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Journal Article
New Political Science (2018) 40 (3): 497–514.
Published: 01 September 2018
...,” Locke’s reasoning is sympathetic to the concerns and convictions of believers while remaining cognizant of the calamities to which religious differences can give rise. Further, he provides a robust explication of the mutually exclusive domains of ecclesiastical and civil authorities, now known more...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2023) 45 (2): 207–223.
Published: 01 June 2023
... in a democracy where confidence in the system requires individuals to believe that their participation matters and counts. © 2023 Caucus for a New Political Science 2023 Politics of resentment democracy representation US Supreme Court counter majoritarian NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE 2023, VOL. 45, NO.2...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2023) 45 (2): 335–358.
Published: 01 June 2023
... with the Supreme Court. Finally, we demonstrate that although support for term limits is generally high, only a modest subset of reform supporters believe that term limits should be a top political priority. These supporters also tend to exhibit weaker levels of support for the rule of law more generally. Taken...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2023) 45 (4): 613–640.
Published: 01 December 2023
... directly responsible for juvenile incarceration. Drawing from an extensive secondary literature on mass incarceration and data on incarceration and crime rates, the paper then argues that there is little reason to believe that school policy is a substantive indirect driver of incarceration rates. Finally...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (4): 545–564.
Published: 01 December 2022
...; it should not take “hard” forms of state violence. Third, liberal proceduralists are wrong to believe that individuals should be free from state regulation to simply choose the amount of work/leisure that they see fit, since doing so creates all kinds of harms for other people. In fact, the state should...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2004) 26 (3): 389–415.
Published: 01 September 2004
... upon intersections between free will and external determinism, by following the fate of John Anderton, an anti-crime crusader in the US government’s Department of Precrime. Anderton is a true believer in Precrime, a government agency that uses “precognitive” human psychics and advanced brain-imaging...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1998) 20 (1): 97–115.
Published: 01 March 1998
... of the “New Left” and of the Cold War in order to confront what the author believes are widely circulating myths about both, some of which permeate Horowitz’s own treatment of these matters, and others of which have much wider currency in American political dialogue. © 1998 Caucus for a New Political...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1998) 20 (2): 141–158.
Published: 01 June 1998
... historians” can settle a controversy by fiat, manufacturing orthodox conclusions out of thin air, in this instance telling us to believe in the “cherries and milk” death of a president. The case demonstrates the sloppy and superficial investigative methods of both pathologists and mainstream historians...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2004) 26 (2): 171–188.
Published: 01 June 2004
...Margaret Groarke Abstract Much community organizing is targeted at local power-holders—landlords, business owners, city officials. For this reason, many believe that community organizing cannot make significant social change—but sometimes community organizations are able to transcend their local...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2003) 25 (3): 385–405.
Published: 01 September 2003
...Judith Grant Abstract This article argues that the frequency and intensity of police corruption scandals indicate that they are not “corruptions” but are the norm. Police believe that they must break the law in order to enforce it. I connect this to Austin Sarat’s notions about the relationship...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2019) 41 (1): 98–121.
Published: 01 March 2019
...Shannon Mariotti Abstract In 1776, a group of political outsiders in Pennsylvania seized control of the convention and drafting process to create a robustly democratic and class-conscious state constitution. These commoners believed governments upheld and extended social and political privilege...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2022) 44 (4): 607–627.
Published: 01 December 2022
... state conspiracy theory group that believes a satanic and pedophiliac cabal is controlling the United States government. In December 2020, approximately 5% of Americans believed in QAnon, but despite increased media focus, there is no evidence that belief in conspiracy theories in the United States has...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2008) 30 (4): 425–426.
Published: 01 December 2008
... on terror" had failed to weaken its prime target al Qaeda. On average only 22°10 believe that al Qaeda has been weakened, while three in five believe that it has either had no effect (29°10) or made al Qaeda stronger (30°10). Even in the United States only 34°10 believe al Qaeda has been weakened. Some 59...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2024) 46 (3): 305–316.
Published: 01 September 2024
...-whether defined in terms of my friends, family, or professional colleagues-who believe that the answer to these questions is a distinct "yes:' Being in a minority, fortunately, does not make me unique. Dan Lazare blazed the trail by emphasizing the need for radical constitutional reform in his book...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2024) 46 (2): 200–201.
Published: 01 June 2024
... an inherent advantage over those of the Left. This book is meant to rattle critical theory; for Busk believes if critical theory cannot defend the objective truth of its analysis, if it cannot harness reason to direct its political designs, humanity will not be able to divert from its apocalyptic path...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2023) 45 (1): 192–193.
Published: 01 March 2023
..., while, at the same time, disorienting their members in supply chains from individualistic, market driven conceptions of freedom. That, he believes, is the key to unlocking the hold of unjust institutions and making the outer limit of freedom possible. I am reminded of Hillary Clinton's message to Black...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2009) 31 (1): 87–88.
Published: 01 March 2009
..., Postmodernism, and Welfare Policy,"l I attempted to address some of the limitations of liberalism, or rights-based thinking in liberal political philosophy, specifically as it applies to welfare policy. I believe that I successfully demonstrated this. Although liberal theory is a workable basis upon which...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2014) 36 (1): 108–114.
Published: 01 March 2014
... of Republican Conservatism, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013, 259 pp. Christopher S. Parker and Matt A. Barreto, Change They Can't Believe In: The Tea Party and Reactionary Politics in America, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2013, 361 pp. Anthony DiMaggio, The Rise of the Tea Party: Political...
Journal Article
New Political Science (1999) 21 (1): 59–72.
Published: 01 March 1999
... intended his text to promote debate among his own community, which he believed to llave a special liking for debate and learning. In it, he asserted that Iustory was all about ideas, and that he was aware of both good and wrong ideas which made up conflictual images of Luo society. His goal was to offer...
Journal Article
New Political Science (2019) 41 (4): 588–603.
Published: 01 December 2019
... Park, FL 32789, USA 1Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado, 584 US _ (2018). © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group @NEW POLITICAL SCIENCE 589 Free Exercise rights of religious believers. This conflict was on clear display in the oral arguments presented when the Court heard...