Imposing vaccine mandates may be counterproductive, our research suggests Samuel Bowles and Katrin Schmelz - June 7, 2021 Mandates may increase distrust and public resistance
Of course Trump’s authority isn’t ‘total.’ Here are 3 myths about how federalism works. Jenna Bednar - April 17, 2020 The founders designed a flexible system with many redundant safeguards against failure
We’re an all-women team chosen to edit political science’s flagship journal. Here’s why that matters. American Political Science Review's incoming editorial team - August 28, 2019 Here’s the ninth in our series on the gender gap in political science.
The real college admissions scandal isn’t bribes and cheating. It’s how wealth tilts the playing field. Scott E. Page - March 21, 2019 If you can choose from 18 sports and 150 clubs, you have more chances to excel.
Academic ideas are supposed to thrive on their merits. If only. Henry Farrell - October 24, 2018 [caption id="attachment_79310" align="aligncenter" width="960"] Scientists are reflected in a window
Goodbye to the genius who changed the way we think (and you didn't even know it) - August 19, 2015 [caption id="attachment_14097" align="aligncenter" width="720"] John Holland's complexity studies helped us
Goodbye to the genius who changed the way we think (and you didn’t even know it) Scott E. Page - August 19, 2015 [caption id="attachment_14097" align="aligncenter" width="720"] John Holland's complexity studies helped us