All Stories

  1. Australian administrative elites and the challenges of digital-era change
  2. Micro-institutions and Liberal Democracy
  3. “The Bureaucracy” as an Interest Group
  4. Towards digital era governance: lessons from the Australian experience
  5. Assessing democratic quality and renewing the potential for democratic advance
  6. Auditing the UK’s changing democracy
  7. London: devolved government and politics at metropolitan level
  8. The Commons’ two committee systems and scrutiny of government policy-making
  9. The House of Commons: control of government and citizen representation
  10. The Westminster ‘plurality rule’ electoral system
  11. The civil service and public services management systems
  12. The core executive and government
  13. The reformed electoral systems used in Britain’s devolved governments and England’s mayoral elections
  14. The UK’s proportional electoral system: the single transferable vote (STV)
  15. The UK's Changing Democracy: The 2018 Democratic Audit
  16. The basic structure of the devolution settlements
  17. The political parties and party system
  18. The interest group process
  19. “Build a wall”. “Tax a shed”. “Fix a debt limit”. The constructive and destructive potential of populist anti-statism and “naïve” statism
  20. The State
  21. Managing Under Austerity, Delivering Under Pressure: Performance and Productivity in Public Service
  22. Democracy, Bureaucracy and Public Choice
  23. Neither the T Index nor the D2 Score Measure “Two-Partyness”: A Comment on Gaines and Taagepera
  24. The second wave of digital-era governance: a quasi-paradigm for government on the Web
  25. Growing the Productivity of Government Services
  26. Analysing multiparty competition in plurality rule elections
  27. New Worlds in Political Science
  28. Editorial Statement
  29. Assessing How Far Charter 88 and the Constitutional Reform Coalition Influenced Voting System Reform in Britain
  30. Governance and state organization in the digital era
  31. Theories of the Democratic State
  32. Digital Era Governance:
  33. Introduction
  34. Acquiring and Managing Government IT
  35. The Comparative Performance of Government IT
  36. Immigration: Technology Changes and Administrative Renewal
  37. New Public Management Is Dead—Long Live Digital-Era Government
  38. New Public Management Is Dead--Long Live Digital-Era Governance
  39. How proportional are the ‘British AMS’ systems?
  40. Constructing the Number of Parties
  41. Editorial: Introducing Political Studies Review
  42. Authoring a PhD
  43. Publishing Your Research
  44. Becoming an Author
  45. Editorial
  46. The Constitution
  47. Democracy, Bureaucracy and Public Choice: Economic Explanations in Political Science.
  48. Democracy in Britain: A health check for the 1990s
  49. Class Dealignment in Britain Revisited
  50. Theories of the State
  51. Pluralism
  52. Introduction
  53. Cities and Services: The Geography of Collective Consumption
  54. Studying for a Degree
  55. Generating Information
  56. Writing Essays
  57. Writing Dissertations
  58. Revising for Exams
  59. Political Theory
  60. How to Decide That Voters Decide
  61. Book reviews
  62. Book Review: Urban Politics: A Sociological Interpretation
  63. Urban Political Analysis
  64. Reply to David McKay
  65. ‘Big data’ and policy learning