The American Political Science Review is political science's premier scholarly research journal, providing peer-reviewed articles and review essays from subfields throughout the discipline. Areas covered include political theory, American politics, public policy, public administration, comparative politics, and international relations. APSR has published continuously since 1906.

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681 to 690 of 705 Results
Apr 18, 2011
Randall W. Stone, 2007, "Replication data for: The Political Economy of IMF Lending in Africa. American Political Science Review, 2004", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/NNMDGM, Harvard Dataverse, V2, UNF:3:NCusF+spwUdef1NOBObFOg== [fileUNF]
Why has IMF lending achieved such poor results in Africa? Is it because the Fund imposes the wrong conditions, or because it fails to enforce them? Analysis of monthly data on 53 African countries from 1990 to 2000 shows that the IMF’s loans-for-reform contract lacks credibility because donor countries intervene to prevent rigorous enforcement. Cou...
Feb 9, 2011 - Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier Dataverse
Janet M. Box-Steffensmeier; Laura W. Arnold; Christopher J.W. Zorn, 2011, "Replication data for: The Strategic Timing of Position Taking in Congress: A Study of the North American Free Trade Agreement", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/UH9W2F, Harvard Dataverse, V4, UNF:5:sOm+noco65w2lZwjoocmIw== [fileUNF]
A critical element of decision making is the timing of choices political actors make; often when a decision is made is as critical as the decision itself. We posit a dynamic model of strategic position announcement based on signaling theories of legislative politics. We suggest that members who receive clear signals from constituents, interest grou...
Jan 21, 2011 - Cassy Dorff Dataverse
Cassy Dorff, 2011, "Replication data for: Ethnicity, Insurgency, and Civil War by Fearon and Laitin", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/QB3BFP, Harvard Dataverse, V2
An influential conventional wisdom holds that civil wars proliferated rapidly with the end of the Cold War and that the root cause of many or most of these has been ethnic and religious antagonisms.We show that the current prevalence of internal war is mainly the result of a steady accumulation of protracted conflicts since the 1950s and 1960s rath...
Jan 13, 2011 - John Ahlquist Dataverse
John Ahlquist, 2010, "Replication data for: "Building Strategic Capacity" American Political Science Review 2010", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/92YTR4, Harvard Dataverse, V2
Encompassing labor movements and coordinated wage setting are central to the social democratic economic model that has proven successful among the nations of Western Europe. The coordination of wage bargaining across many unions and employers has been used to explain everything from inequality to unemployment. Yet there has been limited theoretical...
Dec 5, 2010 - Daniel Ziblatt Dataverse
Daniel Ziblatt; Robert Arsenschek, 2010, "Complete Reichstag Election Dispute Dataset, 1871-1914", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/SMPK2N, Harvard Dataverse, V3, UNF:5:+ntpuzxNl4qKgbRqwERvMw== [fileUNF]
This dataset includes electoral fraud data on every electoral constituency for all thirteen national parliamentary elections in Imperial Germany’s history (between 1871 and 1914). Each constituency-year is coded 1 or 0 depending on whether or not the constituency became the subject of an official investigation for the Reichstag’s Election Investiga...
Apr 28, 2010 - Gov 2020/2001 Dataverse
Anderson, Ashley and Hill, Andrea, 2010, "Ashley Anderson and Andrea Hill's Comments on "Oil, Islam, and Women"", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/OTF0JB, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Michael Ross' paper "Oil, Islam and Women" (The American Political Science Review, Feb 2008: 102,1, pg 107) has significantly impacted both public debate and social science research on the relationship between Islamic culture and gender equality. It challenges the commonly-held notion that women in the Middle East are repressed because of cultural...
Feb 22, 2010
Michael L. Ross, 2010, "Replication data for: Oil, Islam, and Women", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/BHU6SP, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:5:fsZ56s2dvxP26at+iCdOhg== [fileUNF]
Women have made less progress toward gender equality in the Middle East than in any other region. Many observers claim this is due to the region's Islamic traditions. I suggest that oil, not Islam, is at fault; and that oil production also explains why women lag behind in many other countries. Oil production reduces the number of women in the labor...
Jun 22, 2009 - Murray Research Archive Dataverse
Beth A. Simmons; Daniel J. Hopkins, 2005, "Replication data for: The Constraining Power of International Treaties: Theory and Methods", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/APW0R7, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:Ek3SxSgB7PmLcvcJxT1LRA== [fileUNF]
We acknowledge the contribution of von Stein (2005) in calling attention to the very real problem of selection bias in estimating treaty effects. Nonetheless, we dispute both von Stein’s theoretical and empirical conclusions. Theoretically, we contend that treaties can both screen and constrain simultaneously, meaning that findings of screening do...
Jan 20, 2009 - Paul Huth Dataverse
Paul Huth; Hazem Adam Ghobarah; Bruce Russett, 2009, "Replication data for: Civil Wars Kill and Maim People—Long After the Shooting Stops", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/0GNCP5, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:J4qFeArQOQ9B62eoRQ86ow== [fileUNF]
Political scientists have conducted only limited systematic research on the consequences of war for civilian populations. Here we argue that the civilian suffering caused by civil war extends well beyond the period of active warfare. We examine these longer-term effects in a cross-national (1999) analysis of World Health Organization new fine-grain...
Jan 20, 2009 - Paul Huth Dataverse
Paul Huth; Christopher Gelpi; Dan Reiter; David L. Rousseau, 2009, "Replication data for: Assessing the Dyadic Nature of the Democratic Peace", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/ILENEU, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:3:2HgjVIMBMunF+KicvpgcXg== [fileUNF]
The literature on the democratic peace has emerged from two empirical claims: (1) Democracies are unlikely to conflict with one another, and (2) democracies are as prone to conflict with non-democracies as non-democracies are with one another. Together these assertions imply that the democratic peace is a dyadic phenomenon. There is strong support...
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