Content
2020, Volume 8, Issue 4
- 580-589 Technocratic Populism in Hybrid Regimes: Georgia on My Mind and in My Pocket
by David Aprasidze & David S. Siroky - 590-602 Expert Ministers in New Democracies: Delegation, Communist Legacies, or Technocratic Populism?
by Elena Semenova
2020, Volume 8, Issue 3
- 1-5 How Populism and Polarization Affect Europe’s Liberal Democracies
by Heidi Schulze & Marlene Mauk & Jonas Linde - 6-18 Who Uses Right-Wing Alternative Online Media? An Exploration of Audience Characteristics
by Heidi Schulze - 19-31 How Elite Politicization of Terror Impacts Sympathies for Partisans: Radical Right versus Social Democrats
by Lars Erik Berntzen - 32-44 Disentangling How Populism and Radical Host Ideologies Shape Citizens’ Conceptions of Democratic Decision-Making
by Reinhard Heinisch & Carsten Wegscheider - 45-58 Rebuilding Trust in Broken Systems? Populist Party Success and Citizens’ Trust in Democratic Institutions
by Marlene Mauk - 59-70 The Effect of Parties on Voters’ Satisfaction with Democracy
by Miroslav Nemčok - 71-81 When Populist Leaders Govern: Conceptualising Populism in Policy Making
by Attila Bartha & Zsolt Boda & Dorottya Szikra - 82-85 Civil Society Elites: A Research Agenda
by Håkan Johansson & Anders Uhlin - 86-96 Can EU Civil Society Elites Burst the Brussels Bubble? Civil Society Leaders’ Career Trajectories
by Jayeon Lindellee & Roberto Scaramuzzino - 97-108 State Regulations and Elitisation: A Study of Civil Society Elites in Indonesia and Cambodia
by Cornelis Lay & Netra Eng - 109-119 Pathways to Leadership within and beyond Cambodian Civil Society: Elite Status and Boundary-Crossing
by Astrid Norén-Nilsson & Netra Eng - 120-129 Boundary Crossers: The Transformation of Civil Society Elites in Indonesia’s Post-Authoritarian Era
by Haryanto - 130-141 Business Elite as Elected Representatives in Voluntary Organizations in Norway
by Trygve Gulbrandsen - 142-151 Organizational Identity of Think Tank(er)s: A Growing Elite Group in Swedish Civil Society
by Pelle Åberg & Stefan Einarsson & Marta Reuter - 152-161 Three Types of Denial: Think Tanks as a Reluctant Civil Society Elite
by Katarzyna Jezierska - 162-172 Politics and (Self)-Organisation of Electricity System Transitions in a Global North–South Perspective
by Eberhard Rothfuß & Festus Boamah - 173-184 Centrally Decentralising? Analysing Key Policies and Pathways in Norway’s Electricity Transitions
by Tor Håkon Jackson Inderberg - 185-198 Prioritizing the Chicken or Egg? Electric Vehicle Purchase and Charging Infrastructure Subsidies in Germany
by Roland Zink & Javier Valdes & Jane Wuth - 199-210 Geostrategic Renewable Energy Transition in Turkey: Organizational Strategies Towards an Energy Autonomous Future
by Özge Dolunay - 211-222 Cross-Scale Linkages of Centralized Electricity Generation: Geothermal Development and Investor–Community Relations in Kenya
by Britta Klagge & Clemens Greiner & David Greven & Chigozie Nweke-Eze - 223-230 Trans* Politics: Current Challenges and Contestations Regarding Bodies, Recognition, and Trans* Organising
by Mieke Verloo & Anna van der Vleuten - 231-241 Gender in a Box? The Paradoxes of Recognition beyond the Gender Binary
by Sofia Aboim - 242-252 Trans Laws and Constitutional Rulings in Belgium: The Ambiguous Relations between Sex and Gender
by Petra Meier & Joz Motmans - 253-265 Redistribution and Recognition in Spanish Transgender Laws
by R. Lucas Platero - 266-277 Now You See Me? The Visibility of Trans and Travesti Experiences in Criminal Procedures
by Lorena Sosa - 278-289 Contestations of Transgender Rights and/in the Strasbourg Court
by Anna van der Vleuten - 290-300 From Medical to Human-Rights Norms: Examining the Evolution of Trans Norms in the Netherlands
by Melisa Soto-Lafontaine - 301-311 Trans* Identities and Politics: Repertoires of Action, Political Cleavages, and Emerging Coalitions
by Gustavo Santos Elpes - 312-320 Trans* Politics and the Feminist Project: Revisiting the Politics of Recognition to Resolve Impasses
by Zara Saeidzadeh & Sofia Strid - 321-331 Displacing the Gender Binary Through Modes of Dis/Organizing: Sex Toys, Sexuality and Trans Politics
by Ludovico V. Virtù
2020, Volume 8, Issue 2
- 1-5 Editorial: Quantifying Higher Education: Governing Universities and Academics by Numbers
by Maarten Hillebrandt & Michael Huber - 6-14 Quantifying Learning: Measuring Student Outcomes in Higher Education in England
by Camille Kandiko Howson & Alex Buckley - 15-25 Algorithmic Allocation: Untangling Rival Considerations of Fairness in Research Management
by Guus Dix & Wolfgang Kaltenbrunner & Joeri Tijdink & Govert Valkenburg & Sarah de Rijcke - 26-35 Steered by Numbers: How Quantification Differentiates the Reform of a German University
by Michael Huber - 36-47 The Organizational Engine of Rankings: Connecting “New” and “Old” Institutionalism
by Leopold Ringel & Jelena Brankovic & Tobias Werron - 48-57 Keeping One’s Shiny Mercedes in the Garage: Why Higher Education Quantification Never Really Took Off in Germany
by Maarten Hillebrandt - 58-67 Quantification 2.0? Bibliometric Infrastructures in Academic Evaluation
by Anne K. Krüger - 68-71 Governance by Numbers: A Panopticon Reversed?
by Julian Hamann - 72-77 Corruption Control in the Developed World
by Fabrizio Di Mascio & Simona Piattoni - 78-91 Does Changing Electoral Systems Affect (Corrupt) Particularistic Exchanges? Evidence from the Italian Case
by Simona Piattoni & Matteo Fabio Nels Giglioli - 92-102 Do Men and Women Perceive Corruption Differently? Gender Differences in Perception of Need and Greed Corruption
by Monika Bauhr & Nicholas Charron - 103-115 Press Freedom and Corruption Perceptions: Is There a Reputational Premium?
by Michael Breen & Robert Gillanders - 116-127 How Does Corruption Affect the Adoption of Lobby Registers? A Comparative Analysis
by Fabrizio De Francesco & Philipp Trein - 128-139 Islands of Good Government: Explaining Successful Corruption Control in Two Spanish Cities
by Eliška Drápalová & Fabrizio Di Mascio - 140-152 Oversee and Punish: Understanding the Fight Against Corruption Involving Government Workers in Brazil
by Fernanda Odilla - 153-166 Corruption and the Network Structure of Public Contracting Markets across Government Change
by Mihály Fazekas & Johannes Wachs - 167-179 Corruption Risks in Renewable Resource Governance: Case Studies in Iceland and Romania
by Johanna Gisladottir & Sigurbjörg Sigurgeirsdottir & Ingrid Stjernquist & Kristin Vala Ragnarsdottir - 180-183 Policy Debates and Discourse Network Analysis: A Research Agenda
by Philip Leifeld - 184-199 Comparing Discourse and Policy Network Approaches: Evidence from Water Policy on Micropollutants
by Simon Schaub & Florence Metz - 200-214 The Science–Policy Interface as a Discourse Network: Finland’s Climate Change Policy 2002–2015
by Anna Kukkonen & Tuomas Ylä-Anttila - 215-228 The Political Debate on Climate Change in Italy: A Discourse Network Analysis
by Stefano Ghinoi & Bodo Steiner - 229-242 Gatekeeping the Plenary Floor: Discourse Network Analysis as a Novel Approach to Party Control
by Caroline Bhattacharya - 243-256 Us vs. Them as Structural Equivalence: Analysing Nationalist Discourse Networks in the Georgian Print Media
by Nino Abzianidze - 257-271 Solidarity in the Public Sphere: A Discourse Network Analysis of German Newspapers (2008–2017)
by Stefan Wallaschek & Christopher Starke & Carlotta Brüning - 272-285 Incumbents’ Strategies in Media Coverage: A Case of the Czech Coal Policy
by Ondřej Černý & Petr Ocelík - 286-297 Business Power in Noisy Politics: An Exploration Based on Discourse Network Analysis and Survey Data
by Adrian Rinscheid - 298-310 Media Coverage and Perceived Policy Influence of Environmental Actors: Good Strategy or Pyrrhic Victory?
by Adam C. Howe & Mark C. J. Stoddart & David B. Tindall - 311-325 Discourse Networks and Dual Screening: Analyzing Roles, Content and Motivations in Political Twitter Conversations
by Felix Bossner & Melanie Nagel - 326-339 Integrating Manual and Automatic Annotation for the Creation of Discourse Network Data Sets
by Sebastian Haunss & Jonas Kuhn & Sebastian Padó & Andre Blessing & Nico Blokker & Erenay Dayanik & Gabriella Lapesa
2020, Volume 8, Issue 1
- 1-5 Political Behavior in the EU Multi-Level System
by Daniela Braun & Martin Gross & Berthold Rittberger - 6-18 It All Happens at Once: Understanding Electoral Behaviour in Second-Order Elections
by Hermann Schmitt & Alberto Sanz & Daniela Braun & Eftichia Teperoglou - 19-27 Democracy or Oligarchy? Unequal Representation of Income Groups in European Institutions
by Zoe Lefkofridi & Nathalie Giger - 28-40 Electoral Behaviour in a European Union under Stress
by Daniela Braun & Markus Tausendpfund - 41-49 Competition in the European Arena: How the Rules of the Game Help Nationalists Gain
by Zoe Lefkofridi - 50-60 Living Apart Together? The Organization of Political Parties beyond the Nation-State: The Flemish Case
by Gilles Pittoors - 61-71 Interest Groups in Multi-Level Contexts: European Integration as Cross-Cutting Issue in Party-Interest Group Contacts
by Joost Berkhout & Marcel Hanegraaff & Patrick Statsch - 72-84 Candidate Selection and Parliamentary Activity in the EU’s Multi-Level System: Opening a Black-Box
by Eva-Maria Euchner & Elena Frech - 85-94 The EU Multi-Level System and the Europeanization of Domestic Blame Games
by Tim Heinkelmann-Wild & Lisa Kriegmair & Berthold Rittberger - 95-106 Politicized Transnationalism: The Visegrád Countries in the Refugee Crisis
by Michael Koß & Astrid Séville - 107-110 On the Intersection of Leadership and Populism in North America and Europe
by Cristine de Clercy - 111-121 The Populist Radical Right in the US: New Media and the 2018 Arizona Senate Primary
by Jeremy C. Roberts - 122-132 The Trump Paradox: How Cues from a Disliked Source Foster Resistance to Persuasion
by Alessandro Nai - 133-145 How Do Populist Voters Rate Their Political Leaders? Comparing Citizen Assessments in Three Jurisdictions
by Gerard Seijts & Cristine de Clercy - 146-157 Populist Disinformation: Exploring Intersections between Online Populism and Disinformation in the US and the Netherlands
by Michael Hameleers - 158-170 Tweeting Power: The Communication of Leadership Roles on Prime Ministers’ Twitter
by Kenny William Ie - 171-181 The People’s Champ: Doug Ford and Neoliberal Right-Wing Populism in the 2018 Ontario Provincial Election
by Brian Budd - 182-192 Leadership as Interpreneurship: A Disability Nonprofit Atlantic Canadian Profile
by Mario Levesque - 193-205 Charting Putin’s Shifting Populism in the Russian Media from 2000 to 2020
by Tina Burrett - 206-216 Revisiting the Inclusion-Moderation Thesis on Radical Right Populism: Does Party Leadership Matter?
by Laurent Bernhard - 217-225 Veridiction and Leadership in Transnational Populism: The Case of DiEM25
by Evangelos Fanoulis & Simona Guerra - 226-238 Populism and Political Knowledge: The United States in Comparative Perspective
by Henry Milner - 239-242 Editorial: Politicization of EU Trade Policy Across Time and Space
by Dirk De Bièvre & Patricia Garcia-Duran & Leif Johan Eliasson & Oriol Costa - 243-253 Towards Explaining Varying Degrees of Politicization of EU Trade Agreement Negotiations
by Dirk De Bièvre & Arlo Poletti - 254-265 Politicization and Regional Integration in Latin America: Implications for EU–MERCOSUR Negotiations?
by Andrea C. Bianculli - 266-276 Politicisation ‘Reversed’: EU Free Trade Negotiations with West Africa and the Caribbean
by Anke Moerland & Clara Weinhardt - 277-289 National Autonomy or Transnational Solidarity? Using Multiple Geographic Frames to Politicize EU Trade Policy
by Gabriel Siles-Brügge & Michael Strange - 290-300 Managed Globalization 2.0: The European Commission’s Response to Trade Politicization
by Patricia Garcia-Duran & Leif Johan Eliasson & Oriol Costa - 301-311 Huddle Up! Exploring Domestic Coalition Formation Dynamics in the Differentiated Politicization of TTIP
by Niels Gheyle - 312-324 Missing in Action? France and the Politicization of Trade and Investment Agreements
by Sophie Meunier & Christilla Roederer-Rynning - 325-335 The Selective Politicization of Transatlantic Trade Negotiations
by Aukje van Loon - 336-347 ‘Authority Shifts’ in Global Governance: Intersecting Politicizations and the Reform of Investor–State Arbitration
by Anna Herranz-Surrallés - 348-359 Slow Rise of Trade Politicisation in the UK and Brexit
by María García
2019, Volume 7, Issue 4
- 1-7 Editorial: New Perspectives on Food Democracy
by Basil Bornemann & Sabine Weiland - 8-20 Food Sharing Initiatives and Food Democracy: Practice and Policy in Three European Cities
by Anna R. Davies & Agnese Cretella & Vivien Franck - 21-31 Linking Food Democracy and Sustainability on the Ground: Learnings from the Study of Three Alternative Food Networks in Brussels
by François Lohest & Tom Bauler & Solène Sureau & Joris Van Mol & Wouter M. J. Achten - 32-47 Finding Our Way to Food Democracy: Lessons from US Food Policy Council Governance
by Karen Bassarab & Jill K. Clark & Raychel Santo & Anne Palmer - 48-58 Food Policy Councils as Loci for Practising Food Democracy? Insights from the Case of Oldenburg, Germany
by Annelie Sieveking - 59-67 How Civil Servants Frame Participation: Balancing Municipal Responsibility With Citizen Initiative in Ede’s Food Policy
by Joëlla van de Griend & Jessica Duncan & Johannes S. C. Wiskerke - 68-80 Food Democracy from the Top Down? State-Driven Participation Processes for Local Food System Transformations towards Sustainability
by Jana Baldy & Sylvia Kruse - 81-93 Collective Agency in the Making: How Social Innovations in the Food System Practice Democracy beyond Consumption
by Paula Fernandez-Wulff - 94-104 Anti-Democratic Tenets? Behavioural-Economic Imaginaries of a Future Food System
by Tobias Gumbert - 105-118 Empowering People—Democratising the Food System? Exploring the Democratic Potential of Food-Related Empowerment Forms
by Basil Bornemann & Sabine Weiland - 119-130 How Shall We Judge Agri-Food Governance? Legitimacy Constructions in Food Democracy and Co-Regulation Discourses
by Julia Behringer & Peter H. Feindt - 131-141 Food Activism and Citizens’ Democratic Engagements: What Can We Learn from Market-Based Political Participation?
by Jasmine Lorenzini - 142-153 Food Democracy for All? Developing a Food Hub in the Context of Socio-Economic Deprivation
by Sebastian Prost - 154-164 Building London’s Food Democracy: Assessing the Contributions of Urban Agriculture to Local Food Decision-Making
by Alban Hasson - 165-177 Conflicts over GMOs and their Contribution to Food Democracy
by Beate Friedrich & Sarah Hackfort & Miriam Boyer & Daniela Gottschlich - 178-189 Land Investments, Food Systems Change and Democracy in Kenya and Mozambique
by Koen Dekeyser - 190-201 Food Citizenship and Governmentality: Neo-Communitarian Food Governance in The Hague
by Shivant Jhagroe - 202-213 Food Democracy as ‘Radical’ Food Sovereignty: Agrarian Democracy and Counter-Hegemonic Resistance to the Neo-Imperial Food Regime
by Mark Tilzey - 214-223 The Role of Knowledge in Food Democracy
by Camilla Adelle - 224-236 Making Taste Public: Industrialized Orders of Sensing and the Democratic Potential of Experimental Eating
by Jan-Peter Voß & Michael Guggenheim - 237-242 Political Trade-Offs: Democracy and Governance in a Changing World
by Todd Landman & Hans-Joachim Lauth - 243-253 Designing Democratic Constitutions: The Search for Optimality
by Steffen Ganghof - 254-263 Governing Trade-Offs and Building Coherence in Policy-Making for the 2030 Agenda
by Måns Nilsson & Nina Weitz - 264-274 The Theory of Democratic Antinomies and the Identification of Value Trade-Offs in Political Practice
by Oliver Hidalgo - 275-290 Globalization and Modern Slavery
by Todd Landman & Bernard W. Silverman - 291-300 Free Trade versus Democracy and Social Standards in the European Union: Trade-Offs or Trilemma?
by Claudia Wiesner - 301-314 Associations between the Mixture of Governance Modes and the Performance of Local Public Service Delivery
by Yin Lei Win Swe & Seunghoo Lim - 315-330 Identifying Profiles of Democracies: A Cluster Analysis Based on the Democracy Matrix Dataset from 1900 to 2017
by Oliver Schlenkrich - 331-342 Dilemmas and Trade-Offs in Peacemaking: A Framework for Navigating Difficult Decisions
by Anne Isabel Kraus & Owen Frazer & Lars Kirchhoff & Tatiana Kyselova & Simon J. A. Mason & Julia Palmiano Federer
2019, Volume 7, Issue 3
- 1-6 The Impact of Brexit on EU Policies
by Ferdi De Ville & Gabriel Siles-Brügge - 7-18 The Impact of Brexit on EU Trade Policy
by Ferdi De Ville & Gabriel Siles-Brügge - 19-29 EU Single Market(s) after Brexit
by Michelle Egan - 30-39 Why Brexit Will Do Little to Change the Political Contours of the European Social Dimension
by Paul Copeland - 40-50 What Common Agricultural Policy after Brexit?
by Christilla Roederer-Rynning & Alan Matthews - 51-61 Brexit and the EU in Global Climate Governance
by Claire Dupont & Brendan Moore - 62-71 Bringing Gender In? EU Foreign and Security Policy after Brexit
by Toni Haastrup & Katharine A. M. Wright & Roberta Guerrina - 72-82 The Impact of Brexit on EU Development Policy
by Sophia Price - 83-92 The European Union and the Global Arena: In Search of Post-Brexit Roles
by Michael Smith - 93-97 Rethinking Representation: Representative Claims in Global Perspective
by Petra Guasti & Brigitte Geissel - 98-111 Saward’s Concept of the Representative Claim Revisited: An Empirical Perspective
by Petra Guasti & Brigitte Geissel - 112-123 The Redistribution of Representation through Participation: Participatory Budgeting in Chengdu and Delhi
by Emilie Frenkiel & Stéphanie Tawa Lama-Rewal - 124-136 Defining Women’s Representation: Debates around Gender Quotas in India and France
by Virginie Dutoya & Yves Sintomer - 137-151 A New Approach to Map and Quantify Representative Claims and Measure Their Validation: A Case Study Analysis
by Viola Joschko & Luis Glaser - 152-164 Claims of Misrepresentation: A Comparison of Germany and Brazil
by Petra Guasti & Debora Rezende de Almeida - 165-178 The Radical Right versus the Media: from Media Critique to Claims of (Mis)Representation
by Louise Knops & Benjamin De Cleen - 179-188 Political Representation in the Discourse and Practices of the “Party of the Common Man” in India
by Stéphanie Tawa Lama-Rewal - 189-198 Anti-Corruption Movement: A Story of the Making of the Aam Admi Party and the Interplay of Political Representation in India
by Aheli Chowdhury - 199-207 On Authoritarian Political Representation in Contemporary China
by Demin Duan - 208-219 The Evolution of Representative Claim-Making by the Chinese Communist Party: From Mao to Xi (1949–2019)
by Emilie Frenkiel & Anna Shpakovskaya - 220-226 Introduction to “Out of the Shadows, Into the Limelight: Parliaments and Politicisation”
by Christine Neuhold & Guri Rosén - 227-236 Conceptualizing the Parliamentarization and Politicization of European Policies
by Niels Gheyle - 237-247 The European Parliament and the Layered Politicization of the External Dimension of the Common Fisheries Policy
by Hubert Zimmermann - 248-265 Eurosceptics into the Limelight? Eurosceptic Parliamentary Actors and Media Bias in EU Affairs
by Katrin Auel - 266-278 Proving Their Worth? The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership and the Members of the European Parliament
by Guri Rosén - 279-290 Brexit under Scrutiny in EU Member States: What Role for National Parliaments in Austria and Germany?
by Katharina Luise Meissner - 291-302 The Politicisation of the European Central Bank and the Bundestag
by Anna-Lena Högenauer - 303-315 Preparatory Bodies as Mediators of Political Conflict in Trilogues: The European Parliament’s Shadows Meetings
by Ariadna Ripoll Servent & Lara Panning - 316-326 In the Shadow of Public Opinion: The European Parliament, Civil Society Organizations, and the Politicization of Trilogues
by Justin Greenwood & Christilla Roederer-Rynning - 327-338 The European Parliament as an Arena and Agent in the Politics of Climate Change: Comparing the External and Internal Dimension
by Frank Wendler - 339-349 Parliamentarizing a Politicized Policy: Understanding the Involvement of the European Parliament in UN Climate Negotiations
by Tom Delreux & Charlotte Burns
2019, Volume 7, Issue 2
- 1-4 Aid Impact and Effectiveness: Introduction and Overview
by Rachel M. Gisselquist & Finn Tarp - 5-28 A Meta-Analysis of Aid Effectiveness: Revisiting the Evidence
by Tseday Jemaneh Mekasha & Finn Tarp - 29-52 Effects of Foreign Aid on Income through International Trade
by Inmaculada Martinez-Zarzoso - 53-67 The Impact of Foreign Aid on Maternal Mortality
by Emmanuel Banchani & Liam Swiss - 68-92 Foreign Aid and Climate Change Policy: What Can(’t) the Data Tell Us?
by Daniel Yuichi Kono & Gabriella R. Montinola - 93-102 Aid Targeting to Fragile and Conflict-Affected States and Implications for Aid Effectiveness
by Yiagadeesen Samy & David Carment - 103-116 Bypassing Government: Aid Effectiveness and Malawi’s Local Development Fund
by Michael Chasukwa & Dan Banik - 117-126 Too Many Cooks in the Kitchen? The Division of Financing in World Bank Projects and Project Performance
by Matthew S. Winters - 127-154 Do Countries Use Foreign Aid to Buy Geopolitical Influence? Evidence from Donor Campaigns for Temporary UN Security Council Seats
by Bernhard Reinsberg - 155-168 What Does the Evidence Tell Us about ‘Thinking and Working Politically’ in Development Assistance?
by Niheer Dasandi & Ed Laws & Heather Marquette & Mark Robinson - 169-172 The Promise and Perils of Direct Democracy: An Introduction
by Todd Donovan - 173-186 Boosting Political Trust with Direct Democracy? The Case of the Finnish Citizens’ Initiative
by Henrik Serup Christensen - 187-197 ‘Let the Citizens Fix This Mess!’ Podemos’ Claim for Participatory Democracy in Spain
by Carlos Rico Motos - 198-212 Salient Ballot Measures and the Millennial Vote
by Scott J. LaCombe & Courtney Juelich - 213-226 A Survey Experiment on Citizens’ Preferences for ‘Vote–Centric’ vs. ‘Talk–Centric’ Democratic Innovations with Advisory vs. Binding Outcomes
by Sebastien Rojon & Arieke J. Rijken & Bert Klandermans - 227-241 Perceptions of Referendums and Democracy: The Referendum Disappointment Gap
by Shaun Bowler & Todd Donovan - 242-267 Risks and Opportunities of Direct Democracy: The Effect of Information in Colombia’s Peace Referendum
by Juan Masullo & Davide Morisi - 268-277 Legal Regulation of Campaign Deliberation: Lessons from Brexit
by James Organ - 278-296 Losing in the Polls, Time Pressure, and the Decision to Go Negative in Referendum Campaigns
by Alessandro Nai & Ferran Martínez i Coma - 297-305 Intra-Camp Coalitions in Direct Democracy: Evidence from Referendums on Asylum
by Laurent Bernhard - 306-333 Economic Voting in Direct Democracy: A Case Study of the 2016 Italian Constitutional Referendum
by Arndt Leininger - 334-350 Economic Voting in EU Referendums: Sociotropic versus Egocentric Voting in the Lisbon Treaty Plebiscites in Ireland
by Johan A. Elkink & Stephen Quinlan & Richard Sinnott - 351-364 Public Support for Higher Taxes on the Wealthy: California’s Proposition 30
by Caroline J. Tolbert & Christopher Witko & Cary Wolbers - 365-379 It Depends…Different Direct Democratic Instruments and Equality in Europe from 1990 to 2015
by Brigitte Geißel & Anna Krämling & Lars Paulus - 380-409 American State Ballot Initiatives and Income Inequality
by Joshua J. Dyck & Wesley Hussey & Edward L. Lascher, Jr. - 410-426 Explaining Foreigners’ Political Rights in the Context of Direct Democracy: A Fuzzy-Set QCA of Swiss Cantonal Popular Votes
by Francesco Veri
2019, Volume 7, Issue 1
- 1-5 Towards Decarbonization: Understanding EU Energy Governance
by Kacper Szulecki & Dag Herald Claes - 6-16 The Effect of European Integration on Swiss Energy Policy and Governance
by Paul Adrianus van Baal & Matthias Finger - 17-27 Hard or Soft Governance? The EU’s Climate and Energy Policy Framework for 2030
by Sebastian Oberthür - 28-44 A Big Data View of the European Energy Union: Shifting from ‘a Floating Signifier’ to an Active Driver of Decarbonisation?
by Karoliina Isoaho & Fanni Moilanen & Arho Toikka - 45-59 What Drives the Participation of Renewable Energy Cooperatives in European Energy Governance?
by Jale Tosun & Laura Zöckler & Benedikt Rilling - 60-69 EU Agencies and the Energy Union: Providing Useful Information to the Commission?
by Torbjørg Jevnaker & Barbara Saerbeck - 70-80 Constitutionalization and Entrepreneurship: Explaining Increased EU Steering of Renewables Support Schemes
by Elin Lerum Boasson - 81-91 Policy Instrument Supply and Demand: How the Renewable Electricity Auction Took over the World
by Oscar W Fitch-Roy & David Benson & Bridget Woodman - 92-104 Energy Security Concerns versus Market Harmony: The Europeanisation of Capacity Mechanisms
by Merethe Dotterud Leiren & Kacper Szulecki & Tim Rayner & Catherine Banet - 105-123 The EU Emissions Trading System and Renewable Energy Policies: Friends or Foes in the European Policy Mix?
by Marie Byskov Lindberg - 124-138 The Political Economy of EU Climate and Energy Policies in Central and Eastern Europe Revisited: Shifting Coalitions and Prospects for Clean Energy Transitions
by Stefan Ćetković & Aron Buzogány - 139-151 Organised Interests in the Energy Sector: A Comparative Study of the Influence of Interest Groups in Czechia and Hungary
by Brigitte Horváthová & Michael Dobbins - 152-164 Following, Challenging, or Shaping: Can Third Countries Influence EU Energy Policy?
by Benjamin Hofmann & Torbjørg Jevnaker & Philipp Thaler - 165-169 What to Expect from the 2020 Gas Package
by Maria Olczak & Andris Piebalgs
2018, Volume 6, Issue 4
- 1-4 Big Data Applications in Governance and Policy
by Sarah Giest & Reuben Ng - 5-17 The Limits of Policy Analytics: Early Examples and the Emerging Boundary of Possibilities
by Justin Longo & Alan Rodney Dobell - 18-28 Realising the Benefits of Integrated Data for Local Policymaking: Rhetoric versus Reality
by Hannah Durrant & Julie Barnett & Emily Suzanne Rempel - 29-39 Big Data under Obama and Trump: The Data-Fueled U.S. Presidency
by Barbara Trish