Does funding help encourage women to run for legislative office? Season Hoard, Ragnhild Muriaas, and Amy G. Mazur - September 28, 2021 Research explains when political financing works — and when it doesn’t
If the Senate confirms Barrett, Americans could lose faith in the Supreme Court Michael F. Salamone - October 12, 2020 Research shows that 6-to-3 is seen differently from 5-to-4
Unlike the Supreme Court, state courts have responded quickly to the pandemic. Here’s why. Todd Curry, Michael F. Salamone, Michael Romano, and Michael P. Fix - May 10, 2020 At long last, you can listen remotely to the U.S. Supreme Court’s oral arguments.
For the Super Bowl, Bloomberg and Trump are each spending $10 million on ads. Travis N. Ridout and Erika Franklin Fowler - February 1, 2020 How unusual is it for a contender for a party’s presidential nomination to drop so much cash on a single ad? Very.
What Bill Barr doesn’t understand about the office of attorney general Cornell W. Clayton - December 17, 2019 The U.S. attorney general’s office started in the judicial branch, not the executive — and has never been entirely under presidential control
Doctors blame the WHO and the U.N. for failing to fight Ebola. Here's why they're wrong. Henry Farrell - January 20, 2015 [caption id="attachment_20265" align="alignnone" width="620"] Liberian Army soldiers work on a
Doctors blame the WHO and the U.N. for failing to fight Ebola. Here’s why they’re wrong. Nathan Paxton - January 20, 2015 [caption id="attachment_20265" align="alignnone" width="620"] Liberian Army soldiers work on a
This Week: A Colloquium on the 2008 Election John Sides - January 12, 2009 This week, The Monkey Cage will be hosting a discussion
Negative Advertising – The Gift That Just Keeps On Giving - April 24, 2008 Televised campaign ads live two lives. First, there are the