Items where Subject is "JC Political theory"

Library of Congress subjects (102130) J Political Science (34718) JC Political theory (6095)
Number of items at this level: 6095.
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  • Invernizzi Accetti, Carlo, White, Jonathan (Eds.) (2021). Ideologies and the European Union. Routledge.
  • Maliks, Reidar, Widmer, Elisabeth Theresia (Eds.) (2025). Kant’s early followers in political philosophy. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003516545
  • Ostiguy, Pierre, Panizza, Francisco, Moffitt, Benjamin (Eds.) (2020). Populism in global perspective: a performative and discursive approach. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003110149
  • Biswas, Somak, Dasgupta, Rohit K., Mahn, Churnjeet (Eds.) (2024). Queer politics in times of new authoritarianisms: popular culture in South Asia. Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003461678
  • Holvikivi, Aiko, Holzberg, Billy, Ojeda Guemes, Tomas (Eds.) (2024). Transnational anti-gender politics: feminist solidarity in times of global attacks. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Akcigit, Ufuk, Van Reenen, John (Eds.) (2023). The economics of creative destruction: new research on themes from Aghion and Howitt. Harvard University Press.
  • Innerarity, Daniel, White, Jonathan, Astier, Christine, Errasti, Ander (Eds.) (2018). A new narrative for a new Europe. Rowman & Littlefield International.
  • Kaldor, Mary, Vizard, Polly (Eds.) (2011). Arguing about the world: the work and legacy of Meghnad Desai. Bloomsbury Academic. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781849665469
  • Talani, Leila Simona, Casey, Bernard (Eds.) (2008). Between growth and stability: The demise and reform of the European union's stability and growth pact. Edward Elgar.
  • Westad, O.A, Lundestad, G (Eds.) (1993). Beyond the Cold War: new dimensions in international relations. Universitetsforlaget.
  • Kostovicova, Denisa, Glasius, Marlies (Eds.) (2011). Bottom-up politics: an agency-centred approach to globalisation. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Kelly, Paul (Ed.) (2010). British political theory. Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Dowding, Keith, Hughes, James, Margetts, Helen (Eds.) (2001). Challenges to democracy. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Fabian Society (1972). Education and inequality. In Townsend, Peter, Bosanquet, Nicholas (Eds.), Labour and Inequality . Fabian Society (Great Britain).
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (Eds.) (2012). Electoral systems: paradoxes, assumptions, and procedures. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg.
  • Cox, Michael, Dunne, Tim, Booth, Ken (Eds.) (2002). Empires, systems and states: great transformations in international politics. Cambridge University Press.
  • Westad, O.A, Moon, Chung-In (Eds.) (2001). Ending the Cold War in Korea: theoretical and historical perspectives. Yonsei University Press.
  • Sayers, Janet, Evans, Mary, Redclift, Nanneke (Eds.) (2010). Engels revisited: feminist essays. Routledge.
  • Conversi, Daniele (Ed.) (2002). Ethnonationalism in the contemporary world: Walker Connor and the study of nationalism. Routledge.
  • Gearty, Conor (Ed.) (1997). European civil liberties and the European Convention on Human Rights: a comparative study. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.
  • Lodge, Martin, Wegrich, Kai (Eds.) (2012). Executive politics in times of crisis. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Glasius, Marlies, Lewis, David, Seckinelgin, Hakan (Eds.) (2004). Exploring civil society : political and cultural contexts. Routledge.
  • Costa-i-Font, Joan, Greer, Scott (Eds.) (2012). Federalism and decentralization in European health and social care. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Miller, Peter, Gordon, Colin, Burchell, Graham (Eds.) (1991). The Foucault effect : studies in governmentality. University of Chicago Press.
  • Madhok, Sumi, Phillips, Anne, Wilson, Kalpana (Eds.) (2013). Gender, agency and coercion. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Kaldor, Mary, Moore, Henrietta, Selchow, Sabine (Eds.) (2012). Global Civil Society 2012: ten years of critical reflection. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Anheier, Helmut K., Glasius, Marlies, Kaldor, Mary (Eds.) (2001). Global civil society 2001. Oxford University Press.
  • Glasius, Marlies, Kaldor, Mary, Anheier, Helmut (Eds.) (2002). Global civil society 2002. Oxford University Press.
  • Kaldor, Mary, Anheier, Helmut, Glasius, Marlies (Eds.) (2003). Global civil society 2003. Oxford University Press.
  • Anheier, Helmut K., Kaldor, Mary, Glasius, Marlies (Eds.) (2004). Global civil society 2004/5. SAGE Publications.
  • Anheier, Helmut K., Kaldor, Mary, Glasius, Marlies (Eds.) (2005). Global civil society 2005/6. SAGE Publications.
  • Anheier, Helmut K., Kaldor, Mary, Glasius, Marlies (Eds.) (2006). Global civil society 2006/7. SAGE Publications.
  • Albrow, Martin, Anheier, Helmut K., Glasius, Marlies, Price, Monroe E., Kaldor, Mary (Eds.) (2008). Global civil society 2007/8: communicative power and democracy. SAGE Publications.
  • Albrow, Martin, Seckinelgin, Hakan (Eds.) (2011). Global civil society 2011: globality and the absence of justice. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Archibugi, Daniele, Koenig-Archibugi, Mathias, Marchetti, Raffaele (Eds.) (2011). Global democracy: normative and empirical perspectives. Cambridge University Press.
  • Hutchinson, John, Guibernau, Monserrat (Eds.) (2004). History and national destiny: ethnosymbolism and its critics. Blackwell Publishing Ltd..
  • Ewing, Keith, Gearty, Conor, Hepple, B. A. (Eds.) (1994). Human rights and labour law: essays for Paul O'Higgins. Mansell (Firm).
  • Murray, Andrew D., Klang, Mathias (Eds.) (2004). Human rights in the digital age. GlassHouse Press.
  • Mansell, Robin (Ed.) (2002). Inside the communication revolution: evolving patterns of social and technical interaction. Oxford University Press.
  • Local Government and Public Service Reform Initiative European Centre for Minority Issues (2002). Insular autonomy: a new approach to conflict resolution in Corsica? In Minority Governance in Europe (pp. 203-244). Local Government and Public Service Reform Initiative.
  • Kelly, Paul, Varouxakis, Georgios (Eds.) (2010). John Stuart Mill - thought and influence - the saint of rationalism. Routledge.
  • Flikschuh, Katrin, Ypi, Lea (Eds.) (2014). Kant and colonialism: historical and critical perspectives. Oxford University Press.
  • Prichard, Alex, Kinna, Ruth, Pinta, Saku, Berry, Dave (Eds.) (2012). Libertarian socialism: politics in black and red. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • European Academy of Bozen (2003). The Matignon process and insular autonomy as a response to self-determination claims in Corsica. In European Yearbook of Minority Issues (pp. 299-326). Kluwer Law International.
  • London School of Economics Centre for Civil Society and Centre for the Study of Global Governance (2001). Measuring global civil society. In Anheier, Helmut K., Glasius, Marlies, Kaldor, Mary (Eds.), Global Civil Society 2001 (pp. 221-230). Oxford University Press.
  • Casey, Steven, Wright, Jonathan (Eds.) (2008). Mental maps in the era of two world wars. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Fine, Sarah, Ypi, Lea (Eds.) (2016). Migration in political theory: the ethics of movement and membership. Oxford University Press.
  • Kwak, Jun-Hyeok, Jenco, Leigh K. (Eds.) (2014). Republicanism in Northeast Asia. Routledge.
  • Schmidt, Vivien A., Thatcher, Mark (Eds.) (2013). Resilient liberalism in Europe's political economy. Cambridge University Press.
  • Westad, O.A (Ed.) (2000). Reviewing the Cold War: approaches, interpretations, theory. Frank Cass & Co..
  • Cox, Kevin, Low, Murray, Robinson, Jennifer (Eds.) (2008). The Sage handbook of political geography. Sage Publications Ltd..
  • Griffith, J. A. G., Atkinson, Anthony B. (Eds.) (1983). Socialism in a cold climate. Unwin Paperbacks.
  • Griffith, J. A. G. (Ed.) (2012). Socialism in a cold climate. Routledge.
  • Chouliaraki, Lilie (Ed.) (2007). Soft power of war. John Benjamins Publishing Company.
  • Westad, O.A, Holtsmark, Sven G, Neumann, Iver B. (Eds.) (1994). The Soviet Union in Eastern Europe, 1945-89. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Kelly, Paul, Sato, Seishi (Eds.) (2013). Studies in contemporary British political thought: between pluralism and multiculturalism. Waseda Daigaku. Press.
  • Kaldor, Mary, Selchow, Sabine (Eds.) (2015). Subterranean politics in Europe. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Altındiş, Emrah, Özpınar, Gaye, Ozyurek, Esra (Eds.) (2018). The Turkey reader: conversations in contemporary Turkish society. Springer Berlin / Heidelberg.
  • UNSPECIFIED (Ed.) (1963). Twelve wasted years. Labour Party (Great Britain).
  • Hutchinson, John, Guibernau, Montserrat (Eds.) (2001). Understanding nationalism. Polity Press.
  • Lewis, Jane, Surender, R (Eds.) (2004). Welfare state change: towards a Third Way? Oxford University Press.
  • Guzzini, Stefano, Neumann, Iver B. (Eds.) (2012). The diffusion of power in global governance: international political economy meets Foucault. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Leonardi, Robert, Pagano, Michael A. (Eds.) (2007). The dynamics of federalism in national and supranational political systems. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Meyer, Henning, Rutherford, Jonathan (Eds.) (2011). The future of European social democracy: building the good society. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Lawson, George, Armbruster, Chris, Cox, Michael (Eds.) (2010). The global 1989: continuity and change in world politics. Cambridge University Press.
  • Theros, Marika, Hervey, Angus, Held, David (Eds.) (2011). The governance of climate change: science, politics and ethics. Polity Press.
  • Ker-Lindsay, James, Faustmann, Hubert (Eds.) (2009). The government and politics of Cyprus. Verlag Peter Lang.
  • Sánchez-Ancochea, Diego, Shadlen, Kenneth C. (Eds.) (2008). The political economy of hemispheric integration: responding to globalization in the Americas. Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Gallagher, Michael, Mitchell, Paul (Eds.) (2008). The politics of electoral systems. Oxford University Press.
  • Berg, Eiki, Ker-Lindsay, James (Eds.) (2018). The politics of international interaction with de facto states. Conceptualising engagement without recognition. Routledge.
  • Kaldor, Mary, Stiglitz, Joseph E. (Eds.) (2013). The quest for security: protection without protectionism and the challenge for global governance. Columbia University Press.
  • Held, David, Ulrichsen, Kristian (Eds.) (2011). The transformation of the Gulf: politics, economics and the global order. Routledge.
  • Abbas, Tahir (2022). United Kingdom: Islamist radicalization in a spatial context. In Balzacq, Thierry, Settoul, Elyamine (Eds.), Radicalization in Theory and Practice: Understanding Religious Violence in Western Europe (pp. 237 - 254). University of Michigan. Press. https://doi.org/10.3998/mpub.12202059
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2014). The Azeri question and the political competition between Iran and Baku. Limes, Italian Review of Geopolitics, 2,
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2010). From the green movement to Ahmadinejad’s second government: prospective for a new government in Iran. Panorama 2011, 183-190.
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2013). History, national identity and myths in the Iranian contemporary political thought: Mirza Fathali Akhundzadeh (1812-1878), Mirza Agha Khan Kermani (1853-1896) and Hassan Taqizadeh (1878-1970). In Ansari, Ali (Ed.), Perceptions of Iran: history, myths and nationalism from medieval Persia to the Islamic Republic (pp. 27-38). I.B. Tauris Publishers.
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2013). Il pensiero politico di Moḥammad Moṣaddeq: costituzionalismo, patriottismo e democrazia. Futūḥ al-buldān / Sources for the Study of Islamic Societies, 1, 179-197. https://doi.org/10.4399/97888548566849
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2012). In the future of Iran could be a coup d’etat. Limes, Italian Review of Geopolitics,
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2013). Iran and Iraq and the Shiite triangle. Panorama 2013, 143-149.
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2012). Iran and U.S. relations: military intervention, political compromise or Persian renaissance? Limes, Italian Review of Geopolitics,
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2011). Iran and the Arab spring. Panorama 2012, 129-137.
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2014). Quattrocentomila barili al giorno in viaggio sull’asse Iran-Cina. la Repubblica,
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2014). The Shiite Islamic State between quietism and intervention. Storia del pensiero politico, (3), 439-460. https://doi.org/10.4479/78765
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2013). The foreign policy of Rohani’s government and the nuclear issue. ISPIonline,
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2014). The political thought of Mirzā Aqā Khān Kermāni, the father of Persian national liberalism. Oriente Moderno, 94(1), 148-161. https://doi.org/10.1163/22138617-12340043
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2013). The presidential elections in Iran: a political analysis. Limes, Italian Review of Geopolitics,
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2013). The utopia of the Islamic revolution in Iran. Limes, Italian Review of Geopolitics, 131-140.
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman, Mezran, Karim (2011). A new Iran for a new Middle East. Middle East Policy Council,
  • Abrams, Samuel, Iversen, Torben, Soskice, David (2011). Informal social networks and rational voting. British Journal of Political Science, 41(02), 229-257. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123410000499
  • Ahmad, Mahvish (2018-04-06 - 2018-04-07) Anxiety as a technology of rule: the violent crafting of subject and territory in Balochistan [Paper]. Anxiety and Authority in South Asia, Princeton University, Princeton, United States, USA.
  • Ahmad, Mahvish (2018-04-20) Anxiety as a technology of rule: the violent crafting of territory and subjects in Balochistan [Paper]. New Directions in Studies of Pakistan, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Ahmad, Mahvish (2014). Balochistan betrayed. In Tahir, Madiha R., Bux Memon, Qalander, Prashad, Vijay (Eds.), Dispatches from Pakistan (pp. 150 - 167). University of Minnesota. Press.
  • Ahmad, Mahvish (2018-03-13) Confusion as censorship in Balochistan [Paper]. A Legacy of Injustice: CPEC and the Impacts on Balochistan, Palais des Nations, Geneva, Switzerland, CHE.
  • Ahmad, Mahvish (2018-11-21 - 2018-11-21) Pakistan after the 2018 general elections [Paper]. Human Rights & Democracy in Pakistan: Reflections on the 2018 General Elections, European Parliament, Brussels, Belgium, BEL.
  • Ahmad, Mahvish (2017-06-27) State destruction in Pakistani Balochistan: obfuscation as a technique of rule [Paper]. South Asia across the Nordic Region, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark, DNK.
  • Akcigit, Ufuk, Van Reenen, John (2023). Introduction. In Akcigit, Ufuk, Van Reenen, John (Eds.), The Economics of Creative Destruction: New Research on Themes from Aghion and Howitt . Harvard University Press.
  • Albrow, Martin (2011). Conclusion: can global civil society answer the Hobbesian problem? In Kostovicova, Denisa, Glasius, Marlies (Eds.), Bottom-Up Politics: an Agency-Centred Approach to Globalisation (pp. 241-255). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Alden, Chris, Hughes, Christopher R. (2009). Harmony and discord in China’s Africa strategy: some implications for foreign policy. China Quarterly, 199, 563-584. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741009990105
  • Alden, Christopher, Alves, Ana Cristina (2008). History and identity in the construction of China's Africa policy. Review of African Political Economy, 35(115), 43-58. https://doi.org/10.1080/03056240802011436
  • Allison, Roy (2003). The unresolved conflicts in the Black Sea region: threats, impacts on regionalism and regional strategies for conflict resolution. In Pavliuk, Oleksandr, Klympush-Tsintsadze, Ivanna (Eds.), The Black Sea Region: Cooperation and Security Building (pp. 86-122). M.E. Sharpe, Inc..
  • Amiel, Yoram, Cowell, Frank A., Gaertner, Wulf (2009). To be or not to be involved: a questionnaire-experimental view on Harsanyi’s utilitarian ethics. Social Choice and Welfare, 32(2), 299-316. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00355-008-0324-x
  • Ammaturo, Francesca Romana, Melvin, Jennifer (2023). The challenges of teaching human rights. In Outhwaite, William, Ray, Larry (Eds.), Teaching Political Sociology (pp. 172 - 188). Edward Elgar. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781802205152.00015
  • Amoah, Michael, Cole, David Landon (2021). Multinationalism and nationbuilding in West Africa – the case of Ghana: Michael Amoah.
  • Anderson, Christopher J., Beramendi, Pablo (2012). Left parties, poor voters, and electoral participation in advanced industrial societies. Comparative Political Studies, 45(6), 714 - 746. https://doi.org/10.1177/0010414011427880
  • Anderson, Christopher J., Dalton, Russell J. (2010). Nested voters: citizen choices embedded in political contexts. In Dalton, Russell J., Anderson, Christopher J. (Eds.), Citizens, Context, and Choice: How Context Shapes Citizens' Electoral Choices (pp. 241 - 256). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199599233.003.0011
  • Anderson, Christopher Johannes, Hecht, Jason D. (2014). Crisis of confidence? The dynamics of economic opinions during the Great Recession. In Bermeo, Nancy, Bartels, Larry M. (Eds.), Mass Politics in Tough Times: Opinions, Votes and Protest in the Great Recession . Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199357505.003.0002
  • Anderson, Christopher Johannes, Hecht, Jason D. (2015). Happiness and the welfare state: decommodification and the political economy of subjective wellbeing. In Beramendi, Pablo, Häusermann, Silja, Kitschelt, Herbert, Kriesi, Hanspeter (Eds.), The Politics of Advanced Capitalism (pp. 357 - 380). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781316163245.015
  • Angelou, Angelos (2022). Dysfunction and pathology in Brussels: the European Commission and the politics of debt-restructuring. Journal of Common Market Studies, https://doi.org/10.1111/jcms.13447
  • Anheier, Helmut, Themudo, Nuno (2002). Organizational forms of global civil society: implications of going global. In Glasius, Marlies, Kaldor, Mary, Anheier, Helmut K. (Eds.), Global Civil Society 2002 (pp. 191-216). Oxford University Press.
  • Anheier, Helmut K. (2004). Civil society: measurement, evaluation, policy. Earthscan Publications Ltd..
  • Anheier, Helmut K., Stares, Sally (2002). Introducing the global civil society index. In Glasius, Marlies, Kaldor, Mary, Anheier, Helmut K. (Eds.), Global Civil Society Yearbook 2002 (pp. 241-254). Oxford University Press.
  • Anheier, Helmut. K, Glasius, Marlies, Kaldor, Mary (2001). Introducing global civil society. In Anheier, Helmut. K, Glasius, Marlies, Kaldor, Mary (Eds.), Global Civil Society 2001 (pp. 3-22). Oxford University Press.
  • Antoniades, Andreas (2008). Cave! Hic everyday life: repetition, hegemony and the social. British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 10(3), 412-428. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-856X.2008.00328.x
  • Archer, Robin (2010). Seymour Martin Lipset and political sociology. British Journal of Sociology, 61(s1), 43-52. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-4446.2009.01298.x
  • Archer, Robin (2008). Why is there no labor party in the United States? Princeton University Press.
  • Archibugi, Daniele (2003). A critical analysis of the self-determination of peoples: a cosmopolitan perspective. Constellations, 10(4), 488-505. https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1351-0487.2003.00349.x
  • Archibugi, Daniele, Held, David (2011). Cosmopolitan democracy: paths and agents. In Kostovicova, Denisa, Glasius, Marlies (Eds.), Bottom-Up Politics: an Agency-Centred Approach to Globalisation (pp. 21-39). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Arslantaş, Şenol, Arslantaş, Düzgün (2023). Populism and crisis: evidence from the periphery of Europe. Mediterranean Politics, https://doi.org/10.1080/13629395.2023.2180604
  • Asari, Eva-Maria, Halikiopoulou, Daphne, Mock, Steven (2008). British national identity and the dilemmas of multiculturalism. Nationalism and Ethnic Politics, 14(1), 1-28. https://doi.org/10.1080/13537110701872444
  • Audard, Catherine (2009). John Rawls et les alternatives libérales à la laïcité. Raisons Politiques, 34(2), 101-125. https://doi.org/10.3917/rai.034.0101
  • Avbelj, Matej, Komárek, Jan (2008). Four visions of constitutional pluralism. European Constitutional Law Review, 4(3), 524-527. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1574019608005245
  • Aydin, Bermal (2022). Politically motivated precarization of academic and journalistic lives under authoritarian neoliberalism: the case of Turkey. Globalizations, 19(5), 677 - 695. https://doi.org/10.1080/14747731.2021.1902036
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2011). Franquisme i modernització: la Seat, emblema d’una contradicció. L’avenç, (369), 28-39.
  • Barberá, Pablo (2017). Birds of the same feather tweet together: Bayesian ideal point estimation using Twitter data. Political Analysis, 23(1), 76-91. https://doi.org/10.1093/pan/mpu011
  • Barberá, Pablo, Jost, John T., Bonneau, Richard, Langer, Melanie, Metzger, Megan, Nagler, Jonathan, Sterling, Joanna, Tucker, Joshua A. (2018). How social media facilitates political protest: information, motivation and social networks. Political Psychology, 39(S1), 85-118. https://doi.org/10.1111/pops.12478
  • Barberá, Pablo, Jost, John T., Nagler, Jonathan, Tucker, Joshua A., Bonneau, Richard (2015). Tweeting from left to right: is online political communication more than an echo chamber? Psychological Science, 26(10), 1531-1542. https://doi.org/10.1177/0956797615594620
  • Barberá, Pablo, Rivero, Gonzalo (2015). Understanding the political representativeness of Twitter users. Social Science Computer Review, 33(6), 712-729. https://doi.org/10.1177/0894439314558836
  • Barberá, Pablo, Theocharis, Yannis, Fazekas, Zoltán, Popa, Sebastian Adrian, Parnet, Olivier (2016). A bad workman blames his tweets: the consequences of citizens' uncivil Twitter use when interacting with party candidates. Journal of Communication, 66(6), 1007-1031. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcom.12259
  • Barberá, Pablo, Tucker, Joshua A., Nagler, Jonathan, Metzger, Megan MacDuffee, Penfold-Brown, Duncan, Bonneau, Richard (2016). Big data, social media, and protest: foundations for a research agenda. In Alvarez, Michael (Ed.), Computational social science: discovery and prediction (pp. 199-224). Cambridge University Press.
  • Barberá, Pablo, Tucker, Joshua A., Theocharis, Yannis, Roberts, Margaret E. (2017). From liberation to turmoil: social media and democracy. Journal of Democracy, 28(4), 46-59. https://doi.org/10.1353/jod.2017.0064
  • Barberá, Pablo, Vaccari, Cristian, Valeriani, Augusto, Bonneau, Richard, Jost, John T., Nagler, Jonathan, Tucker, Joshua A. (2015). Political expression and action on social media: exploring the relationship between lower- and higher-threshold political activities among Twitter users in Italy. Journal of Computer-Mediated Communication, 20(2), 221-239. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcc4.12108
  • Barberá, Pablo, Zeitzoff, Thomas (2018). The new public address system: why do world leaders adopt social media? International Studies Quarterly, 62(1), 121-130. https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqx047
  • Barker, Rodney (2007). Democratic legitimation: what is it, who wants it, and why? In Hurrelmann, A, Schneider, Steve, Steffek, J (Eds.), Legitimacy in an Age of Global Politics (pp. 19-34). Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Barker, Rodney (2008). Social democracy and liberalism. Re-Public,
  • Barnes, Jonathan (2022). Divergent desires for the just transition in South Africa: an assemblage analysis. Political Geography, 97, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2022.102655
  • Barr, Nicholas (1994). The role of government in a market economy. In Barr, Nicholas (Ed.), Labor Markets and Social Policy in Central and Eastern Europe: the Transition and Beyond (pp. 29-50). Oxford University Press for the World Bank.
  • Barry, Christian, Valentini, Laura (2009). Egalitarian challenges to global egalitarianism: a critique. Review of International Studies, 35(03), p. 485. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210509008626
  • Bavetta, Sebastiano, Navarra, Pietro (2011). Economic freedom and the pursuit of happiness. In Miller, Terry, Holmes, Kim (Eds.), 2011 Index of Economic Freedom (pp. 61-68). Heritage Foundation.
  • Beck, Ulrich, Grande, Edgar (2010). Varieties of second modernity: the cosmopolitan turn in social and political theory and research. British Journal of Sociology, 61(3), 409-443. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-4446.2010.01320.x
  • Bellamy, Richard, Kröger, Sandra, Lorimer, Marta (2022). Flexible Europe: differentiated integration, fairness, and democracy. Bristol University Press.
  • Benoit, Kenneth, Marsh, Michael (2008). The campaign value of incumbency: a new solution to the puzzle of less effective incumbent spending. American Journal of Political Science, 52(4), 874-890. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-5907.2008.00348.x
  • Berliner, Daniel (2014). The political origins of transparency. Journal of Politics, 76(2), 479 - 491. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022381613001412
  • Berliner, Daniel, Prakash, Aseem (2014). Public authority and private rules: how domestic regulatory institutions shape the adoption of global private regimes. International Studies Quarterly, 58(4), 793-803. https://doi.org/10.1111/isqu.12166
  • Berlinski, Samuel, Dewan, Torun, Dowding, Keith (2012). Accounting for ministers: scandal and survival in British government 1945–2007. Cambridge University Press.
  • Bernauer, Thomas, Prakash, Aseem, Beiser-McGrath, Liam F. (2020). Do exemptions undermine environmental policy support? An experimental stress test on the odd-even road space rationing policy in India. Regulation and Governance, 14(3), 481 - 500. https://doi.org/10.1111/rego.12225
  • Besley, Tim, Case, Anne (2003). Political institutions and policy outcomes : evidence from the United States. Journal of Economic Literature, 41(1), 7-73. https://doi.org/10.1257/002205103321544693
  • Besley, Timothy (2011). Pathologies of the state. Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization, 80(2), 339-350. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jebo.2011.08.006
  • Besley, Timothy (2001). Political institutions and policy competition. In Kochendorfer-Lucius, Gudrun, Pleskovic, Boris (Eds.), The Institutional Foundations of a Market Economy (pp. 102-109). World Bank.
  • Besley, Timothy, Burgess, Robin (2001). Political agency, government responsiveness and the role of the media. European Economic Review, 45(04-Jun), 629-640.
  • Besley, Timothy, Burgess, Robin (2001). The political economy of government responsiveness : theory and evidence from India. (CEPR discussion paper ; no. 2721). Centre for Economic Policy Research (Great Britain).
  • Besley, Timothy, Burgess, Robin, Prat, Andrea (2002). Mass media and political accountability. In Islam, Roumeen, Djankov, Simeon, McLiesh, Caralee (Eds.), The Right to Tell: the Role of Mass Media in Economic Development (pp. 45-60). World Bank.
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  • Besley, Timothy, Case, Anne (2002). Political institutions and policy choices : evidence from the United States. (CEPR discussion paper no. 3498). Centre for Economic Policy Research (Great Britain).
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  • Beck, Charles (2015). Delivering sanitation in Kampala.
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  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). 10 things (so far) that organisations say when they are criticised by journalists and don’t want to deal with the issues raised.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Addicted to aid (and what the media can do about it).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). After the golden age: Vienna part IV.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Alastair Campbell teaches campaigning at LSE.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Alpha dogs: how the consultants corporatised campaigning (book review).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Alternative election coverage – live!
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). And the Lord said, "go forth and network socially".
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Another election where (most) politicians failed to lead or connect.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). As Trump takes power, what can journalists, politicians and the public learn?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Aussie rules: the Internet election down under.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). BBC Panorama and the LSE North Korea row: why the BBC needs to take a wider view of its ethical responsibilities.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). BBC and Channel 4: a marriage made in heaven or hell?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). BBC silences American people over Obama.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). BBC’s Tony Hall gets it right even when he gets it wrong?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Baby talk.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Ban the banned list? (That’s a #QTWTAIN of course).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Basil Brush the BBC and bias.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Battle of the big beasts.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Bell of Sarajevo part 2.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Beware the ‘false consciousness’ theory: newspapers won’t decide this referendum.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Billions, banks, and the blog.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Blair at Chilcot: 'the Superbowl of self-justification'.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Blair takes on the media 'beasts'.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Blair: an exceptional leader, literally.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Blair: lessons From Leveson (part one).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Blair: lessons from Leveson – ‘It’s a waste of time” (part two).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Bolivia on the edge and on vacation.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Boris boosts bloggers and hacks.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Boston: just another day in the news revolution?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Breaking news in China. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Broadcasters battle for bucks while viewer goes elsewhere.
  • Beckett, Charlie (11 June 2012) Brown at Leveson: the politicisation of the press. Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Brown bullying story is a nightmare for good journalists.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Brown who?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Brown's ship not holed by Rock.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Budget news blues: what do we know?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Burma: you know it's happening.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Business (not) as normal after leaders debate II.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Business and media in the age of uncertainty.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). But how do you know that it’s true? Notes from #nishbr verification workshop.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). The CCTV 300 a day myth: fact and fiction in the liberty debate.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The CNN effect: but does global news connect?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Campbell: liar or lion?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Can media build states?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Can the Internet make life more fair? The digital spirit level.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Can we trust the Internet? (new book).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Can you bank on the media?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Can you report tactical voting or a hung parliament in a balanced way?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Career controversialists.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Cartoon clampdown.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Celebrities: get them out of here.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Changing media – world links.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Charity marketing: a blood sport?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Charles: the King (to be) of spin.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). China and Tibet: how to manage the media.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). China coverage.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). China media freedom debate.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Chinese media soft power – the debate at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Citizen journalism: how democratic is it?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Clinton comeback: negative is good.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Coalition cracks are about policy not media spin.
  • Beckett, Charlie (20 April 2010) Complexity and the media: Clegg and the Ash. Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Crosby on the Ken campaign: where is it?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Dacre is right on privacy (even where he is wrong).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). David Davis: what, no scandal?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Declare cold war on the special relationship.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Did bloggers do for Hain?
  • Beckett, Charlie (12 May 2015) Did the right wing press defeat Miliband? No. [12 reasons and counting]. Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Digital Britain.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Digital debates disappoint.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Digital democracy: the monkey myth (Evgeny Morozov).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Disasters and aid: does the media have any impact? (Harvard pt V).
  • Beckett, Charlie (6 October 2014) Do the media control our minds? Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Do we need a PolWat or PolCom?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2014). Does it matter that no-one reports on Parliament anymore?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Does online journalism improve the writing?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Don’t blame the media if your demo doesn’t work.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Ealing and Southall: British politics goes online.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2014). Ed the brave and logical? The risks and realities in denying a referendum.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Editorial diversity: quality networked journalism.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Embracing uncertainty: diplomacy and disruption.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Et tu Nick? Do journalists create coups?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). FT.com: the end of the free press?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Facebook's Zuckerberg speaks.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Facebook: social or marketing media? (book review: the Facebook era by Clara Shih).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Fight! Fight!
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Financial journalism: it's everyone's business.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Financial journalism: what are we going to do about it?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Five reasons (at least) the Internet is good for politics.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Fly me to Cuba (I mean Ecuador)! Julian Assange hijacks WikiLeaks.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Forget the bloggers, it's going to be the Flip election.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Freedom for sale: are we really trading in liberty for luxury?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Genocide, Rwanda and the media: what can a journalist do?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). George Entwistle is gone but how to rebuild confidence in the BBC?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Global crime stories.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Goldsmith gets it right-ish.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Good news is bad news.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Goodbye to "spin & split"?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Google and China: cynical ploy or a principled stand? picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Google gets political.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Gordon Brown: beyond satire?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Gordon's global village.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Great global switch off: international coverage on PSB.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Guardian’s Katz to BBC Newsnight: the significance of a small splash in the London media pond.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Guido and the McBride smear: storm in a digital teacup or blogger breakthrough?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Guido goes mainstream.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Has Gordon Brown stopped beating his wife?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2017). Helmut Kohl: why can’t our present leaders match his record?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Here is your news: Britney and dinosaur comics.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). How Bebo and Trippi (and you) will change the world.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). How Labour will win with old TV & new media (says Douglas Alexander).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2014). How can we use media to get people more engaged in politics?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). How dangerous is celebrity journalism?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). How did Kony2012 go viral and should we copy it?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). How do we save journalism?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). How should media organisations adapt to the future now? Trends in European public service media (#EBUVision2020 conference report).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). How the mood changes: why the Tories are ahead and could still lose.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). How to end election speculation.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). How to get a positive image into a hostile media: student demo 2.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). How to save investigative journalism?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). How to tell development stories – Bill Clinton at LSE.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). How to win this election: what the parties should do in the last full week.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2017). How we report elections: time for a new agenda for political journalism after the 2017 shock?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). How weak ties can lead to real revolutions (Tunisia and social media).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). “Imagining the internet: communication, innovation and governance” by Robin Mansell (book review).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). In next week’s exciting blog post we will find out what happened to that brilliant new narrative device idea.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). In reply to Alastair Campbell – journalism and politics.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). The Iran Protests and Neda: networked media, networked politics?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Iraq 5 years on: media myths and mundanity.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Is US political advertising going online?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Is it a bird? Is it a plane? No, it’s media literacy! [Carnival of Journalism].
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Is new media business changing China's politics?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Is new media killing journalism? Do you care?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Is the Internet really more democratic?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Is the world news media really more free?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). It doesn’t matter who is the boss at the BBC. And yet, at this time it matters more than ever.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Jason Russell and Julian Assange: heralds of the age of uncertainty?”.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). John Major and Gordon Brown: bullied by the media?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Journalism as archeology.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Journalism education in a networked world (Polis in Shanghai).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Journalism fails as draft of history.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Journalism in crisis: time for a government bailout.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Journalism: saving the world? [Polis at Harvard part 1].
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Journalists v politicians (Polis@Labour Conference).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). A Kangeroo court for public service TV?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Kony2012 and the digital challenge to the public sphere (new research paper).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Labour: the argument.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Liberalism Trumped. It’s time to listen to the angry mob.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Life’s a media riot (speech to Almedalen in Sweden).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). London2012: a collective triumph.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Losing face(book).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). MI5 opens up (sort of).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Mail man finds online voice.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Major on the media.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Making money online: Swedish style.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Mandelson returns: sick joke or master-stroke?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Margaret Thatcher: how she reshaped politics and political communications.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Mayor Ken – the real scandal.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Media after democracy – Vienna III.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Media and democracy: Polis at Ditchley Park.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Media and social solidarity: Vienna Part I.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Media and social solidarity: Vienna part II.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Media literacy: it’s more than media studies or training, it’s democracy.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Milking the media?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Multi-media Africa: networking you to the people of the DRC.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Murdoch and the Media Committee: a political battle.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). NGOs and journalists: not communicating? (Polis at Harvard II).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Net neutrality: why worry?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Networked journalism: challenges to NGOs and mainstream media.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Networking across borders: from ancient Greece to today.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2017). Never mind fake news, this was the fake politics election.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). New Statesman, old problem.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). New media’s mid-life crisis (thoughts from four sessions at the Perugia International Journalism Festival #IFJ12.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). New paper: connecting to the world, communicating For change: media and agency in the new networked public sphere.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). New report on networked journalism.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). News from Africa – in London.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The Newscorp/BSkyB decision: it's big & it's political.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). No boycott of free speech here.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). No terrorists on Newsround.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). A Nobel call to action?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Notes on Britain's spring revolution.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). November 1st.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Oaths of allegiance: flag of distress?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Obama the Blairite?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Obama: lessons for Labour (and Conservatives) from the great UK campaigner.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Ofcom boss faces questions.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Ofcom comes out fighting.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Ofcom throws down the gauntlet to the BBC: Ed Richards at Polis.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Open source campaigning: efficiency or empowerment?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Our partisan press: does it matter to journalism or politics?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). PAX: an ambitious and flawed way to create global networks for peace, so let's try it?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). PERPETUAL ENGAGEMENT: the potential and pitfalls of using social media for political campaigning (a new POLIS paper).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Papers and TV losing more ground: new data.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). People power online: leave it alone!
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Phone or email?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Polis in Shanghai: the joy of the irresistable web.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Political blog power: numbers and attention.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Political communication in the age of austerity: unless you can claim genuine authenticity – like UKIP’s Nigel Farage – then you will struggle to convince.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Political transvestites.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Political violence: symbolism that only works if you let it.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Political, constitutional journalism is now very interesting (honestly).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Politics and new media – emotions and brains (participatory media conference part 1).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). PoliticsHome: a small new media mess with bigger significance?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Polly's no Miss Bimbo but is Natasha?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2017). ‘Post-truth’: a myth created by journalists?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Power to the people: Murdoch Jnr on public service broadcasting.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Presentation IS politics (Polis@Conservative Conference).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Preserving profit for the public service.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Press v politicians: can tabloids still take on the over-mighty?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Prisoner of narrative, not the unions.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Privacy and the media: time for an inquiry?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2017). Public debate at LSE: how should journalists cover President Trump?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Racist! What rows about language tell us about politics.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). ‘Rancid’ and the police state.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Recasting power: revolution still pending.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Reefer madness.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Regional England's Katrina?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Reporting rock and roll fascism.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Reporting the elections: turn on, log on, join in – but not until after 10pm.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Reuters makes the news.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Revenge of the Evil Empire and why I’m backing Darth Vader: my case against statutory newspaper regulation #Leveson.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Ritual, spectacle, protest and the media.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Ruth Kelly: don't talk to strange people.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Salvation.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Satire as tragedy: Alastair Beaton.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Saving journalism: how far we have come in five years and where we must go now.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Science and the media: time to experiment?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Scott McClellan and Alastair Campbell.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Scouts, kittens and integrity: notes towards an ethical & effective strategy for communicating change.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Secrecy is the problem, not leakers: Wikileaks on the global stage.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Selling Sarajevo.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Sex, politics and the media: UK more liberal than Finland?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2014). Should news get personal? Emotion and objectivity in the face of suffering.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Should the media have shown the images of the Woolwich attacker?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Should we teach journalism students to be more like Julian Assange?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Slaves to history.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Snow storm political reporting.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Social media and democratic governance: the next decade (Wilton Park paper).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Social media participation: what if no-one comes?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Social media – why it’s useless for democratic politics.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). ‘Social mobility’ is now nonsense.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Society, ownership and networked journalism: Polis at the PICNIC in Amsterdam.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Some media-related questions after Obama’s victory.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Sorry. Not actually the hardest word.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Spinning the McCanns.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). St George Farage and the mainstream party dragons: political communication in the age of austerity.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). State 2.0: lessons for e-politics from networked journalism.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Steve Richards and yours truly on Nightwaves on SuperMedia.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Subject to change: how to create great products for an uncertain world (book review).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Sun sets on newspaper influence?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). The Sun sets or rises on African news?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Surreal media is the real media: from c**t to Wikileaks.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Terror leaks mystery.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). They really loathe the media don't they?
  • Beckett, Charlie (20 March 2009) Thinking the thinkable: Clay Shirky on the future of newspapers. Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Time to trust jurors and journalists on contempt?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). To 2020 and beyond: threats and opportunities to public service media across Europe.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Tonight's TV debate: the beginning of the end.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Trust is bad for democracy (Harvard IV).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Twitter: 5 dangers for journalists.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). UK leaders to debate on TV: a victory for personal politics and digital democracy?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). The UK left blogosphere: staring defeat in the face.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). US democracy: dontcha lurve it?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). US elections and mainstream media: go online for the real story.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). VE day: now the real debate begins?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). The Village Cycle: how political news changes when it speeds up.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Voodoo histories: Aaronovitch on conspiracy theories (Polis lecture and book review).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Waiting for Robbo: the media and Mugabe.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Walls, falls and collaboration: the next 5 years for media (new survey).
  • Beckett, Charlie (6 May 2015) What a mess. UK election 2015. Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). What can the African media say about Mugabe?
  • Beckett, Charlie (24 June 2014) What does the Brooks Coulson phone-hacking verdict tell us about editors’ responsibility for their newsrooms? Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). What is an informed society? From Dubai to Davos.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). What is quality in networked journalism?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). What went wrong with Gordon Brown: dispatches.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). What's so good about investigative journalism? (Harvard part III).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). When news was new: how history can save journalism.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). When the going gets tough, blame a woman.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2014). Where next for the (broadcast) political interview? David Dimbleby looks back and forward.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Where were the bloggers?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). Who are we fighting the information war with?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Who calls the shots – politicians or journalists?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Who reads the political blogs and why? Some evidence.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Why Hills won't quit.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). Why doesn’t Julian Assange leave WikiLeaks?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Why it matters who edits the Guardian. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Why not make British politics more festive?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Why shouldn't owners interfere?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Why shouldn't the mail steal your photos?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Why the BNP are right.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Why the Left must learn to love the net.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Why the Mail was right to attack Ralph Miliband (plus: ‘my Nazi past’).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Why the crash (and new media) wins it for Obama.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). Why the internet is rubbish – and 'trainshift'.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). Why we should invest in trustworthy media #Almedalen.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Wicked Wikis?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). WikiLeaks: back in business.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). Wikileaks: now that's what I call an informed society….
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). World press freedom in retreat?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). Would George Orwell have blogged?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). A Yank at Oxford.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). YouGov wins London election.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Your favourite political blog – vote now at Iain Dale's TotalPolitics.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2008). Your mission should you choose to accept it….
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). You’ve got to laugh: why humour is dangerous for politicians.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2012). The art of the impossible.
  • Beckett, Charlie (26 February 2015) A big moment for the BBC but not quite yet. Polis Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). A code for the road: the ethics of reporting Africa.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). The debate about the future of the Labour Party: the best and worst of times.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The devil is in the detail: the primacy of process in election reporting.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). An extraordinary media decade for you, me and the LSE.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The first TV (& social media) election debate is a (small) triumph for democracy.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). The global chilling of media freedom: new world map of defamation.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). The greatest media politician ever?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The informed journalist: Anthony Howard.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2014). The invention of news – how the world came to know about itself (book review).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). The leaderless revolution: Carne Ross (now with podcast link).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The media election: lessons (so far).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). The media revolution: the pace quickens….
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). The message from Number 10: can downing street ever be honest?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). The myth of the myth of digital democracy (book review).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). The net delusion: Evgeny Morozov.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2009). The paradoxes of global news: Polis in Athens.
  • Beckett, Charlie (5 January 2015) The party’s started too early. Polis Blog.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). The philosophy of the new news.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). The political is personal.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). The politics of online journalism.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The post bureaucratic age: what can journalism do?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2011). The rhythm of opposition: Ed Miliband’s strategy.
  • Beckett, Charlie (7 January 2015) The right response to Charlie Hebdo: fear and humanity. Polis Blog.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). The sensitive Sun?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). A strategic approach to the new threats and opportunities for Public Service Media.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The times pay-wall: a golden ghetto or desert island risk?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2007). The trap is sprung.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2013). The €uro crisis in the press – we’re launching a comparative study.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The value of connectivity for the networked journalist: Ruth Gledhill.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2010). The value of networked journalism: new report and conference.
  • Beckett, Charlie, Abi-Aad, Alix (2010). Social networks and journalism: a 5 minute interview.
  • Beckwith, Karen (2017). Cabinets and concrete floors: the women in Macron’s cabinet strengthen the case for gender parity in government.
  • Beer, David (2017). Data-led politics: do analytics have the power that we are led to believe?
  • Beetham, David (2011). News International and corporate power in Britain’s democracy: just the tip of the ‘unelected oligarchies’ iceberg.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). Deepening EU economic governance: the next steps.
  • Begg, Iain (2018). "Read my lips": no Brexit dividend. picture_as_pdf
  • Begg, Iain (2018). Read my lips: no such thing as a Brexit dividend. picture_as_pdf
  • Begg, Iain (2017). Reflecting on how to run €MU more effectively.
  • Begg, Iain (2018). Rethinking the governance of economic and monetary union: should rules continue to rule?
  • Begg, Iain (2018). The UK is heading towards a frightening constitutional crisis over Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Begg, Iain (2015). What might Brexit look like? No one really knows.
  • Begg, Iain (2016). The welfare state in Europe: still worth having?
  • Behuria, Pritish (2016). Aspiring to new heights with no ladder: the barriers to technology acquisition in India’s solar energy sector.
  • Beiser-McGrath, Liam F., Bernauer, Thomas (2019). Could revenue recycling make effective carbon taxation politically feasible? Science Advances, 5(9). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aax3323 picture_as_pdf
  • Beiser-McGrath, Liam F., Bernauer, Thomas, Prakash, Aseem (2022). Do policy clashes between the judiciary and the executive affect public opinion? Insights from New Delhi’s odd-even rule against air pollution. Journal of Public Policy, 42(1), 185 - 200. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0143814X2100012X picture_as_pdf
  • Beiser-McGrath, Liam, Bernauer, Thomas (2024). How do pocketbook and distributional concerns affect citizens’ preferences for carbon taxation? Journal of Politics, 86(2), 551 - 564. https://doi.org/10.1086/727594 picture_as_pdf
  • Beland, Louis-Philippe (2015). Under Democratic governors, Blacks are more likely to work, decreasing their earnings gap with whites.
  • Belchior, Ana (2013). Larger parties at the centre of the political spectrum are more likely to be representative of their voters than smaller, more extreme parties.
  • Bell, Clive, Squire, Lyn (2016). Can drawing on preliminary findings boost the impact of evidence on policymaking?
  • Bellamy, Richard, Bonotti, Matteo, Castiglione, Dario, Lacey, Joseph, Näsström, Sofia, Owen, David, White, Jonathan (2018). The democratic production of political cohesion: partisanship, institutional sesign and life form. Contemporary Political Theory, https://doi.org/10.1057/s41296-018-00285-w picture_as_pdf
  • Bellamy, Richard, Kröger, Sandra, Lorimer, Marta (2023). Party views on democratic backsliding and differentiated integration. East European Politics and Societies and Cultures, 37(2), 563 - 583. https://doi.org/10.1177/08883254221096168 picture_as_pdf
  • Bellamy, Richard, Kröger, Sandra, Lorimer, Marta (2021). Party views on differentiated integration. Comparative European Politics, 19(5), 622 - 641. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41295-021-00250-9 picture_as_pdf
  • Belling, Daniel (2016). ‘The alternatives are worse’ – the message that unites EU referendum campaigners.
  • Ben-Nun Bloom, Pazit, Arikan, Gizem (2013). Religion can both hurt and enhance democratic attitudes.
  • Benbaji, Yitzhak, Burri, Susanne (2020). Civilian immunity without the doctrine of double effect. Utilitas, 32(1), 50 - 69. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0953820819000335 description
  • Benedetto, Giacomo, Hix, Simon, Mastrorocco, Nicola (2020). The rise and fall of social democracy, 1918-2017. American Political Science Review, 114(3), 928 - 939. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055420000234 picture_as_pdf
  • Benedikter, Roland (2018). Italy's post-electoral intrigues shed light on the country's political culture.
  • Benedikter, Roland, Zlosilo, Miguel, Saeger, Corinna (2018). The six sources of Piñera's success in Chile's 2017 elections will also shape his second term.
  • Benequista, Nicholas (2013). Kenyan elections and the media: complex illusions (guest blog).
  • Bennett, Natalie, Kippin, Sean (2014). The Green Party’s Natalie Bennett on UKIP, political disengagement, and the European and local elections.
  • Bennett, Natalie, Kippin, Sean (2014). The Leader of the Green Party, Natalie Bennett, on fixing our broken politics.
  • Bentley, Daniel (2016). The more the State has withdrawn from housebuilding, the more it has found itself propping up the private market.
  • Beraja, Martin, Kao, Andrew, Yang, David Y., Yuchtman, Noam (2023). AI-tocracy. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 138(3), 1349 - 1402. https://doi.org/10.1093/qje/qjad012 picture_as_pdf
  • Berend, Ivan T., Bugaric, Bojan (2014). Academics should be careful not to exaggerate the progress made in Central and Eastern Europe since the fall of the Berlin Wall.
  • Bergamini, Matteo (2014). Compulsory political education is a must if we are to stem the flow of disengagement from politics.
  • Bergamini, Matteo (2015). The youth leaders’ debate: a new voice for the 2015 general election.
  • Bergmann, Adrian (2018). El Salvador elections 2018: security, migration, and the beginning of the end for two-party rule.
  • Berhe, Mulugeta, Gebresilassie, Fiseha (2020). Nationalism and self-determination in contemporary Ethiopia. Nations and Nationalism, https://doi.org/10.1111/nana.12647 picture_as_pdf
  • Berkhout, Joost (2015). Economic rather than political forces shape the pattern of lobbying at the European level.
  • Berlinski, Samuel, Dewan, Torun, Dowding, Keith (2007). Individual and collective performance and the tenure of British ministers 1945-1997. (PEPP 25). Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Berry, Craig (2015). Financialisation, home-ownership, and how democracy became a threat to economic growth.
  • Berry, Craig (2014). A referendum on lowering the voting age would generate a wider national debate about youth participation in democracy.
  • Berry, Craig, Mycock, Andy, Tonge, Jonathan (2014). Voter registration levels for the Scottish independence referendum are already showing the potential benefits of lowering the voting age to 16.
  • Berry, Mike (2016). Understanding the role of the mass media in the EU Referendum.
  • Berry, Richard (2014). Book review: money and electoral politics: local parties and funding in general elections by Ron Johnston and Charles Pattie.
  • Berry, Richard (2015). Catch them while they’re registered: the case for voting at 16.
  • Berry, Richard (2016). Elections to the NHS show that online voting is still in its infancy.
  • Berry, Richard (2016). Heavy duty: what are the shortcomings of the BBC’s reporting of the EU?
  • Berry, Richard (2014). New analysis reveals what types of organisation give evidence to parliamentary select committees.
  • Berry, Richard (2014). The UK spends approximately £150 million per year administering elections.
  • Berry, Richard, Dunleavy, Patrick (2014). To engage younger people in voting the UK must provide far more integrated and accessible information about elections.
  • Berry, Richard, Dunleavy, Patrick (2014). We should enfranchise young people at 16 while they are still living at home in a settled community.
  • Berry, Richard, Kippin, Sean (2014). New Democratic Audit e-collection: Should the UK lower the voting age to 16?
  • Berry, Richard, McGeehan, Nicholas (2013). Interview: Nicholas McGeehan of Human Rights Watch on links between the UK and undemocratic regimes in the Gulf.
  • Bertsou, Eri (2015). Citizen attitudes of political distrust: examining distrust through technical, ethical and interest-based evaluations [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Bertuzzi, Luca (2016). Stumbling on the verge of catastrophe? The media and the transforming world order.
  • Besley, Timothy, Burgess, Robin (2000). The political economy of government responsiveness: theory and evidence from India. (Development Economics discussion paper; DEDPS 28 DEDPS 28). Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Besley, Timothy, Coate, Stephen (1997). Analyzing the case for government intervention in a representative democracy. (Theoretical Economics; TE/1997/335 TE/07/335). Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Besley, Timothy, Dann, Chris (13 January 2023) Why political trust and voluntary compliance have been key to government pandemic responsiveness in Europe. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Besley, Timothy, Pande, Rohini, Rao, Vijayendra (2005). Political selection and the quality of government: evidence from south India. Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Besley, Timothy, Persson, Torsten, Sturm, Daniel.M (2005). Political competition and economic performance: theory and evidence from the United States. Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Besley, Timothy, Prat, Andrea (2005). Handcuffs for the grabbing hand: media capture and government accountability. (CEPR Discussion Paper No. 3132 2002 PEPP/7). Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Besley, Timothy, Preston, Ian (2006). Electoral bias and policy choice: theory and evidence. Suntory and Toyota International Centres for Economics and Related Disciplines.
  • Besley, Timothy (2017). Aspirations and the political economy of inequality. Oxford Economic Papers, 69(1), 1-35. https://doi.org/10.1093/oep/gpw055
  • Besley, Timothy, Reynal-Querol, Marta (2011). Do democracies select more educated leaders? American Political Science Review, 105(03), 552-566. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055411000281
  • Bew, Paul (2014). The Committee on Standards in Public Life is responding to the need for scrutiny of ethical standards in local government.
  • Bhagwati, Jagdish, Campion, Sonali (2015). “Before you can do the social spending, you have to find the money for it” – Jagdish Bhagwati.
  • Bhambra, Gurminder K. (2017). Why are the white working classes still being held responsible for Brexit and Trump?
  • Bhartia, Shobhana, Campion, Sonali (2015). “The media want greater engagement from politicians but I wouldn’t at this stage say the quality of debate is under threat” – Shobhana Bhartia.
  • 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.
  • Bhatt, Chetan (2021). White extinction: metaphysical elements of contemporary western fascism. Theory, Culture & Society, 38(1), 27 - 52. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263276420925523 picture_as_pdf
  • Bhatt, Chetan, Cowden, Stephen, Varma, Rashmi (2025). Identity politics of the left and right: an interview with Chetan Bhatt. Feminist Dissent, (8), 143 - 161. https://doi.org/10.31273/fd.n8.2025.1989 picture_as_pdf
  • Bhattacharya, Jay, Gathmann, Christina, Miller, Grant (2013). The end of the Soviet Union’s anti-alcohol campaign may explain a substantial share of Russia’s ‘mortality crisis’ in the 1990s.
  • Bhatti, Yosef, Hansen, Møller (2013). Turnout at European Parliament elections is likely to continue to decline in the coming decades.
  • Bhaumik, Sumon, Estrin, Saul, Narula, Rajneesh (2023). Integrating host-country political heterogeneity into MNE-state bargaining: insights from international political economy. Journal of International Business Studies, 55(2), 157 - 171. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41267-023-00651-w picture_as_pdf
  • Bhujel, Shema (2017). Looking forward to the first ever LSE Pakistan Summit.
  • Bhunia, Abhirup (2015). Trends and lessons from India’s latest shock elections.
  • Bhusal, Thanesh (2016). Democracy without elections: 15 years of local democratic deficit in Nepal.
  • Bicaba, Zorobabel, Brixiová, Zuzana, Ncube, Mthuli (2015). Eliminating extreme poverty in Africa: the role of policies and global governance.
  • Bickerton, Chris (2018). The Five Star Movement and the rise of 'techno-populist' parties.
  • Bicquelet, Aude, Addison, Helen (2018). Are discretionary referendums on EU integration becoming ‘politically obligatory’? The cases of France and the UK. Parliamentary Affairs, 71(2), 219-242. https://doi.org/10.1093/pa/gsx023
  • Bindman, Eleanor (2014). Book review: the political and social construction of poverty: central and East European countries in transition by Serena Romano.
  • Birch, Jesper (2013). What did Rupert ever do for us? (Polis Summer School guest blog).
  • Birch, Kean (2018). Book review: a research agenda for neoliberalism by Kean Birch.
  • Birch, Sarah (2015). A boundary allocation entailing more competitive results would not necessarily be more ‘political’, but it would be more democratic.
  • Bird, Gemma (2015). Book review: war and democratic constraint: how the public influences foreign policy.
  • Birkhead, Nathaniel A., Hershey, Marjorie Randon (2017). Why it's unfair to tar all party activists with the same brush of extremism.
  • Birkinshaw, Matt (2015). Muddy waters in Delhi’s ‘Dusty South’.
  • Birkinshaw, Matt (2014). Urban water and sanitation: innovations from Delhi.
  • Bischof, Daniel (2014). Party rhetoric isn’t usually empty talk, and tends to accurately reflect political and policy positions.
  • Bischof, Daniel, Cohen, Gidon, Cohen, Sarah, Foos, Florian, Kuhn, Patrick Michael, Nanou, Kyriaki, Visalvanich, Neil, Vivyan, Nick (2022). Advantages, challenges and limitations of audit experiments with constituents. Political Studies Review, 20(2), 192 - 200. https://doi.org/10.1177/14789299211037865 picture_as_pdf
  • Bitschnau, Marco (29 November 2021) Book review: The great recoil: politics after populism and pandemic by Paolo Gerbaudo. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Bitschnau, Marco (5 December 2021) Book review: The great recoil: politics after populism and pandemic by Paolo Gerbaudo. USApp – American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Bittner, Amanda, Goodyear-Grant, Elizabeth (2018). Why "sex" may not be the best way to understand the gender gap in political behavior.
  • Bjeloš, Maja (2017). Who are the protesters in Serbia, and what do they really want?
  • Björkman, Lisa, Campion, Sonali (2016). “It’s local staff who keep Mumbai’s water flowing in the face of systematic planning violations done in the name of world-class city making” – Lisa Björkman.
  • Blain, Harry (2016). Why are Republicans scared of America’s cities?
  • Blais, André, Morin-Chassé, Alexandre, Singh, Shane P. (2015). Voters who support under-represented parties are more likely to express dissatisfaction with the political system.
  • Blake, Lily (11 November 2016) Beyond the binary what might a multiple-choice EU referendum have looked liki? Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Blanchard, Alexander (2016). Book review: conceptualizing terrorism by Anthony Richards.
  • Blanchenay, Patrick (2013). Essays in applied microeconomics [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Blanton, Robert, Peksen, Dursun (2016). The dark side of economic freedom: neoliberalism has deleterious effects on labour rights.
  • Bleich, Erik (2013). States with a history of undemocratic regimes in the 20th century are more likely to repress racist movements.
  • Blick, Andrew (2016). Assuming Brexit takes place, we are at the beginning of a fundamental transition – but we do not know where it will lead us.
  • Blick, Andrew (2015). Federalism could be the only means of resolving some of the UK constitution’s fundamental difficultiies.
  • Blick, Andrew (2016). Federalism provides a desirable path forward for the UK’s constitution – and may be the only means of preserving the Union.
  • Blick, Andrew (25 July 2013) The Government’s proposal for an ‘English only’ stage in the House of Commons could create problems. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Blick, Andrew (2011). It does matter who provides public services, especially when things go wrong.
  • Blick, Andrew (13 January 2012) Lords reform: the problem of piecemeal constitutional amendment. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Blick, Andrew (2011). Police reform: why democracy is not just about elections.
  • Blick, Andrew (2011). Police, politics and the media – the risks of elected police commissioners.
  • Blick, Andrew (2011). Reforming the constitution: process matters.
  • Blick, Andrew (2018). Rematch? The constitutional implications of a second EU referendum.
  • Blick, Andrew (2010). Reports of Parliament’s decline much exaggerated.
  • Blick, Andrew (2011). Special advisers and the ‘phone-hacking’ scandal.
  • Blick, Andrew (2016). To appreciate the importance of the Brexit referendum, we must consider the series of constitutional issues that it raises.
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  • Bojar, Abel (2016). Orbanism at its limits? Hungary’s referendum has exposed the first cracks in Viktor Orban’s rule.
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  • Boone, Catherine (2018). Refocusing scholarly attention on Kenya's smallholder settlement schemes is long overdue.
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  • Bose, Sumantra (2013). Indian democracy: a work in progress.
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  • Bostian, Luke (30 August 2020) Book review: reconstructing democracy: how citizens are building from the ground up by Charles Taylor, Patricia Nanz and Madeleine Beaubien Taylor. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • Chella Rajan, Sudhir (24 August 2021) Long read review: Decolonizing politics: an introduction by Robbie Shilliam. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Chemouni, Benjamin (2018). Book review: why comrades go to war: liberation politics and the outbreak of Africa's deadliest conflict by Philip Roessler and Harry Verhoeven.
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  • Chen, Sibo (27 July 2022) Book review: Global burning: rising antidemocracy and the climate crisis by Eve Darian-Smith. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
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  • Cheshire, Paul (2015). Are they green *belts* by accident?
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  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2015). As the refugee crisis transforms the EU-Turkey relationship, there are no easy choices for Greek foreign policy.
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  • Chua, Ethan, Chua, Scott Lee (2023). Reading Philippine science fiction through science and technology studies the space race and authoritarian modernity in Gregorio Brillantes’s “The Apollo Centennial”. Philippine Studies: Historical and Ethnographic Viewpoints, 71(1), 93 - 105. https://doi.org/10.13185/PS2023.71106 picture_as_pdf
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  • Chwalisz, Claudia (2015). The cry of populism signals a wider frustration with ‘politics as usual’, and greater use of deliberation could be the answer.
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  • Clark, Dulma, Kendall, Lily (2014). Interview: Dulma Clark of Soul Rebel Films.
  • Clark, Michael (2013). A lack of party unity can have a significant negative effect on the electoral success of European parties.
  • Clarke, Harold D., Goodwin, Matthew, Whiteley, Paul (2017). Why Britain voted to leave (and what Boris Johnson had to do with it).
  • Clarke, Ken, Kippin, Sean (2014). Interview: Ken Clarke on Western democracy, the press, and the longevity of our political leaders.
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  • Clayton, Amanda, De Kadt, Daniel, Dumas, Natasha (2023). Daughters do not affect political beliefs in a new democracy. Journal of Experimental Political Science, 10(1), 137 - 147. https://doi.org/10.1017/XPS.2022.3 picture_as_pdf
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  • Clemens, Mario (30 January 2022) Book review: Value, conflict, and order: Berlin, Hampshire, Williams, and the realist revival in political theory by Edward Hall. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • Clemm von Hohenberg, Bernhard (2018). People rely on their attitudes more than the source when judging the accuracy of news stories on Facebook.
  • Clifton, Judith (2015). Straitjacketing the state: how local and national governments have lost power over public service governance to Brussels.
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  • Coban, Mehmet Kerem (2015). Book review: conceptualizing capitalism: institutions, evolution, future by Geoffrey M. Hodgson.
  • Coban, Mehmet Kerem (2015). Book review: global democratic theory: a critical introduction.
  • Coban, Mehmet Kerem (2017). Book review: rethinking the new world order by Georg Sørensen.
  • Cobb, Michael D. (2013). Voters punish politicians for misinformation that portrays them in a favourable light, but not for inaccurate information that attacks their opponents.
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  • Coggan, Philip, Kippin, Sean (2013). Interview: Philip Coggan of the Economist on the West’s democratic decline and how to fix it.
  • Coggan, Philip, Kippin, Sean (2013). Interview: Philip Coggan of the Economist – “We may have ‘one person – one vote’, but we don’t have ‘one person – equal influence'”.
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  • Cohen-Almagor, Raphael (2016). Freedom of expression on the internet is of utmost importance but it needs to be weighed against social responsibility.
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  • Colleau, Morgane (2015). Book review: the Hizbullah phenomenon: politics and communication.
  • Collier, Paul, Kaul, Upaasna (2015). Post 2015: growth and the new sustainable development agenda.
  • Collier, Paul, Laroche, Caroline (2014). If we want the full benefit from resources; this is what we need.
  • Collier, Paul, Laroche, Caroline (2015). Natural resources do not need to be a curse (part 1 – explaining the resource curse).
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  • Colton, Timothy J. (2017). Book Review: Russia: What Everyone Needs to Know by Timothy J. Colton.
  • Colón-Ríos, Joel I., Hausteiner, Eva Marlene, Lokdam, Hjalte, Pasquino, Pasquale, Rubinelli, Lucia, Selinger, William (2021). Constituent power and its institutions. Contemporary Political Theory, 20(4), 926-956. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41296-021-00467-z picture_as_pdf
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  • Conroy, Melanie (2013). Book review: Nature et souveraineté.
  • Conroy-Krutz, Jeff (28 May 2020) Popular support for media freedom in Africa is a complicated picture. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Constant, Claire (2015). Book review: after civil war: division, reconstruction, and reconciliation in Europe.
  • Conway, Moira (2015). The link between casinos and problem gaming in nearby neighborhoods.
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  • Costello, Anthony (2018). The UK needs to clarify what 'full regulatory alignment' means before the next phase of the Brexit talks.
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  • Faguet, Jean-Paul, Shami, Mahvish (2022). The incoherence of institutional reform: decentralization as a structural solution to immediate political needs. Studies in Comparative International Development, 57(1), 85 - 112. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12116-021-09347-4 picture_as_pdf
  • Fahey, James J., Alarian, Hannah M. (7 June 2022) Successful right-wing populist movements decrease satisfaction with democracy among non-populist voters. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Falkner, Robert (2017). Book review: fact and fiction in global energy policy: 15 contentious questions by Benjamin J. Sovacool, Marilyn A. Brown and Scott V. Valentine.
  • Fara, Rudolf, Salles, Maurice (2006). An interview with Michael Dummett: from analytical philosophy to voting analysis and beyond. Social Choice and Welfare, 27(2), 347-364. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00355-006-0128-9
  • Farah, Asma Ali (2015). Book review: from silence to protest: international perspectives on weakly resourced groups.
  • Farmer, Harry (2016). The real reasons referendums have become so common – and so scary.
  • Farmer, Harry (2016). The tax credit row highlighted a fundamental imbalance in our political system: here’s one way to redress it.
  • Farrar, Laura (2008). Tonight: Misha Glenny on "McMafia" at Polis.
  • Farrer, Benjamin D. (2015). Voters react to ethnic minority candidates in different and sometimes unexpected ways.
  • Farrimond, Hannah (16 May 2021) Book review: New pandemics, old politics: two hundred years of war on disease and its alternatives by Alex de Waal. USApp – American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Farías Pelcastre, Iván (2017). Book review: thinking like a political scientist: a practical guide to research methods by Christopher Howard.
  • Fasan, Olu (2018). Okonjo-Iweala's reflections on the challenges of fighting corruption in Nigeria.
  • Fatsis, Lambros (2015). How do citizens choose who to vote for? A sociological account of the 2015 UK general election.
  • Faude, Benjamin (2020). Global governance als polycentric governance. Zeitschrift Fuer Internationale Beziehungen, 27(1), 151 - 162. https://doi.org/10.5771/0946-7165-2020-1-151 picture_as_pdf
  • Faude, Benjamin, Fuss, Julia (2020). Coordination or conflict? The causes and consequences of institutional overlap in a disaggregated world order. Global Constitutionalism, 9(2), 268 - 289. https://doi.org/10.1017/S2045381719000376 picture_as_pdf
  • Faude, Benjamin, Grobe-Kreul, Felix (2020). Let’s justify! How regime complexes enhance the normative legitimacy of global governance. International Studies Quarterly, 64(2), 431 - 439. https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqaa024 picture_as_pdf
  • Faude, Benjamin, Parizek, Michal (2020). Contested multilateralism as credible signaling: how strategic inconsistency can induce cooperation among states. Review of International Organizations, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11558-020-09398-7 picture_as_pdf
  • Faull, Jonathan, Ludlow, N. Piers, Warlouzet, Laurent (2018). British influence in Brussels had been far greater than recognised. picture_as_pdf
  • Faullimmel, Natacha (2015). Book review: truth wars the politics of climate change, military intervention and financial crisis by Peter Lee.
  • Favara, Greta (2016). Practice-dependent political theory and the boundaries of political imagination. (Working paper 3/16). Centro Einaudi.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2012). All the wrong people are applauding!
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2013). Beyond the confusion, a decisive shift.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). Can Greece make the choice?
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2018). Can the Eurozone be more democratic? picture_as_pdf
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2013). ERT tells us all we need to know….
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2012). Europe’s future rests on a Greek election that has only one certain outcome: greater uncertainty.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2012). Greece and its euro-zone partners: why two sides that say they agree can’t find their way to cooperate effectively.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2016). It’s all Greek to me: on the parallels with the UK referendum campaign.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). SYRIZA is not just for ‘Christmas’….
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2012). We demand inertia!
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). When populism fails.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2014). The inevitable European showdown has arrived – between Tsipras and Schauble.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2012). A vote of confidence should mean exactly that.
  • Featherstone, Kevin, Papadimitriou, Dimitris (2015). Greece: the paradox of power.
  • Fedirko, Taras (2015). Book review: the limits of neoliberalism: authority, sovereignty and the logic of competition.
  • Feeney, Barbara (2012). Reporting revolutions: don’t forget the aftermath (guest blog) #Polis12.
  • Felicetti, Andrea, Castelli Gattinara, Pietro (2018). The problem of marginality in public debates: evidence from The Guardian's Charlie Hebdo coverage.
  • Felkai, Dora (2014). Domestic violence and women’s rights in Hungary.
  • Felkai, Dora (2014). How can we prevent genocide?
  • Felle, Tom (2016). The Independent Commission on Freedom of Information shows that there is no going back to the “dark ages” of government opacity.
  • Felli, Leonardo, Hortala-Vallve, Rafael (2016). Collusion, blackmail and whistle-blowing. Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 11(3), 279-312. https://doi.org/10.1561/100.00015060
  • Felsenthal, Dan S. (2010-04-01) Review of paradoxes afflicting various voting procedures where one out of m candidates (m ≥ 2) must be elected [Paper]. Assessing Alternative Voting Procedures, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (2000-05-25 - 2000-05-27) Voting power and parliamentary defections : the 1953–54 French National Assembly revisited [Paper]. Workshop on Game Theoretic Approaches to Cooperation and Exchange of Information with Economic Application, University of Caen, France, FRA.
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (2002). Annexations and alliances : when are blocs advantageous a priori? Social Choice and Welfare, 19(2), 295-312. https://doi.org/10.1007/s003550100115
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (2001). Myths and meanings of voting power : comments on a symposium. Journal of Theoretical Politics, 13(1), 81-97. https://doi.org/10.1177/0951692801013001004
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (2001). The Treaty of Nice and qualified majority voting. Social Choice and Welfare, 18(3), 431-464. https://doi.org/10.1007/s003550100137
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (2005). Voting power measurement: a story of misreinvention. Social Choice and Welfare, 25(2-3), 485-506. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00355-005-0015-9
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (2004). A priori voting power : what is it all about? Political Studies Review, 2(1), 1-23. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1478-9299.2004.00001.x
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (2003). The voting power approach : response to a philosophical reproach. European Union Politics, 4(4), 473-479. https://doi.org/10.1177/146511650344005
  • Felsenthal, Dan S., Machover, Moshé (2002). The whole and the sum of its parts : formation of blocs revisited. In Holler, M. J., Kliemt, H., Schmidtchen, D., Streit, M. E. (Eds.), Power and Fairness (pp. 279-291). Mohr Siebeck (Firm).
  • Fenwick, John (2016). The proposed merger of Newcastle and North Tyneside councils would diminish rather than enhance devolution.
  • Fenzl, Michele (2017). Book review: Singapore and Switzerland: secrets to small states success edited by Yvonne Guo and Jun Jie Woo.
  • Fercovic Cerda, Malik (22 April 2020) Book review: resisting neoliberal capitalism in Chile: the possibility of social critique by Juan Pablo Rodríguez. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Ferland, Benjamin (2016). Citizen assessment of the political system is fostered by rational considerations rather than virtuousness.
  • Fernández, Raquel, Levy, Gilat (2005). Diversity and redistribution. National Bureau of Economic Research.
  • Fernández Arrigoitia, Melissa (2013-03-01) Creating a senior cohousing community in the UK: a case study [Poster]. LSE Research Festival 2013: Exploring Research Stories Through Visual Images, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Ferrara, Federico Maria, Schelkle, Waltraud, Truchlewski, Zbigniew (2023). What difference does the framing of a crisis make to European Union solidarity? European Union Politics, 24(4), 666 - 683. https://doi.org/10.1177/14651165231184641 picture_as_pdf
  • Ferrari, Lorenzo (2013). Book review: The poorer nations: a possible history of theglobal south.
  • Ferretti, Thomas (2022). An institutionalist approach to AI ethics: justifying the priority of government regulation over self-regulation. Moral Philosophy and Politics, 9(2), 239 - 265. https://doi.org/10.1515/mopp-2020-0056 picture_as_pdf
  • Fetzer, Thiemo (2014). Can workfare programmes moderate violence?
  • Fetzer, Thiemo (2014). Can workfare programmes moderate violence? Evidence from India.
  • Feuchtwang, Stephan (2023). Care as critique of care: public services, social security, and ritual responsiveness. China Quarterly, 254, 354 - 365. https://doi.org/10.1017/S030574102300036X picture_as_pdf
  • Feyrer, James, Sacerdote, Bruce (2013). The US may show the EU the way forward on fiscal integration.
  • Field, Bonnie N. (2015). How the next Spanish government might be formed after Spain’s election.
  • Fifi, Gianmarco (2022). From social protection to ‘progressive neoliberalism’ writing the Left into the rise and resilience of neoliberal policies (1968–2019). Review of International Political Economy, https://doi.org/10.1080/09692290.2022.2107044 picture_as_pdf
  • Fifi, Gianmarco (2023). On Antonio Gramsci’s hidden concept: fetishism. Capital and Class, https://doi.org/10.1177/03098168221145857 picture_as_pdf
  • Fildes, Harriet (2014). Book review: gentrification: a working-class perspective by Kirsteen Paton.
  • Filindra, Alexandra, Collingwood, Loren (2018). In the wake of the Parkland mass shooting, the public's now continual anxiety about gun crime may lead to a greater push for stricter gun laws.
  • Filippaki, Iro (2014). Book review: medicine at the border: disease, globalization and security, 1850 to the present, edited by Alison Bashford.
  • Finighan, Reuben (2023). Stabilising liberal societies in a world of radical innovation: committed actors, adaptive rules, and the origins of social order [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004598
  • Finlayson, Alan (2016). Too many facts and not enough theories: the rhetoric of the referendum campaign.
  • Finn, Peter, Ledger, Robert (2018). The new German government's end-run around Trump shows how old allies are hedging their bets.
  • Fischer, Andrew Martin (2005). Close encounters of an inner Asian kind: Tibetan-Muslim co-existence and conflict in Tibet past and present. (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 1 68). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Fisher, Mark (2013). Book review: History of political theory: an introduction.Volume 1: ancient and medieval political theory.
  • Fisher, Mark (2013). Book review: Machiavelli, Hobbes, and Rousseau.
  • Fishman, Ram, Jain, Meha, Kishore, Avinash (2013). What drives migration in northern Gujarat?
  • Fitzgerald, Amanda (2018). Querying the resilient local authority: the question of ‘resilience for whom?’. Local Government Studies, 44(6), 788-806. https://doi.org/10.1080/03003930.2018.1473767
  • Fitzgibbon, John (2018). Breaking the populism 'doom loop'. picture_as_pdf
  • Fleckenstein, Timo, Lee, Soohyun Christine (2018). Caught up in the past? Social inclusion, skills, and vocational education and training policy in England. Journal of Education and Work, 31(2), 109-124. https://doi.org/10.1080/13639080.2018.1433820
  • Fleckenstein, Timo, Lee, Soohyun Christine (2019). The political economy of education and skills in South Korea: democratisation, liberalisation and education reform in comparative perspective. Pacific Review, 32(2), 168 - 187. https://doi.org/10.1080/09512748.2018.1443155
  • Flikschuh, Katrin (2022). Innate right in Kant: a critical reading. European Journal of Philosophy, 30(2), 823-839. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejop.12707 picture_as_pdf
  • Flinders, Matthew (2014). When it comes to a fair constitutional settlement, beware of constitutional hyper-activism.
  • Flinders, Matthew, Ishkanian, Armine, Lawson, George, Mollett, Amy, Brumley, Cheryl (2012). Democracy and its discontents. audio_file
  • Flynn, D.J., Harbridge, Laurel (2015). People can prefer a policy win for the party they oppose over Congressional gridlock.
  • Flynn, Niall (2017). Book review: finite media: environmental implications of digital technologies by Sean Cubitt.
  • Flynn, Niall (2015). Book review: media|matter: the materiality of media, matter as medium edited by Bernd Herzogenrath.
  • Flynn, Niall (2014). Book review: the Routledge companion to mobile media, edited by Gerard Goggin and Larissa Hjorth.
  • Fokas, Effie (2014). Banal, benign or pernicious? The relationship between religion and national identity from the perspective of religious minorities in Greece.
  • Folan O'Connor, Elizabeth (2015). Book review: the lure of technocracy.
  • Follesdal, Andreas (2014). The EU’s lack of shared interests will continue to inhibit the creation of genuine democratic culture.
  • Foos, Florian, Gilardi, Fabrizio (2019). Does exposure to gender role models increase women’s political ambition? A field experiment with politicians. Journal of Experimental Political Science, 7(3), 157-166. https://doi.org/10.1017/XPS.2019.21 picture_as_pdf
  • Foos, Florian, de Rooij, Eline A. (2017). The role of partisan cues in voter mobilization campaigns: evidence from a randomized field experiment. Electoral Studies, 45, 63-74. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2016.11.010 picture_as_pdf
  • Forbes, Claire (2014). Book review: the price of public intellectuals by Raphael Sassower.
  • Forbes, Nick (2014). Financial decentralisation is already happening, and Newcastle is seeing the benefits.
  • Forbess, Alex (2015). From ‘the interview’ to Charlie Hebdo.
  • Forbess, Alex (2014). Nick Davies and journalism’s bullying culture.
  • Forbess, Alex (2014). Using data for campaigning journalism: Monique Villa at LSE.
  • Ford, Alessandro (11 May 2021) Book review: Gangsters and other statesmen: Mafias, separatists, and torn states in a globalized world by Danilo Mandić. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Foreman, Veronica (2012). Journalism as a social science: how data makes a difference (guest Blog).
  • Forestal, Jennifer (2017). Trolling democracy: anonymity doesn’t cause conflicts, bad site design does.
  • Forrester, Dean (2016). Crowdsourced journalism: a new democratic platform?
  • Forstenzer, Joshua (2017). Will the ‘front républicain’ carry Macron to power?
  • Forsyth, Tim (2001). Critical realism and political ecology. In Lopez, Jose, Potter, Gary (Eds.), After Postmodernism: an Introduction to Critical Realism (pp. 146-154). Athlone Press.
  • Forsyth, Tim (2008). Political ecology and the epistemology of social justice. Geoforum, 39(2), 756-764. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2006.12.005
  • Forsyth, Tim (2012). Politicizing environmental science does not mean denying climate science nor endorsing it without question. Global Environmental Politics, 12(2), 18-23. https://doi.org/10.1162/GLEP_a_00106
  • Forsyth, Tim (2004). Social movements and environmental democratization in Thailand. In Jasanoff, Sheila, Martello, Marybeth Long (Eds.), Earthly Politics: Local and Global in Environmental Governance (pp. 195-216). MIT Press.
  • Forsyth, Tim, Johnson, Craig (2014). Elinor Ostrom's legacy: governing the commons, and the rational choice controversy. Development and Change, 45(5), 1093-1110. https://doi.org/10.1111/dech.12110
  • Fortin-Rittberger, Jessica, Rittberger, Berthold, Dingler, Sarah (2015). Recruitment procedures shape the gender composition of party lists in European Parliament elections.
  • Fortunato, David (2015). Cabinet participation erodes the distinctiveness of junior coalition partners’ ‘brand’.
  • Fossen, Thomas, Van Der Brink, Bert (2016). When using voter advice applications, citizens should be aware that they reflect the political assumptions of their developers.
  • Fossum, John Erik, Graver, Hans Petter (2018). Could the Norway model work for Britain? Twelve points to help you decide. picture_as_pdf
  • Foster, Helen (2016). The homelessness reduction bill is a piece of token legislation.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Advocacy in conflict: “half-truths” on behalf of the powerful?
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). African politics, African peace: report submitted to the African Union by the World Peace Foundation.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). Book: making sense of the Central African Republic.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Chris Whitty: “Most ‘good ideas’ in development don’t work, and many cause harm.”.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2017). Courts as local civil authority in South Sudan.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). De Waal: why South Sudan needs more than oil.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Engaging with non-state actors in fragile settings.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). Getting the balance right? Sexual violence response in the DRC: a comparison between 2011 and 2014.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Institutional vacuum, violence and the state: the case of Swat, Pakistan.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). JSRP policy briefs.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). New JSRP paper on public authority.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Rethinking the climate-conflict connection.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). Security: for whom, by whom?
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). South Sudan: towards democratization and development?
  • Foulds, Wendy (2013). UPDATED: Africa in the 2011 Libyan conflict: the inside story.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2014). Unravelling public uuthority: paths of hybrid governance in Africa.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). The unmaking of public authority: a new article by Rebecca Tapscott.
  • 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.
  • Fox, Sean (2017). Neglected drivers of urbanisation in Africa.
  • Fox, Sean (2017). Yangon’s mobility crisis: a governance problem.
  • Fox, Stuart (2015). How can we get more young people voting in elections? Start by abandoning the myth of ‘politically alienated youth’.
  • Fraile, Marta, Gómez, Raul (2017). Bridging the gender gap: how to address low levels of political interest among women.
  • Fraker, Andrew, Shah, Neil Buddy, Abraham, Ronald (2013). Are nutrition programmes serving children in Bihar?
  • Franc, Renata, Medjugorac, Vanja (2013). Support for EU membership in Croatia has fallen dramatically since accession negotiations began in 2003.
  • Franganillo, Carlos (2008). Journalism and terror: transmission belts? (Guest blog).
  • Frank, Mark (4 June 2015) Unless we change the way we think about transparency, open data is unlikely to have a significant political impact at the local level. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Franklin, Simon, Caria, Stefano (2016). Curse of anonymity or tyranny of distance? The impacts of job-search support in urban Ethiopia.
  • Frantescu, Doru (6 February 2020) How the departure of British MEPs has changed the European Parliament. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Franz, Tobias (2018). Colombia elections 2018: candidates and their chances in times of hope and fear.
  • Franz, Tobias (2018). Colombia elections 2018: the perils of polarisation for a precarious peace.
  • Franz, Tobias, Gómez Suárez, Andrei (7 January 2020) ¿Por qué Colombia está marchando? LSE Latin America and Caribbean Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Franzmann, Simon (2017). A right-wing populist party founded by economists: the strange case of Germany’s AfD.
  • Fras, Max (2017). Prime Minister Edi Rama takes total control in Albania, but who can keep him in check?
  • Frazier, Erica (2018). Book review: the language of Brexit by Steve Buckledee. picture_as_pdf
  • Fredriksson, Anders (2015). Bureaucracy intermediaries, corruption and red tape.
  • Fredriksson, Per G., Neumayer, Eric, Damania, Richard, Gates, Scott (2005). Environmentalism, democracy, and pollution control. Journal of Environmental Economics and Management, 49(2), 343 -365. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jeem.2004.04.004
  • Freer, Courtney, Kherfi, Yasmine (2020). Whose story? Narratives of nationalism in heritage production of the Arabian Peninsula. (LSE Middle East Centre paper series 39). LSE Middle East Centre. picture_as_pdf
  • French, Steve (2018). How trade unions are mobilising around the challenges of Brexit.
  • Friday, Terrine (2011). In to the grey zone: Arab spring as information revolution? (guest blog).
  • Fridh Kleberg, Carl (2014). Source protection for journalists – a new Polis research project (guest blog).
  • Friebel, Rocco, Wallenburg, Iris (2024). Politics in all policies: how healthcare is shaped by political (in)action. Health Economics, Policy and Law, 19(3), 289 - 291. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1744133124000240 picture_as_pdf
  • Friesen, Amanda, Ksiazkiewics, Aleksander (2015). Political and religious attitudes are influenced by both environmental and genetic factors.
  • Froio, Caterina (2017). Three ways in which the French presidential election reflects Western European trends.
  • Fuentes, Lorena (2014). Alumni interview: Lorena Fuentes.
  • Fujikawa, Kentaro (2021). Settling with autonomy after civil wars: lessons from Aceh, Indonesia. Global Policy, 12(2), 204 - 213. https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-5899.12949 picture_as_pdf
  • Fuller, Steve (2018). We have seen the Alt-Right, but what about the Alt-Left?
  • Fuller, Steve (2018). Why there is less between social democracy and neoliberalism than meets the eye. picture_as_pdf
  • Fumagalli, Roberto (2022). A more liberal public reason liberalism. Moral Philosophy and Politics, https://doi.org/10.1515/mopp-2021-0068 picture_as_pdf
  • Fumarola, Andrea (2017). The European Union has an obligation to protect civil society in Hungary.
  • Fumarola, Andrea (7 February 2018) Why the media helps make Hungarian elections so predictable. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog.
  • Furlong, Shauneen, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Shauneen Furlong on Canada’s slide from digital government pre-eminence.
  • Furlong, Shauneen, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Shauneen Furlong on the challenges inherent in making the transition to digital government.
  • Furse, Thomas (12 July 2021) Book review: Revolutionary world: global upheaval in the modern age edited by David Motadel. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Furtado, Delia, Song, Tao (2015). How technological change and globalization are driving higher wages of immigrants married to natives.
  • Gabaccia, Donna, Martin, Susan F (2012). Book Review: foreign relations: American immigration in global perspective.
  • Gad, Ulrik Pram (2016). Could a ‘reverse Greenland’ arrangement keep Scotland and Northern Ireland in the EU?
  • Gaffney, John (2013). Anti-Hollande sentiments have fuelled the popularity of France’s Manif pour Tous movement.
  • Gahner Larsen, Erik, Levinsen, Klaus, Kjær, Ulrik (2016). Votes at 16: do mock elections make a difference to adults’ attitudes?
  • Gale, Stephanie (2012). The only way is ethics: newspapers after Leveson (Polis conference guest blog) #Polis12.
  • Galiani, Sebastian, Knack, Stephen, Xu, Colin, Zou, Ben (28 April 2016) The effect of aid on growth: evidence from a quasi-experiment. International Growth Centre Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Gallagher, Jim (2018). Chequers produces the best and most elaborate fudge available. picture_as_pdf
  • Gallagher, Jim (2018). Kicking the bucket down the road to Norway: EEA is back.
  • Gallagher, Jim (2016). Negotiations about the fiscal framework for the Scotland Bill are becoming high political drama.
  • Gallagher, Jim (2016). Scottish devolution will now have a bigger fiscal dimension.
  • Gallien, Max (2021). Researching the politics of illegal activities. PS - Political Science and Politics, 54(3), 467 - 471. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1049096521000317 picture_as_pdf
  • Galpin, Charlotte (2016). Project Fear: how the negativity of the referendum campaign undermines democracy.
  • Galvin, Daniel J. (2017). Wage theft is widespread, but politics and policies can play a powerful role in reducing it.
  • Gamanayake, Piumi (2016). The economic and technological cooperation agreement: full steam ahead for India and Sri Lanka?
  • Gamble, Andrew (17 May 2021) Moving beyond the Western Ideology and creating a more inclusive multilateral order is a herculean task. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Gamsu, Sol (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 6.
  • Ganderson, Joseph (2023). Exiting after Brexit: public perceptions of future European Union member state departures. West European Politics, https://doi.org/10.1080/01402382.2022.2164135 picture_as_pdf
  • Gandrud, Christopher, Hallerberg, Mark (2015). Democratically elected politicians tend to push the cost of financial crises to the future in order to avert unpopularity.
  • Gandrud, Christopher (2012). Knowing the unknowns: financial policymaking in uncertainty [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Gangadharan, Seeta Peña (2017). The downside of digital inclusion: expectations and experiences of privacy and surveillance among marginal internet users. New Media & Society, 19(4), 597 - 615. https://doi.org/10.1177/1461444815614053
  • Garcia, Blake E., Wimpy, Cameron (8 July 2016) The spread of communications technology may facilitate increases in levels of anti-government violence. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Garcia V., Jose Angel (2015). Mexico: between a dangerous democracy and a democracy in danger.
  • García, Miguel, Hoskin, Gary (2003). Political participation and war in Colombia. (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 1 38). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • García Oliva, Javier (2018). The troubling legal and political uncertainty facing Catalonia.
  • Gard-Murray, Alexander (2016). Labour must back freedom of movement – because the public want to stay in the single market.
  • Gardner, Leigh A., Broadberry, Stephen (2014). From boom to bust: avoiding economic ‘growth reversals’ in Africa.
  • Gardner, Zoe (2017). LSE continental breakfast #2: migration and Brexit.
  • Garland, Ruth (2016). Book review: Biopolitical media: catastrophe, immunity and bare life by Allen Meek.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Book review: bring back the bureaucrats by John J. Dilulio Jr.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Book review: personality politics? The role of leader evaluations in democratic elections.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Book review: reporting the EU: news, media and the European Institutions by John Lloyd and Cristina Marconi.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Snowden and beyond (guest blog).
  • Garland, Ruth (2013). Strange fascination: image in music and politics Part One.
  • Garland, Ruth (2013). Strange fascination: image in music and politics Part Two.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). A ‘bizarre’ election of big money and hidden campaigning.
  • Garlick, Alex (2017). In considering Judge Gorsuch’s nomination, the Senate should take the long view.
  • Garry, John, Tilley, James (2014). Right-wing citizens in right-wing countries dislike the EU, but right-wing citizens in left-wing countries support European integration.
  • Gashi, Krenar (2017). Kosovo’s early elections are reviving its ‘war’ and ‘peace’ camps.
  • Gauthier-Chung, Maud Faïle (2017). Relational autonomy from a political perspective [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.g1vu1dkyxrmg
  • Gavira, Alejandro (2007). Social mobility and preferences for redistribution in Latin America. Economía, 8(1), 55 - 88. https://doi.org/10.1353/eco.2008.0003 picture_as_pdf
  • Gazzola, Michele (2016). A ‘one-language’ EU policy would foster elitism and hit disproportionately the least advantaged.
  • Gberie, Lansana (2018). #VoteSalone 2018 : will Sierra Leone's two-party system survive after March?
  • Gearty, Conor (2017). Human rights in a neo-liberal world. picture_as_pdf
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  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). It’s Labor Day today. Here are eight important USAPP posts on work, workers’ rights, and unions.
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  • Grear, Anna (2013). Climate justice involves more than a fair distribution of benefits and burdens: It requires radical, structural change.
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  • Green, Duncan (17 July 2023) How to stand up to a dictator: the fight for our future. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Green, Duncan (17 May 2021) New issues in development policy drive research impact on Somali state-building. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Green, Duncan (3 June 2025) When democracy programmes succeed but democracy fails, what are we missing? An experiment in the Ukraine. Activism, Influence and Change. picture_as_pdf
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  • 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.
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  • Grogan, Joelle (2017). The Great Repeal Bill explained in sticky notes.
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  • Grogan, Joelle, Price, Georgia (2018). The meaningful vote explained in sticky notes. picture_as_pdf
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  • Grover, Sonja C., Mycock, Andrew, Rufo, Yasmin, Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Hamilton, Vivian, Fox, Ruth, Dunleavy, Patrick, Cowley, Philip (2013). Votes at 16: democracy experts respond to Ed Miliband’s proposal.
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  • Guerra, Simona (2016). The Polish Catholic Church has become intertwined with Euroscepticism and the promotion of conservative “national values”.
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  • Gulati, Saanya (2016). Modiplomacy and the dynamics of diaspora engagement: the mass-marketing of Brand India.
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  • Gutiérrez Sanín, Francisco (2003). Criminal rebels? A discussion of civil war and criminality from the Colombian experience. (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 1 27). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
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  • Göpffarth, Julian (2018). The beginning of the end for political stability? How the new generation of CDU and SPD members are seeking to reshape German politics.
  • Göpffarth, Julian (2017). The rise of Germany’s AfD: from ordoliberalism to new right nationalism and into the Bundestag?
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  • Haddon, Catherine, Ziegler, Katja, Peters, Dirk, Blick, Andrew, Hallwood, James (2013). War, peace and Parliament: experts respond to the government’s defeat on Syrian intervention.
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  • Halikiopoulou, Daphne, Vasilopoulou, Sofia (2013). The rise of the Golden Dawn is not a natural consequence of the economic crisis, but a reflection of wider problems in Greek society.
  • Halikiopoulou, Daphne, Vlandas, Tim (1 June 2022) Understanding right-wing populism and what to do about it. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • Hamilton, Zoe, Munger, Anne (2016). Rhetoric vs reality: contraception in India and the DMPA debate.
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  • Hancké, Bob (2014). EMU and the loss of monetary sovereignty.
  • Hancké, Bob (2014). FTT: right idea, wrong way?
  • Hancké, Bob (2014). Growth and unemployment in the Eurozone: what’s really happening?
  • Hancké, Bob (2018). Italy's crisis: wouldn't it be simpler if the government simply dissolved the people and elected another?
  • Hancké, Bob (2014). Karlsruhe and the OMT.
  • Hancké, Bob (2014). On peripheral debt.
  • Hancké, Bob (2014). Piketty part 2.
  • Hancké, Bob (2014). Piketty’s wrong, says the Financial Times.
  • Hancké, Bob (2014). Structural reforms are back. Call the cops!
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  • Hancké, Bob (2014). The spectre haunting Europe.
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  • Harris, Max (8 December 2019) Book Review: 1931: debt, crisis, and the rise of Hitler by Tobias Straumann. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Harris, Peter (2016). Jeremy Corbyn cannot fulfil his constitutional role as leader of the opposition.
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  • Hasan, Mubashar (2016). Religious freedom with an Islamic twist: how the Medina Charter is used to frame secularism in Bangladesh.
  • Hasan, Mubashar, Alam, Khurshed (2015). As governments gather for the Paris Climate Summit the effects of climate change are escalating in Bangladesh.
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  • Hix, Simon (2015). When MEPs vote, the UK’s delegation is increasingly marginalised.
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  • Hix, Simon, Hoyland, Bjorn, Vivyan, Nick (2007). From doves to hawks: a spatial analysis of voting in the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England, 1997-2007. (PSPE working papers 08-2007). Department of Government, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Hix, Simon, Vivyan, Nick, Hoyland, Bjorn (2010). Can the Chancellor still influence voting patterns in the Monetary Policy Committee at the Bank of England?
  • Hix, Simon (2018). Brexit: where is the EU–UK relationship heading? Journal of Common Market Studies, https://doi.org/10.1111/jcms.12766
  • Hix, Simon (2002). Constitutional agenda-setting through discretion in rule interpretation: why the European Parliament won at Amsterdam. British Journal of Political Science, 32(2), 259-280. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123402000108
  • Hix, Simon (2020). Remaking democracy: Ireland as a role-model the 2019 Peter Mair lecture. Irish Political Studies, 35(4), 585 - 601. https://doi.org/10.1080/07907184.2020.1721085 picture_as_pdf
  • Hix, Simon (2018). When optimism fails: liberal intergovernmentalism and citizen representation. Journal of Common Market Studies, 56(7), 1595-1613. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcms.12785 picture_as_pdf
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  • Jiyad, Sajad (2023). Corruption is the lifeblood of politics in Iraq. (LSE Middle East Centre Paper Series 77). LSE Middle East Centre. picture_as_pdf
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  • Johnston, Ron (2013). Book review: The limits of electoral reform.
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  • Johnston, Ron (2017). The long read: the working class hasn’t gone away by Ron Johnston.
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  • Kabeer, Naila (2015). Gender equality, the MDGs and the SDGs: achievements, lessons and concerns.
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  • Kabir, Arafat (2018). Liberal democracies, don't give up on the Maldives.
  • Kageura, Asuka, Paddy, Brendan, Deo, Priyanka (2013). Pictures of suffering – do we have to choose between impact and dignity?
  • Kakabadse, Andrew (2018). Is government fit for purpose? Not with the current structure of departmental boards.
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  • Kaldor, Mary (2014). The habits of the heart substantive democracy afterthe European elections.
  • Kaldor, Mary (2012). A study of the various social mobilisations and collectiveactivities that we chose to describe as 'subterraneanpolitics' reveals a general frustration with current political practices.
  • Kaldor, Mary, Selchow, Sabine, Deel, Sean, Murray-Leach, Tamsin (2012). The ‘bubbling up’ of subterranean politics in Europe. Civil Society and Human Security Research Unit, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Kaldor, Mary (2023). Commentary on Kögler: analysing the Ukraine war through a ‘new wars’ perspective. European Journal of Social Theory, 26(4), 479 - 489. https://doi.org/10.1177/13684310231168807 picture_as_pdf
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  • Kantack, Benjamin (2017). In New York, minor-party candidates win elections all the time – because they’re also major-party candidates.
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  • Kassimeris, George (2018). History will judge ETA as a failed terrorist group, but there are lessons to be learned.
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  • Kienzle, Benjamin, von Weitershausen, Inez (2017). Brexit has given an impetus to reshape Europe’s foreign, security and defence policies.
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  • Kippin, Sean (2013). Book review: power trip: a decade of policy, plots and spin.
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  • Kippin, Sean (2013). Democratic round-up: Parliament and Syria.
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  • Kippin, Sean (2014). Everything you need to know about the regional contests in the European Parliament elections across the UK.
  • Kippin, Sean (2016). How democratically accountable are the UK’s security and intelligence services?
  • Kippin, Sean (2014). Select committees are becoming increasingly significant, but show an enormous gender bias in their choice of witnesses.
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  • Medha (2015). Book review: standardizing diversity: the political economy of language regimes.
  • Meehan, Elizabeth (2016). Is freedom of information a viable research tool? Step three: responses and conclusions.
  • Meehan, Elizabeth (2016). Is freedom of information a viable research tool? Step two: receiving a response to a request.
  • Meehan, Elizabeth (2015). Is “freedom of information” a viable research tool? Step one: composing a request.
  • Meersohn Schmidt, Cynthia (2016). Inadequacy may be useful in withstanding Brexit uncertainty.
  • Mehdiyeva, Nazrin (2016). The long read: Necessity vs ethics or necessary ethics? The West's moral dilemma in sourcing oil from the 1920s to the present day by Nazrin Mehdiyeva.
  • Mehrotra, Mandavi (2015). The strides of transformation: from planning commission to NITI Aayog.
  • Meierhenrich, Jens (2021). Constitutional dictatorships, from colonialism to COVID-19. Annual Review of Law and Social Science, 17, 411 - 439. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-lawsocsci-040721-102430 picture_as_pdf
  • Meierhenrich, Jens (2023). The soul of the state: the question of constitutional identity in Carl Schmitt’s Verfassungslehre. In Goldoni, Marco, Wilkinson, Michael A. (Eds.), The Cambridge Handbook on the Material Constitution (pp. 45 - 63). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009023764.004 picture_as_pdf
  • Mejias, Sam, Banaji, Shakuntala (2018). Using it, losing it: what has EU citizenship meant to young people in Britain?
  • Mejía Mantilla, Carolina, Sánchez Torres, Fabio, Faguet, Jean-Paul (2004-12-01) The impact of political variables on budgets and social outcomes in a context of decentralization : the case of Colombia (El impacto de variables políticas sobre resultados presupuestales y sociales en un marco de descentralización : el caso de Colombia) [Paper]. Crisis States Programme Annual Conference, New Delhi, India, IND.
  • Melissaris, Emmanuel (2015). The Golden Dawn trial is a legitimate criminal case, not political persecution.
  • Melissaris, Emmanuel (2017). On solidarity. (LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers 10/2017). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2980766
  • Mellbye, Alex (2016). Love, space-time, and language: a taste of Norwegian culture.
  • Melo Araujo, Billy, Lupo Pasini, Federico (2018). Irish border backstop: many unanswered questions and considerable economic challenges.
  • Melton, James (2013). Europe is home to some of the world’s most incomprehensible national constitutions.
  • Mennicken, Andrea, Salais, Robert (2021). The new politics of numbers: an introduction. In Mennicken, Andrea, Salais, Robert (Eds.), The New Politics of Numbers: Utopia, Evidence and Democracy (pp. 1 - 42). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-78201-6_1 picture_as_pdf
  • Menzel, Alice, Pykett, Jessica (1 June 2022) Book review: Revolutionary routines: the habits of social transformation by Carolyn Pedwell. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Mercer, Adrian (2018). Donald Trump's presidency has a disturbing parallel in the political career of Huey Long.
  • Meriläinen, Jaakko, Tukiainen, Janne (2018). Rank effects in political promotions. Public Choice, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11127-018-0591-8
  • Merlo, Stefano (2025). Macroeconomic sovereignty in the European Economic and Monetary Union: a republican approach. Political Studies, 73(3), 1254 - 1272. https://doi.org/10.1177/00323217241286784 picture_as_pdf
  • Merz, Prisca (2015). The Paris agreement shows we need a paradigm shift to tackle climate change.
  • Messmer, Marion (2016). Book review: Neoclassical realist theory of international politics by Norrin M. Ripsman, Jeffrey W. Taliaferro and Steven E. Lobell.
  • Metodieva, Asya (2018). Why do foreign fighters join Islamic State? The case of Kosovo. (Strategic Update December 2018). LSE IDEAS, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Mew, Heather (22 September 2018) Book review: Welfare, inequality and social citizenship: deprivation and affluence in austerity Britain by Daniel Edmiston. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Meyer, Brett (23 August 2021) Did countries with populist leaders suffer more from COVID? LSE COVID-19 Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Meyer, Niclas (2010-05-26) The political economy of technical standardization [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Meyer, Thomas M., Haselmayer, Martin, Wagner, Markus (2015). The media’s gatekeeping function means that party press coverage often reproduces and reinforces existing power structures.
  • Meyers, Jeffrey B. (2011). Toward a Negri-inspired theory of c/Constitution: a contemporary Canadian case study [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Meza, Oliver D. (2015). Failure to take into account existing institutions risks jeopardising the success of new reforms.
  • Mhoumadi, Taman (2017). Building a bridge between the European bubble and citizens via social leaders.
  • Mijs, Jonathan J.B, Savage, Mike (2020). Meritocracy, elitism and inequality. Political Quarterly, 91(2), 397 - 404. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-923X.12828 picture_as_pdf
  • Milas, Costas, Panagiotidis, Theodore (2011). How (un)justified are the decisions of credit rating agencies?
  • Milas, Costas, Panagiotidis, Theodore (2011). How big is the risk of contagion from Greece to the rest of the Eurozone?
  • Milas, Costas, Panagiotidis, Theodore, Boumparis, Perikilis (2015). On structural reforms and debt relief.
  • Mildenberger, Matto, Howells, Peter, Marlon, Jennifer, Leiserowitz, Anthony A. (2018). What do Republicans and Democrats think about climate change? It depends on where they live.
  • Miller, Grant, Valente, Christine, Miller, Emily (2016). Insights from Nepal’s abortion legalisation.
  • Mills, John, Prelec, Tena (2017). Labour donor John Mills on the UK election: “The Tories have moved into Labour’s economic territory – the two need to work together on delivering a swift Brexit”.
  • Mills, Thomas (2018). The Anglo-American 'special relationship' in the post-Brexit era. picture_as_pdf
  • Milne, Claire (9 April 2013) Consumer policy in telecoms: how far can market transparency take us? Network Economy Forum. picture_as_pdf
  • Milner, Susan (18 November 2016) Emmanuel Macron and En Marche! – left, right or simply on the move? Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • 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 (2015). Book review: diplomatic afterlives by Andrew F Cooper.
  • Minde, Nicodemus (2018). Recalibration or power consolidation of African ruling parties?
  • Mishra, Pankaj (2012). “The history of the West is not the history of the world” – Pankaj Mishra. picture_as_pdf
  • Misra, Tanmay (2023). The invention of corruption: India and the License Raj [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004591
  • Mistry, Mark (2015). Direct rule from Delhi imposed in restive Kashmir.
  • Mistry, Mark (2016). Kashmir in crisis – before and after the killing of Burhan Wani.
  • Mitchell, James (2017). Audit 2017: how democratic is local government in Scotland?
  • Mitchell, Paul, Evans, Geoffrey, O'Leary, Brendan (2006). Extremist outbidding in ethnic party systems is not inevitable: tribune parties in Northern Ireland. (PSPE working papers 06-2006). Department of Government, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Mitra, Anirban, Pal, Sarmistha (2023). How does fiscal decentralisation affect local polities? Evidence from local communities in Indonesia. In Faguet, Jean-Paul, Pal, Sarmistha (Eds.), Decentralised Governance: Crafting Effective Democracies Around the World (pp. 181 - 208). LSE Press. https://doi.org/10.31389/lsepress.dlg.g picture_as_pdf
  • Mitrovic, Olga (2015). Used during the Balkan crises, the EU’s Temporary Protection Directive may now be a solution to Europe’s refugee emergency.
  • Mitsch, Frieder, Lee, Neil, Morrow, Elizabeth (2021). Faith no more? The divergence of political trust between urban and rural Europe. (III Working Papers 64). International Inequalities Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.j4p17nde0mtd picture_as_pdf
  • Mitsch, Frieder, Lee, Neil, Ralph-Morrow, Elizabeth (2021). Faith no more? The divergence of political trust between urban and rural Europe. Political Geography, 89, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.polgeo.2021.102426 picture_as_pdf
  • Mocan, Naci, Altindag, Duha (2013). Raising MEPs’ salaries causes them to attend fewer meetings, but cutting their salaries increases their attendance rate.
  • Mog, Ashley (2011). Book review: the straight state: sexuality and citizenship in twentieth-century America.
  • Mohan, Deepanshu, Singh Maini, Tridivesh (2015). India in Latin America: a missing story?
  • Mohan, Taneesha (2013). Labour tying arrangements: an enduring aspect of agrarian capitalism?
  • Moiseienko, Anton (2017). Book review: dictators without borders: power and money in Central Asia by Alexander Cooley and John Heathershaw.
  • Moisi, Evangelina, Zachariades, Alexandros (2021). Performing identity: the case of the (Greek) Cypriot National Guard. Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism, 21(1), 26 - 45. https://doi.org/10.1111/sena.12341 picture_as_pdf
  • Mollett, Amy (2014). Reading list: 5 thought-provoking books on families, marriage and policy.
  • Molloy, Andrew (2017). Book review: general intellects: twenty-one thinkers for the twenty-first century by McKenzie Wark.
  • Molthof, Luuk (2018). What the 2015 Greek debt negotiations tell us about Germany's negotiating stance on Brexit.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). Between two poor alternatives, either is ok(-ish).
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). Break away from Groundhog Day.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). Can Hollande save Greece?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). Change!
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). Colourful nonsense.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2013). Counting the options in Cyprus: the good, the bad and the ugly.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). Deflation in Greece!? What do they (not) know?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). Depressing wages.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). From hope to concern and from concern to hopefulness.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). Greece in focus: a GreeSE Papers special issue.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). Happy new year?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). Here we are nowhere …yet.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). I had a dream… …about taxi licensing!
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The IMF’s preliminary draft debt sustainability analysis: what does it mean?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). Keeping Greece afloat and hoping for supply-side growth….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). London burning, stock markets melting… time for structural change!
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). No dilemma.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). No rest for the wicked….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). On the efficiency of public investment allocations in Greece.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). Survival of the weakest?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). Ten frequently asked questions – with nine answers….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). To default or not to default? That is NOT the question!
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The benign somersault.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). A giant leap for the eurozone – a small step for Greece….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The going gets tough….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). The great Eurozone road-kill.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2013). The great Greek exceptionalism (on recessionary austerity and government effectiveness).
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The negotiation that never happened….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2012). The not-so-hospitable Greeks.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2011). A very sombre proposition: finding the strength to kill ones’ self.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis, Zilic, Ivan (2020). The economic effects of political disintegration: lessons from Serbia and Montenegro. European Journal of Political Economy, 65, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2020.101938 picture_as_pdf
  • Moncrieff, Richard (2018). Book review: women and the war on Boko Haram: wives, weapons, witnesses by Hilary Matfess.
  • Monk, Ellis P. (2015). How skin color matters for the physical and mental health of African Americans.
  • Monoghan, Jamie (2017). Why the upcoming election in Georgia’s Sixth District will not be a referendum on Trump.
  • Montagnes, B. Pablo, Wolton, Stephane (2019). Mass purges: top-down accountability in autocracy. American Political Science Review, 113(4), 1045 - 1059. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055419000455 picture_as_pdf
  • Montagu, Ian (2018). Remainer or Leaver? The emergence of the Brexit identity prism. picture_as_pdf
  • Montaigne, Maxine (2014). Book review: digital media and society: transforming economics, politics and social practices by Andrew White.
  • Montaigne, Maxine (2015). Book review: policy change, public attitudes and social citizenship: does neoliberalism matter?
  • Montaigne, Maxine (2017). Book review: the econocracy: the perils of leaving economics to the experts by Joe Earle, Cahal Moran and Zach Ward-Perkins.
  • Monti, Mara (2017). Italy versus Spain: two measures for solving the same banking problem.
  • Montz, Sarah (2008). Knife crime and drinking (guest blog).
  • Mookherjee, Dilip (2014). MNREGA: populist leaky bucket or anti-poverty success?
  • Mookherjee, Dilip (2023). Decentralised targeting of transfer programmes: a reassessment. In Faguet, Jean-Paul, Pal, Sarmistha (Eds.), Decentralised Governance: Crafting Effective Democracies Around the World (pp. 49 - 71). LSE Press. https://doi.org/10.31389/lsepress.dlg.c picture_as_pdf
  • Moono, Herryman (2016). Drivers for diversification: firm productivity and export growth.
  • Moono, Herryman (2017). Exorcising government inefficiency through e-systems.
  • Mor, Federico, Nash, Erin J., Green, Fergus (2021). Separated by a common language: how Breitbart and The New York Times produce different meanings from common words. Politics, https://doi.org/10.1177/02633957211012959 picture_as_pdf
  • Moral, Mert, Ozen, H. Ege, Tokdemir, Efe (2016). Incumbency advantage is not restricted to established majoritarian systems.
  • Morales, Pablo (2024). Book review: Seeking truth in international TV news. China, CGTN and the BBC. Journalism, 25(2), 486 - 488. https://doi.org/10.1177/14648849231225250 picture_as_pdf
  • Moran, James (2011). Book review: how to change the world: tales of Marx and Marxism.
  • Moran, Jane (2012). How to change the world: tales of Marx and Marxism.
  • 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.
  • Morisi, Davide (2017). Risk-takers and referendums: what happens when voters are better-informed?
  • Morisi, Davide, Osipova, Diana (2010). Briefing dossier on the Newscorp/BSkyBMedia merger.
  • Morjaria, Ameet (2014). The value of democracy in the world’s poorest region: evidence from Kenya’s road building.
  • Morphet, Janice (2017). Beyond Brexit: how the OECD could replace the EU as a driver of UK public policy.
  • Morphet, Janice (2013). A wider debate on how Europe shapes British policy making is now needed.
  • Morricone, Corrado (2018). Was Boris Johnson justified in using John Stuart Mill to make the case for Brexit?
  • Morris, Katy, Lee, Neil, Kemeny, Thomas (2018). Immobility and support for Leave: Brexit was partly a reaction to change from the locally rooted.
  • Morris, Katy, Lee, Neil, Kemeny, Thomas (2018). Immobility and support for Leave: Brexit was partly a reaction to change from the locally rooted.
  • Morris, Marley (2013). In the European Parliament, radical-right MEPs focus more on giving speeches than doing work that has direct policy impact.
  • Morris, Marley (2018). Public attitudes to Brexit: the referendum was more a vote for re-regulation than for de-regulation.
  • Morris, Marley (2015). Reforming laws on free movement will be a headache for any future government.
  • Morrison, Jenny (20 May 2015) Can gender equality exclude feminist politics? The case of the Radical Independence Campaign. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Morrison, James (2021). Historical International Political Economy. In Pevehouse, Jon C. W., Seabrooke, Leonard (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of International Political Economy . Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198793519.013.48 picture_as_pdf
  • Morrow, Duncan (2018). Walking away from the Good Friday Agreement may look easy. Picking up the pieces will take decades.
  • Morse, Yonatan (5 October 2022) Authoritarian regimes rely on candidate selection to constrain legislatures. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Mortimer, Josiah (2017). We need to make it easier for people to vote, not harder – and registering is still a big problem.
  • Mortimer, Josiah (2016). Whether Britain stays in the EU or not, there’s a democratic deficit that must be addressed.
  • Mosoetsa, Sarah (2004). The legacies of apartheid and implications of economic liberalisation: a post-apartheid township. (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 1 49). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Mossallam, Alia (2020). Strikes, riots and laughter: Al-Himamiyya village's experience of Egypt's 1918 Peasant Insurrection. (LSE Middle East Centre Paper Series 40). LSE Middle East Centre. picture_as_pdf
  • Mossialos, Elias, Simpkin, Victoria L., Keown, Oliver, Darzi, Ara (2016). Staff, drugs, research, TTIP, patients: how would Brexit affect the NHS?
  • Mostafa, Tarek, Bose, Pablo (2016). The narrow focus on climate change in Bangladesh often reproduces exploitation and vulnerability rather than addressing it.
  • Motadel, David (2023). The political role of the historian. Contemporary European History, 32(1), 38 - 45. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0960777322000716 picture_as_pdf
  • Moten, Matthew (2015). Book review: presidents and their generals: an American history of command in war by Matthew Moten.
  • Mouffe, Chantal (2018). Demonising populism won't work - Europe needs a progressive populist alternative. picture_as_pdf
  • Moury, Catherine, Standring, Adam (2017). How Portugal’s leaders exploited the bail out to pass measures they already supported.
  • Moya Ocampos, Diego (2018). Venezuela elections 2018: military and institutional backing could keep Maduro in power despite sanctions.
  • Mudde, Cas (2016). How scholars turned their attention to the populist radical right.
  • Mueller, Ben (2013). Book review: War, Clausewitz and the trinity.
  • Mueller, Ben (2015). Book review: sex, lies and the ballot box: 50 things you need to know about British Elections by Philip Cowley and Robert Ford.
  • Mugnai, Iacopo (2018). What Italy's election result means for Europe.
  • Mukherjee, Arpita, Goyal, Tanu M. (2015). Reinvigorating India’s manufacturing sector: integrating the services value chain with Southeast Asia.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita (2015). The Amartya Sen Lecture 2015: law, economics and the Republic of Beliefs.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita (2015). Discovering the fire: Amitav Ghosh on history, language and his latest book.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita, Kumar, Arushi (2015). New challenges and opportunities for governance in India: a session with Ajit Seth.
  • Mulderrig, Jane (2016). Fat-shaming: Change4Life’s anti-obesity ‘nudge’ campaign glosses over social inequalities.
  • Muldoon, James (8 September 2022) Book review: Cloud empires: how digital platforms are overtaking the state and how we can regain control by Vili Lehdonvirta. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • 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.
  • Mungiu-Pippidi, Alina (2015). If the European Union wishes to increase its standing with the public, improved performance and greater accountability will be required.
  • Munro, Gayle (2017). Book review: refuge: transforming a broken refugee system by Alexander Betts and Paul Collier.
  • Munshey, Menaal (2016). An incoherent push for peace in Afghanistan.
  • Muralidharan, Karthik, Niehaus, Paul, Sukhtankar, Sandip (2014). Biometric payment systems and welfare benefits.
  • Muravska, Julia (2013). Book review: perspectives on strategy.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2017). Democracy as the legitimating condition in the UK constitution. (LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers 8/2017). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2971242
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2016). The Great ‘Repeal’ Act will leave Parliament sidelined and disempowered.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal, Toubeau, Simon (2016). Sovereignty is an illusion: the UK should use its power-sharing experience to play a constructive role in the EU.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal, Trotter, Sarah (2016). Fundamental rights and fundamental fears.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2021). A written constitution: a case not made. Oxford Journal of Legal Studies, 41(4), 965-986. https://doi.org/10.1093/ojls/gqab016 picture_as_pdf
  • Murray, Andrew D. (2015). Time for the media shadow boxing to end, and for the democratic deficit in the expansion of the UK’s surveillance powers to be tackled.
  • Murray, Rainbow (2012). In 2012 France has seen gains for the Front National, success for François Hollande and electoral defeat and infighting for the UMP.
  • Murray, Sally, Halusan, Brian (2017). Building affordable housing in Kigali.
  • Musella, Fortunato (2015). Recent trends in Italy showcase the ‘presidentialised’ future of democratic politics in Europe.
  • Mushfiq Mobarak, Ahmed (2012). Formally insuring the informally insured. picture_as_pdf
  • Mwale, Temi (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 5.
  • Myant, Martin (2014). Did the Troika get it right?
  • Myant, Martin (2014). When will Europe recover?
  • Mycock, Andrew (2015). Learning to vote? Don’t start with a referendum.
  • Mycock, Andrew (2014). Votes at 16: seeking a more enlightened debate on youth disengagement from politics.
  • Mycock, Andy, Giovannini, Arianna (2015). The prospect of greater regional and city devolution raises the spectre of the “Manchester Withington question”.
  • Mycock, Andy, Tonge, Jonathan (2014). Ed Miliband should recognise that 16 and 17 year olds can be part of our democracy even if they do not have the vote.
  • Myers, Adam S. (2018). Why the 2018 elections may bring a surge in state legislative competition.
  • Myers, Paula (2012). Insight from the other world- a marketing professional speaks on NGOs’ communication challenges.
  • Myślińska, Dagmar Rita (2016). Incomplete Europeans: Polish migrants’ experience of discrimination in the UK is complicated by their whiteness.
  • Møller, Bjørn (2009). The African Union as a security actor: African solutions to African problems? (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 2 57). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Møller, Jørgen (18 August 2015) Exploring the medieval roots of democracy and state building in Europe. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Møller, Jørgen (17 August 2015) Exploring the medieval roots of democracy and state building in Europe. Democratic Audit Blog.
  • Müller, Henrik, Porcaro, Giuseppe, von Nordheim, Gerret (2018). Don't put the blame on me: how different countries blamed different actors for the Eurozone crisis.
  • Müller, Frank I., Richmond, Matthew Aaron (2023). The technopolitics of security: agency, temporality, sovereignty. Security Dialogue, 54(1), 3-20. https://doi.org/10.1177/09670106221141373 picture_as_pdf
  • Nabi, Shehryar (2017). Four approaches to unleashing Pakistan’s growth.
  • Nabi, Shehryar (2016). Four ideas changing how the Punjab government thinks about development.
  • Nadibaidze, Anna (2018). Book review: Brexit and beyond: rethinking the futures of Europe edited by Benjamin Martill and Uta Staiger.
  • Nadibaidze, Anna (2018). Book review: youth movements and elections in Eastern Europe by Olena Nikolayenko.
  • Naeem, Farria (2016). Digital Bangladesh: assessing the impact of electronic government procurement.
  • Naeem, Farria (12 May 2016) Digital Bangladesh: impact of electronic government procurement. International Growth Centre Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Naimiki, Ai (2014). Harnessing the power of people at grassroots level.
  • Naish, Stephen (2017). Book review: 1996 and the end of history by David Stubbs.
  • Nanou, Kyriaki, Dorussen, Han (2013). European integration constrains party competition in the member states.
  • Naqvi, Fayeeza (2016). Delivering innovations in healthcare in Pakistan.
  • Narula, Surina, Gunesekera, Romesh, Daruwalla, Keki (2015). DSC prize interviews: celebrating on South Asian literature.
  • Narulla, Harjeevan S., Nanthakumar, Rohan A. (2025). The role of civil society in the climate change advisory proceedings. In Tigre, Maria Antonia, Rocha, Armando (Eds.), The Role of Advisory Opinions in International Law in the Context of the Climate Crisis (pp. 246 - 274). Brill Nijhoff (Firm). https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004730618_011 picture_as_pdf
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). Blogs, social media and building your network.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). EU referendum and the perils of #perception.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). Ethnicity and politics in Afghanistan: an analysis of the 2014 presidential election.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2015). Fragile future for Afghanistan’s security, and the repercussions for its neighbours.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). “I feel a little bit like they don’t understand me”.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). What matters more to children: cultural and social resources or material resources? Through the lens of Afghanistan.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). Women’s rights in Afghanistan reaches stagnation. Could western notions of rights be the reason?
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). The refugee struggle: an insight into the lives of refugees from Afghanistan.
  • Nasr, Leila (2015). ‘In conversation with Amartya Sen’ at the LSE.
  • Nasrat, Sayed, Tamim Karimi, Abdul (2016). Will WTO membership boost trade and investment in land-locked Afghanistan?
  • Nathan, Laurie (2004). Accounting for South Africa’s successful transition to democracy. (Crisis States Research Centre discussion papers 5). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Nathan, Laurie (2005). ‘The frightful inadequacy of most of the statistics’: a critique of Collier and Hoeffler on causes of civil war. (Crisis States Research Centre discussion papers 11). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Nathan, Max (2011). City deals: what next?
  • Nathan, Max (2011). On the origins of land use regulations.
  • Nathan, Max (2011). The economics of skyscrapers.
  • Navari, Cornelia (2015). How the Badinter Commission on Yugoslavia laid the roots for Crimea’s secession from Ukraine.
  • Naydenova, Pressiana (2014). Global journalism and impartiality.
  • Naydenova, Pressiana (2015). What Capitalism isn’t and what it could be.
  • Nazar, Raza (2016). How would you change Pakistan? Crowdsourcing ideas from LSE students.
  • 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.
  • Nebhrajani, Sharmila, Klecun, Ela, Taylor, Simon, Copeland, Eddie, Carr, Emma, Monaghan, Dawn (2014). Care.data: democracy and health experts respond to concerns over the privacy of NHS patient information.
  • Nektarios, Milton, Tinios, Platon, Simeonidis, George (2017). A pension system for younger workers in Greece: a proposal for growth.
  • Nelson, Matthew J. (2013). Does democracy mean different things in India and Pakistan?
  • Nepal, Srijana, Uprety, Neha, Prasai, Apekshya (2017). Reflections on researching women’s economic empowerment in post-earthquake Kathmandu.
  • Neuenschwander, Giordano, Foos, Florian (2021). Mobilizing party activism: a field experiment with party members and sympathizers. Electoral Studies, 72, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2021.102341 picture_as_pdf
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  • Neumayer, Eric (2013). Do governments mean business when they derogate?: human rights violations during notified states of emergency. Review of International Organizations, 8(1), 1-31. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11558-012-9144-y
  • Neundorf, Anja, Nazrullaeva, Eugenia, Northmore-Ball, Ksenia, Tertytchnaya, Katerina, Kim, Wooseok (2024). Varieties of indoctrination: the politicization of education and the media around the world. Perspectives on Politics, 22(3), 771-798. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1537592723002967 picture_as_pdf
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  • Newman, Ben, Shah, Sono, Collingwood, Loren (2018). During the election, Donald Trump's racist rhetoric activated the fears of people in areas with growing Latino populations.
  • Newton, Eric, Goodman, Emma (2014). Conference 2014 speaker series: an interview with Eric Newton.
  • Niaz, Laraib (2016). Book review: partitioned histories: the other side of your story.
  • Nickels, Ashley E. (2017). How state takeovers undermine the principle of municipal home rule.
  • Nickow, Andre Joshua, Kumar, Sanjay (2017). Ensuring land rights through community mobilisation.
  • Nicola, Elena (2016). The Catch 22 of Psychiatry – what’s wrong with calling depression an illness, but the issue with treating it as if it isn’t.
  • Nicola, Elena (2016). I, Elena Nicola.
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  • Nieminen, Hannu (2024). Why does disinformation spread in liberal democracies? The relationship between disinformation, inequality, and the media. Javnost - the Public, 31(1), 123 - 140. https://doi.org/10.1080/13183222.2024.2311019 picture_as_pdf
  • Niesen, Peter, Patberg, Markus (2018). After Brexit, the UK should have a democratic right of return. picture_as_pdf
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  • Nikore, Mitali (2012). Rio+20 and after: India’s politics of sustainability. picture_as_pdf
  • Nikore, Mitali (2012). Women and India Inc.: equality means business. picture_as_pdf
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2018). No easy options: how the UK could put pressure on Russia over the Skripal attack.
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  • Norris, Pippa (2018). Generation wars over Brexit - and beyond: how young and old are divided over social values. picture_as_pdf
  • Norris, Pippa (2017). Why populism is a threat to electoral integrity.
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  • Nugent, Mary, Krook, Mona Lena (2016). Gender quotas do not pose a threat to “merit” at any stage of the political process.
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  • O'Branski, Megan (2013). Book review: Gender, agency and political violence:rethinking political violence.
  • O'Brien, Wanda (2012). Crash! Slump! Bust! Reporting the economic crisis (guest blog) #Polis12.
  • O'Byrne, Ryan Joseph (2014). Governance vacuums and local responses in Pajok, South Sudan: the Pajok Community People’s Committee.
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  • O'Connor, Courteney J. (30 August 2020) Book review: security aesthetics and the management of life edited by D. Asher Ghertner, Hudson McFann and Daniel M. Goldstein. USApp – American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • O'Connor, Courteney J. (2018). Book review: the FBI in Latin America: the Ecuador files by Marc Becker. picture_as_pdf
  • O'Connor, Philip (2015). The coverage of the Irish marriage referendum shows that sometimes media ‘balance’ is impossible.
  • O'Dwyer, Muireann (2014). Book review: deeds and words: gendering politics after Joni Lovenduski, edited by Rosie Campbell and Sarah Childs.
  • O'Dwyer, Muireann (2014). Book review: democracy in retreat: the revolt of the middle class and the worldwide decline of representative government by Joshua Kurlantzick.
  • O'Dwyer, Muireann (2015). Book review: which policy for Europe? Power and conflict inside the European Commission by Miriam Hartlapp, Julia Metz, and Christian Rauh.
  • O'Grady, Tom (24 May 2022) What politicians and the media said about the benefits system in the 1990s and 2000s caused the public to turn against welfare by 2010. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • O'Leary, Duncan, Duffy, Bobby (2013). Britain’s politicians should take note: The ‘grey vote’ is not as grey as we think.
  • O'Mahony, Joan (2005). Trust in organisations: religious elites and democracy in the post-Communist Czech Republic. (Civil Society Working Paper series 22). Centre for Civil Society (London School of Economics and Political Science).
  • O'Shea, Jerry (6 January 2020) The problem with the Corbyn-McDonnell regional policy - and where to look for lessons. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • O'Sullivan, Aidan (2016). How transparency can be improved in the way EU laws are negotiated and agreed.
  • O'Toole, Therese (2014). Young ethnic minority people are citizens to be engaged in politics, not a problem group.
  • Obadare, Ebenezer (2005). The GSM boycott: civil society, big business and the state in Nigeria. (Civil Society Working Paper series 23). Centre for Civil Society (London School of Economics and Political Science).
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  • Obino, Francesco (2012). The changing political legitimacy of international NGOs: a look from India. picture_as_pdf
  • Obino, Frencesco (2013). Book review: revealing Indian philanthropy. picture_as_pdf
  • Obradović, Sandra, Reddy, Geetha, Gleibs, Ilka H., Howarth, Caroline (2016). New publication: the social psychology of everyday politics.
  • Obradović, Sandra, Power, Séamus A., Sheehy-Skeffington, Jennifer (2020). Understanding the psychological appeal of populism. Current Opinion in Psychology, 35, 125 - 131. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copsyc.2020.06.009 picture_as_pdf
  • Ocampo, Angela X. (2018). In Congressional races, political networks play an important role in ensuring minority representation.
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  • Ojeda Guemes, Tomas, Holzberg, Billy, Holvikivi, Aiko (2024). A transnational feminist approach to anti-gender politics. In Holvikivi, Aiko, Holzberg, Billy, Ojeda, Tomas (Eds.), Transnational Anti-Gender Politics: Feminist Solidarity in Times of Global Attacks (pp. 1 - 32). Palgrave Macmillan. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-54223-7_1 picture_as_pdf
  • Ojha, Sakshi (2010). Media and the financial crisis: could the public have been better informed?
  • Ojok, Donnas (2018). The legacy of LRA conflict continues to disempower women in rural Northern Uganda.
  • 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 Osuna, José Javier (2010-05-26) Controlling the military: a policy instrument approach to Francoist Spain and the Portuguese Estado Novo [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Olivas Osuna, José Javier (2020). From chasing populists to deconstructing populism: a new multidimensional approach to understanding and comparing populism. European Journal of Political Research, https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-6765.12428 picture_as_pdf
  • Olivas Osuna, José Javier (2022). Populism and borders: tools for constructing “the people” and legitimizing exclusion. Journal of Borderlands Studies, 1-24. https://doi.org/10.1080/08865655.2022.2085140 picture_as_pdf
  • Olivas Osuna, José Javier (2021). Populismo en España: fundamentos teóricos y relatos dominantes. Araucaria, 23(47), 371 - 401. https://doi.org/10.12795/araucaria.2021.i47.17 picture_as_pdf
  • Olivas Osuna, José Javier (2024). A fence of opportunity: on how Vox radical right populist narratives frame and fuel crises in the border between Spain and Morocco. Journal of Language and Politics, 23(3), 323 - 347. https://doi.org/10.1075/jlp.23083.oli picture_as_pdf
  • Olivas Osuna, José Javier, Martín, Manuel, Barrada, Juan Ramón, Moyano, Manuel, Clari, Enrique (2025). Varieties of populist attitudes in Brexit Britain: socio-political and psychological correlates of a new multi-dimensional scale. Political Studies, 73(4), 1675 - 1697. https://doi.org/10.1177/00323217241309962 picture_as_pdf
  • Olivas Osuna, José Javier, Rama, José (2021). COVID-19: a political virus? VOX’s populist discourse in times of crisis. Frontiers in Political Science, 3, https://doi.org/10.3389/fpos.2021.678526 picture_as_pdf
  • Olivas Osuna, José javier, Burton, Guy (2024). Populism at the UN: comparing Netanyahu’s and Abbas’s speeches, 2010–19. British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, https://doi.org/10.1080/13530194.2024.2339885 picture_as_pdf
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). After a Brexit: the EU that falls apart, continues to muddle through, or integrates further.
  • Oliver, Tim (2014). A ‘Brexit’ would have important implications at the European and international levels.
  • Oliver, Tim (2018). Britain continues to make a mess of Brexit, but the EU has mishandled it too. picture_as_pdf
  • Oliver, Tim (6 May 2015) The First-Past-the-Post electoral system is breaking up the UK. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). How future UK European referendums might happen.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). How the EU responds to a British withdrawal will be determined by five key factors.
  • Oliver, Tim (2014). It’s time for a balance of competences review of the UK.
  • Oliver, Tim (2014). London bucks the UKIP surge and appears headed in a direction far removed from the rest of the UK.
  • Oliver, Tim (2014). Londoners are not little Englanders.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Preparations for a Brexit: the EU will shape what happens after a vote to withdraw.
  • Oliver, Tim (2017). Theory and Brexit: can theoretical approaches help us understand Brexit?
  • Oliver, Tim (22 January 2016) The UK needs a devolved government for London. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Oliver, Tim (2014). A devolved government for London would be a big step towards rebalancing power in the UK.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). The rise of English nationalism is something British politicians can no longer ignore.
  • Oliver, Tim, Bruton, John (2014). Consent of a majority of the rest of the EU will be needed if there is to be a new UK-EU relationship.
  • Oliver, Tim, Kammel, Arnold, Bartovic, Vladimír, Jokela, Juha, Tzogopoulos, George, Pace, Roderick (2016). Preparations for a Brexit IV: views from Austria, the Czech Republic, Finland, Greece, and Malta.
  • Oliver, Tim, Lacatus, Cora (2015). Eight centuries on from Magna Carta, upholding the rule of law remains a challenge on both sides of the Atlantic.
  • Oliver, Tim, Poli, Eleonora, Möller, Almut, Lovec, Marco, Mestres, Laia (2016). EU views on the British vote to leave: Italy, Germany, Slovenia and Spain.
  • Oliver, Tim, Willermain, Fabian, Gálik, Zoltán, Bruģe, Ilvija, Bilčík, Vladimír, Fägersten, Björn (2016). Preparations for a Brexit V: views from Belgium, Hungary, Latvia, Slovakia, and Sweden.
  • Oliver, Adam (2022). Introduction: a symposium on the behavioural limits of the state. Journal of European Public Policy, 29(12), 1928 - 1933. https://doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2022.2144931 picture_as_pdf
  • Olivetti, Claudia, Paserman, Daniele (2015). A land of opportunity no more: poor intergenerational mobility in the US is a feature of both the past and present.
  • Olsen, Gorm Rye (2013). There is little evidence that a ‘Nordicisation’ of the EU’s Africa policy has taken place.
  • Omoju, Oluwasola E., Abraham, Terfa W. (2014). Investing in Nigeria’s youth bulge.
  • Onyango, Gedion (2023). The post-COVID-19 economic recovery, government performance and lived poverty conditions in Kenya. Public Organization Review, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11115-023-00732-2 picture_as_pdf
  • Orbea, Álvaro (2015). I feel smart after leaving the LSE.
  • Orden, David, Zulauf, Carl (2015). The 2014 Farm Bill reaffirmed protection for farmers against low prices, but limits US leadership in trade reform.
  • Orgad, Shani (2015). Why does the media ‘love stay at home mums’?
  • Orgad, Shani, Seu, Bruna (2014). Caring in crisis – why development and humanitarian NGOs need to change how they relate to the public.
  • Orr, Susan (2016). Deadlines, delegate divisions and demographics helped determine the New York presidential primary result.
  • Orrù, Enrico (2010-05-26) Bringing efficiency and equity across the European regions: is it just an utopia? [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2018). Italy's election: the path to political radicalisation.
  • Oschmann, Felicia (2011). WikiLeaks: making life difficult (summer school guest blog).
  • Oser, Jennifer (2018). You can "boo" AND vote: a new approach for studying how people combine political activities.
  • Oskanian, Kevork (26 January 2022) Liberalism, status, and Russia’s civilisational turn. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Osman, Tarek (2017). The importance of being political.
  • Osmundsen, Mathias, Hendry, David J., Laustsen, Lasse, Smith, Kevin B., Petersen, Michael Bang (2022). The psychophysiology of political ideology: replications, reanalyses, and recommendations. Journal of Politics, 84(1), 50-66. https://doi.org/10.1086/714780 picture_as_pdf
  • Osnabrügge, Moritz, Hobolt, Sara B., Rodon, Toni (2021). Playing to the gallery: emotive rhetoric in parliaments. American Political Science Review, 115(3), 885-899. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055421000356 picture_as_pdf
  • Otero-Iglesias, Miguel (2013). A new Eurotreasury could help the Eurozone’s periphery to regain its economic sovereignty.
  • Otjes, Simon (2016). Is a Nexit now on the cards? What the UK’s referendum means for the Netherlands.
  • Otjes, Simon, Louwerse, Tom (2018). Evidence from the Netherlands: How do populist parties act in parliament? picture_as_pdf
  • Otjes, Simon, Rasmussen, Anne (2017). No longer going steady, but playing the field: trade unions and the decline of social democracy.
  • Ottovordemgentschenfelde, Svenja (2017). The story behind the tweet: factors that shape political journalists’ engagement with Twitter [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.hh002tectxvs
  • Outhwaite, William (2014). Solving the EU’s democratic deficit would help revive democracy at the national level.
  • Outhwaite, William, Brown, Stuart A., Gilson, Christopher (2013). Five minutes with William Outhwaite: “The chic ultra-right populism of Geert Wilders and others is certainly worrying”.
  • Ovens, Bethan (2017). UK permanent residence: where can EU students get information?
  • Overman, Claire (2013). Book review: human rights and democracy: the precarious triumph of ideals.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Abandoned streets.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Adapting to localism.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Aerotropolis.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Agglomeration economies.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Are Britain's 'second tier' cities too small?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Are policy exchange insane?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Beaches, sunshine and public sector pay.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Big society: local planning.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Bins, LEPs, Mayors and growth.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). The Boles 'bung'.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Bradford West a symptom of the North-South divide?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Budget: housing and Heseltine.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Build absolute nothing anywhere near anybody.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Building bridges.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Building homes where we need them.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Building on the green belt.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Building regulations.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Business improvement districts.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Business rate retention.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Business rate retention proposals (the X factor).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Business rate retention: growth vs equity.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Bye-bye RDA's?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). CLASH.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). CLG select committee report on planning: the good, the bad, the ugly.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Cameron's brownfield plan.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Can cheap credit explain the housing boom?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Can local authorities close the gap between rich and poor?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Carbon footprints.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Cash for planning permission.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Catching up (with the regeneration framework).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Changing UK.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Cities and economic growth.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Cities outlook 2012.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Cities outlook 2014: would UK cities be better off without London.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Cities reject elected mayors.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). City deals mark II.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). City devolution.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). City life bad for the brain?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). City mayors.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Cluster policy and (a tale of) tech city.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Coalfield regeneration.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Community cohesion.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Congestion charging.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Conservative plans for planning.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). (Core) city deals.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Council Tax increases.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Council estates and the riots.
  • Overman, Henry G. (7 December 2009) Council freedom on housing allocation. Spatial Economics Research Centre Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Council tax revaluation.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Country dwellers and the 'rural penalty'.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Crime maps.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Culture and regeneration.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Cuts, cuts, cuts.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). De-industrial revolution.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Development control.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Devolving public expenditure cuts.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Digital Britain.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Displacement zones.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Disposable incomes.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Do city climate plans reduce emissions?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Does restricting big-boxes help independent retailers?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Early intervention.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Eco towns.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Economic impact of the Olympics.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Economic impacts of HS2.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Empty bedrooms and the housing crisis.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Empty homes.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Empty homes and the housing crisis.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Encouraging home ownership.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Ending land 'hoarding' won't solve the housing crisis.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). (English) heritage and cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Enterprise zones.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Enterprise zones: right diagnosis, wrong treatment?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Evaluation and decentralisation.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Evaluation and self-report additionality.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Even more high speed 2.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Evidence on planning.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Falling house prices and the case for more housing.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Family friendly hotspots.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Football stadiums.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Foreign buyers and property markets.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Foreign buyers and the London property market.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Frozen Britain.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Funding and structures for local economic growth.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Garden cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Golden handcuffs: teacher recruitment and retention.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Government grants to small firms.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Greater Manchester growth plan.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Green belt.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Greenbelt 'under threat'.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Greener homes?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Grim down South?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). HS2 and the WCML fiasco.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). HS2 regional economic impact: garbage in ...?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). HS3 and a Northern Powerhouse.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Happiness maps.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Helping the elderly downsize.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Helping young people buy more housing.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). The Heseltine report.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). High flying cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). High priced London.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). High speed 2.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). High speed 2: latest opinion poll reveals ...
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). High speed fail.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). High speed rail.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). High speed rail delays.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). High speed rail: no fast track fix.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). High-speed round up.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Higher local taxes a threat to jobs.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Home-ownership and entrepreneurship.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). House building (again).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). House building and affordability.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). House prices.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). House prices and the Diamond Jubilee.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). House prices: local booms and busts.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). House swaps to help the jobless?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Housing and the budget.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Housing benefit reform.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Housing lists.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Housing numbers (numbers numbers).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Housing numbers part 2.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Housing numbers part 3.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Housing policy curse strikes again.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Housing starts.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Housing strategy.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Housing: starts up, completions down.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). How big a problem is land 'hoarding'?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). How did London get away with it?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). How many French people live in London?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). How unbalanced is infrastructure spending?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Immigration and the housing problem.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Immigration up, housing starts down.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Improving voter turnout.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Inexpensive progress: two steps forward, one step back ...
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Infrastructure options.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Innovation in cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Introducing SERC: the spatial economics research centre.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Investing in London's affordable housing.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Is building social housing better than the benefit cap?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Is help to buy 'working'?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Is the new homes bonus working?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Is the new homes bonus working? (Part 2).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Is the regional growth fund (still) rubbish?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Is the regional growth fund rubbish?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Is there a London housing bubble?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). It's chaos out there ...
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Kickstart.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Labour's housing policies.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Latest housing figures.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Local authorities and the downturn.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Local economic development in the UK.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Local government finance.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Local government finance and the Glencore IPO.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Local government pension schemes.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Local growth.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Local homes for local people.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Local jobs for local people.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Local mortgage schemes and affordability.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Local procurement and jobs for local people.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Local procurement for local authorities?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Local public sector pay.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Local transport expenditure.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Localism and house building.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Localism and housing supply.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). London (still) getting away with it.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). London still getting away with it (cont).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). London's (shocking?) growth performance.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Made in Britain.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Made in Britain II.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Manchester-Leeds linkages.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Manchester: top of the (northern) league.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Manchester: top of the league?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Mandelson and HS2.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Margate and the Turner Contemporary.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). MediaCityUK and the Manchester economy.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Millennium villages and the analysis of place-based policies.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Mind the gap.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Minister for cities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (1 March 2012) Miserable Londoners. Spatial Economics Research Centre Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Mixed communities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Mixed communities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). More affordable housing?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). More city rankings.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). More conference housing plans.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). More housing please.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). More supermarket bashing.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). (More) planning rule reform.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Moving the poor out of London.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). NICs holidays.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). NPPF? Plus ça change ...
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). National planning.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Nature and planning.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). New deal for communities?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). New home bonus.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). New homes are too small.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). New homes bonus.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). No alternative to high speed rail?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Northern assembly needed?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). On your bike (policy exchange no longer insane).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Open evaluation and the future of evidence based policy making.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Open evaluation: not just for enterprise zones.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Open government.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Parties and parking.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Planning an easy target?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Planning for people.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Planning hypocrisy.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Planning policy roundtable.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Planning reforms: a challenge for left and right.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Planning reforms: serious debate needed.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). (Planning) permission granted.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Planning, planning, planning.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Planning: localism versus growth.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Plannning, nature and growth: unresolved conflicts.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Politicians and housing.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Population projections and housing affordability.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Portas Pilots.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The Portas review.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Postgrad fees: do rising costs deter poorer students?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Problems with Portas Pilots.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Promoting home ownership.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Protectionism and the high street.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Public sector employment: bad for local manufacturing, good for local services.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Public sector job relocations.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Public sector pay and local employment.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Public sector relocation.
  • Overman, Henry G. (1 February 2010) Public sector wages and the North-South divide. Spatial Economics Research Centre Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). RDAs and evaluation: a bit more value added.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). RDAs: it's what you do, not the way that you do it.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Railways and houses.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Regeneration.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Regional benefits.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Regional growth fund (round II).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Regional growth fund (round III).
  • Overman, Henry G. (12 April 2011) Regional growth fund round 1. Spatial Economics Research Centre Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Regional versus local pay.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Relaxing planning laws.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Rental contracts.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Requiem for Detroit.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Resilience rankings.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Response to the Sub-National Review.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Rethinking our cities; density or size?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). (Return of) the North-South divide.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Rewarding good firms.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Riots: what next?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Rising rents.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Road pricing.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). Rural housing.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Rural living costs.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). San Francisco versus Birmingham.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). San Francisco versus Birmingham part II.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Science parks.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Second homes and the census.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Should Romney Marsh be a nuclear waste dump.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Should bad teachers be paid less?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Should we "save the high street"?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Should we build on the green belt?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Should we give greater powers to City Councils?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Silicon roundabout.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Skyscrapers and financial crashes.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Slum clearance.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Smart growth failures.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Social housing swap shop.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Solving London's housing crisis.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Space rationing.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Spatial inequalities in commuting times.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Spatial mismatch.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Sports stadiums and regeneration.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Strange bedfellows - neighbourhood effects.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Strong foundations?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). (Super) city rankings.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Supermarkets and planning: be careful what you wish for.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Supermarkets in a different class?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Sustainable development and local plans.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Talking about building on the greenbelt.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Taxing bank bonuses.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Time for a more rational debate on 'mixing' in new developments?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Time for a no risk £30bn stimulus package?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Time to build.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Transport and the economy.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). Transport for the North and the Northern Power House.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Two cheers for Mr Boles.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). UK cities: from recession to recovery.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Upwardly mobile: are you living in the wrong city?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Urban policy and budget 2012.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Urban versus rural living.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). Victory for neighbourhood plans (sort of ...).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Well, that's one (brownfield) target met.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). The West End commission.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). What works centre for local economic growth.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). Where to build?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). Whither participation?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Who benefits from HS2.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). Who benefits from new housing?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Who buys new homes in London?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Why are the poorest regions in the UK the poorest regions in Northern Europe?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). Will HS2 end the property price spiral?
  • Overman, Henry G. (14 June 2011) Would elected Mayors help drive growth? Spatial Economics Research Centre Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Overman, Henry G. (14 October 2011) Youth unemployment. CEP Urban and Spatial Programme Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). Youth unemployment "hotspots".
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). An anatomy of economic inequality.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The bank of Mum and Dad.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The campaign for high speed rail.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). The case for abolishing Regional Development Authorities?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). The case for local pay.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). The economic future of British cities: what should urban policy do? (Part I).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). The economic future of British cities: what should urban policy do? (Part II).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The economics of rioting.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). The educational divide.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The empty homes scandal.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2009). The geography of recession (part II).
  • Overman, Henry G. (2008). The geography of recession.
  • Overman, Henry G. (7 October 2011) The globalization paradox. Spatial Economics Research Centre Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). The grey side of localism.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The homes 'crisis'.
  • Overman, Henry G. (1 February 2012) The impact of government grants: employment up, productivity down. CEP Urban and Spatial Programme Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Overman, Henry G. (2012). The labour market impact of public sector employment.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). (A lot) more evidence on New Deal for Communities.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2014). The non-met commission.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). The regional economic impacts of HS2.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The road to recovery - what can government do?
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). The rural economy.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2010). The spending review: jobs.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2013). The strategic case for HS2.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The triumph of the city.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2011). The true value of nature.
  • Ozer, Adam, Sullivan, Brian, Van, Douglas (2022). Viewed from different Engels? Differences in reactions to “socialism” as a policy label. Political Research Quarterly, 75(4), 1297 - 1312. https://doi.org/10.1177/10659129211037402 picture_as_pdf
  • Ozer, Adam, Wright, Jamie (2022). Partisan news versus party cues: the effect of cross-cutting party and partisan network cues on polarization and persuasion. Research and Politics, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1177/20531680221075455 picture_as_pdf
  • O’Branski, Megan (2013). Book review: Women, sexuality, and the political power of pleasure.
  • O’driscoll, Cian, Brown, Chris, Hutchings, Kimberly, Finlay, Christopher J., Whyte, Jessica, Gregory, Thomas (2020). How and why to do just war theory. Contemporary Political Theory, https://doi.org/10.1057/s41296-020-00453-x picture_as_pdf
  • Pack, Mark (2012). Even if the Liberal Democrats vote to oust the Conservatives before 2015 a new general election is still unlikely.
  • Packman, Carl (2011). Book review: Foucault on politics, security and war.
  • Packman, Carl (2011). Book review: the purple book: a progressive future for labour.
  • Pagasiou, Adonis (2013). Dealing with the financial crisis in light of developments in Cyprus: Europeanisation or Germanisation?
  • Page, Edward C. (2015). Undergraduate research: an apprenticeship approach to teaching political science methods. European Political Science, 14, 340-354. https://doi.org/10.1057/eps.2015.17
  • Pailey, Robtel Neajai (2021). Development, (dual) citizenship and its discontents in Africa: the political economy of belonging to Liberia. Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108873871 picture_as_pdf
  • Palani, Kamaran (2025). Iraq: armed influence in education and sub-national governance and their implications for statehood. Conflict, Security and Development, 25(4), 461 - 483. https://doi.org/10.1080/14678802.2025.2541595 picture_as_pdf
  • Pallas, Christopher L. (2009). Revolutionary, advocate, agent, or authority: context-based assessment of the democratic legitimacy of transnational civil society. Centre for Civil Society (London School of Economics and Political Science).
  • Pallaver, Matteo (2011). Power and its forms: hard, soft, smart [Masters thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Pamies, Carles, Olivas Osuna, José Javier, Santana, Andrés (2024). Disagreeing to agree: populism and consensus among members of parliaments and their voters. American Behavioral Scientist, https://doi.org/10.1177/00027642241285017 picture_as_pdf
  • Pamuk, Zeynep (30 March 2022) Politics and expertise: how to use science in a democratic society. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Panagiotarea, Eleni (2016). The political economy of NPLs resolution: ownership and conditionality.
  • Panagiotidis, Theodore (2011). One wedding and two funerals.
  • Panagiotidis, Theodore, Chisiridis, Konstantinos (2017). Economic growth for Greece’s trade partners and Greek export growth.
  • Panagiotidis, Theodore, Printzis, Panagiotis (2014). On the housing market in Greece.
  • Pande, Aparna (2013). The Indian view on Pakistan’s elections.
  • Pankhurst, Reza (2010-05-26) The call for the Islamic state [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Pannini, Elisa (2017). Book review: the great regression edited by Heinrich Geiselberger.
  • Pannini, Elisa (2015). Book review: the power to dismiss: trade unions and the regulation of job security in Western Europe by Patrick Emmenegger.
  • Pant, Harsh V. (2016). 2016: a year of dramatic changes in South Asia.
  • Papagaryfallou, Ioannis (2015). Book review: the European Union: an introduction by Mark Corner.
  • Papagaryfallou, Ioannis (2012). Book review: the power of ideology: from the Roman Empire to Al-Qaeda.
  • Papazoglou, Alexis (2016). Isaiah Berlin and Brexit: how the Leave campaign misunderstands “freedom”.
  • 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.
  • Paraskevopoulos, Christos J. (2017). Varieties of capitalism, quality of government, and policy conditionality in Southern Europe: Greece and Portugal in comparative perspective. (GreeSE papers 117). Hellenic Observatory, European Institute.
  • Pardos-Prado, Sergi (18 December 2019) Who supports Catalan independence, and is there a way forward? LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Parekh, B. C. (1966). The idea of equality in English political thought [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Park, Chinhyong (2016). The big debate at Cumberland Lodge 2016.
  • Parker, Charles F. (2017). The silver lining in Trump’s Paris pullout: a chance for the EU and China to take the leadership mantle.
  • Parkhurst, Justin (2016). Appeals to evidence for the resolution of wicked problems: the origins and mechanisms of evidentiary bias. Policy Sciences, 49(4), 373-393. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11077-016-9263-z
  • Parks, Tom (2013). Asia Foundation: we need to shift the evidence debate.
  • Parmanand, Sharmila (2023). Democratic backsliding and threats to human rights in Dutertes Philippines. In Brysk, Alison (Ed.), Populism and Human Rights in a Turbulent Era (pp. 105 - 125). Edward Elgar. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781802209549.00010 picture_as_pdf
  • Parmanand, Sharmila (2022). Macho populists versus COVID: comparing political masculinities. European Journal of Women's Studies, 29(1_suppl), 43S - 59S. https://doi.org/10.1177/13505068221092871 picture_as_pdf
  • Parmar, Inderjeet, Bhardwaj, Atul (10 April 2020) We can build a better world after Covid-19 by dragging the state back into public services. USApp-American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Parry, Richard (2018). Scotland and Wales wait for the Supreme Court referee on Brexit.
  • Parsons, Alex (22 September 2016) Don’t let them lie: how we can start holding political advertising to account. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • 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?
  • Parthasarathi, Vibodh, Amanullah, Arshad (2012). Silencing SMS: the anatomy of ‘mCurfews’ in India. picture_as_pdf
  • Partridge, Matthew (2011). Book review: terrorism, elections and democracy: political campaigns in the United States, Great Britain and Russia.
  • Partridge, Matthew (2011). With markets often outperforming more traditional forecasting approaches, bookmakers could be useful to policy makers in predicting global trends and events.
  • Parvin, Phil (2015). There is real cause for concern when the persuasiveness of a story depends more on public attitudes than the facts.
  • Parycek, Peter, Edelmann, Noella, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Peter Parycek and Noella Edelmann on digital democracy best practice, localism, and e-government.
  • Parycek, Peter, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Peter Parycek on artificial intelligence, dystopia, and democracy’s digital future.
  • Pastellopoulos, Antonis (2022). Cypriotism as a political ideology: critical contributions and conceptual limitations. (GreeSE Papers: Hellenic Observatory Papers on Greece and Southeast Europe 178). London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Pastor, Lubos, Veronesi, Pietro (2018). A rational backlash against globalisation. picture_as_pdf
  • Pastorella, Guilia (2013). Book review: The Europe of elites: a study into theEuropeanness of Europe’s political and economic elites.
  • Pastorella, Guilia (2018). When Europe is fashionable: the strange paradox of the Italian elections.
  • Patberg, Markus (2018). Brexit, as a democratic exercise, prompts the need for a normative theory of political disintegration.
  • Patel, Dinyar (19 June 2022) Book review: Unexpected voices in imperial parliaments edited by Josep M. Fradera, José María Portillo and Teresa Segura-Garcia. USApp – American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Patel, Reema (2016). Citizens can and should be involved in the process of shaping economic policy.
  • Pathak Shah, Ratna, Khan, Ruhi (2017). “Lipstick under my burkha tells stories that have simmered under the surface for a very long time. They need their space.” – Ratna Pathak Shah.
  • Patkauskas, Justas (2018). Book review: the neopopular bubble: speculating on 'the people' in late modern democracy by Péter Csigó.
  • Patterson Perkins, Ariel Ann (2023). Private defense as a public good: threat, trust, and emotive pathways to armed mobilization in the United States [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004676
  • Pattie, Charles, Johnston, Ron, Hartman, Todd K. (2017). Party canvassers don’t change people’s opinions, but they do persuade them to vote.
  • Pattie, Charles, Johnston, Ron, Rossiter, David (19 February 2020) Repealing the Fixed-Term Parliaments Act is a tidying-up exercise, not a major constitutional change. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Pattison, James (2013). Using volunteer forces, rather than conscripts or private contractors, is the most legitimate method for organising a military.
  • Pattnaik, Ayesha (2022). Loyalty, liberty, and the law: analysing the juxtaposition of nation and citizen in the Indian sedition law. Social and Legal Studies, 31(6), 829 - 846. https://doi.org/10.1177/09646639221086859 picture_as_pdf
  • Paudel, Shreya (2015). The “unofficial blockade” has precipitated a significant shift in Nepal’s relationship with its neighbours.
  • Paugam, Guillaume (2018). From Waterloo to Wembley: A Comparison of International Football and International Warfare in Building Nationalism. LSE Undergraduate Political Review, 1, 96-127. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.ovrd9tkd5337
  • Paul, Newly, York, Chance (2015). Endorsement ads are primarily used by incumbents and female candidates in the early stages of campaigns.
  • Pavlović, Srđa (2017). West is best: how ‘stabilitocracy’ undermines democracy building in the Balkans.
  • Payne, Daniel (2016). From the LSE Library: rarely seen campaigning literature from the 1975 referendum.
  • Pearce, Jenny, Garzón Vallejo, Iván (2022). The role of protests on the journey to a politics without violence. Deusto Journal of Human Rights, (10), 77 - 101. https://doi.org/10.18543/djhr.2623 picture_as_pdf
  • Pedaliu, Effie G. H. (2018). The 18 April 1948 Italian election: seventy years on.
  • Pedaliu, Effie G. H. (2017). The Marshall Plan speech at 70 – and the lessons it can provide for today’s challenges.
  • Pegasiou, Adonis (2012). Blame game persists as Cyprus’s quest for a bailout has turned into a saga.
  • Pegasiou, Adonis (20 March 2013) Cyprus is the latest casualty of Germany’s one size fits all solution to the Eurozone crisis. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Pei, Zhuan, Pischke, Jorn-Steffen, Schwandt, Hannes (2018). Poorly measured confounders are more useful on the left than on the right. (CEP Discussion Papers CEPDP1539). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Pejic, Irena (2007). Constitutional design and viability of semi-presidentialism in Serbia. (Discussion papers 43). Centre for the Study of Global Governance, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Peled, Alon, Kippin, Sean (2016). Interview: Alon Peled on open data, incentives, and ‘traversing digital Babel’.
  • Peled, Alon, Kippin, Sean (2016). Interview: Alon Peled on the public sector information exchange, avoiding disasters, and big data.
  • Pencheva, Denny (21 January 2020) Book review: refuge beyond reach: how rich democracies repel asylum seekers by David Scott FitzGerald. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Pendle, Naomi (2016). A South Sudanese peace?
  • Peralta, Joseph (2014). Book review: political journalism in transition: Western Europe in a comparative perspective edited by Raymond Kuhn and Rasmus Kleis Nielsen.
  • Pereira, Miguel, Öhberg, Patrik (2024). The expertise paradox: how policy expertise can hinder responsiveness. British Journal of Political Science, 54(2), 474 - 491. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123423000303 picture_as_pdf
  • Perrin, Kristen (2012). Book review: activating human rights and peace.
  • Perrin, Kristen (2015). Book review: debating the end of Yugoslavia edited by Florian Bieber, Armina Galijaš, and Rory Archer.
  • Persson, Mats, Brown, Stuart A. (2013). Five minutes with Mats Persson: “National parliaments are the solution to the EU’s democratic deficit”.
  • Pertwee, Edward (2020). Donald Trump, the anti-Muslim far right and the new conservative revolution. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 43(16), 211 - 230. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.2020.1749688 picture_as_pdf
  • Pesu, Matti (2018). What Sauli Niinistö's re-election means for Finnish foreign policy.
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  • Peters, Yvette (2016). Political parties which operate in a direct democratic context tend to have a higher number of members.
  • Petersen, Marie Juul, í Skorini, Heini (2017). Freedom of expression vs. defamation of religions: protecting individuals or protecting religions?
  • Pettitt, Robin (2018). Labour's manifesto-making process and why it is a source of organisational grief for the party.
  • 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.
  • Phalkey, Jahnavi, Chattapadhyay, Sumandro (2015). The Aakash tablet and technological imaginaries of mass education in contemporary India.
  • Philipon, Flavie (2014). “Stronger than corruption, mistakes and lies”: being political and right wing in France (guest blog).
  • Phillips, Anne (2000). Equality, pluralism, universality: current concerns in normative theory. British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 2(2), 237-255. https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-856X.00035
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  • Phillips, Anne (2018). Gender equality: core principle of modern society? Journal of the British Academy, 6, 169-185. https://doi.org/10.5871/jba/006.169
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  • Pickard, Victor (25 November 2015) The US stands as a cautionary tale for what happens when a media system is dominated by market values. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • Pickerden, Alex (2016). Budget 2016: the sociology of sugar.
  • Pierzynski, Gabriel A., Joseph, Jonathan (2025). Patrimonial imperialism: a taxonomy of the causes of the Russo‐Ukrainian war. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour, 55(3). https://doi.org/10.1111/jtsb.70007 picture_as_pdf
  • Pietraszewski, David, Curry, Oliver, Petersen, Michael Bang, Cosmides, Leda, Tooby, John (2015). Constituents of political cognition: race, party politics, and the alliance detection system. Cognition, 140, 24-39. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cognition.2015.03.007
  • Pike, Karl (2017). What does it mean to be Labour? Understanding the party’s ethos.
  • Pinfari, Marco (2010-05-26) Time to agree: time pressure and 'deadline diplomacy' in peace negotiations [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Piotrowski, Suzanne J., Berliner, Daniel, Ingrams, Alex (2022). The power of partnership in open government: reconsidering multistakeholder governance reform. MIT Press. https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/13984.001.0001 picture_as_pdf
  • Pirro, Andrea L.P. (2014). Historical legacies and national political contexts have shaped today’s far-right in Eastern and Central Europe.
  • Pirro, Andrea L.P., Portos, Martín (9 March 2021) Supporters of populist parties exhibit higher levels of political engagement than non-populist voters. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • Quiroga, Alejandro (2018). A new political bandwagon? The rise of Ciudadanos in Spain.
  • Quiroz, Carla (24 February 2022) Book review: How social movements can save democracy: democratic innovations from below by Donatella della Porta. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Qvortrup, Matt (2015). “Oops I did it again!” Cameron and the Britney Spears model of constitutional reform.
  • Qvortrup, Matt (2014). The planned independence referendum in Eastern Ukraine is unconstitutional and anti-democratic.
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  • Rackey, John (2018). Rand Paul's budget filibuster shows the decline of the US Senate as a deliberative body.
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  • Rahman, Tasmiah (2015). Not just a tick box: NGOs should look beyond women’s employment and address household power dynamics.
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  • Rainsford, Emily (2014). Extending the franchise in Scotland to 16 year olds was progress which should be capitalised on, not rolled back.
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  • Rao Dhananka, Swetha, Campion, Sonali (2016). Of housing and politics: mapping political opportunities for mobilising in Bangalore.
  • Raos, Višeslav (2016). Croatia’s fallen Orešković government was a messy but healthy experiment in democracy.
  • Rathbun, Brian (2018). Populism fed pro-Leave sentiment, but what kind of populism?
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  • Ratnayake, Rapti (2017). ‘Diplomacity’ in the 21st century: why Sri Lanka’s local mayors must become global players.
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  • Ray, John (2015). Adam Boulton – “2015: a post-TV election?”.
  • Ray, John (2015). Andrew Marr: British politics is due for an earthquake.
  • Ray, John (2014). PositionDial and the joys of self-discovery.
  • Raymond, Christopher (2015). David Cameron may have to emphasise the partisan consequences of a divided Tory party to his MPs if he is to get through this Parliament.
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  • 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.
  • Redert, Bas (2016). Big money buys influence in Brussels. Or does it?
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  • Regan, Daniel (2014). Do we need a Global Constitution for a Globalised Age?
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  • Reid, Andrew (2017). Book review: the populist radical right: a reader edited by Cas Mudde.
  • Reid, Andrew (2016). Book review: transparency and the open society: practical lessons for effective policy by Roger Taylor and Tim Kelsey.
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  • Reid, Richard (2018). The powers of the Lords in Brexit are substantial but unlikely to be used to full effect.
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  • Rolls, Mark G. (2016). From the margins to the centre: the deepening of New Zealand’s relations with India.
  • Rome, Emma (2015). Allowing MPs to job share would bring benefit constituents, democracy, and the MPs themselves.
  • Rome, Emma, Berry, Richard (2015). Debate part 1: should adding ‘none of the above’ to ballot papers be a priority for UK political reformers?
  • Rome, Emma, Berry, Richard (2015). Debate part 2: should adding ‘none of the above’ to ballot papers be a priority for UK political reformers?
  • Ropek Hewson, Sofia (2016). Book review: awkward politics: technologies of popfeminist activism by Carrie Smith-Prei and Maria Stehle.
  • 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 (14 June 2020) Book review: Set the Night on Fire: L.A. in the Sixties by Mike Davis and Jon Wiener. USApp – American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • Rosina, Matilde, Griffini, Marianna, Talani, Leila Simona (2025). Right move? Populist radical right parties and Europe. International Spectator, 60(1), 17 - 32. https://doi.org/10.1080/03932729.2025.2468921 picture_as_pdf
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  • Ross, Alec J., Sheehan, Clare (2013). Alec J Ross – my media world today and what I would like to change about it.
  • Roth, Bob (2023). The welfare state between juridification and commodification: how the Frankfurt School gave up on economic democracy. European Law Open, 2(2), 386 - 404. https://doi.org/10.1017/elo.2023.39 picture_as_pdf
  • Rothenberg, Alex, Bazzi, Samuel, Gaduh, Arya, Wong, Maisy (2016). Matching and migration: lessons from a resettlement programme in Indonesia.
  • Rothkopf, Ilana (2013). Book review: Worldviews of aspiring powers: domestic foreign policy debates in China, India, Iran, Japan, and Russia.
  • Roumanias, Costas, Skouras, Spyros, Christodoulakis, Nicos (2018). Crisis and extremism: can a powerful extreme right emerge in a modern democracy? Evidence from Greece’s Golden Dawn. (Hellenic Observatory Papers on Greece and Southeast Europe 126). Hellenic Observatory, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Rovira Kaltwasser, Cristóbal (19 March 2013) The legacy of Hugo Chávez has lessons for how the EU and its institutions can engage with populist leaders. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • Rowell, Carli Ria (2015). The personal pull of sociology.
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  • Ruane, Sally (2014). Expanding the resources and powers of Healthwatch and Overview & Scrutiny Committees would improve the local accountability of health services.
  • 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.
  • Rueda-Cantuche, José Manuel (2013). Despite a reduction in the labour intensity of European exports, they continue to contribute to employment growth.
  • Ruiz Pérez, Valeria (2024). Unconstitutional punishment: political authority and penal crises in Colombia [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.00004753
  • Rumbul, Rebecca (2015). Citizens worldwide are embracing civic technology but the profile of users varies markedly between countries.
  • Rumbul, Rebecca (2015). The representation of women in elected positions in Wales is not mirrored by the number of women giving evidence.
  • Rupel, Tadej (2016). Brexit Ambassador series: the view from Slovenia.
  • Ruseishvili, Svetlana, Surak, Kristin (2024). Commodification of citizenship and global inequalities. REMHU: Revista Interdisciplinar Da Mobilidade Humana, 32, https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-85852503880003214.pt picture_as_pdf
  • Ruser, Alexander (2015). Saving the Euro at all costs could lead to an eventual hollowing out of European democracy.
  • Ruser, Alexander (2015). Saving the euro at all costs could lead to the hollowing out of European democracy.
  • Rush, Jessica (2016). NGOs and refugees: the Afghanistan and Central Asian Association.
  • Russell, Meg (2013). David Cameron’s Syria defeat was unexpected, but Prime Ministers are regularly forced to bow to Parliament’s will.
  • Russell, Meg, Serban, Ruxandra (2022). Why it is indeed time for the Westminster model to be retired from comparative politics. Government and Opposition, 57(2), 370 - 384. https://doi.org/10.1017/gov.2021.49 picture_as_pdf
  • Russell, Meg, Serban, Ruxandra (2020). The muddle of the 'Westminster Model': a concept stretched beyond repair. Government and Opposition, https://doi.org/10.1017/gov.2020.12 picture_as_pdf
  • Rutherford, Nat (2016). Justifications for the Investigatory Powers Bill are based on a very specific interpretation of freedom.
  • Ryan, Bernard (2016). Vote Leave’s position on EU and Irish citizens post-Brexit raises more questions than it answers.
  • Ryan, John (26 February 2020) Sinn Féin is poised to recast Ireland's political dynamic. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Ryan, Josh (2018). The Democratic Party's presidential primary lasts too long-and that may hurt the eventual nominee.
  • Ryan, Josh (2015). Evidence from the United States shows that the gerrymandering of district boundaries is not necessarily a cause of political polarisation.
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  • Singh, Shane P., Dunn, Kris (2015). The success of populist radical right parties is not a result of heightened participation in politics by authoritarians.
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  • Sked, Alan (2016). Alan Sked on the EU, part three: how Germany came to dominate the EU.
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  • Sked, Alan (2016). University leaders who lobby against Brexit are a disgrace. Research would thrive outside the EU.
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  • South Asia, LSE (2012). Can free bikes close the education gender gap in India? picture_as_pdf
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  • South Asia, LSE (2012). Debt and entrepreneurship: microfinance in India. picture_as_pdf
  • South Asia, LSE (2017). Demonetisation, digitisation and narrow definitions of nationalism: Arun Jaitley’s visit to LSE.
  • South Asia, LSE (2014). India’s elections: results from the biggest event in the world.
  • South Asia, LSE (2013). LSE launches green growth research programme in India.
  • South Asia, LSE (2013). Land grabs in a South Asian context. picture_as_pdf
  • South Asia, LSE (2013). Multimedia: India’s responsible corporations.
  • South Asia, LSE (2014). New research programme: inequality and poverty in India.
  • South Asia, LSE (2013). Why study South Asia?
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  • Srivastava, Shashank (18 April 2024) Judicial overload: analysing India's case backlog crisis. Public Sphere Journal blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • Stirbu, Diana Silvia, McAllister, Laura (2016). If it’s broken, fix it! Time to rethink the AMS electoral system in Wales.
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  • Stoica, Mihnea (2017). Romania’s political crisis reflects severe tensions within the country’s Social Democratic Party.
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  • Stolz, Klaus (2018). Unionism vs self-interest: would MPs support proportional representation? picture_as_pdf
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  • Studdert, Jessica (2015). Engagement at the local level should be citizen-led rather than institution-led.
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  • Sung Min, Han (2015). Income inequality and party polarisation proceed together in some countries, but not in others.
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  • Suttmann-Lea, Mara (2017). Profound partisanship, rather than early voting, may have guaranteed Greg Gianforte’s success in Montana amidst assault charges.
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  • Swain, Ashok (2016). India must remember that Balochistan is not Bangladesh.
  • Swain, Geoffrey (2017). LSE RB feature essay: the centenary of the Russian Revolution by Geoffrey Swain.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). Desperate times and desperate measures: could the UK force the EU to negotiate before Article 50 is triggered?
  • Swan, Sean (2015). If bombing the Middle East was the way to peace, it would be the most peaceful place on Earth.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). Jean-Claude Juncker is wrong and dangerously out of touch to demand an immediate Brexit.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). The Northern Ireland Secretary’s suggestion that Stormont’s impasse could be solved by the return of London rule is dangerous and wrong.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). Once again the Constitution seems vulnerable to piecemeal reform arising out of sectional party interest.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). Overcoming the UK’s constitutional crisis may require the development of more flexible relationships between the constituent nations.
  • Swan, Sean (2018). Sinn Fein won't drop its abstentionist policy over Brexit - and that's not necessarily a bad thing.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). Theresa May replaces David Cameron – but will there be an early general election?
  • Swan, Sean (2016). The concept of class is absent from political debate, even as inequality in Britain reaches new heights.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). The constitutional settlement of the UK has been thrown into flux – an overarching polity is urgently needed.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). A response to Chuka Umunna: the dominant equality issues of today need to be understood in terms of economics, interests and class.
  • Swan, Sean (15 November 2016) The ultimate test for anti-Brexit MPs: will they resign their seats? Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Swann, Juliet (2016). Scottish Parliament Election preview: whatever happens in Lothians, we’re bound to see new faces.
  • Swann, Juliet (2016). Scottish Parliament election preview: continuity and change in the Highlands and Islands.
  • Swash, Sam (24 February 2018) Book review: The authoritarian public sphere: legitimation and autocratic power in North Korea, Burma and China, Alexander Dukalskis. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Swash, Sam (2018). Book review: the authoritarian public sphere: legitimation and autocratic power in North Korea, Burma and China by Alexander Dukalskis. picture_as_pdf
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  • Swers, Michele (2014). As republicans take over the senate, they have lost some of their most willing allies on the democratic side.
  • Swers, Michele (2013). The increasing ideological polarization of the Republican and Democratic parties has led to the U.S. government’s shutdown.
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  • Szafranski, Mikolaj (25 February 2022) Book review: Politics and expertise: how to use science in a democratic society by Zeynep Pamuk. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
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  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (27 January 2020) How will the latest judicial reform controversy affect Poland's presidential election? LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). Law and Justice’s stunning victory in Poland reflected widespread disillusionment with the country’s ruling elite.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (6 January 2020) What are the prospects for Poland's radical right Confederation? LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2018). What are the prospects for the Polish left?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2018). The political significance of Poland's government reshuffle.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks, Taggart, Paul (2017). How has Brexit, and other EU crises, affected party Euroscepticism across Europe?
  • Sztykowski, Zosia (2016). On post-Brexit London: difference doesn’t have to break us.
  • Sztykowski, Zosia (2016). What’s the role of sociology after Brexit?
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  • Sørensen, Catharina (2018). Evidence from Denmark: how attitudes toward sovereignty affect support for the EU.
  • Süß, Rahel (16 March 2022) Book review: Digital technology and democratic theory edited by Lucy Bernholz, Hélène Landemore and Rob Reich. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Süß, Rahel (26 July 2020) Book review: reactionary democracy: how racism and the populist far right became mainstream by Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Süß, Rahel (21 July 2020) Book review: reactionary democracy: how racism and the populist far right became mainstream by Aurelien Mondon and Aaron Winter. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
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  • Tallberg, Jonas, Lundgren, Magnus, Sommerer, Thomas, Squatrito, Theresa (2020). Why international organizations commit to liberal norms. International Studies Quarterly, 64(3), 626-640. https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqaa046 picture_as_pdf
  • Talleraas, Tina (2012). How we all win in the digital wars – Charles Arthur at Polis LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Tambini, Damian (2010). How Clegg powered his way into a menage a trois.
  • Tambini, Damian (2010). Media ethics in the new media landscape: new paper.
  • Tambini, Damian (2013). Should journalists write about companies they own shares in? In Hong Kong they do. (New publication).
  • Tambini, Damian (2018). Targeted propaganda and the Italian election campaign.
  • Tambini, Damian (21 January 2025) Why is Elon Musk destabilising UK and EU politics? British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Tanczer, Leonie Maria (2015). Book review: the coming swarm: DDoS actions, hacktivism, and civil disobedience on the internet.
  • Tandon, Ambika (2016). Rethinking radicalism.
  • Tang, Cheng Keat (2016). Do we value the London Congestion Charge?
  • Tannam, Etain (11 April 2018) Hume's legacy: British-Irish relations need strengthening to face the challenges of Brexit. LSE Brexit. picture_as_pdf
  • Tannam, Etain (2018). The Irish border issue is not going away, no matter how much the UK government may wish it away.
  • Tanner, James, Young, Sarah (3 October 2022) In deciding how to deliver public services, bureaucrats, not citizens, often have the loudest voice. USApp – American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Tapscott, Rebecca (16 November 2020) Today’s authoritarians project power through militarised masculinity. Africa at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Tapscott, Rebecca (2020). Militarized masculinity and the paradox of restraint: mechanisms of social control under modern authoritarianism. International Affairs, 96(6), 1565 - 1584. https://doi.org/10.1093/ia/iiaa163 picture_as_pdf
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  • 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.
  • Tartir, Alaa Adel (2010-05-26) ‘Good’ governance and state formation in Palestine: governance without ‘real’ government and aid for ‘phantom’ authority [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Tatsak, Jenny (2015). GOP candidates unite to attack the media in the third presidential debate.
  • Tavares, Michael (2016). Obama, Trump and the language of everyday nationalism.
  • Taylor, Charles, Campion, Sonali (2016). Five minutes with Charles Taylor: “in order to make ourselves safe we need to resist stigmatising sections of the population”.
  • Taylor, Charles, Campion, Sonali (2016). “A lot of the thinking about secularism that I’ve done has grown out of intensive discussions about the Indian situation” – Charles Taylor.
  • Taylor, Helen, Kaehne, Axel (2016). Public consultations do not currently enable all stakeholders to effectively contribute to the legislative process.
  • Taylor, Ian (2017). Book review: India and China in Africa: a comparative perspective of the oil industry by Raj Verma.
  • Taylor, J. Benjamin (2015). Extreme media may polarize opinions, but they also educate viewers about politics and policy.
  • Taylor, Nick (2013). Book review: Essays on Classical and Marxian political economy: collected essays IV.
  • Taylor, Ros, Klaas, Brian (2016). ‘If something isn’t done we’ve hit democracy’s high water mark. That’s billions of people and their life chances’ – Brian Klaas.
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  • Tegenbos, Jolien, Vlassenroot, Koen (2018). Broadening the scope of scholarly research on the repatriation of refugees is a necessity #LSEreturn. picture_as_pdf
  • Tellis, Ashley J., Campion, Sonali (2017). “The new bipolarity between the US and China poses challenges for India” – Ashley Tellis.
  • Temple, Luke (2016). Book review: more sex, lies and the ballot box: another 50 things you need to know about elections edited by Philip Cowley and Robert Ford.
  • Temple, Luke (2017). To fend off populism, we must stop believing in the will of the people.
  • Terhalle, Maximilian (2022). Can Chancellor Scholz save the West? The new German government and global geopolitics. (LSE IDEAS Strategic Updates). LSE Ideas. picture_as_pdf
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  • Tillman, Erik R. (2013). Euroscepticism is rooted in a broader authoritarian worldview that also includes higher levels of nationalism and hostility to ‘outsiders’.
  • Tillman, Erik R. (2015). Pre-electoral coalitions increase voter turnout by making elections more decisive.
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  • Titov, Alexander (2017). The timing is just right for Navalny to challenge Putin’s regime.
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  • Toledo Bastos, Marco (2013). Newsmaking in the Twittersphere – some new international data on how journalism flows through the microblog network (guest blog) #twitter.
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Book review: Britain’s cities, Britain’s future by Mike Emmerich.
  • Tomaney, John (2017). Book review: the great Labour unrest: rank-and-file movements and political change in Durham coalfield by Lewis Mates.
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  • Toth, Federico (2013). National health services tend to be introduced by countries with social democratic governments that also have a concentration of political power.
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  • Traill, Helen (2017). Book review: engaged urbanism: cities and methodologies edited by Ben Campkin and Ger Duijzings.
  • Traill, Helen (2016). Food banks, community gardens and I, Daniel Blake.
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  • Trench, Alan (2015). The UK is at a constitutional crossroads and major change is needed if it is to work effectively.
  • Trevitt, Vittorio (2014). Compulsory voting is controversial, but would represent a move towards genuine democratic empowerment.
  • Trevitt, Vittorio (2014). Extending the franchise to 16 and 17 year olds would deepen and strengthen British democracy.
  • Trevitt, Vittorio (2015). The emergence of a genuine system of multiparty politics in the United Kingdom is a positive development for British democracy.
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  • Trillas, Francesc (2013). The objective of social democracy should be ‘sustainable progress’.
  • Tripp, Charles (2013). Book review: Intellectuals and civil society in the MiddleEast: liberalism, modernity and political discourse.
  • Tritter, Jonathon Q., Fredriksson, Mio (2016). The handling of the junior doctors’ strike reinforces a vision of the NHS where key voices are neither sought nor listened to.
  • Tronconi, Filippo (2015). Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement must adapt if it wants to become a permanent feature of Italy’s party system.
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  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Trump or not, Obama’s successor may seek to trim America’s sails internationally.
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  • Trubowitz, Peter, Watanabe, Kohei (2021). The geopolitical threat index: a text-based computational approach to identifying foreign threats. International Studies Quarterly, 65(3), 852 - 865. https://doi.org/10.1093/isq/sqab029 picture_as_pdf
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  • Uscinski, Joseph E. (2013). Why are conspiracy theories popular? There’s more to it than paranoia.
  • Uscinski, Joseph E., DeWitt, Darin, Atkinson, Matthew D. (2018). Conspiracy theorists helped the Parkland students keep gun control on the national agenda.
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  • Valbjørn, Morten, Gunning, Jeroen, Lefèvre, Raphaël (2024). When transnationalism is not global: dynamics of armed transnational Shi'a Islamist groups. Studies in Conflict and Terrorism, https://doi.org/10.1080/1057610X.2024.2398695 picture_as_pdf
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  • Valentini, Laura (2015). Laura Valentini wins a Philip Leverhulme Prize for her research.
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  • Varin, Carolin (2010-05-26) Power and security: the role of private military companies in small states [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Varin, Caroline (2014). Book review: the fog of peace: the human face of conflict resolution by Gabrielle Rifkind and Giandomenico Picco.
  • Varshney, Ashutosh, Campion, Sonali (2016). “There are phases when India falls remarkably short of the standards you would expect democracies to follow” – Ashutosh Varshney.
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  • Vasilopoulou, Sofia, Halikiopoulou, Daphne (2014). Golden Dawn’s success in the European elections shows the party now has a stable support base among Greek voters.
  • Vasilopoulou, Sofia, Halikiopoulou, Daphne (2015). Golden Dawn’s ‘nationalist solution’: explaining the rise of the far-right in Greece.
  • Vasilopoulou, Sofia, Wagner, Markus (2016). Emotions to shape debates and decisions in the upcoming referendum.
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  • Velander, Marielle (2014). Begging for answers: film review of “Beggars of Lahore”.
  • Velander, Marielle (2015). Epistemologies of water: in search of new approaches to the looming South Asian crisis.
  • Velander, Marielle (2015). Throw your heart out into the world: a tribute concert to Pakistani human rights activist Sabeen Mahmud.
  • Velander, Marielle (2015). The converging politics of water scarcity and renewable energy in Pakistan’s Thar Desert.
  • Velander, Marielle (2014). The three worlds of Indian citizenship: an evening with Professor Niraja Gopal Jayal.
  • Velarde-Rubalcava, Dayanna (2014). Affirmative action: Indian industries’ push to promote inclusive society.
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  • Venables, Tony (2015). Making cities work for development: perspectives from South Asia.
  • Venugopal, Rajesh (2022). Can the anti-politics machine be dismantled? New Political Economy, 27(6), 1002 - 1016. https://doi.org/10.1080/13563467.2022.2045926 picture_as_pdf
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  • Verma, Raj (2017). Author response: India and China in Africa: a comparative perspective of the oil industry by Raj Verma.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Book review: deadly impasse: Indo-Pakistani relations at the dawn of a new century by Sumit Ganguly.
  • Verma, Raj (2017). Book review: handbook of Indian defence policy: themes, structures and doctrines edited by Harsh Pant.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Book review: heading east: security, trade and environment between India and Southeast Asia edited by Karen Stoll Farrell and Sumit Ganguly.
  • Verma, Raj (2013). India, China and the Depsang Valley quagmire.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). The Oxford Handbook of Indian Foreign Policy edited by David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan and Srinath Raghavan.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Top South Asian foreign policy challenges for 2016.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). The long read: 68 years of Indian foreign policy by Raj Verma.
  • Verweijen, Judith (2016). Between ‘justice’ and ‘injustice’: justice populaire in the Eastern DR Congo.
  • Verweijen, Judith (2013). The disconcerting popularity of “justice populaire” in the Eastern DR Congo.
  • 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”.
  • Vibert, Frank (2015). Going Dutch: can Cameron secure subsidiarity reforms without treaty change?
  • Vibert, Frank (2018). Making a 21st century constitution: the rules we have established for democracies are now outdated. picture_as_pdf
  • Vibert, Frank, Beck, Gunnar (2016). The seven days of Brexit: how a Leave government could bypass Article 50.
  • Vibert, Frank (2024). The classic concept: an architecture for learning. In Rethinking the Separation of Powers: Democratic Resilience in Troubled Times (pp. 19 – 40). Edward Elgar. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781035315802.00011 picture_as_pdf
  • Vicari, Stefania (2014). Book review: transnationalizing the public sphere by Nancy Fraser et al.
  • Vicente, Pedro, Beck, Charles (2014). Is vote-buying always bad for development?
  • Vico, Sanja (30 April 2018) Book review: everyday nationhood: theorising culture, identity and belonging after banal nationalism edited by Michael Skey and Marco Antonsich. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • 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.
  • Vidal, Laura (2015). Why does including modern slavery in the S.D.G.s matter?
  • Villarreal Fernández, Evelyn, Wilson, Bruce M. (2018). Costa Rica's 2018 elections: corruption, morality politics, and voter alienation make uncertainty the only certainty.
  • Villarreal Fernández, Evelyn, Wilson, Bruce M. (2018). Costa Rica's 2018 elections: the two Alvarados, between deepening division and democratic dependability.
  • Vitiello, Thomas (2017). Understanding the campaign dynamics of the French presidential election.
  • Vittori, Davide (6 March 2018) Italy's election wasn't just a populist takeover - it was also about the demise of the left. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Vittori, Davide, de Candia, Margherita (2018). From online participation to offline consensus? The declining appeal of web-democracy to Five Star Movement supporters.
  • Vlandas, Tim (2014). Debunking the myth that keeps coming back: excessive spending on labour market policies and benefit fraud in the UK.
  • Vlandas, Tim (2016). Xenophobia Britannica? Anti-immigrant attitudes in the UK are among the strongest in Europe.
  • Vlassenroot, Koen, Büscher, Karen (2013). The NGO-fication of Goma.
  • Vogkli, Maria-Christina (2016). “The battle of bastards”: Game of Thrones, the EU referendum and Greece.
  • Vogkli, Maria-Christina (2015). The lost honour of Europe.
  • Volckart, Oliver (2021). Voting like your betters: the bandwagon effect in the diet of the Holy Roman Empire. (Economic History Working Papers 329). Department of Economic History, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • Volckart, Oliver (2023). Voting like your betters: the bandwagon effect in the diet of the Holy Roman Empire. German History, 41(1), 1 - 20. https://doi.org/10.1093/gerhis/ghac073 picture_as_pdf
  • Volintiru, Clara (2013). Bucharest’s recent protests show that Romanians are beginning to embrace western styles of civic engagement.
  • Volintiru, Clara (2014). The European Parliament elections in Romania will highlight the deep divisions within the country’s political system.
  • Volintiru, Clara, Toma, Bianca, Damian, Alexandru (2018). How the political capture of state owned enterprises is damaging democracy in Central and Eastern Europe.
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  • Voller, Yaniv (2020). Advantages and challenges to diaspora transnational civil society activism in the homeland: examples from Iraqi Kurdistan, Somaliland and South Sudan. Conflict Research Programme, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
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  • Voltolini, Benedetta (2013). Book review: Lobbying in the European Union: interest groups, lobbying coalitions, and policy change.
  • Voorhoeve, Alex (2018). May a government mandate more comprehensive health insurance than citizens want for themselves? In Sobel, David, Vallentyne, Peter, Wall, Steven (Eds.), Oxford Studies in Political Philosophy (pp. 167-191). Oxford University Press.
  • Voorhoeve, Alex (2021). Policy evaluation under severe uncertainty: a cautious, egalitarian approach. In Heilmann, Conrad, Reiss, Julian (Eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Economics (pp. 467 - 479). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315739793-42 picture_as_pdf
  • Voorhoeve, Alex, Fleurbaey, Marc (2016). Priority or equality for possible people? Ethics, 126(4), 929 - 954. https://doi.org/10.1086/686000
  • Voskeritsian, Horen (2012). Of minimum wages and other vices of the labour market….
  • Voskeritsian, Horen (2012). Process versus content; or the slow and painful death of social dialogue.
  • Vrbensky, Rastislav (2008). Can development prevent conflict? Integrated area-based development in the Western Balkans – theory, practice and policy recommendations. (Working paper series WP 02/2008). Centre for the Study of Global Governance, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Vredenburgh, Kate (2023). Bureaucratic discretion, legitimacy, and substantive justice. Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 26(2), 251 - 259. https://doi.org/10.1080/13698230.2022.2133829 picture_as_pdf
  • Vrydagh, Fanny, Jiménez-Martínez, César (2021). Conversando com a direita: polarização perniciosa no Brasil e a filosofia de Paulo Freire. MATRIZes, 15(3), 223 - 243. https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.1982-8160.v15i3p223-243 picture_as_pdf
  • Vrydagh, Fanny, Jiménez-Martínez, César (2020). Talking with the right-wing: pernicious polarisation in Brazil and the philosophy of Paulo Freire. International Communication Gazette, 82(5), 456 - 473. https://doi.org/10.1177/1748048520943695 picture_as_pdf
  • Vukovic, Vuk (2016). How a small team of academics correctly predicted a Trump victory.
  • Vukovic, Vuk, Lahdelma, Ilona (2017). New election prediction: Macron will win, but the race will be closer than opinion polls suggest.
  • Vuksanovic, Vuk (2018). Three lessons from Erdoğan's rally in Sarajevo.
  • Vuksanovic, Vuk (2017). The Western Balkans could be the first casualty of a ‘connectivity war’ between the EU and Turkey.
  • Vyas, Sangita (2015). Solving India’s sanitation puzzle.
  • Wadi, Ramona (2011). Book review: dignity in adversity: human rights in troubled times.
  • Waggoner, Philip D. (2018). Constituents have minimal influence on their legislators' policy priorities. picture_as_pdf
  • Wagner, Rikke (2010-05-26) The bridge of love – migration, borders and citizenship [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Waheed Jamali, Abdul (2017). Protecting small farmers in Pakistan in the wake of the new seed Act.
  • Waights, Sevrin (2013). Game of zones.
  • Wakelin, Elyse (3 November 2018) Book review: Making a 21st century constitution: playing fair in modern democracies by Frank Vibert. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Wald, Erica (2014). Total war, shortages and British hospitals: Sepoy experiences in World War I.
  • Wales, Philip (2013). Postgraduate fees: access all areas?
  • Walker, Alan (2018). A social policy on ageing: to reduce the costs of old age, we must improve the entire life course. picture_as_pdf
  • Walker, Hannah, Thorpe, Rebecca (2018). How changes to how the Census counts people has implications for democracy and inequality.
  • Walker, Samuel, Rosenman, Emily (2016). The practice of demolishing abandoned houses in Cleveland,Ohio is limited in its capacity to address underlying causes ofhousing injustice.
  • Wall, Derek (2015). Book review: the two degrees dangerous limit for climate change: public understanding and decision making by Christopher Shaw.
  • Wall, John, Birch, Sarah, Williams, Stephen, Zeglovits, Eva, Saglie, Jo (2013). Votes at 16: what the UK can learn from Austria, Norway and the Crown dependencies.
  • Wall, Matthew, Krouwel, André, Vitiello, Thomas (2014). Voters can be influenced by voter advice websites, but they do not follow the guidance blindly.
  • Waller, Chris, Reynolds, Louis (2014). Connecting knowledge to power: the future of digital democracy in the UK.
  • Walvaart, Marleen te, Leurs, Koen, Van den Bulck, Hilde, Dhoest, Alexander (2016). Kosmopolitische verbeeldingen in het Nederlandse buitenlandprogramma Metropolis: een productieanalyse = Cosmopolitan imaginaries in the Dutch foreign affairs programme Metropolis: a production analysis. Tijdschrift Voor Communicatiewetenschap, 44(1).
  • Wanga, Stephanie (2025). Rereading Ujamaa, rethinking freedom. Development and Change, 56(3), 572 - 594. https://doi.org/10.1111/dech.70005 picture_as_pdf
  • Ward, Bob (2016). What next for the Greens? The Green Party after Natalie Bennett.
  • Ward, George (2015). Is happiness a predictor of election results? (CEP Discussion Papers CEPDP1343). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Ward, Joseph, Da Costa Vieira, Thomas (2024). Authoritarian neoliberalism between Johnson and Jupiter: declining legitimacy and the elevation of home affairs in post-Brexit Britain and Macron's France. Geoforum, 149, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoforum.2024.103942 picture_as_pdf
  • Wargent, Matt (2013). Book review: Reforming democracies: six facts about politics that demand a new agenda.
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: Britain’s nuclear experience: the roles of beliefs, culture and identity.
  • Warren, Michael (2017). Book review: the conversational firm: rethinking bureaucracy in the age of social media by Catherine J. Turco.
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: the psychology of strategy: exploring rationality in the Vietnam War by Kenneth Payne.
  • Warwick, Ben (2014). Book review: failing to protect: the UN and the politicisation of human rights by Rosa Freedman.
  • Wass, Hanna, Pirkkalainen, Päivi, Weide, Marjukka (2016). The political potential of migrants is often overlooked in discussions around integration.
  • Wassara, Samson (2014). Predictable causes and prospects of the current political crisis in South Sudan.
  • Wasserziehr, Jan (15 December 2025) Does Mamdani’s victory show that ‘radical’ is the new normal? Department of Government. picture_as_pdf
  • Watkins, Jessica (2019). Combating domestic abuse in Jordan from the top-down liberal and/or democratic statebuilding? Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding, https://doi.org/10.1080/17502977.2019.1663983 picture_as_pdf
  • Watson, Jenny, Kippin, Sean (2014). The Electoral Commission’s Jenny Watson on internet voting, electoral fraud, and individual voter registration.
  • Watson, Jenny, Kippin, Sean (2014). The Electoral Commission’s Jenny Watson on votes at 16, information for voters, and modernising our electoral infrastructure.
  • Watts, Mark, Goodman, Emma, Charlton, Meg, Kageura, Asuka, Fuller-Jackson, Kailey (2014). Conference 2014 speaker series: an interview with Mark Watts.
  • Waylen, Georgina, Crowe, Jessica, Bailey, Adrian, Veale, Sarah, Runswick, Alex, Undy, Helen, Savigny, Heather, Thompson, Louise (2014). Selecting committee witnesses: experts back the call for a more even gender balance.
  • Wdowiak, Laurie (2016). Nuit Debout: middle class protests in neoliberal France.
  • Weale, Albert (2017). If you believe Brexit is a mistake, you have a democratic duty to oppose it.
  • Webb, Peter, Robinson, Lucy (2014). The 2011 riots: a story of community, locality, subculture and music, demystifying the mainstream media and politicians’ descriptions of feral youth, nihilistic gang culture, thug life and ignorance.
  • Webber, Douglas (2015). By most objective measures, Europe must now be classed as a declining power.
  • 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.
  • Wehner, Joachim, Hallerberg, Mark (12 May 2021) Pandemic leadership: beware of anecdotes. LSE COVID-19 Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Weigand, Florian (13 October 2022) How to build (or lose) legitimacy during war. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Weigand, Florian (2015). Investigating the role of legitimacy in the political order of conflict-torn spaces. (Working papers SiT/WP/04/15). Security in Transition, LSE.
  • Weilandt, Ragnar (2018). SPD members should think twice before vetoing Germany's grand coalition.
  • Weinhardt, Felix (2012). What does daylight-saving time actually save?
  • Weinstein, Adam (2016). What Pakistan’s war in the north reveals about post-conflict landscapes and the future of Syria.
  • Weisbrod, Aaron (2015). Myanmar: a new breed of mobile money?
  • Weisskircher, Manès (2016). World Animal Day: tracking the animal rights movement’s growing presence in European politics.
  • Weitzberg, Keren, Cheesman, Margie, Martin, Aaron, Schoemaker, Emrys (2021). Between surveillance and recognition: rethinking digital identity in aid. Big Data and Society, 8(1), 1 - 7. https://doi.org/10.1177/20539517211006744 picture_as_pdf
  • Welikala, Asanga (2015). The Nineteenth Amendment is a historic constitutional milestone in Sri Lanka’s ongoing political development.
  • Welikala, Asanga (2015). The Rajapaksa Regime and the constitutionalisation of populist authoritarianism in Sri Lanka.
  • Welikala, Asanga (2015). Sri Lanka and its democratic revolution: the constitutional challenge of unity and diversity.
  • Wellings, Ben, Vines, Emma (2015). Are EU referendums undermining parliamentary sovereignty?
  • Wells, Anthony (2016). With the diagnosis confirmed pollsters can start working on their own solutions to the 2015 polling error.
  • Wells, Tamas (2016). Answers to the Western democratic malaise may come from unexpected places.
  • Welzel, Chris, Dalton, Russell (2016). The secret of better government? Citizens who complain.
  • Wenban-Smith, Hugh B. (2015). Strengthening the contribution of cities to growth.
  • Werdine Norris, Maria (2014). The Trojan Horse affair: British Muslims and the narrative of belonging.
  • Werts, Han, Lubbers, Marcel, Scheepers, Peer (2013). Rising Euroscepticism is positively linked to increased support for radical right-wing parties.
  • Weru, Jane (2014). Transforming slums by using access to finance.
  • Westall, Andrea (2016). Widespread democratic change could trigger meaningful action on climate change.
  • Westeren, Felix (10 May 2024) The name of the game: soft power and the Eurovision Song Contest. Department of Government. picture_as_pdf
  • Westlake, Martin (2016). How the Spitzenkandidaten process and Juncker’s reforms might shape the future of the European Commission.
  • Wheatley, Jonathan (2015). Politics is too complex to be understood just in terms of Left and Right.
  • Wheatley, Jonathan (2017). The “empty centre”: how voters’ views have polarised since 2015.
  • Wheatley, Jonathan (22 June 2020) The future of politics after COVID-19: four trends that are already discernible. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Wheeler, Reyss (2016). Divided families: Brexit and the working class.
  • Wheelhouse, Andrew (2015). The ‘Anderson Report’ on surveillance powers does fudge the issues, but its findings should be implemented.
  • Whigham, Stuart, Black, Jack (2018). Sport and the push for 'Empire 2.0': the 2014 Commonwealth Games in the media. picture_as_pdf
  • White, Anne, Dunleavy, Patrick (2010). Making and breaking Whitehall departments: a guide to machinery of government changes. Institute for Government; LSE Public Policy Group.
  • White, Calum W. (2015). Book review: Nye: the political life of Aneurin Bevan by Nicklaus Thomas-Symonds.
  • White, Calum W. (2014). Book review: spreading protest: social movements in times of crisis edited by Donatella della Porta and Alice Mattoni.
  • White, Jonathan (2 September 2019) Performative prorogation: what Johnson, Cummings and Co are trying to teach the public. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • White, Jonathan (24 January 2024) Q and A with Jonathan White on In the long run: the future as a political idea. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • White, Jonathan (2023). What makes climate a populist issue? (Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment Working Paper 401). Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • White, Jonathan (2023). What makes climate change a populist issue? (Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment Working Papers 401). Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment, London School of Economics and Political Science. picture_as_pdf
  • White, Jonathan (11 November 2019) The danger of personalised power in the EU. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
  • White, Mark D. (2014). Book review: valuing life: humanizing the regulatory state by Cass Sunstein.
  • White, Jonathan (2015). Authority after emergency rule. Modern Law Review, 78(4), 585-610. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2230.12130
  • White, Jonathan (2022). Circadian justice. Journal of Political Philosophy, 30(4), 487 - 511. https://doi.org/10.1111/jopp.12271 picture_as_pdf
  • White, Jonathan (2012). Community, transnationalism, and the left-right metaphor. European Journal of Social Theory, 15(2), 197-219. https://doi.org/10.1177/1368431011423652
  • White, Jonathan (2010). Europe and the common. Political Studies, 58(1), 104-122. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9248.2009.00775.x
  • White, Jonathan (2011). Left and right as political resources. Journal of Political Ideologies, 16(2), 123-144. https://doi.org/10.1080/13569317.2011.575681
  • White, Jonathan (2022). WhatsApp Europe? Social Europe, picture_as_pdf
  • White, Jonathan (2022). The de-institutionalisation of power beyond the state. European Journal of International Relations, 28(1), 187 - 208. https://doi.org/10.1177/13540661211053683 picture_as_pdf
  • White, Jonathan (2017). The party in time. British Journal of Political Science, 47(4), 851-868. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007123415000265
  • White, Jonathan (2010). The politics of other citizens. Citizenship Studies, 14(4), 411-427. https://doi.org/10.1080/13621025.2010.490036
  • White, Jonathan (2009). The social theory of mass politics. Journal of Politics, 71(1), 96-112. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022381608090075
  • White, Jonathan, Ypi, Lea (2011). On partisan political justification. American Political Science Review, 105(2), 381-396. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055411000074
  • White, Jonathan, Ypi, Lea (2010). Rethinking the modern prince: partisanship and the democratic ethos. Political Studies, 58(4), 809-828. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9248.2010.00837.x
  • White, Jonathan, Ypi, Lea (2016). The partisan claim. In The meaning of partisanship (pp. 8-37). Oxford University Press.
  • White, Jonathan, Ypi, Lea (2017). The politics of peoplehood. Political Theory, 45(4), 439 - 465. https://doi.org/10.1177/0090591715608899
  • Whitely, Paul (2014). The techniques used in traditional election studies are notsuitable for understanding modern electoral realities.
  • Whiting, Sophie, Braniff, Máire (2016). ‘There is no point having a token woman’: gender and representation in the ‘new’ Northern Ireland.
  • Whitlock, Benjamin (2018). First Brexit, then Czexit? Unlikely - Czech attitudes to Europe are very different.
  • Widmer, Elisabeth (2025). Max Adler’s neo-Kantian reinvention of Marx’s notion of history. Kantian Review, https://doi.org/10.1017/S1369415425100770 picture_as_pdf
  • Widmer, Elisabeth Theresia (2024). Hermann Cohen's neo-Kantian ethical socialism. Kantian Review, https://doi.org/10.1017/S1369415424000396 picture_as_pdf
  • Wiemken, Anna (2016). Assam elections: “If I don’t vote, they think I am a foreigner”.
  • Wiertz, Dingeman, Rodon, Toni (2021). Frozen or malleable? Political ideology in the face of job loss and unemployment. Socio-Economic Review, 19(1), 307 - 331. https://doi.org/10.1093/ser/mwz024 picture_as_pdf
  • Wieser, Sonia (2016). Book review: an introduction to Antonio Gramsci: his life, thought and legacy by George Hoare and Nathan Sperber.
  • Wiggins, Peter (2018). Brexit from the back benches: have the whips become the straw men of British politics?
  • Wiggins, Peter (2018). Referendums, though they may be political lifeboats, can be very bad for democracy.
  • Wignaraja, Ganeshan, Campion, Sonali (2017). “Increased connectivity and economic integration between South and Southeast Asia would create significant opportunities for both regions” – Ganeshan Wignaraja.
  • Wilcox, Susannah (2013). Book review: Land by Derek Hall.
  • Wilcox, Zach (2014). Tailored devolution would bring tangible benefits to cities and improve the quality of local governance.
  • Wild, Morgan (2015). ‘Depoliticising infrastructure’: can a strategic approach enhance public engagement?
  • Wildbore, Helen, Klug, Francesca (2011). Replacing the Human Rights Act with a weaker British Bill of Rights would send a sign to the international community that we are no longer serious about human rights.
  • Wilford, Rick (2015). The current talks in Northern Ireland exemplify the mistrust that has attended devolution from the outset.
  • Wilkin, Peter (2015). Hungary’s ‘Milla’ movement shows that social media driven protest movements only succeed when they connect meaningfully with civil society.
  • Wilkins, Andrew (2013). Book review: Local democracy, civic engagement and community: from New Labour to the Big Society.
  • Wilkins, Andrew (2016). Should we be worried about controversial government plans to do away with parent governors in schools?
  • Wilkinson, Michael (2022). Authoritarian liberalism and the transformation of modern Europe: rejoinder. (LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers). London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4062207 picture_as_pdf
  • Wilkinson, Michael (2014). Politicising Europe's justice deficit: some preliminaries. (Law Society and Economy Working Paper Series). London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2379043
  • Wilkinson, Michael (2018). Public law and the autonomy of the political: a material critique. (LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers 17/2017). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3063210
  • Wilkinson, Michael, Lokdam, Hjalte (2018). Law and political economy. (LSE Law, Society and Economy Working Papers 7/2018). Department of Law, London School of Economics and Political Science. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3144723
  • Wilkinson, Michael (2022). Authoritarian liberalism and the transformation of modern Europe: rejoinder. European Law Open, 1(1), 191 - 208. https://doi.org/10.1017/elo.2021.7 picture_as_pdf
  • Wilkinson, Michael (2023). Constitutionalism in postwar Europe revolutionary or counter-revolutionary? In Dani, Marco, Goldoni, Marco, Menéndez, Agustín J. (Eds.), The Legitimacy of European Constitutional Orders: A Comparative Inquiry (pp. 64 - 92). Edward Elgar. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781803928890.00010 picture_as_pdf
  • Wilkinson, Michael (2023). On the new German ideology. In Komárek, Jan (Ed.), European Constitutional Imaginaries: Between Ideology and Utopia (pp. 281 - 295). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192855480.003.0013 picture_as_pdf
  • Wilkinson, Michael A. (2023). Authoritarian liberalism and authoritarian populism opposition or inflection? Rechtstheorie, 52(2-3), 239 - 249. https://doi.org/10.3790/rth.52.2-3.239 picture_as_pdf
  • Wilkinson, Tom (2019). Student politics in British India and beyond: the rise and fragmentation of the All India Student Federation (AISF), 1936-1950. South Asia Multidisciplinary Academic Journal, (22), https://doi.org/10.4000/samaj.6488 picture_as_pdf
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (2010). Do referendums ever resolve constitutional debates?
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (2010). Postal voting and electoral fraud.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (2010). Reduce and equalise? Why electoral geography matters.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (4 November 2011) Select committee report shows way forward on voter registration. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (2011). Talking sense on Lords reform: why the PSA’s new briefing fills a crucial gap.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (2012). There is still a very long way to go before votes at 16 at general elections becomes a reality.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (2012). Time to tackle the growth of the ‘payroll vote’.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (2011). What’s happening to our democracy?
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart (2011). Who governs Merseyside? The significance of Heseltine’s new report.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). Britain’s bloated payroll vote hampers Parliament in keeping a check on the executive.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). Conservative members have less influence on policy than those in the other major parties.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). How far does the UK support the United Nations and respect the international rule of law?
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). In the representation of women in political life, the UK continues to be outperformed by other democracies.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). It remains to be seen whether Parliament is cut out for coalition.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). Lobbyists and corporations have opportunities to exercise significant influence over UK public policy.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). MPs pay has risen sharply since the 1970s – but it is outside earnings that should really concern.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). Parliament has relatively weak war powers compared to legislatures in other democracies.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). Rules on election deposits create an uneven playing field and protect the interests of the largest parties.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). The UK is inconsistent in its support for human rights and democracy overseas.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). Unfinished devolution has created constitutional imbalances in the UK.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). What is the extent of electoral fraud at English elections?
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). The political affiliations of the UK’s national newspapers have shifted, but there is again a heavy Tory predominance.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Blick, Andrew, Crone, Stephen (2013). The unreformed House of Lords is already the largest parliamentary chamber of any democracy.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Crone, Stephen, Blick, Andrew (2014). Legal aid cuts may mean excluded members of society are denied access to a vital part of our democratic system.
  • Wilks-Heeg, Stuart, Crone, Stephen, Blick, Andrew (2013). Protections for the freedom of religion have improved over the last decade.
  • Willett, Joanie (2015). Cornwall is a logical place to begin with rural devolution, but a coherent UK-wide plan is sorely needed.
  • Williams, Amy (2014). The human rights act: Labour renews its vows to the UK’s Bill of Rights.
  • Williams, Katherine (25 April 2018) Book review: 'Tomorrow belongs to us': the British far right since 1967 edited by Nigel Copsey and Matthew Worley. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Williams, Katherine (26 May 2021) Book review: Hate in the homeland: the new global far right by Cynthia Miller-Idriss. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Williams, Katherine (4 July 2021) Book review: Hate in the homeland: the new global far right by Cynthia Miller-Idriss. USApp – American Politics and Policy Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Williams, Katherine (17 November 2018) Book review: The extreme gone mainstream: commercialisation and far right youth culture in Germany by Cynthia Miller-Idriss. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: critical approaches to international security, 2nd Edition.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: feminism, gender, and universities: politics, passion and pedagogies by Miriam E. David.
  • Williams, Katherine (2014). Book review: women in political theory by Jane Duran.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: women of power: half a century of female presidents and prime ministers worldwide by Torild Skard.
  • 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, Sophie (2018). Politicising national identity: Welsh parties conflate 'Welshness' with their own political ideology.
  • Williamson, Andy (2016). 2015 was not an ‘internet election’ but both data and social tools did matter.
  • Williamson, J. (1992). The Eastern transition to a market economy: a global perspective. (Centre for Economic Performance occasional papers CEPOP 2). London School of Economics and Political Science. Centre for Economic Performance.
  • Willimek, Flora Marlene (2024). When diplomats become leaders: conceptualising diplomatic leadership in crisis from a psychological angle. European Review of International Studies, 11(2), 195 - 226. https://doi.org/10.1163/21967415-11020002 picture_as_pdf
  • Willis, Rebecca (20 February 2018) How MPs can make a case for action on climate change, even if voters aren't yet interested. British Politics and Policy at LSE. picture_as_pdf
  • Wills, María Emma (2003). Peru’s failed search for political stability (1968-2000). (Crisis States Research Centre working papers series 1 30). Crisis States Research Centre, London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Willy, Craig J. (2013). In order to avoid a demographic “death trap” Western Europe must implement new and fair policies for both present and future generations.
  • Wilson, Emma (2017). LSE Lit Fest 2017 Book Review: Ctrl Alt Delete: how I grew up online by Emma Gannon.
  • Wilson, Gary (2014). Book review: Jerusalem unbound: geography, history and the future of the holy city by Michael Dumper.
  • Wilson, Gary (20 May 2020) Book review: Preferential Voting Systems: influence on intra-party competition and voting behaviour by Gianluca Passarelli. LSE Review of Books. picture_as_pdf
  • Wilson, Gary (2014). Book review: referendums and ethnic conflict by Matt Qvortrup.
  • Wilson, Gary (2014). Book review: surpassing the sovereign state: the wealth, self-rule, and security advantages of partially independent territories, by David A. Rezvani.
  • Wilson, Gary (2015). Book review: the search for peace in the Arab-Israeli conflict: a compendium of documents and analysis, edited by Terje Rod-Larsen et al.
  • Wilson, Kalpana (2015). Prime Minister Modi’s UK visit: protests gather momentum.
  • Wilson, Kalpana (2014). Resisting Hindutva, defending the right to vote in Bihar.
  • Wilson, Sophie (25 October 2016) Time’s running out: Brexit scrutineers Hilary Benn and Angus MacNeil need to get a move on. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Wilson, Peter (2011). Gilbert Murray and International Relations: Hellenism, liberalism, and international intellectual cooperation as a path to peace. Review of International Studies, 37(2), 881-909. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210510000744
  • Wilson, Peter (2009). Liberalism and the world circa 1930: Gilbert Murray’s The Ordeal of this Generation. Politik, 12(4), 15-20.
  • Wincott, Daniel (2018). Brexit is re-making the UK's constitution under our noses. picture_as_pdf
  • Wingrove, Paul (2015). Book review: the limits of partnership: US-Russian relations in the twenty-first century.
  • Wintersieck, Amanda (2017). Real-time fact-checking can change people’s opinion about a candidate, but only if the ratings are decisive.
  • Wise, David W. (2017). How Donald Trump is helping to make China great again.
  • Wiśniewski, Jarosław (2017). Russia ups its game in the Balkans, but the West should avoid responding in kind.
  • Wlezien, Christopher (2017). The public may not be getting the policies they want, but it’s very hard to measure what they do want.
  • Wojciechowska, Marta (2019). Participation is not enough: an argument for emancipation as a foundation of participatory theorising. Representation, https://doi.org/10.1080/00344893.2019.1704849 picture_as_pdf
  • Wolf, Sebastian (2015). How mobile money is revolutionising banking in Africa.
  • Wolff, Emily (2015). COP21 a monster party?
  • Wolff, Guntram (2018). It's time for the EU to negotiate seriously. picture_as_pdf
  • Wolff, Johannes M. (2010-05-26) Rationality, control, or coordination? [Poster]. Relating research to reality: interdisciplinary ideas for a changing world. LSE PhD student poster exhibition, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, United Kingdom, GBR.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (31 October 2016) The Labour party, Momentum and the problem with intra-party democracy. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2016). Norbert Hofer, the friendly face of the populist right.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2018). Why did the EPP vote against Orbán? picture_as_pdf
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2016). Deliberative democracy within parties [Doctoral thesis]. London School of Economics and Political Science.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2016). A deliberative model of intra-party democracy. Journal of Political Philosophy, 24(3), 297-320. https://doi.org/10.1111/jopp.12064
  • Wolton, Stephane (2024). Decentralised information transmission in the shadow of conflict. Journal of Theoretical Politics, 36(1), 64 - 82. https://doi.org/10.1177/09516298231203318 picture_as_pdf
  • Wong, Alfred (2016). The Governance deficit in Central Asia and the threat to China’s Central Asian energy strategy.
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  • Zulianello, Mattia (22 January 2020) The failed integration of an anti-system party: where Luigi Di Maio and the Five Star Movement went wrong. LSE European Politics and Policy (EUROPP) blog. picture_as_pdf
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  • de Besi, Elena (2015). Only an approach founded on rights and obligations can allow for effective and legitimate public infrastructure provision.
  • de Clercy, Cristine (2015). In Canada’s election, Trudeau got the messaging right, as the other parties fumbled.
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  • van Biezen, Ingrid (2013). The decline in party membership across Europe means that political parties need to reconsider how they engage with the electorate.
  • van Geffen, Robert (2017). LSE continental breakfast 1: what can we expect from Brexit negotiations?
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  • van Selm, Gijs, Bukenya, Badru, Kamya, Innocent, Kumi, Emmanuel, Yeboah, Thomas, Banks, Nicola, Elbers, Willem, Schulpen, Lau, van Wessel, Margit (2025). Northern NGO-centrism in localisation processes: reproducing power inequities in the aid field. Development in Practice, https://doi.org/10.1080/09614524.2025.2543349 picture_as_pdf
  • van Zyl Smit, Jan (2018). Sustaining the Rule of Law in the Irish border region will depend on institutional co-operation. picture_as_pdf
  • van der Brug, Wouter, Hobolt, Sara B., Popa, Sebastian Adrian (2026). The kids are Alt right? Age, authoritarian attitudes and far-right support in Europe. Journal of European Public Policy, 33(2), 469 - 494. https://doi.org/10.1080/13501763.2025.2488358 picture_as_pdf
  • van der Brug, Wouter, Popa, Sebastian Adrian, Hobolt, Sara B., Schmitt, Hermann (2021). Illiberal democratic attitudes and support for the EU. Politics, 41(4), 537 - 561. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263395720975970 picture_as_pdf
  • van der Gaag, Nikki (2014). Book review: feminism and men by Nikki Van Der Gaag.
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  • von Ondarza, Nicolai (30 January 2016) What a fair relationship between ‘euro ins’ and ‘euro outs’ could look like. Democratic Audit Blog. picture_as_pdf
  • von Weitershausen, Inez (2015). Book review: the European Council and the Council: new intergovernmentalism and institutional change by Uwe Puetter.
  • von Weitershausen, Inez (2014). Book review: the battle for Europe: how an elite hijacked a continent and how we can take it back by Thomas Fazi.
  • Çaylı, Eray (2022). The politics of spatial testimony: the role of space in witnessing martyrdom and shame during and after a widely televised and collectively perpetrated arson attack in Turkey. Space and Culture, 25(4), 675 - 688. https://doi.org/10.1177/1206331220906090 picture_as_pdf
  • Çubukçu, Ayça (2021). After seeing like a state: the imperialism of epistemic claims. Polity, 53(3), 492 - 497. https://doi.org/10.1086/714548 picture_as_pdf
  • Çubukçu, Ayça (2024). On left internationalism. South Atlantic Quarterly, 123(3), 569 – 586. https://doi.org/10.1215/00382876-11235599 picture_as_pdf
  • Özel, Soli (2014). Erdoğan is in the process of establishing a presidential political system in Turkey based on Islamic rather than secular principles.
  • Özel, Soli, Öney, Sezin (2017). Today’s referendum is the most critical vote in modern Turkish history.
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