  • Sala, Luca, Gambetti, Luca, Forni, Mario, Lippi, Marco (2017). When expectations of technological change in the economy are noisy signals.
  • Salamone, Anthony (2017). Why the current UK-Scotland constitutional impasse was far from inevitable.
  • Salas-Vega, Sebastian, Mossialos, Elias (2017). Value in cancer drug spending: assessing the clinical risks and benefits from a decade’s worth of innovation.
  • Salman, Zara (2017). Has GSP plus status improved Pakistan's garments exports?
  • Samba Sylla, Ndongo (2017). The CFA Franc: French monetary imperialism in Africa.
  • Sampson, Thomas (2017). Understanding the motivations of Leave voters will play an important role in determining the future of globalisation.
  • Sampson, Thomas, Breinlich, Holger, Novy, Dennis, Leromain, Elsa (2017). UK households are already paying an average of £404pa for Brexit.
  • Samudzi, Zoe (2017). Thirty-six years of Mugabe and why he remains.
  • Samuell, Doron (2017). Would I lie to you?
  • Sander, Harald (2017). Finally, some good economic news from the Eurozone – but will it last?
  • Sanders, Amber N., Kuhns, Joseph B., Blevins, Kristie R. (2017). Why crime prevention strategies may be effective against both deliberate and impulsive burglars.
  • Sanders, Jamie (2017). Apolitical? A defence of the Bank of England.
  • Sandford, Mark, Ayres, Sarah, Flinders, Matthew (2017). Devolution revolution? Assessing central-local relationships in England's devolution deals.
  • Sandis, Constantine (2017). Against principles.
  • Sanjana, Feroza (2017). How nudge units can aid development.
  • Santoboni, Marta, Karlsson, Alexandra (2017). A New Vision for Addressing Youth Unemployment in Africa.
  • Santos, Carlos Daniel (2017). Leaving a trade area can substantially reduce innovation and productivity.
  • Santos, Eraldo S. (2017). Book review: in the heat of the summer: the new york riots of 1964 and the war on crime by Michael W. Flamm.
  • Santos, Eraldo S. (2017). Book review: sharing this walk: an ethnography of prison life and the PCC in Brazil by Karina Biondi.
  • Saramifar, Younes (2017). Book review: Haredi masculinities between the Yeshiva, the army, work and politics: the sage, the warrior and the entrepreneur by Yohai Hakak.
  • Saramifar, Younes (2017). Book review: seawomen of Iceland: survival on the Edge by Margaret Willson.
  • Savage, Lee (2017). How party systems in Central and Eastern Europe affect government formation.
  • Savonick, Danica, Davidson, Cathy N. (2017). Newly updated for international women’s day – gender bias in Academe bibliography.
  • Sawyer, Sarah (2017). Thinking about morality.
  • Schabram, Kira, Maitlis, Sally (2017). How to avoid burnout when you follow your passion in your career choice.
  • Schade, Daniel (2017). No more ‘Dear Donald’: what we can glean from Theresa May’s Brexit letter.
  • Scheidel, Walter (2017). Throughout history, only violent and catastrophic events have significantly cut inequality.
  • Schiano, Austin (2017). Human rights and renewable energy: a critical link.
  • Schlaile, Michael P., Mueller, Matthias, Schramm, Michael, Pyka, Andreas (2017). Time to acknowledge the role of consumers in responsible innovation.
  • Schmid, Julian (2017). Book review: disappearing war: interdisciplinary perspectives on cinema and erasure in the post-9/11 world edited by Christina Hellmich and Lisa Purse.
  • Schmidt, Paul (2017). Could Austria join the Visegrád Group?
  • Schmidt, Paul (2017). Is EU free movement a curse or a blessing? The case of Austria.
  • Schmidt, Vivien, Wood, Matt (2017). The EU’s new white paper underlines why Europe needs to be more open to its citizens.
  • Schoenefeldt, Henrik (2017). Should MPs be involved in Westminster's restoration? Yes, according to history.
  • Schorpp, Susanne, Finocchiaro, Charles (2017). Wars can strengthen U.S. Presidents' policy gains in Congress, but as casualties rise, they can become a liability.
  • Schoyen, Mi Ah, Vegard Haug, Are (2017). The worries of wealth: what Monday's election might mean for the future of Norway.
  • Schroeder, Jonathan, Borgerson, Janet (2017). Vintage vinyl can tell us about Cold War tensions and cultural diplomacy.
  • Schwartz, Amanda (2017). Humanitarian space and the deaths of U.N. workers in the Congo.
  • Scott Cato, Molly (2017). The government won't release its analyses of Brexit's impact. We have a right to see them.
  • Scrollini, Fabrizio (2017). Into the darkness: how illegal surveillance is undermining open government reforms in Latin America.
  • Senarath, Shanuka (2017). The Dodd-Frank Act doesn’t solve the principal-agent problem in asset securitisation.
  • Senserrich, Roger (2017). Catalonia: a fight within a nation.
  • Senserrich, Roger, Borrell Porta, Mireia, Lapuente, Victor, Balfour, Sebastian (2017). Our five most read articles on the Catalan independence referendum.
  • Sgroi, Daniel (2017). Measuring happiness across the ages.
  • Shafick, Hesham (2017). Book review: the power triangle: military, security and politics in regime change by Hazem Kandil.
  • Shaikh, Farzana, Cheema, Nadir (2017). Pakistan in the eyes of the world: a new perspective on a blemished international image.
  • Shamsuddin, Shomon (2017). How reimagining public housing with greater development can benefit low income residents.
  • Sharlein, Jeffrey (2017). Compared to adjudication in juvenile court, criminal convictions can hurt adolescent boys’ future employment prospects.
  • Sharman, Joshua (2017). Book review: Foucault on the arts and letters: perspectives for the twentyfirst century edited by Catherine M. Soussloff.
  • Shaw, Chris (2017). Book review: crisis and sustainability: the delusion of free markets by Alessandro Vercelli.
  • Shaw, Chris (2017). Book review: crisis and sustainability: the delusion of free markets by Alessandro Vercelli.
  • Shaw, Eric (2017). Once more unto the breach: what you need to know about the next Scottish Labour leader.
  • Shaw, Eric (2017). Why Corbyn’s leadership is being judged neither prematurely nor by the wrong standards.
  • Shaw, Joe (2017). Book review: networks of New York: an internet infrastructure field guide by Ingrid Burrington.
  • Sheagley, Geoffrey (2017). Voters are less likely to be influenced by their party's position on a policy issue when they have a different view.
  • Shen, Dennis (2017). The only way to halt the rise of demagoguery may be to reform globalization.
  • Shen, Dennis (2017). A rise in narcissism could be one of the main causes of America’s political and economic crises.
  • Shepherd, Amy (2017). More speech, not less.
  • Sheridan, Alison, MacDermott, Kathy (2017). Glass walls: Australia's highly gender-segregated workforce.
  • Shipp, Jonny, Noula, Ioanna (2017). Unpacking the black box of digitalization: will “sustainability thinking” empower citizens in a data-driven world?
  • Shorrocks, Rosalind (2017). In what ways does gender matter for voting behaviour in GE2017?
  • Shreedhar, Ganga (2017). Book review: profits and sustainability: a history of green entrepreneurship by Geoffrey Jones.
  • Shutes, Isabel (2017). All EU migrants are not equal: the gendered consequences of Brexit.
  • Sian, Katy (2017). Bursting the liberal bubble: racism in the era of Brexit and Trump.
  • Sibal, Kanwal (2017). “India needs clarity about President Trump’s policy towards China because there have been a lot of contradictions” – Kanwal Sibal.
  • Siddiq, Hamza (2017). Violent extremism in Pakistan: a failure of public education.
  • Siddiqi, Lutfey (2017). Three lessons from Singapore, with or without Brexit.
  • Siegel-Hawley, Genevieve, Thachik, Stefani, Bridges, Kim (2017). How families from gentrifying neighborhoods can help break the cycle of school segregation.
  • Sigamany, Indrani (2017). Book review: democracy in the woods: environmental conservation and social justice in India, Tanzania and Mexico by Prakash Kashwan.
  • Sighele, Chiara (2017). Jeopardising the effectiveness of journalism in South East Europe: The role of extra-legal policy mechanisms.
  • Sigona, Nando (2017). "A disgusting political lie": EU parents respond to the Children's Commissioner's letter to Michel Barnier.
  • Silver, Jonathan David (2017). Book review: participatory planning for climate compatibledevelopment in Maputo, Mozambique.
  • Simi, Pete, Blee, Kathleen, DeMichele, Matthew, Windisch, Steven (2017). White supremacy can be addictive, and leaving it behind can be like kicking a drug habit.
  • Simson, Rebecca (2017). Book review – The rise of Africa’s middle class: Myths, realities and critical engagements, by Henning Melber(ed.).
  • Sindbjerg Martinsen, Dorte, Pons Rotger, Gabriel (2017). EU immigration benefits the welfare state in Denmark.
  • Singh, Rajat (2017). Book review: fashioning diaspora: beauty, femininity and South Asian American culture by Vanita Reddy.
  • Singh Chhina, Raman (2017). Nand Singh and Jangnamah Europe: subaltern insights on the wars of Empire.
  • Singh Maini, Tridivesh (2017). Rouhani’s victory and India-Iran ties.
  • Singh Maini, Tridivesh, Sachdeva, Sandeep (2017). Foreign investment in India: recognising and addressing regional disparities.
  • Singh Maini, Tridivesh, Sachdeva, Sandeep (2017). In the diplomatic row over Qatar, New Delhi needs to prioritise its national interests.
  • Singh Maini, Tridivesh, Sachdeva, Sandeep (2017). India's diaspora policy: time for a rethink.
  • Singh Maini, Tridivesh, Sachdeva, Sandeep (2017). India, the US and connectivity: in search of a clear vision.
  • Singla, Nikita (2017). Lessons for Ghana in the Malaysian economic miracle.
  • Sinsomboonthong, Tinnaphop (2017). A nightmare on Houghton Street.
  • Siyal, Mohsin Ali Kazmi and Benazir Khumbhar, Ghamz E Ali, Kazmi and Benazir Khumbhar, Mohsin Ali, Khumbhar, Benazir (2017). Tracing the impact of El Nino on agriculture and life in Mirpur Khas.
  • Skarbek, David, Michaluk, Courtney (2017). When inmates make the rules (and enforce them): democracy in self-governing prisons.
  • Slapin, Jonathan, Kirkland, Justin (2017). For many ideologues in Congress, voting against their party when they are in power may be a sound electoral strategy.
  • Slaton, Christa (2017). Lavish travel by cabinet members on the public's dime shows the emptiness of Trump's promise to "drain the swamp".
  • Sloane, Mona (2017). The materiality of research: dealing with ‘stuff’ in design: thoughts on materiality in design research by Mona Sloane.
  • Slodounik, Aaron (2017). How big data can expose a nascent White (House) Nationalism.
  • Slootmaeckers, Koen (2017). Tactical Europeanisation: why Serbia’s decision to appoint an openly gay PM is no great leap forward for LGBT rights.
  • Smeltzer, Joshua (2017). Book review: Marx, capital and the madness of economic reason by David Harvey.
  • Smeltzer, Joshua (2017). Book review: the ordinary virtues: moral order in a divided world by Michael Ignatieff.
  • Smilde, David, Gill, Timothy M. (2017). “Post-Western” diplomacy and the Venezuela crisis.
  • Smith, Constance (2017). Book Review: Africa’s return migrants: The new developers? by Lisa Åkesson and Maria Eriksson Baaz (eds).
  • Smith, Constance (2017). Book review: little Mogadishu: Eastleigh, Nairobi's global Somali hub by Neil Carrier.
  • Smith, J.A. (2017). Long read book review: deplorable me: the alt-right comes to power by J.A. Smith.
  • Smith, Julie (2017). Absent from the start: Britain’s leery relationship with the EU.
  • Smith, Melissa (2017). Why Trump could mean all change at the Federal Election Commission – if he can be bothered.
  • Smith, Russell M. (2017). Cities of Color are a growing trend in America – and their long-term influence should not be underestimated.
  • Smucker, Sierra (2017). Strengthening laws which take guns out of the hands of domestic abusers will help prevent future mass shootings.
  • Smucker, Sierra (2017). Three more dead in California: why the US political system is to blame.
  • Smucker, Sierra (2017). Why lawmakers want more guns after yet another mass shooting.
  • Smyth, Stewart (2017). From Westminster to Stormont: forty years of failed housing policies.
  • Sneha, P. P. (2017). Mapping digital humanities in India.
  • Snyder, Susanna (2017). How faith communities in the UK are responding to the refugee crisis.
  • Sobel, Kiley (2017). Families and Pokémon GO.
  • Solomon, Solon (2017). Has the time come for the UK to leave the European Court of Human Rights too?
  • Solonenko, Iryna (2017). How western populism weakens democracy in Ukraine.
  • Sommerville, Peter (2017). Are the government's homebuilding plans good news? Depends on whom you ask.
  • Sood, Rakesh, Spalding, Alexander (2017). “As geopolitical tensions unfold India will need a more agile and engaged foreign policy to protect its autonomy” – Rakesh Sood.
  • Sorace, Miriam (2017). Brexit pushes European lawmakers to reform the EU.
  • Sorace, Miriam (2017). Taking back control, actually: reforming the European Parliament elections.
  • South Asia, LSE (2017). Demonetisation, digitisation and narrow definitions of nationalism: Arun Jaitley’s visit to LSE.
  • Spalding, Alexander (2017). Between exclusion and political engagement: voices of youth from post-war Sri Lanka.
  • Spalding, Alexander (2017). If India’s encryption policy is to be effective, it must mandate higher standards and enhance trust.
  • Spalding, Alexander (2017). Student diary: interning at the Observer Research Foundation in Delhi.
  • Spencer, Nick (2017). She does God: Theresa May, a PM with strong views but little ideology.
  • Spieler, Ines, Scheibe, Susanne, Roßnagel, Stamov, Arvid, Kappas (2017). How to reap the benefits of flexible work time.
  • Spierings, Niels (2017). What if the angry white man is a woman? The gender gap in voting for the populist radical right.
  • Srnicek, Nick (2017). LSE Lit Fest 2017: platform capitalism by Nick Srnicek.
  • Staal, Klaas (2017). Britain has most often taken positions against the majority in the Council of the European Union.
  • Staal, Klaas (2017). How support from other member states affects influence in the Council of the European Union.
  • Staetsky, Daniel (2017). Quantifying antisemitic attitudes in Britain: the 'elastic' view of antisemitism.
  • Staite, Catherine (2017). Andy Street has just three years to unite the West Midlands under his mayoralty.
  • Stamm, Isabell, Eklund, Lina (2017). With great power comes great responsibility: crowdsourcing raises methodological and ethical questions for academia.
  • Stanley, Ben (2017). The causes and consequences of Poland’s parliamentary crisis.
  • Stannard, Emily (2017). Book review: copyright and E-learning: a guide for practitioners, 2nd ed. by Jane Secker with Chris Morrison.
  • Steffy, Kody (2017). Among underemployed college graduates, the role of class looms large.
  • Steinberg, Stacey (2017). Sharenting – in whose interests?
  • Stephenson, Mary-Ann (2017). Never mind NICs: gender budgeting reveals the Spring Budget’s true impact on poorer women.
  • Stern, Jon (2017). Brexit, competition and markets: there’s a need to spread the benefits of growth.
  • Stevens, Matthew Frank (2017). How a shortage of coins precipitated a depression in 15th century England.
  • Stewart, Michael (2017). Losing the Central European University would be a tragedy for Hungarian public life.
  • Stewart, Neil (2017). Book review: the data librarian’s handbook by Robin Rice and John Southall.
  • Stockemer, Daniel, Sundström, Aksel (2017). Female cabinet picks: just one more way in which Trump is exceptional.
  • Stocker, Paul (2017). Brexit and the mainstreaming of the British far right.
  • Stoica, Mihnea (2017). Romania’s political crisis reflects severe tensions within the country’s Social Democratic Party.
  • Stoica, Mihnea (2017). Survey evidence: why people are protesting in Romania.
  • Stokan, Eric (2017). Competition for Amazon's HQ2.0 shows how keen local governments are to offer incentives to attract firms.
  • Stokes, Bruce (2017). Religion and national belonging: do you have to be Christian to be “one of us?”.
  • Stokes, Patrick (2017). Philosophy communication is a two-way street: we learn from our publics, rather than simply teaching them.
  • Storer, Elizabeth (2017). Keeping the faith: on the spiritual dimensions of South Sudanese exile in Arua, north-west Uganda #LSEreturn.
  • Storer, Elizabeth (2017). Photo essay: seeing displacement through ethnographic photography #LSEreturn.
  • Straw, Ed (2017). How weak governance stopped Labour winning the general election.
  • Straw, Ed (2017). Redshift over Britain: is the Centre moving Left?
  • Strhan, Anna (2017). Tim Farron, Conservative Evangelicalism and the public sphere.
  • Strother, Logan (2017). Congress’ U-turn on flood insurance reform shows that lawmaking power can very quickly go from free rein to constrained.
  • Stupart, Richard (2017). Book review – South Sudan: A new history for a new nation by Douglas H. Johnson.
  • Stupart, Richard (2017). Book review: Burundi: the biography of a small Africancountry by Nigel Watt.
  • Stupart, Richard (2017). Book review: Nyerere: the early years by Thomas Molony.
  • Stupart, Richard (2017). Book review: the root causes of Sudan's civil wars, by Douglas H Johnson.
  • Sturgis, Patrick, Jennings, Will (2017). Who will turnout and who will not? The indicator that could make or break GE2017 poll predictions.
  • Stylianou, Konstantinos (2017). The end of net neutrality is not the end of the open internet.
  • Sullivan, Esther (2017). Manufactured homeowners live at risk of eviction - state policies can improve housing insecurity or make it worse.
  • Sullivan, Katie, Delaney, Helen (2017). Does God want female entrepreneurs to have it all?
  • Sullivan, Paul (2017). Harry Potter meets prototypes for policy-making: the global public policy network conference 2017.
  • Sultan, Maged (2017). Taiz youth: Between conflict and political participation.
  • Sumich, Jason (2017). Book review: the despot’s accomplice: how the West isaiding and abetting the decline of democracy by Brian Klaas.
  • Sunstein, Cass R. (2017). A prison of our own design: divided democracy in the age of social media.
  • Surridge, Paula, McAndrew, Siobhan, Begum, Neema (2017). Social capital and belonging: the 'citizens of somewhere' are more likely to be pro-EU.
  • Sutherland, Claire (2017). The European ideal has sunk to the bottom of the Mediterranean with the migrants it rejects.
  • Suttmann-Lea, Mara (2017). As a true outsider, what Trump’s presidency will look like is anybody’s guess.
  • Suttmann-Lea, Mara (2017). Profound partisanship, rather than early voting, may have guaranteed Greg Gianforte’s success in Montana amidst assault charges.
  • Sutton, April, Bosky, Amanda, Muller, Chandra (2017). How high school training for work in blue-collar communities helps manufacture workplace gender inequality.
  • Swain, Geoffrey (2017). LSE RB feature essay: the centenary of the Russian Revolution by Geoffrey Swain.
  • Swan, Sean (2017). Joint sovereignty? The implications of a snap election for Northern Ireland.
  • Swan, Sean (2017). Scotland and the myth of the 'Corbyn bounce'.
  • Swan, Sean (2017). Three reasons why Brexit has failed to boost support for Scottish independence.
  • Swan, Sean (2017). Why has Brexit failed to boost support for Scottish independence?
  • Swan, Sean (2017). Will Richard Leonard’s election mark a definitive turning point for Scottish Labour?
  • Swan, Sean (2017). A democratic outrage: Scotland’s constitutional position and Brexit.
  • Swan, Sean (2017). The real SNP 'peak' is yet to come - if Conference deals successfully with two key issues.
  • Sweeney, Christine (2017). Book Review: Basic Income: And How We Can Make It Happen by Guy Standing.
  • Sweeney, Christine (2017). Book review: masculinity, femininity and american political behavior by Monika McDermott.
  • Sweeney, Christine (2017). LSE Lit Fest 2017 book review: step up: confidence, success and your stellar career in 10 minutes a day by Phanella Mayall Fine and Alice Olins.
  • Sweeney, David (2017). Credit for research outputs should go to the originating institution but with a transitional arrangement for this REF cycle.
  • Swers, Michele L. (2017). Cracks in Republican unity between Trump and Congress are already beginning to show.
  • Sykes, Martin (2017). Retirement: are you looking forward to it.. or fearing it?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2017). Can Donald Tusk save Poland's weak and divided opposition?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2017). Explaining the popularity of Poland's law and justice government.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2017). How is the European migration crisis affecting Polish politics?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2017). How will Poland approach the Brexit negotiations?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2017). Poland’s parliamentary crisis could reach a tipping point by mid-January.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2017). Should the EU be concerned about a possible 'Polexit'?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks, Taggart, Paul (2017). How has Brexit, and other EU crises, affected party Euroscepticism across Europe?
  • Sørensen, Carsten (2017). The iPhone X in context.
  • Sørensen, Rune J. (2017). Evidence from Norway: how public broadcasters influence voting behaviour.
  • Talbot, Colin (2017). No longer welcome: the EU academics in Britain told to ‘make arrangements to leave’.
  • Talbot, Colin (2017). No longer welcome: the EU academics in Britain told to “make arrangements to leave”.
  • Tambini, Damian (2017). Online Campaigning – Averting a Crisis.
  • Tambini, Damian (2017). Where now for media reform in the UK?
  • Tambini, Damian (2017). Who benefits from using the term ‘fake news’?
  • Tambini, Damian, Anstead, Nick, Magalhães, João Carlos (2017). How the Liberal Democrats are using Facebook ads to court ‘remainers’.
  • Tambini, Damian, Anstead, Nick, Magalhães, João Carlos (2017). Is the Conservative Party deliberately distributing fake news in attack ads on Facebook?
  • Tambini, Damian, Anstead, Nick, Magalhães, João Carlos (2017). Labour’s advertising campaign on Facebook (or “Don’t Mention the War”).
  • Tamibini, Damian (2017). How advertising fuels fake news.
  • Tammas-Hastings, Dan (2017). Could the EU's new data regulation be the catalyst for a more ethical social media?
  • Tammas-Hastings, Dan (2017). Robo-advice in ten points - asset management on the cusp of dramatic change.
  • Tammas-Hastings, Dan (2017). ‘WealthTech’: The challenges facing the wealth management industry.
  • Tamzil, Cazadira Fediva (2017). Truth for Giulio Regeni!: Tragedy, complex complicity and the pursuit of effective transnational advocacy.
  • Taneja, Kabir (2017). India's foreign policy in West Asia: managing the three poles of power.
  • Tannam, Etain (2017). Brexit’s implications for Northern Ireland may be destabilising, but not fatal.
  • Tannam, Etain (2017). Cracks are beginning to appear in British-Irish relations.
  • Tannam, Etain (2017). Theresa May's Florence speech and Northern Ireland: subtle change?
  • Tannous, Laurie, Hayward, Katy (2017). Softening a hard border: lessons from North America for post-Brexit Ireland.
  • Tarsi, Melinda R., Rhodes, Jesse H., Nteta, Tatishe M. (2017). Presidents more likely to represent the concerns of white Americans than black Americans in speeches, yet Obama proves to be exception to rule.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2017). Book review: communicating your research with social media: a practical guide to using blogs, podcasts, data visualisations and video by Amy Mollett, Cheryl Brumley, Chris Gilson and Sierra Williams.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2017). Disentangling the academic web: what might have been learnt from discogs and IMDB.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2017). Following the success of the learning technologist, is it time for a research equivalent?
  • Tatum, Dale C. (2017). How a failed 17th century rebellion can help explain Donald Trump's election victory.
  • Taylor, Claire (2017). Using social media to curate digital artworks can lead to increased and more dynamic public participation and engagement.
  • Taylor, Claire, Thornton, Niamh (2017). “Writing sprints” can facilitate collaboration and encourage new ways of thinking about academic writing.
  • Taylor, Ian (2017). Book review: India and China in Africa: a comparative perspective of the oil industry by Raj Verma.
  • Taylor, Lucy (2017). Levantando el velo de la bondad: "la amistad" y el colonialismo de asentamiento en la Patagonia galesa de Argentina.
  • Taylor, Lucy (2017). Lifting the veil of kindness: 'friendship' and settler colonialism in Argentina's Welsh Patagonia.
  • Tedesco, Laura (2017). The dam is burst: Trump has legitimised the politically incorrect.
  • Teixeira, Ligia (2017). How the third sector can convince people that homelessness can be tackled.
  • Tellis, Ashley J., Campion, Sonali (2017). “The new bipolarity between the US and China poses challenges for India” – Ashley Tellis.
  • Temple, Luke (2017). To fend off populism, we must stop believing in the will of the people.
  • Tennant, Jon (2017). What are the barriers to post-publication peer review?
  • Tennant, Jon, Graziotin, Daniel, Kearns, Sarah (2017). We have the technology to save peer review - now it is up to our communities to implement it.
  • Terry, Chris (2017). Who’s going to hold the new metro mayors to account?
  • Terry, Lucy (2017). How collaboration can boost productivity in public services.
  • Tesche, Tobias (2017). Europe's Banking Union: what progress has been made?
  • Tewari, Falguni (2017). Paradiplomacy and the Teesta river water dispute: national interest vs regionalism.
  • Thakur, Dushyant (2017). Clean India mission: towards the right to sanitation as a human right?
  • Thaneshwar, Bhusal (2017). Breaking the silence: returning to local elections in Nepal.
  • Tharoor, Shashi, Campion, Sonali (2017). “To give the British credit for things that were never intended to benefit India is a mistake” – Shashi Tharoor.
  • Thebe Limbu, Sangita (2017). What works? Breaking silence on menstrual stigma and taboos.
  • Thelwall, Mike (2017). Mendeley reader counts offer early evidence of the scholarly impact of academic articles.
  • Thomas, Lorrin (2017). Like most Americans, Trump is ignorant of the truth about Puerto Rico.
  • Thompson, Helen (2017). Why oil matters for British politics.
  • Thompson, Matthew J., Smith, Chris M. (2017). Citizen science and crowdsourced data collection, not government statistics, provide the most reliable count of citizen fatalities by police.
  • Thompson, Noel (2017). Creating an ideal citizenry: the perorations of twentieth-century Budget speeches.
  • Thomson, Jennifer (2017). Free abortions in England will not remove the fundamental injustice Northern Irish women suffer.
  • Thomson, Jennifer (2017). Free abortions in England will not remove the fundamental injustice Northern Irish women suffer.
  • Thomson, Pat (2017). What should ECRs and PhDers consider when choosing a conference? Purpose, cost, and motivation.
  • Thornton, LaDonna M., Esper, Terry L., Autry, Chad W. (2017). The crucial role of politically savvy supply chain managers for internal integration.
  • Thouaille, Marie-Alix (2017). The ideal PhD researcher has no baggage.
  • Tierney, Stephen (2017). A second independence referendum in Scotland: the legal issues.
  • Titov, Alexander (2017). The timing is just right for Navalny to challenge Putin’s regime.
  • Tiyou, Tony (2017). The five biggest solar markets in Africa.
  • Toman, Eric (2017). Developing social science identities in interdisciplinary research and education.
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Book Review: Fossil Capital: The Rise of Steam Power and the Roots of Global Warming by Andreas Malm.
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Book review: Britain’s cities, Britain’s future by Mike Emmerich.
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Book review: from boom to bubble: how finance built the new Chicago by Rachel Weber.
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Book review: rethinking the economics of land and housing by Josh Ryan-Collins, Toby Lloyd and Laurie Macfarlane.
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Book review: the great Labour unrest: rank-and-file movements and political change in Durham coalfield by Lewis Mates.
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Fossil capital: the rise of steam power and the roots of global warming - Book Review.
  • Tomic, Slobodan (2017). Doping in world sport: the real issue is that we still don’t know who to blame for anti-doping failures.
  • Tomic, Slobodan (2017). Long read review: crisis in sports governance: exploring anti-doping policy and other battlegrounds (part one).
  • Tomic, Slobodan (2017). Long read review: crisis in sports governance: exploring anti-doping policy and other battlegrounds (part two).
  • Tomlinson, Jim (2017). Brexit: blame it on the loss of industrial jobs, not on globalisation.
  • Toshkov, Dimiter (2017). The EU is extraordinarily complex. But do we want to simplify it?
  • Toshkov, Dimiter (2017). There is no evidence of a structural East-West divide in the EU.
  • Toshkov, Dimiter (2017). Why it's not so simple to make the EU simpler.
  • Toubeau, Simon (2017). The EU must step in if Spain and Catalonia are to negotiate an end to the crisis.
  • Toubiana, Madeline, Zietsma, Charlene (2017). Social media echo chambers create serious issues for organisations.
  • Touchton, Michael, Borges Sugiyama, Natasha, Wampler, Brian (2017). The Brazilian experience: democracy, at its fullest, saves lives.
  • Toygür, Ilke (2017). Turkish constitutional referendum preview: a polarised society at a crossroads.
  • Traill, Helen (2017). Book review: engaged urbanism: cities and methodologies edited by Ben Campkin and Ger Duijzings.
  • Traill, Helen (2017). Book review: re:development: voices, cyanotypes and writings from the green backyard edited by Jessie Brennan.
  • Treadway, Jon (2017). Our current conceptualisation of peer review must be expanded if we're to realise the greatest innovations.
  • Trelstad, Brian (2017). The challenge for impact investing is management, not measurement.
  • Triantaphyllou, Dimitris (2017). Greek-Turkish relations and the perceptions of their elites.
  • Trigg, Dylan (2017). Lost in the supermarket.
  • Tsakatika, Myrto (2017). Assessing Syriza’s two years in power: how successful has the party been in office?
  • Tse, Terence, Esposito, Mark, Goh, Danny (2017). Humans and artificial intelligence: Rivalry or romance?
  • Tsiftsoglou, Anna (2017). Brexit and the ECJ: If the UK plays in EU territory, it has to accept EU rules and referees.
  • Tsiftsoglou, Anna (2017). Why May can't have it all: the ECJ and the Brexit rules of (dis-)engagement.
  • Tsygankov, Andrei P. (2017). Andrei Tsygankov: “The US establishment, not the Kremlin, is undermining normalisation with Russia”.
  • Tulumello, Simone (2017). Semi-quantitative mapping in comparative case-study research: Resources, constraints and research design adaptation.
  • Turculet, Georgiana (2017). The language of nationalism: what to make of the leaked immigration plans.
  • Turner, Bryan S. (2017). Religion and the modernization of the body.
  • Udani, Adriano (2017). The take up of E-Verify programs shows that state officials prefer the highly skilled over temporary immigrant workers with lower skills.
  • Udani, Adriano, Kimball, David (2017). Perceptions of voter fraud are boosted by many Americans' hostility towards immigrants.
  • Umit, Resul (2017). Most British MPs used to avoid tweeting about the EU, leaving Eurosceptics to fill the gap.
  • Umit, Resul (2017). Most British MPs used to avoid tweeting about the EU, leaving Eurosceptics to fill the gap.
  • Uprety, Sudeep (2017). Do numbers tell the real story of gender based violence in Nepal?
  • Usherwood, Simon (2017). Will Christmas come early in the Brexit negotiations?
  • Utych, Stephen M. (2017). As Donald Trump has shown, words matter in how voters make political decisions.
  • Uzor, Eustace (2017). Enhancing Tax Collection Efficiency and Compliance in Nigeria: The role of behavioural economics.
  • Uzor, Eustace (2017). Reducing incentives for fiscal indiscipline at Nigeria’ssubnational government level.
  • Uzor, Eustace (2017). Tackling Corruption in Nigeria through Public Service Reforms.
  • Vakilifathi, Mona (2017). Term-limited legislators use lawmaking to keep a closer hold on policy implementation.
  • Valdez, Inés (2017). Donald Trump is expanding a system of immigration enforcement which already punishes immigrants and makes them vulnerable.
  • Valdur, Mari (2017). Book review: before and after gender: sexual mythologies of everyday life by Marilyn Strathern.
  • Van Ingen, Michiel (2017). Higher education staff and students should support the One Day Without Us protest.
  • Van Vechten, Renée (2017). How California could be the launching pad for the Democrats' 2020 presidential nominee.
  • Vaughan, Tom (2017). Book review: cultural politics of targeted killing: on drones, counter-insurgency and violence by Kyle Grayson.
  • Vaughan, Tom (2017). Book review: uranium by Anthony Burke.
  • Veenendaal, Wouter (2017). The curious case of Liechtenstein: A country caught between a prince and democracy.
  • Vela, Blerim (2017). Five lessons from the mayoral run-off elections in Kosovo.
  • Velasco, Jesus (2017). The rise of Donald Trump shows the need for a deeper understanding of the US in Mexico and elsewhere.
  • Velázquez Quiroz, Roberto (2017). Chile's 'second transition': the persistent politics of memory in the 2017 presidential election.
  • Venis, Sarah (2017). MSF Scientific Days 2017: improving the effectiveness of humanitarian programmes through scientific research and innovation.
  • Venson-Moitoi, Pelonomi (2017). From conversation to action: the role of women empowerment in transforming Africa.
  • Venters, Will, Sørensen, Carsten (2017). Naps in the office - perhaps the secret of China's digital success?
  • Verma, Raj (2017). Author response: India and China in Africa: a comparative perspective of the oil industry by Raj Verma.
  • Verma, Raj (2017). Book Review: Modi's world: expanding India's sphere of influence by C. Raja Mohan.
  • Verma, Raj (2017). Book review: China and the new Maoists by Kerry Brown and Simone Van Nieuwenhuizen.
  • Verma, Raj (2017). Book review: the US Pivot and Indian foreign policy: Asia's evolving balance of power by Harsh V. Pant and Yogesh Joshi.
  • Vertelytė, Mantė, Jarmack, Sarita Fae (2017). Book review: ties that bind: race and the politics of friendship in South Africa edited by Shannon Walsh and Jon Soske.
  • Veseli, Kadri, EUROPP, LSE (2017). Kadri Veseli: “Kosovo needs an army – we are worried about increasing Russian influence, the rise of extremism and Serbian provocations”.
  • Victor, Jennifer Nicoll (2017). Parties are more likely to form coalitions with groups that are like them and show loyalty, but not those that are rich.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Catherine Wines: ‘International remittances help people directly’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Clarence Blay: 'Ghana has 140,000 mobile money agents versus 1,300 bank branches'.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Crimson Rose: ‘Burning Man shows people a different way of looking at what they do’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Gaurav Dhillon: ‘The cloud is safer than any other form of managing data applications’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Hacking the market: Systemic contagion from cybersecurity breaches.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Joseph Kahn: ‘We’re not talking about news, we’re talking about fraud’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Julian David: 'We need to get the data issue right in the Brexit negotiations'.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Kate Brodock: ‘Some Silicon Valley firms are leaders in parental leave’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Marc DaCosta: “Define your problem, then look at the data, not the other way around”.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Melonee Wise: ‘Robot adoption will grow faster in semi-structured environments’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Naveen Jain: ‘If we can learn to live on the moon we can live anywhere in space’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Nico Sell: ‘Stop giving away all your information for free on Facebook'.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Nicole Eagan: “Cybersecurity is very fast becoming an all-out arms race”.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Robert Scoble: ‘The coming wave of technology will really change human life’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Rolf Dobelli: 'People will say about you what they want. Treat it as white noise.'.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Sasha Hoffman: ‘Autonomous cars are just one piece of a much larger equation’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). Torbjörn Holmström: ‘We add automation when it helps our customers’ bottom line’.
  • Vieira, Helena (2017). William Murphy: ‘We need change management to help people with new technology’.
  • Vieira, Jordan (2017). Book Review – Volunteer Economies: The Politics and Ethics of Voluntary Labour in Africa, edited by Ruth Prince and Hannah Brown.
  • Vincent, Ben (2017). Book review: risk, power and inequality in the 21st century by Dean Curran.
  • Vincent, Peter (2017). Introducing Canary Haz: discovering article PDFs with one click.
  • Visalvanich, Neil (2017). Voters are more likely to support Asian-American candidates in American elections.
  • Vitaud, Laetitia (2017). Co-workers and makers: New public policies and corporate strategies for the city.
  • Vitiello, Thomas (2017). Understanding the campaign dynamics of the French presidential election.
  • Vittori, Davide (2017). Is social democracy facing extinction in Europe?
  • Vlachopoulos, Dimitrios, Makri, Agoritsa (2017). The use of games and simulations in higher education can improve students' cognitive and behavioural skills.
  • Vollaard, Hans (2017). Final look at the Dutch election: a campaign of limited drama looks set to produce a remarkably fragmented parliament.
  • Vraga, Emily (2017). Expert organizations can be effective in correcting health misinformation on social media.
  • Vries, Gerdien de (2017). Some tech devices try but fail to make us minimize our carbon footprint.
  • Vukovic, Vuk, Lahdelma, Ilona (2017). New election prediction: Macron will win, but the race will be closer than opinion polls suggest.
  • Vuksanovic, Vuk (2017). Nuclear weapons dominate North Korea's foreign and domestic policy; diplomatic engagement is the only way to encourage regime change.
  • Vuksanovic, Vuk (2017). Rex Tillerson may be a Secretary of State with little influence on US foreign policy.
  • Vézina, Pierre-Louis (2017). Brexit will inevitably hurt UK exports, slowly but surely.
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan (2017). Post-Brexit work visa quotas on EU nationals will likely favour graduates.
  • Wager, Alan (2017). Redefining the political landscape: here’s how a Progressive Alliance could work.
  • Waheed Jamali, Abdul (2017). Protecting small farmers in Pakistan in the wake of the new seed Act.
  • Waldman, Simon A., Caliskan, Emre (2017). The archipelago of press restriction in Turkey.
  • Walker, Martin (2017). Blockchain and bitcoin: In search of a critique.
  • Walker, Martin (2017). ‘Ledger Nirvana’ in trade processing either doesn’t exist or is aeons away.
  • Walsh, Matt (2017). Understanding Labour’s ingenious campaign strategy on Facebook.
  • Walter, Stefanie (2017). Europeans support the EU's hard line in the Brexit negotiations.
  • Walter, Stefanie (2017). Survey evidence: Europeans support the EU's hard line in the Brexit negotiations.
  • Wang, Mengjie, Sugden, Robert, Zizzo, Daniel (2017). Shoppers under pressure shun time-limited offers.
  • Wang, Xianwen (2017). Tracking the digital footprints to scholarly articles: the fast accumulation and rapid decay of social media referrals.
  • Ward, Bob (2017). Universities under purdah: maintaining impartiality or restricting academic freedom?
  • Ward, Bob (2017). The extension and successes of California's cap-and-trade programme suggests the future of US climate policy may not be so bleak.
  • Warner, Neil, Pitts, Frederick Harry, Lombardozzi, Lorena (2017). Why a basic income alone will not be a panacea to social insecurity.
  • Warren, Michael (2017). Book review: caring for strangers: Filipino medical workers in Asia by Megha Amrith.
  • Warren, Michael (2017). Book review: the conversational firm: rethinking bureaucracy in the age of social media by Catherine J. Turco.
  • Watson, Matthew (2017). Machonomics: George Osborne’s legacy to UK macroeconomic governance.
  • Waugh, Chris (2017). Book review: vulnerability in resistance edited by Judith Butler, Zeynep Gambetti and Leticia Sabsay.
  • Weale, Albert (2017). If you believe Brexit is a mistake, you have a democratic duty to oppose it.
  • Weale, Albert (2017). If you believe Brexit is a mistake, you have a democratic duty to oppose it.
  • Webb, Paul (2017). Book review: writers’ rights: freelance journalism in a digital age by Nicole S. Cohen.
  • Webb, Paul, Scarrow, Susan E., Poguntke, Thomas (2017). New parties, new movements: but how much say do party members get?
  • Webster, Keith (2017). Reimagining the role of the library in the digital age: changing the use of space and navigating the information landscape.
  • Webster, Peter (2017). Book review: the new Elizabethan age. Culture, society and national identity after World War II edited by Irene Morra and Rob Gossedge.
  • Webster, Peter (2017). The New Elizabethan Age: Culture, Society and National Identity after World War II.
  • Webster, Steven W. (2017). Why Republicans and Democrats can no longer 'just get along'.
  • Weinstein, Adam (2017). What US policymakers can learn about Iran from the life and death of Rafsanjani.
  • Weiss, Alan (2017). If work stresses you out, give yourself permission to take control.
  • Weissenborn, Frederik (2017). Book review: urban re-industrialization edited by Krzysztof Nawratek.
  • Weisskircher, Manès (2017). The European Citizens’ Initiative is five years old – and it has been no step forward for EU democracy.
  • Weisskircher, Manès (2017). Six things to know about the German election.
  • Weisskircher, Manès, Bergman, Matthew E. (2017). Austria's election: four things to know about the result.
  • Weitershausen, Inez von (2017). The German reaction to Theresa May’s speech: A mixed response to ‘hard Brexit’.
  • Wenyan Ma, Winston (2017). The Chinese have transitioned directly to a mobile-only era.
  • Wenzelburger, Georg (2017). Law and order in the '90s: why Blair and Schröder implemented very different policies.
  • Wheatley, Jonathan (2017). The “empty centre”: how voters’ views have polarised since 2015.
  • Whiteley, Paul, Clarke, Harold D., Goodwin, Matthew (2017). Was this a Brexit election after all? Tracking party support among Leave and Remain voters.
  • Whiteley, Paul, Clarke, Harold D., Stewart, Marianne (2017). How the Conservatives’ austerity rhetoric won them GE2015, and almost cost them GE2017.
  • Whiting, Matthew (2017). One step closer to a united Ireland? Explaining Sinn Féin’s electoral success.
  • Widfeldt, Anders (2017). UKIP giveth and UKIP taketh away: why Brexit may prove an electoral dead end for the Tories.
  • Wiggins, Joe (2017). Do emotions overwhelm probability in decision making?
  • Wignaraja, Ganeshan, Campion, Sonali (2017). “Increased connectivity and economic integration between South and Southeast Asia would create significant opportunities for both regions” – Ganeshan Wignaraja.
  • Wilby, Mercedes (2017). "Bathroom bills" don't take into account that gender isn't always clear cut.
  • Wilkinson, Betina Cutaia, Bingham, Natasha (2017). Southern Blacks who feel powerless and disadvantaged are less likely to support immigration.
  • Wilkinson, Clare (2017). Where's the evidence? Obstacles to impact-gathering and how researchers might be better supported in future.
  • Willems, Auke (2017). How EU law came to the fore in the Catalan independence debate - and what it means for Carles Puigdemont.
  • Willetts, David (2017). How longitudinal analysis helps us understand why the younger generation’s living standards are faltering.
  • Williams, Katherine (2017). Book review: crimes unspoken: the rape of German women at the end of the Second World War by Miriam Gebhardt.
  • Williams, Katherine (2017). Book review: messengers of the right: conservative media and the transformation of American politics by Nicole Hemmer.
  • Williams, Katherine (2017). LSE Lit Fest 2017 book review: Red Ellen: the life of Ellen Wilkinson, socialist, feminist, internationalist by Laura Beers.
  • Williams, Katherine (2017). Red Ellen: The Life of Ellen Wilkinson, Socialist, Feminist, Internationalist.
  • Williams, Matt (2017). How Parliament's failure to clearly articulate immigration policy forces judges to take control.
  • Williams, Mike, Oliver, Tim (2017). In 2017 and beyond, the UK-US Special Relationship will be caught between a Trump Rock and a Brexit Hard Place.
  • Williams, Sierra (2017). Science is a social process: facilitating community interactions across the research lifecycle.
  • Williams, Thomas Christie (2017). Book review: metrics: what counts in global health edited by Vincanne Adams.
  • Williams, Thomas Christie (2017). Long read review: drug dealer, MD: how doctors were duped, patients got hooked and why it’s so hard to stop by Anna Lembke.
  • Williamson, Ben, Rutherford, Alasdair (2017). ClassDojo poses data protection concerns for parents.
  • Willoughby, Syerramia (2017). Land conflict mapping tools.
  • Wilmott, Annabelle (2017). The media’s visual securitisation and dehumanisation of refugees.
  • Wilson, David Carl (2017). Can philosophy teach us anything about leadership and management?
  • Wilson, Emma (2017). LSE Lit Fest 2017 Book Review: Ctrl Alt Delete: how I grew up online by Emma Gannon.
  • Wilson, Gary (2017). Book review: the Holocaust: a new history by Laurence Rees.
  • Wilson, Neil (2017). Metadata is the key to collaboration and a national bibliographic knowledgebase.
  • Windridge, Oliver (2017). A positive step on a rocky road: Tunisia signs up to the African Court on human and peoples’ rights.
  • Wintersieck, Amanda (2017). Real-time fact-checking can change people’s opinion about a candidate, but only if the ratings are decisive.
  • Wintgens, Sophie (2017). China's new relations with Panama and Costa Rica are another step towards a Beijing Consensus in Central America.
  • Wise, David W. (2017). How Donald Trump is helping to make China great again.
  • Witkin, Susan, Hays, Scott P. (2017). For many rural participants, Drug Court can be a positive experience, but more treatment options and support are needed.
  • Witney, Simon (2017). Brexit in the Supreme Court – a landmark ruling, or monumental waste of time and money?
  • Wlezien, Christopher (2017). The public may not be getting the policies they want, but it’s very hard to measure what they do want.
  • Woldemariam, Yohannes (2017). Desperately poor countries host refugees while the affluent world abandons them.
  • Woldemariam, Yohannes (2017). Morocco’s new tango with the African Union #28thAUSummit.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2017). The right is set to be the big winner in Austria's upcoming general election.
  • Woodcock, Jamie (2017). Working the Phones.
  • Woods, Philip (2017). Dadi’s dal: deciphering India’s ‘national dish’?
  • Woods, Philip (2017). The beginning of the end of Empire? Reassessing the reporting of the British retreat in Burma.
  • Woolley, Richard, Robinson-Garcia, Nicolas (2017). The 2014 REF results show only a very weak relationship between excellence in research and achieving societal impact.
  • Worthy, Ben (2017). How Parliament's campaign of attrition forced the government to open up about Brexit.
  • Worthy, Ben (2017). Letting the sun shine in – for a while: why (most) US presidents embrace openness.
  • Worthy, Ben (2017). Submarine May can’t slip back under the waves. Keeping Brexit negotiations secret is impossible.
  • Worthy, Ben (2017). Theresa May’s snap election: historic or Pyrrhic?
  • Worthy, Ben, Bennister, Mark (2017). Rebels running London? The mayoralties of Ken and Boris compared.
  • Wren-Lewis, Simon (2017). Brexit has led to falling real wages in the UK.
  • Wren-Lewis, Simon (2017). Why Brexit has led to falling real wages in the UK.
  • Wright, Kieran (2017). How shifts in Scottish public opinion helped the Conservatives reverse their long-term decline.
  • Wright, Mike, Amess, Kevin, Bacon, Nick, Gilligan, John, Wilson, Nick (2017). Brexit is changing the scenario for private equity in the UK.
  • Wright, Nicholas (2017). Squeezed mandarins: the four big challenges facing the civil service.
  • Wu, Sharon (2017). Book Review: Voices from the 'Jungle': Stories from the Calais Refugee Camp edited by Marie Godin, Katrine Møller Hansen, Aura Lounasmaa, Corinne Squire and Tahir Zaman.
  • Wu, Sharon (2017). Book review: man or monster?: the trial of a Khmer Rouge torturer by Alexander Laban Hinton.
  • Xu, Jianwei (2017). The pharmaceutical industry is at risk from Brexit.
  • Yadav, Punam (2017). 1325 – is that a taxi number? Implementation of the National Action Plan on 1325 and 1820 in Nepal – Punam Yadav (4/2017).
  • Yadav, Punam (2017). ‘1325 – is that a taxi number?’ Implementation of the National Action Plan on 1325 and 1820 in Nepal.
  • Yadav, Punam (2017). Can internally displaced women in the entertainment sector be part of the Women, Peace and Security agenda?
  • Yam, Kai Chi (Sam) (2017). How (not) to turn good soldiers into bad apples.
  • Yam, Kai Chi (Sam), Lau, Jenson (2017). It’s ok for leaders to have a sense of humour.
  • Young, Sara (2017). Will they stay or must they go? The children of EU migrants face an uncertain future.
  • Youngs, Richard (2017). Is ‘hybrid geopolitics’ the next EU foreign policy doctrine?
  • Yueh, Linda Y. (2017). 'Global Britain': the trade strategies the UK could pursue after Brexit.
  • Yusuf, Jameel, Campion, Sonali (2017). “The answer to terrorism lies in collaboration and shared intelligence” – Jameel Yusuf.
  • Zaller, Nickolas (2017). How expanding Medicaid can help prisoners in the Southern states.
  • Zalt Austwick, Martin (2017). Does high-impact research come at the expense of quality? An automated analysis of the REF impact landscape.
  • Zambrano-Gutierrez, Julio, Rutherford, Amanda, Nicholson-Crotty, Sean (2017). It's good for students when parents work with teachers to design and produce their education.
  • Zawacki, Sarah G (2017). Equal parts researcher and advocate: having an impact in hard-to-reach communities.
  • Zeev, Nadav Ben (2017). News of defence spending changes the economic behaviour of people and firms.
  • Zeev, Nadav Ben, Pappa, Evi (2017). News of defence spending changes the economic behaviour of people and firms.
  • Zeisberger, Claudia (2017). Success attracts new players to private equity.
  • Zenghelis, Dimitri (2017). Both Brexit and the financial crisis highlight why economists should admit they can’t always get it right.
  • Zeni, Thomas A. (2017). Ethical problems in business start with biases in judgement.
  • Zenios, Stavros (2017). EU borders: walking backwards from Northern Ireland to Cyprus.
  • Zenios, Stavros (2017). There are few good solutions from a divided Cyprus for Northern Ireland.
  • Zhang, Chenchen (2017). Book review: migration, ethics & power: spaces of hospitality in international politics by Dan Bulley.
  • Zhang, Fengxiu, Feeney, Mary K. (2017). City managers matter in how cities engage with their citizens.
  • Zhang, Jing, Wong, Poh-Kam, Ho, Yuen-Ping (2017). The price Asian venture capitalists pay to work in Silicon Valley.
  • Zhang, Ting, Gino, Francesca, Norton, Michael I. (2017). Conflict mediators who use a dose of hostility can be surprisingly effective.
  • Zhivitskaya, Maria (2017). Book review: the fix: how bankers lied, cheated and colluded to rig the world’s most important number by Liam Vaughan and Gavin Finch.
  • Zimmermann, Allyson (2017). Diversity is a fact; inclusion, a choice.
  • Zimmermann, Allyson (2017). How employee networks can help boost a company’s bottom line.
  • Zimmermann, Allyson (2017). Think manager, think male: stereotypes that the media help reinforce.
  • Zink, Jim (2017). Individuals’ “reverence” for constitutions acts as a barrier to constitutional change.
  • Zorzella, Luiz, Zevallos, Gustavo (2017). Why are so few companies satisfied with their innovations’ results?
  • Zumaeta V., Jessy (2017). How LSE turned my ambitions into an action plan.
  • da Silva Lopes, Teresa (2017). Using third-party endorsements to build a brand’s reputation: The case of British chocolate.
  • de Coss Corzo, Alejandro (2017). Mexico's new general law on archives could jeopardise research, journalism, and transparency.
  • de Cruz, Helen (2017). Despite uncertainty over EU academics' future, the brain drain hasn't begun yet.
  • de Gortari, Carlos Salinas (2017). Mexico and the US must realise that NAFTA is the solution not the problem.
  • de Londras, Fiona (2017). The new sovereigntism: what it means for human rights law in the UK.
  • de Mestral, Armand (2017). If NAFTA fails, Canada should reach across the Atlantic to the UK.
  • de Meza, David (2017). Self-employment attracts the optimist.
  • de Silva, Chandra R. (2017). Sri Lanka has made progress but faces formidable challenges in 2017.
  • de Vaujany, François-Xavier, Vitaud, Laetitia (2017). Re-inventing management research with learning expeditions.
  • de Vries, Catherine E. (2017). How other Europeans assess the dangers of leaving the EU.
  • de Vries, Catherine E. (2017). Juncker, Euroscepticism and the guinea pig: how other Europeans assess the dangers of leaving the EU.
  • del Castillo, Graciana (2017). Obstacles to peacebuilding: the failure of foreign intervention in war-torn countries.
  • di Fiore, Alessandro, Schneider, Simon (2017). Crowdscanning: The future of open innovation and artificial intelligence.
  • hasan, Tahera, Campion, Sonali (2017). “Despite the prevalence of child abandonment in Pakistan there are no formal structures for adoption in place” – Tahera Hasan.
  • van Kessel, Stijn (2017). Geert Wilders is no longer so keen on pushing for a ‘Nexit’ – and it’s because Dutch people don’t want it.
  • van Kessel, Stijn (2017). No domino effect: Brexit is close to constituting a non-issue in European politics.
  • van Kessel, Stijn (2017). There has been no domino effect - Brexit is close to constituting a non-issue in European politics.
  • van Klinken, Adriaan (2017). Beyond African religious homophobia: how Christianity is a source of African LGBT activism.
  • van Liere, Lucien (2017). Whether he wins or not, Geert Wilders has successfully managed to put Islam at the centre of the Dutch elections.
  • van Vliet, Pim (2017). Debunking the investment myth that high risks yield high returns.
  • von Ondarza, Nicolai, Scheler, Ronja (2017). The High Representative’s ‘double hat’: how Mogherini and Ashton have differed in their links with the Commission.
  • Özel, Soli, Öney, Sezin (2017). Today’s referendum is the most critical vote in modern Turkish history.
  • Šimečka, Martin M. (2017). Truth and lies – a Central European perspective.
  • Ščasný, Milan, Zvěřinová, Iva (2017). You broke the planet, you pay for it.
  • عمر العبيدلي وكامرون ميرزا (2017). كيفية الاستفادة من الاستشاريين في دول مجلس التعاون.
  • Working paper
  • Duriesmith, David (2017). Engaging men and boys in the Women, Peace and Security agenda: beyond the "good men" industry. (Women, Peace and Security Working Paper Series 11/2017). Centre for Women Peace and Security, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Frogh, Wazhma (2017). Afghanistan's National Action Plan 'a wish list of many dreams'. (Women, Peace and Security Working Paper Series 10/2017). Centre for Women Peace and Security, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Kuner, Christopher (2017). The internet and the global reach of EU law. (LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers 04/2017). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Blog post
  • Alonso, Gregorio (30 September 2017) Bicentenary celebrations of Latin American independence obscure the complex realities of the birth of nations. USApp-American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Antonucci, Lorenza, Horvath, Laszlo, Krouwel, André (31 October 2017) Brexit was not the voice of the working class nor of the uneducated - it was of the squeezed middle. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Appelbaum, Eileen, Batt, Rosemary (23 January 2017) How private equity firms are designed to earn big while risking little of their own. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Babayan, Nelli (13 January 2017) The Kremlin doesn’t promote autocracy – it simply trolls whomever it dislikes. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Batarseh., Feras A. (20 September 2017) Thoughts on the future of human knowledge and machine intelligence. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Baxter, Graeme, Burnett, Simon, Isaacs, John, MacLeod, Iain, Pedersen, Sarah, Tait, Elizabeth (24 June 2017) Scottish leaders’ debates on Twitter: Sturgeon, Davidson, and ‘indyref2’ dominated proceedings. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Begg, Iain (20 October 2017) The gaffe that keeps on taking: how to break the deadlock over Britain's EU divorce bill. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Behuria, Pritish (17 February 2017) The tentative developmental state in Rwanda: from anti-manufacturing to recapturing the domestic market. International Development.
  • Betermier, Sebastien, Calvet, Laurent E., Sodini, Paolo (11 July 2017) Investors' striking migration from growth to value investing over their life cycle. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Blankenburger, Bob (6 July 2017) Illinois’ African American and Hispanic students are significantly less likely to complete a bachelor’s degree than their White peers. USApp-American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Blyth, Fiona, Schneider, Carmen Huckel (6 July 2017) A more interdisciplinary approach can help us understand why research evidence does or doesn’t make it into policy. Impact of Social Sciences Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Bovens, Mark, Wille, Anchrit (5 July 2017) It's education, stupid: how globalisation has made education the new political cleavage in Europe. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Brown, Jennifer (30 January 2017) Make America cruel again?: a pragmatic analysis of why torture does not work. British Politics and Policy at LSE.
  • Brown, Jennifer (3 November 2017) The sexual harassment merry-go-round: what we know about Britain’s under-reported problem. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Brown, Stuart A. (17 March 2017) A weaker economic case, but a stronger political one – how Yes could win a second referendum in Scotland. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Bullock, Steve (5 July 2017) 'Bloody difficult' Britain has already blown its chances of a good deal from the EU27. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Bullock, Steve (12 July 2017) Brexit can be stopped – but the window of opportunity is closing fast. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Codiroli Mcmaster, Natasha (10 July 2017) Women are less likely to study STEM subjects - but disadvantaged women are even less so. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Coleman, Simon (15 February 2017) Virtuous citizens: Pentecostal social activism in an age of suspicion. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Corbett, Anne, Gordon, Claire E (2 February 2017) The university challenge what would an Intelligent Brexit look like? LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Corea, Francesco (14 October 2017) Can Twitter sentiment predict stock market behaviour? USApp-American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Costello, Anthony (6 July 2017) The £1bn bung won’t protect Northern Ireland from the pain of a hard Brexit. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Dahler-Larsen, Peter (13 July 2017) The new configuration of metrics, rules, and guidelines creates a disturbing ambiguity in academia. Impact of Social Sciences Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Dasgupta, Rohit K., Dhall, Pawan (31 July 2017) The potential (and limitations) of digital media for sexual health interventions in India. South Asia @ LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Deegan, Marilyn, Deller, Rose (23 June 2017) What does the future hold for academic books? LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Demary, Markus (6 September 2017) The US should not roll back financial regulation. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Donnelly, Brendan (8 November 2017) The internal contradictions of the Brexit project are unbridgeable. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Doshi, Bhavik (18 October 2017) Cultural encounters in the field: finding a 'home' away from home. Field Research Methods Lab Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Ershov, Philipp (6 December 2017) What can neuroscience teach us about the social world? LSE Undergraduate Political Review.
  • Farley, Felix (30 November 2017) A case for artificial intelligence (AI) rights. LSE Undergraduate Political Review.
  • Fichtner, Jan (2 November 2017) The Cayman conundrum why is one tiny archipelago the largest financial centre in Latin America and the Caribbean? LSE Latin America and Caribbean Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Halikiopoulou, Daphne (10 February 2017) What is new and what is nationalist about Europe’s ‘new nationalism’? LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Harris, Brad, Gardner, Richard (12 July 2017) Boomerang employees: should you welcome them back? LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Hayward, Katy, Campbell, Maurice (18 September 2017) Legatum Institute's 'solution' for the Brexit border is highly problematic. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Honohan, Iseult (23 January 2017) Britons are applying for Irish citizenship to get an EU passport. Is this a problem? Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Igami, Mitsuru (10 July 2017) When companies stop offshoring, they may end up dying. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Jacobs, Brian, Singhal, Vinod (11 July 2017) Why were Western retailers blamed for the building collapse in Bangladesh? LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Kahle, Kathleen, Stulz, René M. (17 October 2017) The shrinking number of public corporations in the US. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Karvonen, Andrew (12 July 2017) Book Review: The Politics of Evidence: From Evidence-Based Policy to the Good Governance of Evidence by Justin Parkhurst. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Ke, Qing, Ahn, Yong-Yeol, Sugimoto, Cassidy R. (12 July 2017) Scientific birds of a feather flock together: science communication on social media rarely happens across or beyond disciplinary boundaries. Impact of Social Sciences Blog.
  • Kettell, Steven (21 February 2017) Britain’s Christian right: seeking solace in a narrative of discrimination. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Kuner, Christopher (18 July 2017) The Internet and the global reach of EU law. LSE Business Review.
  • Laker, Ben, Ridley, Mark (25 January 2017) How salespeople can stimulate the global economy. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Lam, Chloe Lok Yi (5 July 2017) Curbing populism: remove barriers and make actual benefits visible. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Lokonon, Boris Odilon Kounagbè (26 July 2017) Farmers' vulnerability to climate shocks in Benin. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Lottholz, Philipp, Kluczewska, Karolina (30 October 2017) Ever wondered why practitioners treat researchers like a nuisance? The challenges of accessing expert knowledge, from two perspectives. Field Research Methods Lab Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • López de San Román, Alea, Schunz, Simon (15 September 2017) Understanding European Union science diplomacy. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Marchi, Ludovica (3 July 2017) How the EU’s partnership with Myanmar is furthering its goals in Southeast Asia. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Massa, Felipe G., Helms, Wesley, Voronov, Maxim, Wang, Liang (3 July 2017) How to turn a brand’s friends (and detractors) into evangelists: The case of Canadian wine. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • McKenzie, Lisa (3 March 2017) Walking in Whitechapel: a series of blogs from Lisa Mckenzie’s class, culture and politics class. Researching Sociology. picture_as_pdf
  • Mema, Buhendwa (10 July 2017) Contesting 'Le Glissement': analysis of election gridlocks and constitutional coup in DRC. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Mew, Heather (23 January 2017) Book review: student lives in crisis: deepening inequality in times of austerity by Lorenza Antonucci. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Moore, Luke (9 November 2017) What motivated Conservative MPs to back or oppose Brexit? British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Muro, Mark, Liu, Sifan (22 November 2017) The digitalisation of everything: How the US economy is going digital at hyper speed. LSE Business Review. picture_as_pdf
  • Najy, Cenni, Phinnemore, David (12 July 2017) Should the UK seek association with or membership of EFTA? LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Oliver, Tim (28 July 2017) A Brexit summer reading guide. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Orsi, Roberto (20 February 2017) The European Union at a crossroads. Euro Crisis in the Press. picture_as_pdf
  • Ortega, José Luis (11 January 2017) Twitter can help with scientific dissemination but its influence on citation impact is less clear. Impact of Social Sciences Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Ortino, Federico, Hestermeyer, Holger (14 November 2017) Article 50 does allow Britain to negotiate a transitional period. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Posen, Adam S. (2 October 2017) Adam Posen ‘There are many echoes between Brexiteers and the Trump way of thinking’. LSE Business Review.
  • Power, Sam (25 January 2017) The funding of politics in Great Britain – an issue transformed. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Robertson, Hamish, Travaglia, Joanne (5 July 2017) Without a critical approach to big data it risks becoming an increasingly sophisticated paradigm for coercion. Impact of Social Sciences Blog. picture_as_pdf
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