All Stories

  1. Animosity, Amnesia, or Admiration? Mass Opinion Around the World Toward the Former Colonizer
  2. Labor Informality and the Vote in Latin America: A Meta-analysis
  3. Sweet Talk: Paternalism and Collective Action in North–South Trade Relations. By J. P. Singh. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2017. 264p. $85.00 cloth, $24.95 paper.
  4. Is the Informal Sector Politically Different? (Null) Answers from Latin America
  5. Does democratization lower consumer prices? Regime type, prices, and the consumer–producer tradeoff
  6. The Dynamics of Partisan Identification When Party Brands Change: The Case of the Workers Party in Brazil
  7. The Dynamics of Socially Supplied Information: Examining Discussion Network Stability Over Time
  8. Clientelism as Persuasion-Buying
  9. Race, Paternalism, and Foreign Aid
  10. Anti-Americanism in Latin America: Economic Exchange, Foreign Policy Legacies, and Mass Attitudes toward the Colossus of the North
  11. The Latin American Left's Mandate: Free-Market Policies and Issue Voting in New Democracies
  12. Looking Like a Winner: Candidate Appearance and Electoral Success in New Democracies
  13. Split-ticket voting as the rule: Voters and permanent divided government in Brazil
  14. The Market and the Masses in Latin America
  15. Electoral system effects and ruling party dominance in Japan: A counterfactual simulation based on adaptive parties
  16. Social Context and Campaign Volatility in New Democracies: Networks and Neighborhoods in Brazil's 2002 Elections
  17. Who Wants to Globalize? Consumer Tastes and Labor Markets in a Theory of Trade Policy Beliefs
  18. REPRESENTING BLACK INTERESTS AND PROMOTING BLACK CULTURE: The Importance of African American Descriptive Representation in the U.S. House
  19. Adaptive parties: party strategic capacity under Japanese SNTV
  20. Assessing The HIV/AIDS Health Services Needs Of African Immigrants To Houston
  21. Why is Trade Reform So Popular in Latin America?: A Consumption-Based Theory of Trade Policy Preferences
  22. The Market and the Masses in Latin America