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🌊 From broken windows to cultural disorder

May 14, 2026

Libertarian-conservative displacement of liberal democracy 

May 14, 2026

🌈 Gender battles and the crisis of multilateral democracy

May 13, 2026

Does political trust strengthen democracy?

May 12, 2026

Wicked problems are not algorithmic puzzles

May 12, 2026
May 11, 2026

Syria is not ready: what returnees reveal about return 

Osman Bahadir Dinçer Osman Bahadir Dinçer and Zeynep Sahin-Mencütek argue that Syria is not ready for large-scale refugee return. Drawing on interviews with returnees, they show how economic collapse, weak institutions, and social fragmentation undermine reintegration. Policy debates, they say, must move beyond rhetoric to reflect realities on the ground Read more
May 7, 2026

Political earthquake in Bulgaria: landslide victory in parliamentary elections

Milen Lyubenov Milen Lyubenov and Dragomir Stoyanov argue that the Bulgarian parliamentary elections of April 2026 may well have resolved a five-year political crisis through a landslide victory for ex-President Rumen Radev’s new political formation, ‘Progressive Bulgaria’ Read more
May 7, 2026

🌊 US calls for sanctions on right-wing Indian paramilitary organisation

Sonia Sarkar The United States Commission on International Religious Freedom has called for sanctions on India’s Hindutva Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh, for its flagrant violations of religious freedom. Sonia Sarkar warns that Donald Trump may pay no heed to it, because of own ties with the far-right network Read more
May 6, 2026

🌈 The European Court of Justice's Hungary judgement and what it means for LGBTQ+ rights 

Koen Slootmaeckers On 21 April 2026 the European Court of Justice delivered a landmark ruling, arguing that Hungary’s anti-LGBTQ+ law, in dehumanising LGBTIQ+ people, is incompatible with EU values. Koen Slootmaeckers analyses the Court’s ruling and its wider implications beyond Hungary Read more
May 5, 2026

⛓️ Universities: canaries in the authoritarian coalmine 

Jeremy Ko Populist governance poses a profound threat to universities, undermining the autonomy essential to knowledge production. Jeremy Ko and James F. Downes reveal how populist leaders invoking 'the people' against elites consistently reduce academic freedom – and right-wing variants accelerate the decline most sharply  Read more

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Advancing Political Science
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