Tag: Political Science and International Relations

Social media helped shape Indonesian protest agendas
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Examine how social media framing and agenda-setting shaped the August 2025 Indonesian protests, analyzing hashtags, organizational actors, and institutional responses.

Politics should be rigorous, problem-driven, and cross-disciplinary
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Explore how a PPE graduate developed a rigorous political science methodology emphasizing temporal and spatial analysis over behavioural paradigms, bridging humanities and social sciences through.

Cabinet policy orientation and capital inflows in OECD countries
Cabinet policy orientation and gross capital inflows in OECD countries. Transitions to market-oriented cabinets boost direct investment; reform efficacy varies by ideology.

AI-SAR integration improved Amazon monitoring in the Brazilian Air Force
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AI and SAR integration enhances Brazilian Air Force Amazonian surveillance, improving territorial governance and sovereignty through automated imagery analysis and anomaly detection.

Economic negativity linked to abstention and Eurosceptic support
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Explore how economic voting in European elections depends on whether voters blame the EU for economic conditions, driving abstention and Eurosceptic party support.

Matatu access conflicts with Nairobi Expressway infrastructure
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Study examines tensions between Nairobi’s matatu informal transport and Chinese-backed Expressway, revealing how foreign infrastructure reshapes mobility and excludes indigenous systems.

Swiss parties join referendum campaigns for policy and image reasons
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Strategic analysis of political party participation in referendum campaigns, examining public attention, issue salience, and initiator status across 33 Swiss referendums using regression analysis.

Mass Observation offers access to British public opinion and feeling
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Explore how Mass Observation methodology illuminates British political disaffection and polarization through longitudinal archival data, offering researchers unique insights into public sentiment.

Deliberative experience increased perceived legitimacy in Honduras
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Study on how citizen participation in deliberative assemblies increases institutional legitimacy in Honduras, even when participants disagree with outcomes.

Bekasi labor candidates split votes, but coordination sometimes concentrated support
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Examines how Indonesia’s fragmented labor movement achieved electoral success in Bekasi’s 2019 legislative election through cross-union cooperation despite structural divisions and institutional.










