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Why Botter: How Pro-Government Bots Fight Opposition in Russia
Why Botter: How Pro-Government Bots Fight Opposition in Russia

Abstract There is abundant anecdotal evidence that nondemocratic regimes are harnessing new digital technologies known as social media bots to facilitate policy goals. However, few previous attempts have been made to systematically analyze the [...]

License: CC BY-NC-SA
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055421001507
Type: Journal Articles
The Ties That Bind: Text Similarities and Conditional Diffusion among Parties
The Ties That Bind: Text Similarities and Conditional Diffusion among Parties

Abstract: Comparative analyses of party policy diffusion are only just emerging. To better understand the conditions under which diffusion occurs, this article argues that three heuristics – availability, representativeness and anchoring – sha [...]

Constraining Governments: New Indices of Vertical, Horizontal, and Diagonal Accountability
Constraining Governments: New Indices of Vertical, Horizontal, and Diagonal Accountability

Abstract: Accountability—constraints on a government’s use of political power—is one of the cornerstones of good governance. However, conceptual stretching and a lack of reliable measures have limited cross-national research on this concept. T [...]

License: CC BY-NC-SA
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055420000222
Type: Journal Articles
Human Rights are (Increasingly) Plural: Learning the Changing Taxonomy of Human Rights from Large-scale Text Reveals Information Effects
Human Rights are (Increasingly) Plural: Learning the Changing Taxonomy of Human Rights from Large-scale Text Reveals Information Effects

Abstract: This manuscript helps to resolve the ongoing debate concerning the effect of information communication technology on human rights monitoring. We reconceptualize human rights as a taxonomy of nested rights that are judged in textual r [...]

License: CC BY-NC-SA
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055420000258
Type: Journal Articles
The Distinctive Political Status of Dissident Minorities
The Distinctive Political Status of Dissident Minorities

Abstract: “Dissident minorities” are members of marginalized groups who dissent from the consensus group position on matters seen as critical to their group’s collective liberation. This paper articulates the distinctive political status—power [...]

License: CC BY-NC-SA
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055420000659
Type: Journal Articles