Happy to see this one in print @ElectoralStdies!
In this article, I investigate how districted proportional representation systems affect party-voter congruence for leftist vs. rightist voters.
https://t.co/PPfqIeFFRK
As of today, @EJPRjournal will stop counting references towards word limits. As we did not change the word limits for the tree articles types, this also means de facto longer articles. We follow the (I think) great initiative from colleagues at @journalEPOP.
From time to time, Polisci community talks about graduate students' difficulties, but what exactly are those? We point out job market, inclusion, and financial insecurity based on three surveys.
Dissertation’s been submitted, so I’m coming out of Twitter lurking to announce that I’ll be going back to @Penn as a Provost’s Postdoctoral Fellow and then starting at @binghamtonu after. Excited to join @BingPoliSci and to be back in Philly for a year!
📣 new article @journalEPOP w/ @csestweets data
Winning and losing elections matters more for citizens' satisfaction with their democracy (SWD) when they perceive greater differences among the political parties in their country
https://t.co/nR8B974zkB
🚨CFP Special Issues Editors @journalEPOP 🚨
JEPOP invites applications for editorship of 🔥 two special issues 🔥
➡️General (no pre-set theme), DL 03/31
➡️"Disinformation, conspiracy theories, and affective polarization", DL 04/16
Info: https://t.co/PnTqRYnnXl
Plz RT
Attention all prospective contributors to @journalEPOP:
Effective immediately, references DO NOT count toward your manuscript's word count limit. The editorial team at #JEPOP believes strongly that our contributors should be able to cite all relevant works to your projects. 1/n
Happy to see this one in print @ElectoralStdies!
In this article, I investigate how districted proportional representation systems affect party-voter congruence for leftist vs. rightist voters.
https://t.co/PPfqIeFFRK
These findings add to existing research on partisan bias in districted PR systems, which arises from both the variation in district magnitude and the correlation between geographic location and political preferences.