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🌈 ‘Familyism’ and the remaking of care politics in authoritarian populism 

February 23, 2026

Centrism as a structure for political action

February 23, 2026

🔮 Trump and the unmaking of multilateralism

February 19, 2026

Why Iran’s opposition is fracturing – and how to fix it

February 19, 2026

​​​🌈 Hindu nationalists are targeting Muslim women via AI porn 

February 17, 2026
February 16, 2026

🧭 How economic governance makes or breaks EU enlargement

Visnja Vukov Comparing Central and Eastern Europe with the Western Balkans, Visnja Vukov argues that the EU’s governance of economic integration is a decisive lever of transformation. When the EU prioritises and credibly enforces these requirements, it constrains rent-seeking and weakens state capture. When the EU defers them, however, governments can entrench clientelist political–economic coalitions Read more
February 13, 2026

Synthetic dissidents: how AI protects dissent under repression 

Michal Malý Michal Malý and Asker Bryld Staunæs argue that synthetic dissidents mark a new form of opposition politics. In authoritarian regimes, AI avatars and chatbots can propagate risky speech without exposing a single, identifiable speaker. This can protect journalists and activists, but it also changes how responsibility, authenticity and repression work  Read more
February 12, 2026

What The Economist magazine's coverage reveals about the European Council 

Lucas Schramm Based on a 67-year arc of reporting by British magazine The Economist, Lucas Schramm analyses the European Council, a key institution of the European Union. He shows how that coverage explains why the European Council was created, how it evolved, what it does, and why its dominance is both useful and unsettling Read more
February 11, 2026

🔮 Making sense of decades of populism in Europe with The PopulisTree 

Mattia Zulianello Mattia Zulianello introduces the PopulisTree, a new taxonomy and open-access dataset that maps the full diversity of populist parties across Europe over recent decades. Building upon and expanding the existing PopuList database, The PopulisTree helps scholars, journalists, and policymakers analyse one of the most important political phenomena of our times  Read more
February 10, 2026

Transatlantic TikTok propaganda and the end of localised populism 

Mimi Mihăilescu TikTok deportation propaganda is fast becoming the new border wall. States, platforms and algorithms are fusing into a single machine. This, says Mimi Mihăilescu is turning deportation into bingeable content, burying resistance in the feed, and replacing physical walls with algorithmic control. Local populism dies and global spectacle rules Read more

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THE EUROPEAN CONSORTIUM FOR POLITICAL RESEARCH
Advancing Political Science
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