All Stories

  1. Do citizens approve of technocrats? Analyzing attitudes toward technocrats in thirty-one European democracies 1999–2021
  2. The patterns of political career movements of Nigerian cabinet ministers, 1999–2017
  3. The Determinants of Parliamentary Turnover in Central and Eastern European Countries, 1990–2022
  4. Patterns of political career movements in multi-level systems: a cross-national comparison of twenty-seven countries
  5. The patterns of political career movements in the Russian Federation: the case of regional governors, 1991–2021
  6. Presidential power effects on government and ministerial durability: evidence from Central and Eastern Europe
  7. The small world of German CEOs: a multi-method analysis of the affiliation network structure
  8. Expert Ministers in New Democracies: Delegation, Communist Legacies, or Technocratic Populism?
  9. A Motivational Analysis of Russian Presidents, 1994–2018
  10. Soviet and German implicit perceptions of mutual threat, 1939–1941.
  11. Farewell to the party elites?
  12. The Palgrave Handbook of Political Elites
  13. Research Methods for Studying Elites
  14. Recruitment and Careers of Ministers in Central Eastern Europe and Baltic Countries
  15. The Global Encyclopaedia of Informality, Volume 2
  16. Semenova, Elena, Michael Edinger and Heinrich Best. eds. 2013. Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe. Recruitment and Representation. London/New York: Routledge. 336 S., € 102.56
  17. Parliamentary Party Switching: A Specific Feature of Post-Communist Parliamentarism?
  18. Russia: cabinet formation and careers in a super- presidential system
  19. The Selection of Ministers around the World
  20. Semenova, Elena, Michael Edinger und Heinrich Best (Hrsg.). Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe. Recruitment and Representation.
  21. Parliamentary Elites in Central and Eastern Europe
  22. Patterns of Parliamentary Representation and Careers in Ukraine: 1990–2007
  23. Ministerial and Parliamentary Elites in an Executive-Dominated System: Post-Soviet Russia 1991–2009