David Carter Co-Authors "Border Barriers and Illicit Trade Flows" in International Studies Quarterly
David Carter's newest article looking into the flow of illicit goods at ports of entry has been published in International Studies Quarterly
David Carter's newest article looking into the flow of illicit goods at ports of entry has been published in International Studies Quarterly
A new study from WashU’s Department of Political Science points to the potential value of politicians’ unrealistic claims and agendas.
Enamorado will design open-source data software that can process tens of millions of records – all from a personal computer.
Anyone who has played a game of telephone knows how easily messages can change when they pass from person to person. But what happens when these distorted messages spread misinformation?
James L. Gibson's newest book, "Democracy's Destruction?: Changing Perceptions of the Supreme Court, the Presidency, and the Senate After the 2020 Election" is slated for publication in September from the Russell Sage Foundation.
Congratulations to David Carter who is a new member of the editorial committee for the journal World Politics, effective July 1st.
Prati's poster was on the topic of “Building Peace in Fragile States? UNDP and Violence Mitigation.”
Most research investigates why the public embraces conspiracy theories, but few studies empirically examine how Americans evaluate the politicians who do.
Ashlee Chung, who graduated in 2020 with a bachelor’s in political science and in East Asian studies from Arts & Sciences, earned an award to teach English in South Korea.
Professor Margit Tavits, with co-authors Marc Debus and Zeynep Somer-Topcu, are this year’s recipients of the Lijphart/Przeworski/Verba Best Dataset Prize for their dataset, “Comparative Campaign Dynamics Dataset."
Dihan Shi and Guillermo Rosas' new article "“If Foreign, Then Cleaner”: Individual Corruption Perceptions and Support for Free Trade in Developing Nations" has been published in International Studies Quarterly.