This is who Americans trust about coronavirus information. Shana Gadarian and Bethany Albertson - March 19, 2020 Here’s what our research finds
Delaware offered Amazon $4.5 million to locate a new facility there. Guess who wins? Nathan Jensen - March 10, 2020 Our new book reveals the unexpected consequences of incentive programs
Romney’s not really alone. Republican senators were ready to oust Nixon in 1974. Paul von Hippel - February 11, 2020 That’s why Nixon resigned first.
Australia’s fires have devastated millions of acres. What’s the political damage? Matto Mildenberger and Joshua Busby - January 13, 2020 The government is mistaking an election win for a mandate to ignore climate change
Amazon will move into New York City after all. Did it really need public investments? Nathan Jensen - December 10, 2019 Research suggests public incentives don’t really shape corporate decisions
U.S. military confrontation with Iran would be unpopular. Here’s why. Jason Brownlee - August 19, 2019 Survey data shows when Americans are – and aren’t – up for intervention.
With Boris Johnson in charge, will the U.K. face escalating international crises? Scott Wolford - July 23, 2019 Here’s what we know about new leaders and the risk of military conflict.
Trump and his advisers are probably wrong about what foreign policy Americans want Joshua Busby, Jordan Tama, and Dina Smeltz - July 3, 2019 But, then, so are most foreign policy elites. Here’s what they’re missing.
Congress has NATO’s back, despite Trump’s unilateralism Joshua Kertzer, Joshua Busby, Jordan Tama, Jonathan Monten, and Craig Kafura - April 3, 2019 Surveys show deep bipartisan support for the alliance.
America will lose influence, not gain it, if Trump wins the fight over the World Bank presidency Catherine Weaver - February 15, 2019 [caption id="attachment_83807" align="aligncenter" width="960"] President Trump has nominated David Malpass,