New edition (33:4) of 'German Politics' out.
Articles on AfD, foreign policy, responses to Brexit, voter choice & voter turnout, media framing of the Covid pandemic, parties activities on Facebook and discussions in Parl. on Afghanistan.
Do have a look
https://t.co/jviPGJUGug
Thursday/Friday 12/13 December sees the annual conference of the @IntASGP take place in Darmstadt.
Programme looks excellent, more on how the event goes here over next couple of days.
The result of the US election is still in the balance, but Donald Trump looks favourite to win.
How did the first Trump presidency affect US-German relations? Eric Langenbacher and Ruth Wittlinger investigated.
https://t.co/1HvLIIMDFi
Ten years on from its first ever demo, Pegida is winding down its activities.
@SabineDVolk looks at representative claim-making and Pegida's populist Style in this 2020 piece. Still very much worth a read.
https://t.co/Elwh52SRmg
#Pegida
New article out in German Politics.
@oudenijhuisd and @Recher compare the different responses of Dutch and German employer groups to regulatory attempts at improving the quality of part-time employment.
Available free to view here.
https://t.co/etDj2zMk3U
❗️❗️❗️Publication alert❗️❗️❗️
I’m thrilled to see my first solo-authored paper published in @GermanPolJnl. In the paper I explore the dynamics of negative campaigning during the 2021 German Federal Election using data from the online profiles of party leaders.
How do the attitudes of Germans towards the war in Ukraine impact their voting intentions?
In a new article in German Politics, @CW_PoWi and @SarahWagnerPhD investigate (free to read).
https://t.co/yev52Dv3vW
The International Association for the Study of German Politics (IASGP)'s annual conference taking place on 12-13 Dec in Darmstadt. Given how much is happening in Germany at the moment, should be very interesting affair.
Deadline for abstracts approaching
https://t.co/E4hKdRPeDO
A new paper by Klaus Brummer of @unieichstaett has just been published in 'German Politics'.
Brummer looks at why states sometimes behave in ways that you wouldn’t expect.
Germany’s decision not to intervene in Libya in 2011 an interesting case.
https://t.co/E0AV6YtKNM
A new paper by Klaus Brummer of @unieichstaett has just been published in 'German Politics'.
Brummer looks at why states sometimes behave in ways that you wouldn’t expect.
Germany’s decision not to intervene in Libya in 2011 an interesting case.
https://t.co/E0AV6YtKNM
Germany and leadership in the EU.
@AlineBastein and Wolfgang Wessels argue that under Olaf Scholz Germany has increasingly led within the EU and the rationale centres on a new geopolitical, security-driven master narrative.
Full article here
https://t.co/rCpK7AptJ1
How do the attitudes of Germans towards the war in Ukraine impact their voting intentions?
In a new article in German Politics, @CW_PoWi and @SarahWagnerPhD investigate (free to read).
https://t.co/yev52Dv3vW
Populist parties are the talk of the town.
@SiefkenLeon from @MZESUniMannheim looks at how best to measure populism via party manifestos, putting the #AfD and #Linke under the microscope.
https://t.co/9cqO4WcRIO
.
Going even further back (to 2001), @thedanhough from @sussexuni and Charlie Jeffery from @UniOfYork analysed the drivers of 'multi-level' voting in Germany.
How do EP, national and regional elections 'fit' together in voters' minds?
https://t.co/vhbxuxz74B
5/5
How do we explain the results of the 2024 elections to the European Parliament (EP)?
A number of articles published in 'German Politics' may help us make sense of what's gone on.
A thread
1/5
We can also dig into the fault and go back to 2009 to look at how parties behave in EP elections.
@Wahlforscher analyses the role that issues, framing and attitudes to the EU itself play in shaping election outcomes across Germany and indeed Europe.
https://t.co/ovkChJTigQ
4/5