New grant funds open-access publishing in political science Erik Voeten - February 16, 2016 One of our goals here at the Monkey Cage is
This is the endorsement that actually helps a candidate win Thad Kousser, Scott Lucas, Seth Masket, and Eric McGhee - July 23, 2015 [caption id="attachment_27683" align="aligncenter" width="275"] Copyright California Democratic Party[/caption] In any
Why Congress should not cut funding to the social sciences John Sides - June 10, 2015 [caption id="attachment_25880" align="aligncenter" width="1024"] Are politics worthy of serious study?
Here is fascinating new research on crime in Russia Matthew Light and Gavin Slade - May 19, 2015 [caption id="attachment_25019" align="aligncenter" width="660"] Anzor Gubashev, suspected of involvement in
Will cell phones help insurgents? Or the regimes they oppose? Jacob N. Shapiro and David Siegel - February 26, 2015 [caption id="attachment_21914" align="aligncenter" width="620"] Men walk through a damaged area
How did West German TV affect East German protests? Holger L. Kern, David Darmofal, and Charles Crabtree - February 26, 2015 Editor's note: This is the seventh post in a series drawn
News coverage of civil conflict is biased in both democracies and autocracies Yuri Zhukov and Matthew Baum - February 26, 2015 [caption id="attachment_21909" align="alignnone" width="620"] Egyptians queue up with
The (ab)uses of social media for understanding international conflict Thomas Zeitzoff, John Kelly, and Gilad Lotan - February 25, 2015 Editor’s note: This is the fifth in a series of posts drawn
Segregation kills: How social media fuels violence in African states Camber Warren - February 25, 2015 [caption id="attachment_21731" align="alignnone" width="620"] A Somali government soldier walks outside
When Internet access becomes a weapon Anita Gohdes - February 24, 2015 [caption id="attachment_21649" align="aligncenter" width="936"] Credit: REUTERS/Khalil Ashawi[/caption] Editor's note: