Browsing School of Politics and International Relations by Title
Now showing items 757-776 of 814
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Values and candidate evaluation: How voters respond to allegations of sexual harassment
(Elsevier, 2023-04-25)How do voters respond to candidates accused of sexual harassment? The literature on political scandals demonstrates that candidate characteristics, scandal type, and voter characteristics matter; as well as party affiliation. ... -
The View from the Train—Interrogating the HaEmek Train Corridor
(Taylor & Francis, 2017-01) -
VIEWPOINT: WHY IT MUST BE A FEMINIST GLOBAL HEALTH AGENDA
(Elsevier, 2019-02-09) -
Virtuous Violence and the Politics of Statecraft in Machiavelli, Clausewitz and Weber
(Wiley: 24 months, 2010-04-23)This article seeks to problematise the dominant understandings of the relationship between politics and violence in political theory. Liberal political theory identifies politics with the pacified arena of the modern state; ... -
Visual Global Politics
(2021-02)This is the accepted manuscript of an article published online: Ryan HE. Book review: Visual Global Politics. Visual Communication. 2021;20(1):121-123. doi:10.1177/1470357220961331 -
War and Moral Stupidity
(Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2017-07-20) -
"We also deserve help during the pandemic": The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong.
(2021)The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic poses particular challenges for migrant workers around the world. This study explores the unique experiences of foreign domestic workers (FDWs) in Hong Kong, and how COVID-19 ... -
'We Didn't See it Coming': The Conservatives
(2018-03) -
The Welfare Agenda of the Populist Radical Right in Western Europe: Combining Welfare Chauvinism, Producerism and Populism
Recent scholarship on the populist radical right tends to imprecisely describe the welfare agenda of this party family with reference to its key ideological characteristics of nativism, authoritarianism, and populism. We ... -
Westminster’s Brexit Paradox: the contingency of the ‘old’ versus ‘new’ politics
(SAGE Publications, 2019)