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POLITICS EVERYWHERE
One of the fun things about being a political scientist is that politics is everywhere. It’s in Washington, state capitols, towns, schools, churches, businesses, organizations, families, etc. This is a point I always try to convey to students. To me, the ubiquity of politics is underappreciated. At least, it’s underappreciated relative to some other foundationalMONKEY CAGE
That sounds like a simple question, doesn't it? Well, it's not. Let me make it as easy as I can -- by converting it from a fill-in-the-blank to a multiple choice: Who was the first president born in the twentieth century? a. John F. Kennedy b. Lyndon Johnson c. Richard Nixon d. Gerald Ford e. Jimmy Carter f. Ronald Reagan g. It's impossible to say definitively. BEFORE ANSWERING, READ THEMONKEY CAGE
In the summer of 1993, I was an intern in the Austin (TX) Police Department, a.k.a. APD. I went there with 3 other UNC undergrads as part of this program. We spent about eight weeks seeing different parts of the APD, from the truly boring (the airport police) to the promising-but-usually-boring (ridealongs in patrol cars) to the highly-entertaining-if-occasionally-dangerous (role-playingMONKEY CAGE
Good political science writing does not require striking metaphors or clever verbal constructions (while these are not precisely discouraged, they are not commonly regarded as necessary). Instead, it requires simple, direct writing, which communicates its arguments andMONKEY CAGE
In a post earlier this week, I asked whether anyone had conducted research regarding the voting behavior of US military personnel. Major Jim Golby, an Instructor in the Department of Social Science at the United States Military Academy at West Point and a Stanford Ph.D., kindly sent along the following response. Please be aware thatMONKEY CAGE
The death of George McGovern has got people thinking again about the 1972 presidential election. In Salon, Joan Walsh gives what might be called the extreme “journalistic” view of that contest: In 1972 the populist war hero was destroyed by Richard Nixon’s dirty tricks and Democrats’ self-destructive fear . . . Protracted floor-fightingover the
MONKEY CAGE
Japan, an island with few direct threats to its core homelands, became a territorially satisfied state and, eventually, a strong democracy. Once territorial issues are resolved in a state, public opinion becomes more diverse, and the need for large-scale militarization disappears. Party competition returns, checks on the power of theexecutive
DO PRESIDENTIAL SCANDALS AFFECT EXECUTIVE PRODUCTIVITY 4 versus ‘deny, deny, deny’” (Davis 2006, 17-18). In this context, “stonewalling” is the choice not to communicate with thepublic.
CONTEMPORARY LAME-DUCK SESSIONS OF CONGRESS specifically, a moral hazard problem – that does not exist in pre-election sessions. Indeed, this agency problem was the driving force behind the adoption of the Twentieth Amendment, which MONKEY CAGEPOLICYLAWEDUCATIONBLOGSJUDICIALCONTINUE TO NORTH KOREA The Monkey Cage - "Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." - H.L. Mencken. This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. “Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage.”. — H.L. Mencken.POLITICS EVERYWHERE
One of the fun things about being a political scientist is that politics is everywhere. It’s in Washington, state capitols, towns, schools, churches, businesses, organizations, families, etc. This is a point I always try to convey to students. To me, the ubiquity of politics is underappreciated. At least, it’s underappreciated relative to some other foundationalMONKEY CAGE
That sounds like a simple question, doesn't it? Well, it's not. Let me make it as easy as I can -- by converting it from a fill-in-the-blank to a multiple choice: Who was the first president born in the twentieth century? a. John F. Kennedy b. Lyndon Johnson c. Richard Nixon d. Gerald Ford e. Jimmy Carter f. Ronald Reagan g. It's impossible to say definitively. BEFORE ANSWERING, READ THEMONKEY CAGE
In the summer of 1993, I was an intern in the Austin (TX) Police Department, a.k.a. APD. I went there with 3 other UNC undergrads as part of this program. We spent about eight weeks seeing different parts of the APD, from the truly boring (the airport police) to the promising-but-usually-boring (ridealongs in patrol cars) to the highly-entertaining-if-occasionally-dangerous (role-playingMONKEY CAGE
Good political science writing does not require striking metaphors or clever verbal constructions (while these are not precisely discouraged, they are not commonly regarded as necessary). Instead, it requires simple, direct writing, which communicates its arguments andMONKEY CAGE
In a post earlier this week, I asked whether anyone had conducted research regarding the voting behavior of US military personnel. Major Jim Golby, an Instructor in the Department of Social Science at the United States Military Academy at West Point and a Stanford Ph.D., kindly sent along the following response. Please be aware thatMONKEY CAGE
The death of George McGovern has got people thinking again about the 1972 presidential election. In Salon, Joan Walsh gives what might be called the extreme “journalistic” view of that contest: In 1972 the populist war hero was destroyed by Richard Nixon’s dirty tricks and Democrats’ self-destructive fear . . . Protracted floor-fightingover the
MONKEY CAGE
Japan, an island with few direct threats to its core homelands, became a territorially satisfied state and, eventually, a strong democracy. Once territorial issues are resolved in a state, public opinion becomes more diverse, and the need for large-scale militarization disappears. Party competition returns, checks on the power of theexecutive
DO PRESIDENTIAL SCANDALS AFFECT EXECUTIVE PRODUCTIVITY 4 versus ‘deny, deny, deny’” (Davis 2006, 17-18). In this context, “stonewalling” is the choice not to communicate with thepublic.
CONTEMPORARY LAME-DUCK SESSIONS OF CONGRESS specifically, a moral hazard problem – that does not exist in pre-election sessions. Indeed, this agency problem was the driving force behind the adoption of the Twentieth Amendment, whichMONKEY CAGE
"Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." -H.L. Mencken
MONKEY CAGE
bq. The 1969 Vietnam draft lottery assigned numbers to birth dates in order to determine which young men would be called to fight in Vietnam. We exploit this natural experiment to examine how draft vulnerability influenced political attitudes. Data are from the Political Socialization Panel Study, which surveyed high school seniors from the class ofMONKEY CAGE
bq. Conventional wisdom suggests that the best way to persuade Americans to support changes in health care policy is to appeal to their self-interest — particularly to concerns about their economic and health security. An alternative strategy, framing problems in the health care system to emphasize inequalities, could also, however, mobilize public support for policyMONKEY CAGE
_Unequal Democracy_ is one of the best books on American politics in the past generation. It has few peers in its engagement with important, topical questions based on careful empirical analysis reported in accessible prose. Among the book's many interesting findings is this: In the fourteen presidential elections from 1952 to 2004, a majority of white voters in the lower third of the income MILTON FRIEDMAN'S THERMOSTAT Journalists depict political scientists as saying that campaigns don’t matter. But as per the cars climbing hills, campaigns _do matter_ – campaign operatives respond to changing conditions, just as the driver e.g. puts her foot on the accelerator when the hill gets steeper. If they didn’t do this, the candidate would be in trouble.MONKEY CAGE
The following is a guest post from Columbia University political scientist John Huber, and is a slightly modified version of a commentary that previously appeared in the newsletter of the Political Economy Section of the American Political Science Association. ***** There is a powerful movement in social science emphasizing the importance of causal identification, ofMONKEY CAGE
It has been rather challenging for legal scholars to portray the Supreme Court opinions of the past few days as somehow following logically from precedent or even from the past judgments of individual justices. As University of Chicago law professor Eric Posner puts it on Slate: trying to find a jurisprudential explanation for thisopinion,
MONKEY CAGE
This is a guest post by Karolina Lula, a PhD student at Rutgers-Newark. ——- The terrorism industry has grown exponentially since 9/11. Whenever a terrorist attack occurs, a plethora of terrorism scholars eagerly spoon out their collective wisdom. The chance to be included in the over-caffeinated media spotlight justifies decades cooped up in small officesMONKEY CAGE
The following guest post is from University of Minnesota political scientist David Samuels, the author of Ambition, Federalism, and Legislative Politics in Brazil (Cambridge University Press, 2003). ***** In recent weeks millions of Brazilians – urban youth, mainly – have taken to the streets across the country in protest. Why? Politicians, pundits and academics – this oneMONKEY CAGE
Washington State and Colorado legalized the recreational use of marijuana during Tuesday’s election. There are still many legal issues to be sorted out but it pays to ponder what will happen if legalization indeed takes effect. Alex Tabarrok may be right that this will simply become a new norm and that “In the future people will MONKEY CAGEPOLICYLAWEDUCATIONBLOGSJUDICIALCONTINUE TO NORTH KOREA The Monkey Cage - "Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." - H.L. Mencken. This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. “Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage.”. — H.L. Mencken.POLITICS EVERYWHERE
One of the fun things about being a political scientist is that politics is everywhere. It’s in Washington, state capitols, towns, schools, churches, businesses, organizations, families, etc. This is a point I always try to convey to students. To me, the ubiquity of politics is underappreciated. At least, it’s underappreciated relative to some other foundationalMONKEY CAGE
That sounds like a simple question, doesn't it? Well, it's not. Let me make it as easy as I can -- by converting it from a fill-in-the-blank to a multiple choice: Who was the first president born in the twentieth century? a. John F. Kennedy b. Lyndon Johnson c. Richard Nixon d. Gerald Ford e. Jimmy Carter f. Ronald Reagan g. It's impossible to say definitively. BEFORE ANSWERING, READ THEMONKEY CAGE
In the summer of 1993, I was an intern in the Austin (TX) Police Department, a.k.a. APD. I went there with 3 other UNC undergrads as part of this program. We spent about eight weeks seeing different parts of the APD, from the truly boring (the airport police) to the promising-but-usually-boring (ridealongs in patrol cars) to the highly-entertaining-if-occasionally-dangerous (role-playingMONKEY CAGE
Good political science writing does not require striking metaphors or clever verbal constructions (while these are not precisely discouraged, they are not commonly regarded as necessary). Instead, it requires simple, direct writing, which communicates its arguments andMONKEY CAGE
In a post earlier this week, I asked whether anyone had conducted research regarding the voting behavior of US military personnel. Major Jim Golby, an Instructor in the Department of Social Science at the United States Military Academy at West Point and a Stanford Ph.D., kindly sent along the following response. Please be aware thatMONKEY CAGE
The death of George McGovern has got people thinking again about the 1972 presidential election. In Salon, Joan Walsh gives what might be called the extreme “journalistic” view of that contest: In 1972 the populist war hero was destroyed by Richard Nixon’s dirty tricks and Democrats’ self-destructive fear . . . Protracted floor-fightingover the
MONKEY CAGE
Japan, an island with few direct threats to its core homelands, became a territorially satisfied state and, eventually, a strong democracy. Once territorial issues are resolved in a state, public opinion becomes more diverse, and the need for large-scale militarization disappears. Party competition returns, checks on the power of theexecutive
DO PRESIDENTIAL SCANDALS AFFECT EXECUTIVE PRODUCTIVITY 4 versus ‘deny, deny, deny’” (Davis 2006, 17-18). In this context, “stonewalling” is the choice not to communicate with thepublic.
CONTEMPORARY LAME-DUCK SESSIONS OF CONGRESS specifically, a moral hazard problem – that does not exist in pre-election sessions. Indeed, this agency problem was the driving force behind the adoption of the Twentieth Amendment, which MONKEY CAGEPOLICYLAWEDUCATIONBLOGSJUDICIALCONTINUE TO NORTH KOREA The Monkey Cage - "Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." - H.L. Mencken. This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. “Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage.”. — H.L. Mencken.POLITICS EVERYWHERE
One of the fun things about being a political scientist is that politics is everywhere. It’s in Washington, state capitols, towns, schools, churches, businesses, organizations, families, etc. This is a point I always try to convey to students. To me, the ubiquity of politics is underappreciated. At least, it’s underappreciated relative to some other foundationalMONKEY CAGE
That sounds like a simple question, doesn't it? Well, it's not. Let me make it as easy as I can -- by converting it from a fill-in-the-blank to a multiple choice: Who was the first president born in the twentieth century? a. John F. Kennedy b. Lyndon Johnson c. Richard Nixon d. Gerald Ford e. Jimmy Carter f. Ronald Reagan g. It's impossible to say definitively. BEFORE ANSWERING, READ THEMONKEY CAGE
In the summer of 1993, I was an intern in the Austin (TX) Police Department, a.k.a. APD. I went there with 3 other UNC undergrads as part of this program. We spent about eight weeks seeing different parts of the APD, from the truly boring (the airport police) to the promising-but-usually-boring (ridealongs in patrol cars) to the highly-entertaining-if-occasionally-dangerous (role-playingMONKEY CAGE
Good political science writing does not require striking metaphors or clever verbal constructions (while these are not precisely discouraged, they are not commonly regarded as necessary). Instead, it requires simple, direct writing, which communicates its arguments andMONKEY CAGE
In a post earlier this week, I asked whether anyone had conducted research regarding the voting behavior of US military personnel. Major Jim Golby, an Instructor in the Department of Social Science at the United States Military Academy at West Point and a Stanford Ph.D., kindly sent along the following response. Please be aware thatMONKEY CAGE
The death of George McGovern has got people thinking again about the 1972 presidential election. In Salon, Joan Walsh gives what might be called the extreme “journalistic” view of that contest: In 1972 the populist war hero was destroyed by Richard Nixon’s dirty tricks and Democrats’ self-destructive fear . . . Protracted floor-fightingover the
MONKEY CAGE
Japan, an island with few direct threats to its core homelands, became a territorially satisfied state and, eventually, a strong democracy. Once territorial issues are resolved in a state, public opinion becomes more diverse, and the need for large-scale militarization disappears. Party competition returns, checks on the power of theexecutive
DO PRESIDENTIAL SCANDALS AFFECT EXECUTIVE PRODUCTIVITY 4 versus ‘deny, deny, deny’” (Davis 2006, 17-18). In this context, “stonewalling” is the choice not to communicate with thepublic.
CONTEMPORARY LAME-DUCK SESSIONS OF CONGRESS specifically, a moral hazard problem – that does not exist in pre-election sessions. Indeed, this agency problem was the driving force behind the adoption of the Twentieth Amendment, whichMONKEY CAGE
"Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." -H.L. Mencken
MONKEY CAGE
bq. The 1969 Vietnam draft lottery assigned numbers to birth dates in order to determine which young men would be called to fight in Vietnam. We exploit this natural experiment to examine how draft vulnerability influenced political attitudes. Data are from the Political Socialization Panel Study, which surveyed high school seniors from the class ofMONKEY CAGE
bq. Conventional wisdom suggests that the best way to persuade Americans to support changes in health care policy is to appeal to their self-interest — particularly to concerns about their economic and health security. An alternative strategy, framing problems in the health care system to emphasize inequalities, could also, however, mobilize public support for policyMONKEY CAGE
_Unequal Democracy_ is one of the best books on American politics in the past generation. It has few peers in its engagement with important, topical questions based on careful empirical analysis reported in accessible prose. Among the book's many interesting findings is this: In the fourteen presidential elections from 1952 to 2004, a majority of white voters in the lower third of the income MILTON FRIEDMAN'S THERMOSTAT Journalists depict political scientists as saying that campaigns don’t matter. But as per the cars climbing hills, campaigns _do matter_ – campaign operatives respond to changing conditions, just as the driver e.g. puts her foot on the accelerator when the hill gets steeper. If they didn’t do this, the candidate would be in trouble.MONKEY CAGE
The following is a guest post from Columbia University political scientist John Huber, and is a slightly modified version of a commentary that previously appeared in the newsletter of the Political Economy Section of the American Political Science Association. ***** There is a powerful movement in social science emphasizing the importance of causal identification, ofMONKEY CAGE
It has been rather challenging for legal scholars to portray the Supreme Court opinions of the past few days as somehow following logically from precedent or even from the past judgments of individual justices. As University of Chicago law professor Eric Posner puts it on Slate: trying to find a jurisprudential explanation for thisopinion,
MONKEY CAGE
This is a guest post by Karolina Lula, a PhD student at Rutgers-Newark. ——- The terrorism industry has grown exponentially since 9/11. Whenever a terrorist attack occurs, a plethora of terrorism scholars eagerly spoon out their collective wisdom. The chance to be included in the over-caffeinated media spotlight justifies decades cooped up in small officesMONKEY CAGE
The following guest post is from University of Minnesota political scientist David Samuels, the author of Ambition, Federalism, and Legislative Politics in Brazil (Cambridge University Press, 2003). ***** In recent weeks millions of Brazilians – urban youth, mainly – have taken to the streets across the country in protest. Why? Politicians, pundits and academics – this oneMONKEY CAGE
Washington State and Colorado legalized the recreational use of marijuana during Tuesday’s election. There are still many legal issues to be sorted out but it pays to ponder what will happen if legalization indeed takes effect. Alex Tabarrok may be right that this will simply become a new norm and that “In the future people will MONKEY CAGEPOLICYLAWEDUCATIONBLOGSJUDICIALCONTINUE TO NORTH KOREA The Monkey Cage - "Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." - H.L. Mencken. This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. “Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage.”. — H.L. Mencken. WHAT IS THE MONKEY CAGE? “Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage.” — H.L. Mencken The Monkey Cage’s mission is to connect political scientists and the political conversation by creating a compelling forum, developing publicly focused scholars, and building an informed audience. Using the discipline’s research, we help make sense of thecircus that is
MONKEY CAGETHE MONKEY CAGE WASHINGTON POSTWASHINGTON POST MONKEY CAGE BLOGCIRCUS CAGE TRAILERCIRCUS CAGE WAGONCIRCUS MONKEY CARTOONCIRCUSMONKEY COSTUME
"Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." -H.L. Mencken
POLITICS EVERYWHERE
One of the fun things about being a political scientist is that politics is everywhere. It’s in Washington, state capitols, towns, schools, churches, businesses, organizations, families, etc. This is a point I always try to convey to students. To me, the ubiquity of politics is underappreciated. At least, it’s underappreciated relative to some other foundational MONKEY CAGECOP IN THE HOOD BLOGCOP IN THE HOOD BOOKCOP IN THE HOOD PDF In the summer of 1993, I was an intern in the Austin (TX) Police Department, a.k.a. APD. I went there with 3 other UNC undergrads as part of this program. We spent about eight weeks seeing different parts of the APD, from the truly boring (the airport police) to the promising-but-usually-boring (ridealongs in patrol cars) to the highly-entertaining-if-occasionally-dangerous (role-playing MONKEY CAGEWHAT PERCENT OF THE MILITARY SUPPORTS TRUMP2016 MILITARY VOTE FOR TRUMPDO THE MILITARY LIKE TRUMPDOES THE MILITARY SUPPORT PRESIDENT TRUMPMILITARY VOTE 2020 STATISTICSMILITARY VOTE STATISTICS In a post earlier this week, I asked whether anyone had conducted research regarding the voting behavior of US military personnel. Major Jim Golby, an Instructor in the Department of Social Science at the United States Military Academy at West Point and a Stanford Ph.D., kindly sent along the following response. Please be aware that MONKEY CAGEGEORGE MCGOVERN 1972GEORGE MCGOVERN ELECTIONGEORGE MCGOVERN GRAVEGEORGE MCGOVERN PRESIDENTIAL RACEGEORGE MCGOVERN WIKIGEORGEMCGOVERN WIKIPEDIA
The death of George McGovern has got people thinking again about the 1972 presidential election. In Salon, Joan Walsh gives what might be called the extreme “journalistic” view of that contest: In 1972 the populist war hero was destroyed by Richard Nixon’s dirty tricks and Democrats’ self-destructive fear . . . Protracted floor-fightingover the
MONKEY CAGE
Despite it being the constitutional amendment that most altered the design of the federal government, and despite recent efforts by many prominent figures to repeal it, little is known about why the Seventeenth Amendment passed in 1913. Existing histories of why the Constitution was amended to require direct elections for U.S. Senators, rather than having MILTON FRIEDMAN'S THERMOSTAT Journalists depict political scientists as saying that campaigns don’t matter. But as per the cars climbing hills, campaigns _do matter_ – campaign operatives respond to changing conditions, just as the driver e.g. puts her foot on the accelerator when the hill gets steeper. If they didn’t do this, the candidate would be in trouble. DO PRESIDENTIAL SCANDALS AFFECT EXECUTIVE PRODUCTIVITY 4 versus ‘deny, deny, deny’” (Davis 2006, 17-18). In this context, “stonewalling” is the choice not to communicate with thepublic.
MONKEY CAGEPOLICYLAWEDUCATIONBLOGSJUDICIALCONTINUE TO NORTH KOREA The Monkey Cage - "Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." - H.L. Mencken. This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged. “Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage.”. — H.L. Mencken. WHAT IS THE MONKEY CAGE? “Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage.” — H.L. Mencken The Monkey Cage’s mission is to connect political scientists and the political conversation by creating a compelling forum, developing publicly focused scholars, and building an informed audience. Using the discipline’s research, we help make sense of thecircus that is
MONKEY CAGETHE MONKEY CAGE WASHINGTON POSTWASHINGTON POST MONKEY CAGE BLOGCIRCUS CAGE TRAILERCIRCUS CAGE WAGONCIRCUS MONKEY CARTOONCIRCUSMONKEY COSTUME
"Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." -H.L. Mencken
POLITICS EVERYWHERE
One of the fun things about being a political scientist is that politics is everywhere. It’s in Washington, state capitols, towns, schools, churches, businesses, organizations, families, etc. This is a point I always try to convey to students. To me, the ubiquity of politics is underappreciated. At least, it’s underappreciated relative to some other foundational MONKEY CAGECOP IN THE HOOD BLOGCOP IN THE HOOD BOOKCOP IN THE HOOD PDF In the summer of 1993, I was an intern in the Austin (TX) Police Department, a.k.a. APD. I went there with 3 other UNC undergrads as part of this program. We spent about eight weeks seeing different parts of the APD, from the truly boring (the airport police) to the promising-but-usually-boring (ridealongs in patrol cars) to the highly-entertaining-if-occasionally-dangerous (role-playing MONKEY CAGEWHAT PERCENT OF THE MILITARY SUPPORTS TRUMP2016 MILITARY VOTE FOR TRUMPDO THE MILITARY LIKE TRUMPDOES THE MILITARY SUPPORT PRESIDENT TRUMPMILITARY VOTE 2020 STATISTICSMILITARY VOTE STATISTICS In a post earlier this week, I asked whether anyone had conducted research regarding the voting behavior of US military personnel. Major Jim Golby, an Instructor in the Department of Social Science at the United States Military Academy at West Point and a Stanford Ph.D., kindly sent along the following response. Please be aware that MONKEY CAGEGEORGE MCGOVERN 1972GEORGE MCGOVERN ELECTIONGEORGE MCGOVERN GRAVEGEORGE MCGOVERN PRESIDENTIAL RACEGEORGE MCGOVERN WIKIGEORGEMCGOVERN WIKIPEDIA
The death of George McGovern has got people thinking again about the 1972 presidential election. In Salon, Joan Walsh gives what might be called the extreme “journalistic” view of that contest: In 1972 the populist war hero was destroyed by Richard Nixon’s dirty tricks and Democrats’ self-destructive fear . . . Protracted floor-fightingover the
MONKEY CAGE
Despite it being the constitutional amendment that most altered the design of the federal government, and despite recent efforts by many prominent figures to repeal it, little is known about why the Seventeenth Amendment passed in 1913. Existing histories of why the Constitution was amended to require direct elections for U.S. Senators, rather than having MILTON FRIEDMAN'S THERMOSTAT Journalists depict political scientists as saying that campaigns don’t matter. But as per the cars climbing hills, campaigns _do matter_ – campaign operatives respond to changing conditions, just as the driver e.g. puts her foot on the accelerator when the hill gets steeper. If they didn’t do this, the candidate would be in trouble. DO PRESIDENTIAL SCANDALS AFFECT EXECUTIVE PRODUCTIVITY 4 versus ‘deny, deny, deny’” (Davis 2006, 17-18). In this context, “stonewalling” is the choice not to communicate with thepublic.
WHAT IS THE MONKEY CAGE? “Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage.” — H.L. Mencken The Monkey Cage’s mission is to connect political scientists and the political conversation by creating a compelling forum, developing publicly focused scholars, and building an informed audience. Using the discipline’s research, we help make sense of thecircus that is
MONKEY CAGE
"Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." -H.L. Mencken
MONKEY CAGE
"Democracy is the art of running the circus from the monkey cage." -H.L. Mencken
MONKEY CAGE
bq. Conventional wisdom suggests that the best way to persuade Americans to support changes in health care policy is to appeal to their self-interest — particularly to concerns about their economic and health security. An alternative strategy, framing problems in the health care system to emphasize inequalities, could also, however, mobilize public support for policyMONKEY CAGE
That sounds like a simple question, doesn't it? Well, it's not. Let me make it as easy as I can -- by converting it from a fill-in-the-blank to a multiple choice: Who was the first president born in the twentieth century? a. John F. Kennedy b. Lyndon Johnson c. Richard Nixon d. Gerald Ford e. Jimmy Carter f. Ronald Reagan g. It's impossible to say definitively. BEFORE ANSWERING, READ THEMONKEY CAGE
_Unequal Democracy_ is one of the best books on American politics in the past generation. It has few peers in its engagement with important, topical questions based on careful empirical analysis reported in accessible prose. Among the book's many interesting findings is this: In the fourteen presidential elections from 1952 to 2004, a majority of white voters in the lower third of the incomeMONKEY CAGE
This is a guest post by Karolina Lula, a PhD student at Rutgers-Newark. ——- The terrorism industry has grown exponentially since 9/11. Whenever a terrorist attack occurs, a plethora of terrorism scholars eagerly spoon out their collective wisdom. The chance to be included in the over-caffeinated media spotlight justifies decades cooped up in small officesMONKEY CAGE
We welcome back Texas A&M political scientist Diego von Vacano with the following guest post: ***** In one of the most unusual incidents involving international outlaws and Bolivia since Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, suspicion that Edward Snowden was on Evo Morales’s presidential plane led to a major diplomatic row. Putting aside the legitimacy of Snowden’s revelationsMONKEY CAGE
It has been rather challenging for legal scholars to portray the Supreme Court opinions of the past few days as somehow following logically from precedent or even from the past judgments of individual justices. As University of Chicago law professor Eric Posner puts it on Slate: trying to find a jurisprudential explanation for thisopinion,
MONKEY CAGE
The following guest post is from University of Minnesota political scientist David Samuels, the author of Ambition, Federalism, and Legislative Politics in Brazil (Cambridge University Press, 2003). ***** In recent weeks millions of Brazilians – urban youth, mainly – have taken to the streets across the country in protest. Why? Politicians, pundits and academics – this oneCONTACT US
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