The Science of Politics
En podcast av Niskanen Center - Onsdagar
197 Avsnitt
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Descriptive Representation in Supreme Court Nominations
Publicerades: 2022-04-06 -
Putin’s War and Personalist Authoritarianism
Publicerades: 2022-03-23 -
Policymakers Follow Informed Expertise
Publicerades: 2022-03-09 -
How Does the Public Move Right When Policy Moves Left?
Publicerades: 2022-02-23 -
Does the Public Respond to Threats to Democracy?
Publicerades: 2022-02-09 -
U.S. Politics: The Hyper-Involved vs. The Disengaged
Publicerades: 2022-01-26 -
U.S. Democratic Decline in Comparative Perspective
Publicerades: 2022-01-12 -
Inflation Hurts Presidents, Especially Gas Prices—And It’s Not the Media’s Fault
Publicerades: 2021-12-15 -
How Politics Changes Our Racial Views and Identities
Publicerades: 2021-12-01 -
Childcare and Pre-K Expansion: Consensus or Polarization?
Publicerades: 2021-11-17 -
What Makes a Skilled and Conscious Mayor?
Publicerades: 2021-11-03 -
Can Democrats Design Social Programs that Survive?
Publicerades: 2021-10-20 -
The Future of the Biden Agenda in Congress
Publicerades: 2021-10-07 -
How the Left and Right Undermined Trust in Government
Publicerades: 2021-09-22 -
How the Media Economy Drives Political News
Publicerades: 2021-09-08 -
Why Lawyers Rule American Politics
Publicerades: 2021-08-25 -
The Growing Influence of the Non-Religious
Publicerades: 2021-08-11 -
The Role of Political Science in American Public Life
Publicerades: 2021-07-28 -
Why Rising Inequality Doesn't Stimulate Political Action
Publicerades: 2021-07-14 -
Reducing Polarization with Shared Values
Publicerades: 2021-06-30
The Niskanen Center’s The Science of Politics podcast features up-and-coming researchers delivering fresh insights on the big trends driving American politics today. Get beyond punditry to data-driven understanding of today’s Washington with host and political scientist Matt Grossmann. Each 30-45-minute episode covers two new cutting-edge studies and interviews two researchers.
