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Tackling gender-based violence in European universities — through intersectionality

November 4, 2025

Can UN high-level meetings on health deliver real change?

November 3, 2025

🦋 Breaking democracy out of its box 

October 31, 2025

Penelope’s web and the politics of patience

October 31, 2025

☢️ Rebuilding nuclear credibility through fair energy access 

October 31, 2025
October 27, 2025

Is Latin American democracy showing signs of recovery?

Tim Pires Alves After almost twenty years of democratic decline, in 2023, liberal democracy in Latin America appeared to be regaining strength. But has it managed to sustain the trend? Tim Pires Alves assesses whether recent developments heralded a new global wave of democratisation, or whether we merely glimpsed the calm before an even harsher autocratic storm Read more
October 24, 2025

🦋 The pluriverse of democracy 

Ioannis Rigkos-Zitthen In a time of anthropogenic existential crises, writes Ioannis Rigkos-Zitthen, this new stage in the Science of Democracy conversation highlights how plural thinking can help rejuvenate democracy Read more
October 24, 2025

From missiles to malware, hybrid war is rewriting global security

Daphna Canetti With missiles in the sky and malware in the wires, hybrid warfare is no longer speculative. Daphna Canetti, Gal Dor, and Tal Mimran argue the Iran-Israel clash marks a strategic turning point — where democracies must defend minds as fiercely as borders Read more
October 24, 2025

Re-electing Cameroon’s forever president

John Chin Paul Biya, the world’s oldest head of state and the second-longest ruling leader in Africa, ran for a record eighth term earlier this month. John Chin and Julien Derroitte assess Cameroon’s prospects for peace and democracy in Africa’s turbulent coup belt Read more
October 21, 2025

Rising inequality is driving Europe's far-right surge

Lucas Sudbrack Lucas Sudbrack and James F. Downes describe how growing income inequality across Europe has strengthened support for far-right parties. Using decades of national and individual-level data, they find that when the poorest citizens lose a significant share of national income, far-right vote shares rise Read more

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Advancing Political Science
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