Items where department is "Public Policy Group"

University Structure (106206) LSE (106206) Academic Departments (62869) Government (4893) Public Policy Group (542)
Number of items: 60.
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  • Agrawal, David R. (2016). Local sales taxes can reduce the differences between taxes at state borders.
  • Astill, Stuart (2016). The UK is missing a great opportunity to improve productivity: people data.
  • Atherton, Michelle, Wesley, Leckrone (2016). Despite rising inequality, Mayors are still focusing on economic development – not redistribution – to help the poor.
  • Avlijaš, Sonja (2016). From Brexit to Trump: why mobilising anger in a constructive way is now one of the key challenges in modern politics.
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  • Baker, Thomas (2016). Americans are more supportive for policies that will save rather than punish youth criminals, and are willing to pay for them.
  • Barker, Chris (2016). How the failure of two political parties helped lead to Brexit and the rise of Donald Trump.
  • Barnum, Jeremy D., Campbell, Walter L., Trocchio, Sarah, Caplan, Joel M., Kennedy, Leslie W. (2016). How the physical landscape of the urban environment affects drug dealing.
  • Berry, Richard (2016). Book review: locating localism: statecraft, citizenship and democracy by Jane Wills.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). The 1930s realignment of German politics shows that in times of crisis, political equilibriums can quickly fall out of balance.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). This year’s upside-down election is part of a political realignment which encompasses both parties, and is fueled by public rancor.
  • Evans, Heather, Brown, Kayla, Wimberly, Tiffany (2016). Hillary Clinton is tweeting more than Donald Trump and attacks him more often than he does her.
  • Metz, Neil, Burdina, Mariya (2016). How neighborhood inequality leads to higher crime rates.
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  • Carolyn, Côté-Lussier (2016). How rising social inequality may be fueling public demands for increasingly harsh criminal justice policies.
  • Christenson, Dino, Kriner, Douglas (2016). When it comes to executive actions, Americans’ partisan and policy preferences trump constitutional concerns.
  • Craun, Sarah W., Tiedt, Andrew D. (2016). Compared to other crimes, law enforcement closes warrants for sex crimes and violent crimes more quickly.
  • Nalder, Kim L., Conroy, Meredith, Joesten Martin, Danielle (2016). The Two Hillary Clintons: how supporters and detractors describe the Democratic nominee.
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  • Davis, Jr, Theodore J. (2016). Delaware’s case shows why the racial achievement gap in education remains stubbornly large.
  • Donovan, Todd (2016). Voters are not blindly cynical about money in politics.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). Brexit shows (again) why we must overhaul the way the Commons is elected.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). Epitaph for a political chancer: Cameron’s fate examplifies the inability of UK elites to resolve long-run crises.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How democratic are the UK’s two proportional electoral systems?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How democratic are the reformed electoral systems used in mayoral and devolved elections?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How democratic is the UK’s ‘Westminster Plurality Rule’ electoral system?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How effective is Parliament in controlling UK government and representing citizens?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How to write a blogpost from your journal article in eleven easy steps.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). Submitting to a journal commits you to it for six weeks to six months (or longer) – so choose your journal carefully.
  • Dusso, Aaron (2016). Mike Pence won’t be a game changer for Donald Trump.
  • Kippin, Sean, Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How democratic are the UK’s political parties and party system?
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  • Erigha, Maryann (2016). Lucrative blockbuster films are rarely directed by African Americans, holding them back in Hollywood.
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  • Fisk, Jonathan M. (2016). The biggest challenge to fracking is no longer technological – it’s community resistance.
  • Friesen, Amanda (2016). Trump’s supporters share his idea of the American dream. And it’s all about Vegas, baby.
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  • Gilson, Chris (2016). Florida works to keep death penalty, Idaho’s minimum wagemeasure fails, and why are people sending mops to ChrisChristie?: US state blog roundup for 23 – 29 January.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Trump’s debate boycott, the Democrats’ Iowa dead heat, and threeeasy ways to dismantle Obamacare: US national blog roundup for 23 – 29 January.
  • Sykes, Bryan L., Piquero, Alex R., Gioviano, Jason P. (2016). How government social programs can help reduce bullying.
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  • Hazelton, Morgan L.W., Hinkle, Rachael K., Jeon, Jee Seon (2016). How one circuit court judge can stop a higher court from establishing a legal precedent.
  • Martin, Hal, Hanson, Andrew, Hawley, Zackary (2016). African Americans have a harder time getting mortgage information compared to whites.
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  • Jackson, Kristoffer (2016). Why California is so expensive: It’s not just the weather, it’s the regulation.
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  • Kitchen, Nicholas (2016). American voters’ choice is between Clinton’s liberal internationalism and Trump’s offensive realism. Who wins in November matters to the world.
  • Klaas, Brian (2016). The circus of the Republican convention masks an extremely divided party.
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  • Lauermann, John (2016). Failed Olympic bids can help drive urban (re)development.
  • Livermore, Michael A. (2016). If Donald Trump did win the presidency, as an outsider he would face huge challenges in pursuing a coherent policy agenda.
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  • MacWilliams, Matthew C. (2016). Donald Trump is attracting authoritarian primary voters, and it may help him to gain the nomination.
  • Mann, Christopher B., Uscinski, Joseph E. (2016). Why holding a presidential nominating convention in a swing state matters.
  • Meibauer, Gustav (2016). How the 2011 Libyan intervention may have discredited the no-fly zone as a policy tool.
  • Meyer, Henning (2016). Five filters moderate the technological revolution.
  • Meyer, Henning (2016). Inequality in the second machine age: the need for a social democratic digital society. Juncture, 23(2), 102-106. https://doi.org/10.1111/newe.12002
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  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). In the face of Trump’s rhetoric of “fear and anger”, 2016 is not likely to be another “hope and vision” election.
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  • Rand, Ian (2016). A CEO shows us how promoting diversity is not an exact science.
  • Ray, Surette (2016). How social media is changing the way people commit crimes andpolice fight them.
  • Rhodebeck, Laurie (2016). Framing same-sex marriage in terms of equality may help encourage more African-Americans to support it.
  • Rose, Mary (2016). How Latino immigration may be making the US less tolerant of violence.
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  • Sierra-Arevalo, Michael (2016). Broken windows is broken: study shows that a more focused approach to tackling street violence can be more effective.
  • Smith, Glen (2016). How mainstream news can reduce partisan hostility.
  • Smith, Melissa (2016). Trump, Brexit, and the West’s “Mad as hell” moment.
  • Trubowitz, Peter, Smucker, Sierra (2016). Donald Trump accepts the presidential nomination for the Republican Party: LSE experts react.
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  • Taylor, Laura (2016). Cleaning up brownfield sites not only benefits the environment – it also increases nearby property values.
  • Tinkler, Jane (14 November 2016) Surviving work as an academic in the age of measuring impact. Impact of Social Sciences Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). How the “Trump factor” came to dominate the 2016 election.
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  • Uscinski, Joseph (2016). Balancing the presidential ticket may lead to unexpected – and unwanted – outcomes.
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  • Ward, Bob (2016). Misinformation on climate change policy will get us nowhere: a response to Bjorn Lomborg.