Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Perspectives on Politics is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering political science. It was established in 2003 and is published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the American Political Science Association. The editors-in-chief are Ana Arjona and Wendy Pearlman (Northwestern University).
The free software movement is a social movement with the goal of obtaining and guaranteeing certain freedoms for software users, namely the freedoms to run, study, modify, and share copies of software. [1] [2] Software which meets these requirements, The Four Essential Freedoms of Free Software, is termed free software.
The American Political Science Association (APSA) is a professional association of political scientists in the United States.Founded in 1903 in the Tilton Memorial Library (now Tilton Hall) of Tulane University in New Orleans, [1] it publishes four academic journals: American Political Science Review, Perspectives on Politics, Journal of Political Science Education, and PS – Political ...
Parliamentary Affairs; Party Politics; Perspectives on Political Science; Perspectives on Politics; Philosophy & Public Affairs; Policy & Internet; Policy Review (Defunct); Policy Studies Journal
Perspectives on Political Science is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal covering political philosophy. The journal was established in 1990 by merging Teaching Political Science (1973–1989) and Perspective (1972–1989). [1] It is abstracted and indexed in Scopus. [2]
Patriots (novel series) Pentagon (novel) The People's Choice (novel) Philip Dru: Administrator; The Plot Against America; Prayers for the Assassin; Preserve and Protect; The President Vanishes; The President's Plane Is Missing (novel) Primary Colors (novel) The Promise of Joy; Public Men
Politics (academic journal) Politics and Policy; Politics & Society; Politics and the Life Sciences; Politics, Philosophy & Economics; Politics, Religion & Ideology; Politique africaine; Polity (journal) Pouvoirs; Poverty & Public Policy; Presidential Studies Quarterly; Problems of Post-Communism; PS – Political Science & Politics; Public ...
How Democracies Die is a 2018 comparative politics book by the Harvard University political scientists Steven Levitsky and Daniel Ziblatt about democratic backsliding and how elected leaders can gradually subvert the democratic process to increase their power.