Everyone loves to hate the IRS. That’s a problem. John Kane and Ian G. Anson - April 21, 2022 Our research found ways to increase public support for funding the agency
How Republican leaders could motivate their voters to get vaccinated against the coronavirus John Kane and Ian G. Anson - October 7, 2021 Our research found an argument that boosts Republicans’ willingness to get vaccinated.
Hurricanes may not discriminate, but governments and utility companies do, our research finds Mary Angelica Painter, Gustavo García-López, and Fernando Tormos-Aponte - September 23, 2021 When everyone loses power, who gets it back first?
Why it’s so misleading to call the Capitol violence ‘Third World’ Shariana Ferrer-Núñez, Melody Fonseca, and Fernando Tormos-Aponte - January 15, 2021 Like too many episodes in U.S. history, the violence was homegrown
What happens when colleges welcome people to campus and someone becomes ill? William Blake and Susan M. Sterett - July 17, 2020 For U.S. universities, legal liability is just one of many uncertainties
Many Puerto Ricans are outraged about how its resigning governor installed his successor. Here’s why. Glenda Labadie-Jackson and Fernando Tormos-Aponte - August 6, 2019 The backroom maneuver might not be constitutional — or democratic.
Unrest in Puerto Rico is not just about the governor. Here are four things to know. Fernando Tormos-Aponte - July 23, 2019 There were allegations of fraud — and then came 889 pages of leaked chats.
This Week: A Colloquium on the 2008 Election John Sides - January 12, 2009 This week, The Monkey Cage will be hosting a discussion
The Dollars and Sense of Public Financing of Professional Sports Arenas - May 30, 2008 Those of us who reside in the nation's capital are