The Science of Politics
A podcast by Niskanen Center - Miercuri
197 Episoade
-
Do Congressional Committees Still Make Policy?
Publicat: 16.06.2021 -
Can TV News Keep Politics Local?
Publicat: 02.06.2021 -
Is Demographic and Geographic Polarization Overstated?
Publicat: 19.05.2021 -
How Voters Judge Congress
Publicat: 05.05.2021 -
Conspiracy Beliefs are Not Increasing or Exclusive to the Right
Publicat: 21.04.2021 -
The Resilience of the Filibuster and its Myths
Publicat: 07.04.2021 -
Values and Racism in American Immigration Views
Publicat: 24.03.2021 -
How Media Coverage of Congress Limits Policymaking
Publicat: 10.03.2021 -
How Political Values and Social Influence Drive Polarization
Publicat: 24.02.2021 -
When Partisans Endorse Violence
Publicat: 10.02.2021 -
Right-Wing Extremism and the Capitol Insurrection
Publicat: 27.01.2021 -
The Politics of School from Home
Publicat: 13.01.2021 -
How Much Did Trump Undermine U.S. Democracy?
Publicat: 30.12.2020 -
How Presidential Appointments Reveal Policy Goals and Elite Interests
Publicat: 16.12.2020 -
Why Latinos Moved Toward Trump (and Why Most Are Still Democrats)
Publicat: 02.12.2020 -
Compromise Still Works in Congress and with Voters
Publicat: 18.11.2020 -
Interpreting the Early Results of the 2020 Election with G. Elliott Morris
Publicat: 04.11.2020 -
How Court Nominations Polarize Interest Groups and Voters
Publicat: 21.10.2020 -
Why Do Americans Accept Democratic Backsliding?
Publicat: 07.10.2020 -
Racial Protest, Violence, and Backlash
Publicat: 23.09.2020
The Niskanen Center’s The Science of Politics podcast features up-and-coming researchers delivering fresh insights on the big trends driving American politics today. Get beyond punditry to data-driven understanding of today’s Washington with host and political scientist Matt Grossmann. Each 30-45-minute episode covers two new cutting-edge studies and interviews two researchers.
