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 the circus that is politics.
At TMC, political scientists draw on their expertise and the discipline’s research to provide in-depth analysis, illuminate the news, and inform civic discussion. We want the political conversation to include timely, accessible, and sound knowledge from a publicly oriented political science discipline, and to be less dominated by evidence-free arguments.
TMC is an independent site currently published here at the Washington Post.
Who can write for TMC?
We publish political scientists, usually in universities or comparable research positions, writing about their particular area of expertise. Occasionally we publish pieces by scholars in affiliated disciplines — such as sociology, economics, psychology, or history — if their contributions are relevant to politics.
We are especially committed to cultivating and publishing contributors from historically underrepresented groups as well as contributions about issues that have been neglected in the past.
How do I write for TMC?
First, please download and read carefully our Contributors’ Guide and Ethics Code.
If your proposed piece fits with our guidelines, please email us ([email protected]) with a one- or two-paragraph pitch that briefly explains:
- which news or current issue your piece will illuminate
- which research findings you will bring to bear on this topic
- how your post will change public or policymakers’ perceptions on this topic
Decisions are made by a board of editors all of whom are political scientists with expertise in various areas. We are supported by professional editors who edit posts and manage the site.
Please note:
- We do not publish traditional op-eds or editorials that advocate for political parties, candidates, or public policies.
- We accept only pitches from authors, not from public relations professionals.
- We do not automatically extend the right to respond to anything published on TMC.
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
John Sides is a Professor of Political Science at George Washington University. He specializes in public opinion, voting, and American elections. His books include Identity Crisis: The 2016 Presidential Campaign and the Battle for the Meaning of America. He has also written for the New York Times, Washington Post, Los Angeles Times, the New York Daily News, Salon, Boston Review, and Bloomberg View. Follow him on Twitter @johmsides.
EDITORS








Michael Tesler is an Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of California, Irvine. He studies American politics and especially race and ethnic politics. His books include Obama’s Race, Post-Racial or Most-Racial?, and Identity Crisis.
Managing Editor
E.J. Graff
Associate Editors
Vanessa Lide
Lauren Baker
Stephanie Dahle
Marketing Director
Gihane Askar
Occasional Contributors
Larry Bartels (Vanderbilt)
Chris Blattman (University of Chicago)
Erica Chenoweth (Denver)
Stephen Benedict Dyson (University of Connecticut)
Patrick Egan (NYU)
James Fearon (Stanford)
Chris Federico (Minnesota)
Andrew Gelman (Columbia)
David Karol (Maryland)
Gregory Koger (Miami)
Jason Lyall (Yale)
Nolan McCarty (Princeton)
Corrine McConnaughy (George Washington)
Andrew Rudalevige (Bowdoin)
Erik Voeten (Georgetown)
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