Items where type is Online resource and year is 2015

Number of items: 2978.
Accounting
  • Beaver, William H, Cascino, Stefano, Correia, Maria, McNichols, Maureen F. (2015). Business groups manage credit risk by reshuffling resources amongst units.
  • Van der Stede, Wim A. (2015). Hollywood studios appear to plan sequels before they produce the original movie.
  • Van der Stede, Wim A. (2015). Management Accounting Research 25th anniversary conference.
  • Van der Stede, Wim A. (2015). Managers with a history of good results get more flexible performance targets.
  • Van der Stede, Wim A. (2015). With manager performance metrics, the tricky question is how to reward long-term thinking.
  • Anthropology
  • Banerjee, Mukulika (2015). LSE South Asia Centre to launch 1st June.
  • Banerjee, Mukulika (2015). Modi bowled them over, but they are fans and not citizens.
  • Banerjee, Mukulika (2015). What the “Common Man Party” victory in Delhi means for politics everywhere.
  • Banerjee, Mukulika (2015). “An examination of Indira Gandhi’s second term of office offers an urgent history lesson – we need to study it to understand the present”.
  • Banerjee, Mukulika, Gandhi, Gopalkrishna (2015). “Britain celebrates Gandhi today because while oppose he did, he opposed it in a cause that Britain now sees was just”.
  • Dulley, Iracema (2015). As missões cristãs e o surgimento do nacionalismo em Angola.
  • Dulley, Iracema (2015). Christian missions and the emergence of Nationalism in Angola.
  • Engelke, Matthew (2015). Renowned Zimbabwe Writer Chenjerai Hove Remembered.
  • Hickel, Jason (2015). Five reasons to think twice about the UN’s sustainable development goals.
  • Asia Centre
  • International Development (2015). Introducing the MSc Development Studies – James Putzel.
  • Putzel, James, Wade, Robert Hunter (2015). ID Professors speak out on Greek exit.
  • Stern, Nicholas, Zenghelis, Dimitri (2015). Climate change and cities: a prime source of problems, yet key to a solution.
  • Care Policy and Evaluation Centre
  • Bougioukos, Vasileios, Casey, Bernard (2015). The aftermath of the Greek elections: who voted for who?
  • Dixon, Josie (2015). Thousands are missing out on palliative care because of unfair provision.
  • Iemmi, Valentina (2015). Strengthening mental health systems in low and middle income countries.
  • Iemmi, Valentina, Knapp, Martin (2015). Autism: which interventions offer value for money?
  • Iemmi, Valentina, Knapp, Martin (2015). Positive behavioural support for adults with intellectual disabilities and behaviours that challenge.
  • Iemmi, Valentina, Knapp, Martin (2015). Self-management for people with severe mental health problems.
  • Centre for Analysis of Risk & Regulation
  • Lodge, Martin (2015). An environmental disaster in Brazil raises highly problematic risk and regulation issues.
  • Centre for Analysis of Social Exclusion
  • Costa-Font, Joan, Cowell, Frank (2015). How European integration influences the way we think about redistribution of income.
  • Power, Anne (2015). Your vote counts when you remember Selma.
  • Centre for Climate Change Economics and Policy (CCCEP)
  • Bowen, Alex, Ward, Bob, Zenghelis, Dimitri (2015). A cost-effective balance between taxes on fossil fuel pollution and support for cleaner alternatives.
  • Stern, Nicholas, Zenghelis, Dimitri (2015). Climate change and cities: a prime source of problems, yet key to a solution.
  • Centre for Economic Performance
  • Amior, Michael, Manning, Alan (2015). Local joblessness has persisted because of persistent job loss.
  • Cheshire, Paul, Hilber, Christian A. L. (2015). Business rates: hoorah! But watch out for housing!
  • Dhingra, Swati (2015). Book Review: After the storm: the world economy and Britain’s economic future by Vince Cable.
  • Dhingra, Swati (2015). Time to join the war on the error of plagiarism.
  • Gibbons, Stephen (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – human rights reporting: 2016 could be a pivotal year.
  • Johnston, David, Lordan, Grace (2015). In brief...Prejudice in a time of recession. https://doi.org/Paper No' CEPCP453
  • Maurer, Stephan, Potlogea, Andrei (2015). Oil booms attract mostly men, but women flock to newly created service jobs.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). City devolution.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). Transport for the North and the Northern Power House.
  • Sanchis-Guarner, Rosa (2015). Facebook or Wikipedia? ICT and education: evidence from student home addresses.
  • Valero, Anna (2015). A clear growth strategy would steer the UK away from short-term solutions to its productivity puzzle.
  • Centre for Philosophy of Natural and Social Sciences (CPNSS)
  • LSE Philosophy Blog (2015). BJUP interview with John Worrall.
  • Roberts, Bryan W. (2015). Weak interactions and the curious little arrow of time.
  • Conflict Research Programme
  • Ishkanian, Armine, Bechler, Rosemary (2015). The Squares and Beyond.
  • Kaldor, Mary (2015). Subterranean Politics in Europe after the Greek Elections.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2015). The Ukraine crisis is forcing the EU to abandon normative power and act more strategically in its eastern neighbourhood.
  • Economics
  • Amior, Michael, Manning, Alan (2015). Local joblessness has persisted because of persistent job loss.
  • Bandiera, Oriana, Prat, Andrea, Sadun, Raffaella (2015). In family-owned businesses, professional CEOs work longerhours than owner-CEOs.
  • Bandiera, Oriana, Tobias, Julia (2015). Hiring do-gooders or go-getters: attracting talent to improve public service delivery.
  • Bloom, Nicholas, Van Reenen, John (2015). Healthcare competition can improve management quality and save lives.
  • Burgess, Robin (2015). Tackling extreme poverty: in conversation with Robin Burgess.
  • Costa-Font, Joan, Cowell, Frank (2015). How European integration influences the way we think about redistribution of income.
  • Dhingra, Swati (2015). Book Review: After the storm: the world economy and Britain’s economic future by Vince Cable.
  • Dhingra, Swati (2015). Time to join the war on the error of plagiarism.
  • Leape, Jonathan (2015). Zero-draft proposal on sustainable development goals falls short.
  • Valero, Anna (2015). A clear growth strategy would steer the UK away from short-term solutions to its productivity puzzle.
  • Young, Kevin, Pagliari, Stefano (2015). When the business community unites as a lobbying force.
  • European Institute
  • Afonso, Whitney (2015). A lack of transparency is leading to a fiscal illusion where citizens underestimate their tax burdens and the cost of government.
  • Ahlfeldt, Gabriel M., Cheshire, Paul (2015). What is good architecture worth?
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2015). The 2015 Spanish general election: a final look at the parties and the polls.
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2015). Catalonia is facing a deeply uncertain future – whether inside or outside of Spain.
  • Bartlett, Will (2015). Croatia’s economy under Milanović: recession and policy response.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). Britain’s risky euro-out strategy.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). Deepening EU economic governance: the next steps.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). Lies, damned lies and statistics on the UK’s EU membership.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). No movement in Brussels: Cameron needs to come up with another way to cut EU migration.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). ‘OK, David’ – No 10 will be quietly satisfied with Tusk’s initial response to Cameron’s renegotiation demands.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). What might Brexit look like? No one really knows.
  • Bryant, Rebecca (2015). Cyprus ‘peace water’ project: how it could affect Greek-Turkish relations on the island.
  • Cheshire, Paul (2015). Are they green *belts* by accident?
  • Cheshire, Paul, Hilber, Christian A. L. (2015). Business rates: hoorah! But watch out for housing!
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2015). Italy is stretching budget flexibility to the limit, raising a number of issues over EU fiscal rules.
  • Corbett, Anne (2015). Commission hearing: just how much do British universities need the EU?
  • Costa-Font, Joan, Cowell, Frank (2015). How European integration influences the way we think about redistribution of income.
  • Coulter, Steve (2015). Reforming UK labour regulation in or outside the EU would be hard work.
  • Coulter, Steve (2015). Reforming UK labour regulation – in or out of the EU – would be hard work.
  • Coulter, Steve (2015). Tsipras to Germany: German taxpayers are not paying for Greek pensions.
  • Doan, Long, Miller, Lisa, Loehr, Annalise (2015). Americans support partnership benefits for same-sex couples, but are less positive towards marriage rights and showing affection in public.
  • Doherty, David (2015). Biases in inferences about representatives’ motives may reinforce political acrimony.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). Can Greece make the choice?
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). SYRIZA is not just for ‘Christmas’….
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). When populism fails.
  • Featherstone, Kevin, Papadimitriou, Dimitris (2015). Greece: the paradox of power.
  • Gerba, Eddie (2015). The Fed’s rate rise may not provide enough of a boost to the financial sector to allow the US recovery to take off.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Boston to bid for Olympics, Oklahoma earthquakes, and Montana GOP’s mistakes: US state blog round up for 3 – 9 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Budget woes in Massachusetts and Kansas, Texas overturnsschool pastry ban, and ethics in Wyoming’s legislature: USstate blog round up for 10 – 16 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Corruption in New York, same-sex marriage in Alabama, and is North Dakota facing a jobs crisis? : US state blog round up for 17 – 23 January.
  • Glendinning, Simon (2015). Derrida and Europe beyond Eurocentrism and anti-Eurocentrism.
  • Hagemann, Sara (2015). The ‘No’ in Denmark’s EU referendum poses a dilemma for all EU governments, not least the UK.
  • Hix, Simon, Hagemann, Sara (2015). Does the UK win or lose in the Council of Ministers?
  • Hobolt, Sara (2015). What lessons can Britain learn from other EU referendums?
  • Hopkin, Jonathan, Moreno, Luis, Quiroga, Alejandro, Olivas, Jose Javier, Basta, Karlo, Costa-i-Font, Joan, Borrell Porta, Mireia (2015). Experts react: Catalan elections.
  • Ker-Lindsay, James, Mitrovic, Olga, Hronesova, Jessie, Merdžanović, Adis, Kmezić, Marko, Krasniqi, Gëzim, Buhari-Gulmez, Didem, Hoxhaj, Andi (2015). Political reactions to the Paris attacks: from national unity to politics as usual.
  • Krešimir, Macan, Bartlett, Will, Selo Sabic, Senada, Brankovic, Nina, Mihajlović, Nikola (2015). Croatian parliamentary elections 2015: expert reactions.
  • La Raja, Ray (2015). Campaign finance laws that make small donations public maylead to fewer people contributing and to smaller donations.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). Between two poor alternatives, either is ok(-ish).
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). From hope to concern and from concern to hopefulness.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The IMF’s preliminary draft debt sustainability analysis: what does it mean?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The benign somersault.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The going gets tough….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The negotiation that never happened….
  • Myant, Martin, Horwitz, Laszlo (2015). Spain’s labour market reforms: no solution to its employment problems.
  • Ozyurek, Esra, Ayata, Bilgin (2015). Turkey’s war against peace: why the EU should rethink its support for Erdoğan.
  • Schelkle, Waltraud (2015). The City and the EU: too big to stay — or too big to go?
  • Finance
  • Bustamante, Maria Cecilia (2015). Intra-industry competition informs stock markets investment decisions.
  • Firoz Lalji Institute for Africa
  • Coast, Ernestina, Freeman, Emily (2015). Lack of awareness of Zambia’s abortion law leads to unsafe practices.
  • Gender Studies
  • Acciari, Louisa (2015). Women have nothing to be forgiven for.
  • Benge, Victoria (2015). Intergenerational relationships: Case study of Stephen Fry and Elliott Spencer.
  • Billington-Murphy, Kady (2015). The legacy of the coalition government: a double standard on women’s rights.
  • Eloit, Ilana (2015). Sarah Schulman on ‘Conflict Is Not Abuse’: Rethinking community responsibility outside of the state apparatus.
  • Gilchrist, Kate (2015). Intersections of gender, sexuality, race and age in the privileging of coupledom. picture_as_pdf
  • Lacey, Nicola (2015). Childcare is a central issue in women’s participation and advancement in business.
  • Mikulak, Magdalena (2015). The Polish Parliamentary elections 2015: A gender analysis.
  • Wilson, Kalpana (2015). Prime Minister Modi’s UK visit: protests gather momentum.
  • [Unknown], Nicci (2015). Someone you know: the Rapist. Examining perpetration at the Clear Lines Festival.
  • Geography and Environment
  • Ahlfeldt, Gabriel M., Cheshire, Paul (2015). What is good architecture worth?
  • Chant, Sylvia (2015). Gambian diaspora: Signs of separation and symbiosis.
  • Cheshire, Paul (2015). Are they green *belts* by accident?
  • Cheshire, Paul, Hilber, Christian A. L. (2015). Business rates: hoorah! But watch out for housing!
  • Evans, Alice (2015). Academic Research – Stories you don’t get to hear.
  • Freeman, Mark, Groom, Ben, Zechauser, Richard (2015). Refining the climate science will be essential for firms’ ability to adapt to global warming.
  • Gibbons, Stephen (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – human rights reporting: 2016 could be a pivotal year.
  • Hilber, Christian A. L. (2015). Help-to-Buy ISAs will end up feathering nests of the wealthy – here’s how.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). City devolution.
  • Storper, Michael (2015). My neighbourhood: the 13 November Paris massacres.
  • Storper, Michael, Kemeny, Thomas, Makarem, Naji, Osman, Taner (2015). A tale of two cities: how San Francisco surged forward while LA fell behind.
  • Government
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2015). The 2015 Spanish general election: a final look at the parties and the polls.
  • Balfour, Sebastian (2015). Catalonia is facing a deeply uncertain future – whether inside or outside of Spain.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hix, Simon (2015). Britain’s evolving multi-party system(s).
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hix, Simon, Travers, Tony (2015). New electoral registration rules mean students are likely to be under-represented in the 2015 election.
  • Boone, Catherine, Wahman, Michael (2015). #Zambia Presidential Elections: Why is it so hard to predict a potential winner?
  • Brett, Daniel, Knott, Ellie, Popșoi, Mihai (2015). The ‘billion dollar protests’ in Moldova are threatening the survival of the country’s political elite.
  • Bruter, Michael, Harrison, Sarah (2015). Granting 16 and 17 years olds the right to vote is not a panacea for youth engagement in politics, but it is necessary for democracy.
  • Cullinane, Carl, Dunleavy, Patrick (2015). How to use the Democratic Dashboard.
  • Department of Government blog (2015). Professor Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey elected Fellow of the British Academy.
  • Department of Government blog (2015). Undergraduate internship scheme: what’s it like to work as a research assistant?
  • Dixon, Arthur, Hood, Christopher, Travers, Tony (2015). The evidence paradox – or when is a series not a series?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2015). 'First you see, then you know’: becoming more creative in academic work.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2015). The remaking of a Euro Brit? Unless many more UK voters express positive support for things European, a ‘spiral of silence’ could yet undermine the campaign to stay in.
  • Frantescu, Doru (2015). Since you’ve been gone: five ways EU policy is likely to change if Britain leaves.
  • Freier, Luisa Feline, Arcarazo, Diego Acosta (2015). South America’s moves to liberalize irregular migration are in stark contrast to the punitive and fatal policies of the U.S. and Europe.
  • Gerver, Mollie (2015). Data Privacy: an ethical dilemma.
  • Green, Fergus (2015). New economics of climate change action challenges ‘costly burden’ arguments.
  • Hix, Simon (2015). Brits know less about the EU than anyone else.
  • Hix, Simon (2015). Is the UK marginalised in the EU?
  • Hix, Simon (2015). UK influence in Europe series: British MEPs lose most often in the European Parliament.
  • Hix, Simon (2015). UK influence in Europe series: is the UK at the top table in EU negotiations?
  • Hix, Simon (2015). The UK: close to the centre of European Council decision-making.
  • Hix, Simon (2015). When MEPs vote, the UK’s delegation is increasingly marginalised.
  • Hix, Simon, Hagemann, Sara (2015). Does the UK win or lose in the Council of Ministers?
  • Hope, David (2015). What the loud “No” in the Greek referendum means for the Eurozone.
  • Hopkin, Jonathan, Moreno, Luis, Quiroga, Alejandro, Olivas, Jose Javier, Basta, Karlo, Costa-i-Font, Joan, Borrell Porta, Mireia (2015). Experts react: Catalan elections.
  • Jablonski, Ryan S. (2015). The price of piracy in Somalia.
  • Jones, George (2015). Changing the centralist culture.
  • Ketchley, Neil, Biggs, Michael (2015). Who actually died in Egypt’s Rabaa massacre.
  • Kissane, Bill (2015). Division, Reconstruction, Reconciliation: what happens to identity after civil war?
  • Kissane, Bill (2015). Does engaging the public in the constitutional process depend on the existence of a ‘constitutional identity’?
  • Kissane, Bill (2015). The tragedy of Syria and the nature of civil war.
  • Knott, Eleanor (2015). Do Crimeans see themselves as Russian or Ukrainian? It’s complicated.
  • Knott, Eleanor (2015). Identity politics and kin-state relations from the bottom-up in Crimea and Moldova.
  • Kostovicova, Denisa (2015). Women in conflict: violence, injustice and power.
  • Kukathas, Chandran (2015). Why immigration controls resemble apartheid in their adverse consequences for freedom.
  • Lankina, Tomila V. (2015). Russian citizens owe it to Boris Nemtsov to keep the hope of democracy in Russia alive.
  • Lloyd, Delia, Willats, Prudence (2015). Media and accountability- lessons from fragile settings.
  • Lodge, Martin (2015). An environmental disaster in Brazil raises highly problematic risk and regulation issues.
  • Mazor, Joe (2015). The good neighbour nation: The democracy of everyday life.
  • Mossleman, Bella (2015). The value of volunteering: “One of the highlights of university”.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2015). The Ukraine crisis is forcing the EU to abandon normative power and act more strategically in its eastern neighbourhood.
  • Pennill, Matthew (2015). Widening Participation gave me the opportunity to develop skills and help young people achieve their potential.
  • Phillips, Anne (2015). Confronting gender inequality: How far have we come in the UK?
  • Popescu, Diana (2015). The Romanians are coming: open borders but no exit.
  • Price, Laura (2015). Volunteering opened my eyes and enriched my university experience.
  • Rogers, Martin (2015). Labour likely to hold Oldham but face UKIP surge.
  • Rogers, Martin (2015). Oldham: post-election analysis.
  • Sen Sharma, Flavy (2015). Efficiency in branding: what are the paradigms?
  • Skorge, Øyvind (2015). Mind the pay gap: will Cameron’s proposals achieve workplace gender equality?
  • Travers, Tony (2015). Book Review: Taking power back: putting people in charge of politics by Simon Parker.
  • Travers, Tony (2015). London – The election in the capital.
  • Valentini, Laura (2015). Laura Valentini wins a Philip Leverhulme Prize for her research.
  • Vibert, Frank (2015). Can Cameron achieve a new relationship between member states inside the eurozone and those outside?
  • Vibert, Frank (2015). David Cameron is challenging the EU’s own explanation for its unpopularity.
  • Vibert, Frank (2015). Going Dutch: can Cameron secure subsidiarity reforms without treaty change?
  • Vibert, Frank (2015). Tough competition: why cutting regulation is so hard for the EU.
  • Zoido, Paula (2015). Jeremy Corbyn’s ‘women only carriages’ proposal shows an alarming lack of understanding of the real causes of harassment.
  • Grantham Research Institute
  • Averchenkova, Alina, Crick, Florence (2015). Where do multinationals fit in global efforts to adapt to climate change?
  • Bowen, Alex, Ward, Bob, Zenghelis, Dimitri (2015). A cost-effective balance between taxes on fossil fuel pollution and support for cleaner alternatives.
  • Falkner, Robert (2015). Business involvement in climate negotiations has come a long way.
  • Green, Fergus (2015). New economics of climate change action challenges ‘costly burden’ arguments.
  • Kattumuri, Ruth (2015). Sustainable Development: the goals and the challenges ahead.
  • LSE, Business Review (2015). Growth of emerging markets, new technologies and urbanisation are historic world shift.
  • Sharman, Amelia (2015). Book review: energy poverty: global challenges and local solutions edited by Antoine Halff, Benjamin K. Sovacool, and Jon Rozhon.
  • Stern, Nicholas, Zenghelis, Dimitri (2015). Climate change and cities: a prime source of problems, yet key to a solution.
  • Hellenic Observatory
  • Bougioukos, Vasileios, Casey, Bernard (2015). Who wanted what? An aftermath of the public debate on Greek elections.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). Can Greece make the choice?
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). SYRIZA is not just for ‘Christmas’….
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). When populism fails.
  • Featherstone, Kevin, Papadimitriou, Dimitris (2015). Greece: the paradox of power.
  • Louri-Dendrinou, Eleni (2015). Questioning Greece’s future from the other side of the Atlantic.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). Between two poor alternatives, either is ok(-ish).
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). From hope to concern and from concern to hopefulness.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The IMF’s preliminary draft debt sustainability analysis: what does it mean?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The benign somersault.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The going gets tough….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The negotiation that never happened….
  • Sotiropoulos, Dimitri A., Tsirbas, Yannis (2015). Greek MPs pro European but weary of European institutions.
  • Tinios, Platon (2015). Pension poor and housing rich in Greece? A generational perspective argues for policy entrepreneurship.
  • India Observatory
  • Kattumuri, Ruth (2015). Sustainable Development: the goals and the challenges ahead.
  • Stern, Nicholas, Zenghelis, Dimitri (2015). Climate change and cities: a prime source of problems, yet key to a solution.
  • International Development
  • Boone, Catherine, Wahman, Michael (2015). #Zambia Presidential Elections: Why is it so hard to predict a potential winner?
  • Dyson, Tim (2015). Birth control can solve problems: Tim Dyson talks sustainability at the UN Commission.
  • Dyson, Tim (2015). Demographer Dyson in demand ahead of World Population Day.
  • Faguet, Jean-Paul (2015). The Great Lecture Notes Debate.
  • Forsyth, Tim (2015). Tim Forsyth: Ecological Functions and Functionings.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2015). Corruption, protest and militancy.
  • Fox, Sean, Dyson, Tim (2015). Part 2: is population growth good or bad for economic development?
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). Tim Allen faces Gearty Grilling on fieldwork in Africa.
  • Green, Duncan (2015). Africa is rising – but for whom? Winnie Byanyima captivates a full house at LSE.
  • Green, Duncan, Green, Elliott D., Weinhold, Diana (2015). Response to Angus Deaton’s award of the Nobel Prize in Economics.
  • Green, Elliott D. (2015). Immigration offers scope for boosting democracy – Elliott Green.
  • Gulati, Kris (2015). “Child sacrifice is pervasive!?” Tim Allen tackles the BBC on Uganda.
  • Hanlon, Joseph (2015). Joseph Hanlon: Elections losers often cry fraud. Can we use data to check?
  • Hijab, Nadia, Tartir, Alaa (2015). And when Abbas goes?
  • Hijab, Nadia, Tartir, Alaa (2015). Israel’s cynical new strategy: reframe Palestine debate as a religious battle, when it is really about civil rights.
  • Hopwood, Julian, Porter, Holly E., Saum, Nangiro (2015). Karamojong women and the extremes of insecurity.
  • Howell, Jude (2015). Is being more like China the answer for Britain? – Jude Howell.
  • Ibreck, Rachel (2015). Justice in practice: South Sudan.
  • International Development (2015). Introducing the MSc African Development – Cathy Boone.
  • International Development (2015). Introducing the MSc Development Management – Jean-Paul Faguet.
  • International Development (2015). Introducing the MSc Development Studies – James Putzel.
  • International Development (2015). Introducing the MSc International Development & Humanitarian Emergencies – Stuart Gordon.
  • International Development (2015). Is texting / Tweeting in lectures good for learning, or just a needless distraction?
  • International Development (2015). Response to the Repeal of China’s One-Child Policy: Part 2 – The Economic Transformation.
  • International Development (2015). Welcome to the LSE. It’s not for the faint-hearted.
  • Juma, Jamal, Hilal, Jamil, Ali, Nijmeh, Shaheen, Khalil, Suleiman, Jaber, Abu Samra, Mjriam, Shobaki, Belal, Tartir, Alaa (2015). Palestinian youth revolt: any role for political parties?
  • Kaldor, Mary (2015). Subterranean Politics in Europe after the Greek Elections.
  • Kirk, Thomas (2015). The brutal logic of the political marketplace.
  • Lloyd, Delia, Willats, Prudence (2015). Media and accountability- lessons from fragile settings.
  • Macdonald, Anna (2015). Justice in the world’s most difficult places.
  • Masiero, Silvia (2015). Industrial policy for development? Causes, mechanisms and consequences of industrial policy across the world.
  • McDonald, Keith (2015). Time to Bid Farewell to All-Male Panels?
  • Putzel, James, Wade, Robert Hunter (2015). ID Professors speak out on Greek exit.
  • Radice, Henry (2015). On the borderlands of humanity.
  • Rigterink, Anouk S., Schomerus, Mareike (2015). Anouk Rigterink and Mareike Schomerus, “The World Development Report 2015: One step forward, one step back”.
  • Schomerus, Mareike, Rigterink, Anouk S. (2015). Mareike Schomerus and Anouk Rigterink, “Off the hook: Can mobile phones help with statebuilding?”.
  • Schomerus, Mareike, Rigterink, Anouk S. (2015). Off the hook: can mobile phones help with statebuilding?
  • Shadlen, Kenneth C. (2015). Ken Shadlen wins Open Article prize for 2014.
  • Tartir, Alaa (2015). Can fragility in countries be addressed outside of politics?
  • Tartir, Alaa (2015). Palestinian options after the Israeli election.
  • Wade, Robert (2015). Fiscal compact treaty adds to chaos in Europe – Robert Wade.
  • Wade, Robert (2015). Get profit share to support a more equal income distribution – Robert Wade.
  • Wade, Robert (2015). Living where you don’t make the rules: Development in Palestine – one of the world’s last colonies.
  • Wade, Robert (2015). Robert Wade takes umbrage at defence of corporate managers and short-termism in the Financial Times.
  • Wade, Robert Hunter (2015). The Ukraine crisis is not what it seems.
  • Waldinger, Maria (2015). The effects of climate change on migration – Maria Waldinger.
  • de Waal, Alex (2015). An agenda for research into justice in South Sudan.
  • International Growth Centre
  • Africa@LSE (2015). Photo Essay – Urban experimentation: How housing, transport, and infrastructure projects are revolutionising Addis Ababa.
  • Augsburg, Britta, Rodríguez Lesmes, Paul (2015). No toilet, no bride: the unlikely link between private toilets and marriage market outcomes in India.
  • Bandiera, Oriana, Tobias, Julia (2015). Hiring do-gooders or go-getters: attracting talent to improve public service delivery.
  • Beck, Charles (2015). Delivering sanitation in Kampala.
  • Bicaba, Zorobabel, Brixiová, Zuzana, Ncube, Mthuli (2015). Eliminating extreme poverty in Africa: the role of policies and global governance.
  • Buckley, Robert, Murray, Sally (2015). Delivering low income housing in Rwanda.
  • Burgess, Robin (2015). Tackling extreme poverty: in conversation with Robin Burgess.
  • Chattopadhyay, Deb, Wijayatunga, Priyantha D., Fernando, P. N. (2015). Cheaper, cleaner, more reliable: why invest in cross-border power-trading.
  • Christiaensen, Luc, De Weerdt, Joachim (2015). Urbanisation, growth and poverty reduction: the role of secondary towns.
  • Collier, Paul, Kaul, Upaasna (2015). Post 2015: growth and the new sustainable development agenda.
  • Collier, Paul, Laroche, Caroline (2015). Natural resources do not need to be a curse (part 1 – explaining the resource curse).
  • Collier, Paul, Laroche, Caroline (2015). Natural resources do not need to be a curse (part 2 – avoiding the resource curse).
  • Curtis, Chad, Lugauer, Steven, Mark, Nelson (2015). Smaller family sizes and ageing populations may reduce long-run savings rates.
  • Dasso, Rosamaría, Fernandez, Fernando (2015). Powering change: can rural electrification close the gender gap?
  • Dempster, Helen (2015). Getting the most out of local government: lessons from Uganda.
  • Divanbeigi, Raian, Ramalho, Rita (2015). Governing growth: how business regulations can foster productivity.
  • Dreher, Axel, Fuchs, Andreas, Hodler, Roland, Parks, Bradley, Raschky, Paul, Tierney, Michael (2015). Are African leaders misusing Chinese development finance? The price of country ownership.
  • Evans, Alice (2015). Does more mean better? #SDGs and the (unmet) need for measurable indicators of egalitarian social change.
  • Fasan, Olu (2015). Africa must industrialise and trade more to achieve the #SDGs.
  • Fox, Sean, Dyson, Tim (2015). Part 1: is population growth good or bad for economic development?
  • Fox, Sean, Dyson, Tim (2015). Part 2: is population growth good or bad for economic development?
  • Fredriksson, Anders (2015). Bureaucracy intermediaries, corruption and red tape.
  • Ghate, Chetan, Robertson, Peter (2015). India: chasing the dragon?
  • Green, Duncan, Yamada, Takumo (2015). How will the #SDGs differ from the MDGs?
  • Gueye, Cheikh Ante, Lee, Munseob (2015). Natural resource wealth: making resource windfalls work for Sub-Saharan African countries.
  • Haushoffer, Johannes, Thomas, Catherine (2015). Cash: a simple remedy for domestic violence?
  • Hickel, Jason (2015). Five reasons to think twice about the UN’s sustainable development goals.
  • Hoekman, Bernard, Shepherd, Ben (2015). Reducing trade costs.
  • Jefferis, Keith, Haas, Astrid (2015). Moving from a fixed to a floating exchange rate: the case of the South Sudanese Pound.
  • Kattumuri, Ruth (2015). Sustainable Development: the goals and the challenges ahead.
  • Kennedy, David (2015). DFID’s approach to economic development.
  • Kumar, Santosh, Molitor, Ramona, Vollmer, Sebastian (2015). Droughts and child health.
  • La Ferrara, Eliana (2015). Fighting poverty with soap operas.
  • Laski, Anne (2015). Anticipating regional integration in Africa.
  • Laski, Anne (2015). Blurred lines: East African Community integrates in fits and starts.
  • Leape, Jonathan (2015). Zero-draft proposal on sustainable development goals falls short.
  • Levy, Stephanie (2015). Scaling up social protection: price & productivity effects on growth.
  • Lustig, Nora (2015). A missing target in the SDGs: tax systems should not reduce the income of the poor.
  • Magruder, Jeremy (2015). Click to apply: the impact of online job portals on job search outcomes.
  • Mukherjee, Arpita, Goyal, Tanu M. (2015). Reinvigorating India’s manufacturing sector: integrating the services value chain with Southeast Asia.
  • Nkwanga, Waiswa (2015). The #GlobalGoals are more comprehensive, but fall short in targets for #health.
  • Schaner, Simone (2015). A balancing act: subsidising treatment for Malaria.
  • Sembene, Daouda (2015). Disabling the drivers of unequal growth in Sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Shah, Manisha, Steinberg, Bryce (2015). Do workfare programmes reduce educational attainment? Evidence from India.
  • Shaikh, Hina (2015). Cross-party involvement and reform in Pakistan.
  • Shiraz, Shabana (2015). SDG 11: supporting the delivery of cities that work for all.
  • Simuzingili, Muloongo (2015). Post-election challenges for Zambia.
  • Titley, Janine, Anderson-Macdonald, Stephen (2015). When entrepreneurship training matters most.
  • Tobias, Julia, Kaul, Upaasna (2015). #PoweringGrowth: 3 new facts from the IGC Energy Conference.
  • Urpelainen, Johannes (2015). How solar power could transform rural India.
  • Vyas, Sangita (2015). Solving India’s sanitation puzzle.
  • Weisbrod, Aaron (2015). Myanmar: a new breed of mobile money?
  • Wenban-Smith, Hugh B. (2015). Strengthening the contribution of cities to growth.
  • Wolf, Sebastian (2015). How mobile money is revolutionising banking in Africa.
  • Yamada, Takumo (2015). Making business part of the solution: Private sector partnerships can support sustainable development.
  • Yamada, Takumo (2015). Making business part of the solution: how can private sector partnerships support sustainable development?
  • Zheng, Siqi, Sun, Weizeng, Wu, Jianfeng, Kahn, Matthew (2015). The birth of edge cities in China: measuring the spillover effects of industrial parks.
  • International History
  • Alvandi, Roham (2015). Diplomatic relations after the Iran nuclear deal.
  • Sked, Alan (2015). Why Britain really joined the EEC (and why it had nothing to do with helping our economy).
  • Witney, Nick (2015). Obstructive and unhelpful: what EU diplomats think of the UK’s strategy.
  • International Relations
  • Cox, Michael (2015). Better times for Greeks?
  • Cox, Michael (2015). The Great Game.
  • Cox, Michael (2015). Scylla and Charybdis.
  • Datzberger, Simone (2015). Uganda: Digging for social justice in Karamoja.
  • Dill, Janina (2015). The Janus faced nature of international war and law.
  • Dill, Janina (2015). "Proportionate" collateral damage and why we should care about what civilians think.
  • Falkner, Robert (2015). Business involvement in climate negotiations has come a long way.
  • Haacke, Jürgen (2015). Myanmar’s big moment: the forthcoming elections are a critical step into a somewhat uncertain future.
  • Haacke, Jürgen (2015). Why did Myanmar's opposition leader just visit China?
  • Hughes, Christopher R. (2015). Prof. Hughes: "China dismisses most interventions as ways in which the US pursues its own interests, therefore, it opposes most actions".
  • International Relations blog (2015). European foreign policy unit engaged in debate on Brexit.
  • International Relations blog (2015). The Global Transformation: history, modernity and the making of international relations – a public discussion.
  • International Relations blog (2015). Hezbollah, Islamist Politics, and International Society: NEW BOOK by IR Dept PhD alumnus Filippo Dionigi.
  • Kalhousova, Irena (2015). Workshop: Brexit and EU foreign policy: the view from other member states.
  • Lankina, Tomila V. (2015). Russian citizens owe it to Boris Nemtsov to keep the hope of democracy in Russia alive.
  • McFate, Sean (2015). New book from IR Department alumnus Sean McFate.
  • Oliver, Tim, Lacatus, Cora (2015). Eight centuries on from Magna Carta, upholding the rule of law remains a challenge on both sides of the Atlantic.
  • Owtram, Francis (2015). New online portal on Gulf History involving IR Dept PhD alumnus, Francis Owtram.
  • Rossdale, Chris (2015). Between innocence and deconstruction: rethinking political solidarity.
  • Smith, Karen E. (2015). The EU and democracy promotion, five years on from the Arab Spring: no time for celebration.
  • Strong, James (2015). Without an agreement between the party leaders there is nothing further that Britain can do for Syria.
  • Terry, Jillian (2015). Book review: terror and insurgency in the Sahara-Sahel Region: corruption, contraband, jihad and the Mali War of 2012-2013 by Stephen A. Harmon.
  • Justice and Security Research Programme
  • Foulds, Wendy (2015). Corruption, protest and militancy.
  • Hopwood, Julian, Porter, Holly E., Saum, Nangiro (2015). Karamojong women and the extremes of insecurity.
  • Ibreck, Rachel (2015). Justice in practice: South Sudan.
  • Kirk, Thomas (2015). The brutal logic of the political marketplace.
  • Macdonald, Anna (2015). Justice in the world’s most difficult places.
  • Radice, Henry (2015). On the borderlands of humanity.
  • de Waal, Alex (2015). An agenda for research into justice in South Sudan.
  • LSE
  • LSE Impact of Social Sciences (2015). Top posts of 2015: social media and digital scholarship.
  • Abueg, Christian (2015). Jeb Bush last campaigned more than a decade ago. The Republican Party has moved on – and to the right.
  • Abueg, Christian (2015). The rise of Trump and Sanders shows that the debate between style and substance in presidential elections is here to stay.
  • Adaire, Esther (2015). Book Review: Of God and man by Zygmunt Bauman and Stanislaw Obirek.
  • Adaire, Esther (2015). Book review: the philosophy of war and exile by Nolen Gertz.
  • Adam, Jeroen (2015). The democratic credentials of a hybrid institutional framework.
  • Adam, Noémie (2015). Drumming out resistance in Japan: writing back Burakumin identity through music.
  • Addey, Camilla (2015). Literacy as numbers: The efficacy, merits and validity of transnational literacy assessment programmes.
  • Adebahr, Cornelius (2015). Wider cooperation with Iran would be in the EU’s strategic interest.
  • Adeyemo, Lola (2015). United We Stand: How the Election Results Dismiss the Narrative of a Divided #Nigeria.
  • Afonso, Alexandre (2015). Why the next Portuguese election will not see the surge of a left-wing challenger like Podemos or Syriza.
  • Africa@LSE (2015). Photos from the 2015 #LSEAfrica Summit.
  • Aghatise, Mitchell (2015). Democracy and the Nigerian factor: the problem with the Nigerian people.
  • Aghatise, Mitchell (2015). Nigeria’s 2015 elections have not brought change, but business as usual with a different face.
  • Aghatise, Mitchell (2015). Rescued from Boko Haram – What will it take to feel truly free?
  • Agnihotri, Srishti (2015). The bitter aftertaste of sugar.
  • Agnihotri, Srishti, Das, Minakshi (2015). Reviewing India’s protection of children from sexual offences act three years on.
  • Aguiar-Conraria, Luís (2015). What impact will Portugal’s election have on the country’s economy?
  • Ahearn, Mary Clare (2015). Obamacare may be changing the way that American farms work.
  • Ahmad Kaker, Sobia (2015). The enclavisation paradox: everyday insecurity and the perpetuation of violence in Karachi.
  • Ahmed, Wasim (2015). Challenges of using Twitter as a data source: An overview of current resources.
  • Aidt, Toke, Leon, Gabriel, Franck, Raphael, Jensen, Peter (2015). The threat of revolution can play a pivotal role in spurring democratisation.
  • Aisbitt, Lexi, Chowdhury, Humaira (2015). For those whose livelihoods are intertwined with water, the monsoon is both desired and cursed.
  • Aitchison, Claire, Carter, Susan, Guerin, Cally (2015). Academic blogging in the “accelerated academy”: How to build a personal, professional and public community.
  • Aizenman, Joshua (2015). With Greek debt negotiations at a critical phase it is time for Germany to end its policy of ‘muddling through’.
  • Akhtar, Zoya, Shriram, Sharanya (2015). “Forget my creative expression, I can tell other stories, but can you imagine being a part of a society that thinks that you should not exist?” – Zoya Akthar.
  • Aksoy, Deniz (2015). Terrorist attacks are linked to the timing of elections, but only in states where it is difficult to influence the political process.
  • Akum, Richard, Vonhmassess, Mainlehwon (2015). Liberia’s postwar constitution review: A tale of mistrust and uncertainty.
  • Alaadldin, Ranj (2015). David Cameron must re-invigorate British foreign policy.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). Air strikes in Syria are a good start, but the lessons of Iraq and Libya must be learned.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). Collective solidarity with France must transform into collective action against ISIS.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). David Cameron must re-invigorate British foreign policy.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). Help sufferers of obesity and addiction help themselves.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). Labour must go back to conviction politics.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). Rethinking secession: why Spain and Catalonia should not take stability for granted.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). Turkish elections: why the EU may come to regret its support for Erdoğan.
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2015). The West must hit ISIS harder.
  • Alam, Khurshed (2015). Expanding the reach of microcredit through livelihood mapping: a model.
  • Alam, Khurshed, Hasan, Mubashar (2015). Progress through pragmatism in the Indo-Bangla relationship.
  • Alam, Omar (2015). China-Pakistan economic corridor: towards a new ‘heartland’?
  • Alba, Richard, Foner, Nancy (2015). Mixed unions reveal progress in integration but also enduring societal social cleavages, which revolve around race in the US and religion in Europe.
  • Alba, Silvia (2015). A scribe’s-eye view of #Polis2015.
  • Albertazzi, Daniele (2015). Junior partner no more: how the growth of the Lega Nord could reshape the right in Italy.
  • Alevizou, Giota (2015). Modalities of solidarity in Greece: a civil society at the cross-roads.
  • Alexander, Titus (2015). A political education portal which brings together currently disparate democratic information should be developed.
  • Ali, Bashir (2015). As Ethiopia works towards becoming a middle income country, can it tackle growing inequality?
  • Alison, Johnston, Regan, Aidan (2015). Income growth may be more important to the development of housing bubbles than cheap credit.
  • Alison, Powell (2015). Will digital innovators say bye bye Britain?
  • Allen, Natalie (2015). Book review: from Cuba with love: sex and money in the twenty-first century.
  • Allen, Nicholas (2015). Cameron’s post-election reshuffle: a historical perspective.
  • Allen, Nicholas (2015). If the debates do not go ahead, it will be the fault of self-interest on the part of the main parties and the broadcasters.
  • Allsop, Bradley (2015). Compulsory voting is not the answer, but fixing an archaic system is.
  • Alper, Meryl (2015). Future talk: parenting for a digital future for young people with a disability.
  • Ambrosius, Joshua T. (2015). Presidential candidates in 2016 should not underestimate the power of urban identity—it allowed Obama to halve Bush’s urban victories.
  • Amer, Amena (2015). Beyond obedience.
  • Amer, Amena (2015). Shades of Muslim: racialisation, representation and white British Muslims.
  • Amer, Amena (2015). Why social psychology matters in the real world: reflections on Steve Reicher’s talk.
  • Amior, Michael (2015). The low skilled are less mobile geographically because of the meagre value of work.
  • Amodio, Francesco, Martelli, Angelo (2015). Matteo’s third way: what lessons could Labour learn from Renzi’s success in Italy?
  • Amos, Merris (2015). The Government’s case against the European Court of Human Rights is a smokescreen.
  • Amuedo-Dorantes, Catalina, Lopez, Mary J. (2015). Increased immigration enforcement has a detrimental effect on the school performance of the children of unauthorized immigrants.
  • Anciaes, Paulo Rui (2015). The best bookshops in Tirana, Albania.
  • Anderson, Bridget (2015). Connecting discontent with austerity and support for migrants.
  • Anderson, Chingun (2015). Why do some democracies fail to help their poor? Ethnic diversity and identity politics may provide answers.
  • Anderson, Patricia M., Butcher, Kristen F., Whitmore Schanzenbach, Diane (2015). The US safety net caught some poor households during the Great Recession, but many just above the poverty line slipped through the cracks.
  • Andersson, Ruben (2015). Calais migrant response overblown – Ruben Andersson on BBC Radio Scotland.
  • André, Audrey, Bradbury, Jonathan, Depauw, Sam (2015). Politicians are more likely to forward constituent inquiries to the appropriate level if they are of the same party as the recipient.
  • Angel, Ron (2015). An aging and increasingly Hispanic population poseschallenges for social welfare policy in the US.
  • Angelis, Joseph De (2015). How systematic surveys can help cities to better understand community perceptions of police accountability.
  • Angier, Tom (2015). European social democracy is in danger of terminal decline unless it can reengage with its core values.
  • Anheier, Helmut K. (2015). Democracy requires the critical engagement of practitioners and experts alike if it is to thrive in these challenging times.
  • Anselmo, Kevin (2015). Academics should express an “editorial mission” in order to create consistent media content.
  • Anselmo, Kevin (2015). Media training for academics: How to avoid being misquoted by journalists.
  • Anselmo, Kevin (2015). With academia moving in a digital direction, sustained investment in media training would benefit all.
  • Anstead, Nick (2015). New Research: How to save the 2015 televised debates.
  • Anstead, Nick (2015). The debate about debates: there needs to be a clearer rationale for invitations.
  • Antonopoulos, Eleftherios (2015). The Greek referendum: Popular verdict or foregone conclusion?
  • Antonopoulos, Eleftherios (2015). Power has become centralised in Greek politics since the crisis and this is unlikely to change under Syriza.
  • Antonopoulos, Eleftherios, Kostagiannis, Konstantinos (2015). The Greek Government’s programme: an act of defiance or a call for compromise?
  • Appold, Stephen (2015). Airports are playing an important role in the remaking of UScities.
  • Arceneaux,, Kevin, Johnson, Martin, Lindstädt, René, Wielen, Ryan Vander (2015). Fox News pushes Democrats and Republicans to bemore conservative, especially around election time.
  • Arekapudi, Nisha (2015). World Bank calls for changes in laws that hinder women’s participation in business.
  • Ariely, Gal (2015). Does diversity erode social cohesion? It depends on how diversity is conceptualized and measured.
  • Armstrong, Megan (2015). Book review: hyper sexual, hyper masculine? Gender, race, and sexuality in the identities of contemporary black men edited by Brittany C. Slatton and Kamesha Spates.
  • Aron, Jae (2015). Public service broadcasting in the modern age.
  • Arora, Payal (2015). Facebook and the digital romance economy: courtship, scams, and internet regulation in the global South.
  • Arzheimer, Kai (2015). Despite hostile German public opinion, a deal on Greece may still be politically feasible for Angela Merkel.
  • Asbed, Greg (2015). UN FORUM SERIES: measuring achieves little without market-based enforcement and worker participation.
  • Ashcroft, Brian (2015). The GERS report indicates that Scotland’s finances are in dire shape.
  • Ashley, Louise, Sommerland, Hilary, Duberley, Jo (2015). Barriers to entry: social exclusion is rife in elite professions in the UK.
  • Asmolov, Gregory (2015). Between institutional dungeons and the dragons of public opinion: Russian Internet regulation.
  • Astor, Bonny (2015). Are the days of Twitter storms numbered?
  • Astor, Bonny (2015). “We should have different voices with different perspectives”.
  • Astor, Bonny (2015). The world according to Buzzfeed.
  • Atanasova, Dimitrinka (2015). Book review: digital humanitarians: how big data is changing the face of humanitarian response.
  • Atanssow, Ewa (2015). How we diagnose the state of democracy today depends on how we define democracy.
  • Atchison, Amy, Bull, Jonathan (2015). Self-archived articles receive higher citation counts than non-OA articles from same political science journals.
  • Athanassiou, Cerelia (2015). As much as Hillary Clinton’s ‘smart power’ works to signalchange, it is not a game changer.
  • Athanassiou, James D., Pedaliu, Effie G. H. (2015). Establishing ‘safe zones’ in Syria remains the most realistic route to tackling Europe’s refugee crisis.
  • Atikcan, Ece Özlem (2015). Asking the public twice: why do voters change their minds in second referendums on EU treaties?
  • Auel, Katrin, Rozenberg, Olivier, Tacea, Angela (2015). National parliaments are not the losers of EU integration – at least not anymore.
  • Avaram, Silvia (2015). Losing benefits hurts more than paying taxes and this should be reflected in how we frame and design policy.
  • Aveling, Emma-Louise, Martin, Graham (2015). First among equals? Recommendations and guidelines for deciding who gets authorship credit.
  • Avila, Renata (2015). Alternative internet(s): will they develop in Latin America?
  • Awori, Sanyu, Stanislaus Benjamin, Dorathy (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – advancing women’s human rights: this is progress in business and human rights.
  • Ayres, Christopher J. (2015). The EU’s law on conflict minerals could well end up hurting the people it is intended to help.
  • Ayres, Christopher J. (2015). It is time for the European Union to redefine what it means to be a ‘refugee’.
  • Ayres, Christopher J. (2015). There is little basis for viewing migrants in the Mediterranean as a threat to the ‘indigenous’ population of Europe.
  • Ayscue, Jennifer, Orfield, Gary (2015). States with highly fragmented school districts have greaterlevels of school segregation.
  • Azmat, Ghazala (2015). Gender and the UK labour market: The evidence on whether ‘family-friendly’ policies can make a difference.
  • Azoulay, Anaelle (2015). Online media in Africa: a new powerful public sphere to counter stereotypes.
  • Baccini, Leonardo (2015). TPP may benefit both global businesses and the developing countries where they operate.
  • Bagchi, Kanad (2015). UN General Assembly resolution on basic principles on debt restructuring processes: a first step towards a global state bankruptcy regime?
  • Bagchi, Kanad (2015). The ultimate sovereign debt showdown: Russia & Ukraine likely to battle it out in court!
  • Bailey, Kate (2015). Book review: ornament and order: graffiti, street art and the parergon by Rafael Schacter.
  • Bailey, Martha, Goodman-Bacon, Andrew (2015). Community Health Centers have reduced mortality rates of older Americans at significantly lower cost than Medicare.
  • Bailey, Michael, Wilcox, Clyde (2015). Why not trying to lead public opinion can be an effectivepresidential strategy.
  • Baitlinger, Gail (2015). Overt sexism does not drive women’s under-representation in the media.
  • Baker, Andy (2015). White Americans are supportive of redistribution to foreigners of African descent, but for prejudicial and paternalistic reasons.
  • Baker, Catherine (2015). Book review: Bosnia and the Destruction of Cultural Heritage by Helen Walasek et al.
  • Baker, Dillon (2015). A source of inspiration.
  • Baker, Scott R. (2015). Evidence suggests that amnesty for undocumented immigrantsin 1986 significantly reduced crime in the US.
  • Baker, Scott R., Bloom, Nick, Davis, Steven J. (2015). Higher policy uncertainty curbs business investment and employment growth.
  • Baker, Thomas (2015). Most Americans support rehabilitation compared to ‘tough oncrime’ policies.
  • Bakker, Ryan, Jolly, Seth, Polk, Jonathan (2015). Mapping Europe’s party systems: which parties are the most right-wing and left-wing in Europe?
  • Bale, Tim, Hampshire, James (2015). The UK’s political parties do matter when it comes to determining immigration policy.
  • Bale, Tim, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview part 2: Tim Bale on Ed Miliband’s approach to public services, constitutional reform, and whether he can win.
  • Bale, Tim, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Tim Bale on Ed Miliband’s ‘presentationally weak, but strategically astute’ leadership of the Labour Party.
  • Bale, Tim, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Tim Bale on comparisons between Ed Miliband and David Cameron as Leader of the Opposition.
  • Banda, Kevin K. (2015). Despite worries to the contrary, the evidence suggests that candidates do engage in dialogue with their opponents.
  • Banerjee, Mukulika (2015). Gandhi and Frontier Gandhi.
  • Banerjee, Paroj (2015). Divided in squatters, united in bias.
  • Bania, Konstantina (2015). E-books, MFNs and a European Commission blowing hot and cold.
  • Banka, Andris (2015). While drones did not introduce targeted assassinations, 9/11 and new technologies have pushed the boundaries of the tactic’s acceptability.
  • Bannerman, Gordon (2015). Book Review: Britain votes 2015 edited by Andrew Geddes and Jonathan Tonge.
  • Bar, Allon (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – how do technology companies integrate freedom of expression and privacy rights?
  • Barbelet, Veronique (2015). Elections mean little when people trust armed groups more than peacekeepers or the state.
  • Barber, Lionel (2015). Making news for the new world.
  • Barber, Stephen (2015). Opposition Leaders need to share power with credible ‘alternative Chancellors’ if they want to win elections.
  • Barber, Stephen (2015). The Tax Credits dispute illustrates both the need for Lords reform, and why it is unlikely to happen any time soon.
  • Barcellos, Silvia Helena, Jacobson, Mireille (2015). Medicare helps protect the elderly against catastrophic medical expenditure risk. Increasing the Eligibility age will expose many to higher costs and financial strain.
  • Barnett, Steven (2015). BBC Charter Green Paper: Unprecedented threat to BBC’s future.
  • Barnett, Steven (2015). Is Cameron surrendering to press power?
  • Barreyo, Pilar (2015). The sinister reality of gentrification in Washington, D.C.
  • Barrilleaux, Charles, Rainey, Carlisle (2015). Governors who refuse to expand Medicaid are doing so for political reasons, despite the needs of their state’s citizenry.
  • Bartlett, Will (2015). Fiscal consolidation policies have had had a disastrous effect on the Croatian economy.
  • Bartovic, Vladimír, Gálik, Zoltán, Brattberg, Erik, Vaicekauskaite, Živilė (2015). European views on the UK’s renegotiation: Czech Republic, Hungary, Sweden, and Lithuania.
  • Barwise, Patrick (2015). There’s no public benefit in BBC programmes being ‘distinctive’.
  • Basedow, Robert (2015). How trade policy can help settle the Ukraine crisis.
  • Basedow, Robert (2015). TTIP is not the threat to European democracy that it is portrayed as by its opponents.
  • Bassey, Michael (2015). Book review: climate change and human development by Hannah Reid.
  • Bassey, Michael (2015). Book review: green planet blues: critical perspectives on global environmental politics (5th Edition) by Ken Conca and Geoffrey D Dabelko.
  • Basso, Leonardo, Silva, Hugo (2015). Cities that subsidize transit will get the best value for money in the absence of congestion pricing and bus lanes.
  • Basta, Karlo (2015). Whatever the result of the Catalan elections, both Catalonia and Spain are now entering uncharted territory.
  • Bates, Timothy, Robb, Alicia (2015). Although the Community Reinvestment Act has improved loanavailability among small businesses run by minorities, equalitywith equally creditworthy white-owned firms remains elusive.
  • Batiri Williams, Esther (2015). Esther Batiri Williams, Fiji.
  • Bauchowitz, Stefan (2015). The challenge of responding to extreme political views: Germany struggles to address Pegida’s anti-Islam protests.
  • Baudin, Thomas, de la Croix, David, Gobbi, Paula E. (2015). Childlessness is high in the US once again, but this time it’s driven by choice, not poverty.
  • Bauer, Nichole (2015). Carly Fiorina’s post-debate challenge will be to navigate gender stereotypes to show voters she is both tough and likable.
  • Baumann-Pauly, Dorothée (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – creating industry-specific standards to operationalize the “responsibility to respect”.
  • Baumgartner, Frank, Grigg, Amanda, Mastro, Alisa (2015). Blacks are much more likely to be executed for killing whites than whites who have killed blacks.
  • Baxter, Graeme (2015). Analysis of Twitter responses indicates a preference for diversity in televised political debates.
  • Baxter, Graeme (2015). A below par performance? Donald Trump’s golf resort development and government openness and transparency in Scotland.
  • Baxter, Jacqueline, Farrell, Catherine (2015). Governing public services in England and Wales: a move from the stakeholder model could further the democratic deficit.
  • Baxter, Jacqueline, Farrell, Catherine (2015). Governing public services in England and Wales: a move from the stakeholder model could further the democratic deficit.
  • Baykan, Toygar Sinan (2015). Book review: inside the Brotherhood by Hazem Kandil.
  • Beachy, Roger, Sumner, Daniel (2015). Using economics to address the challenges of improving global nutrition security.
  • Beal, Douglas (2015). We must ensure that the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals are not a missed opportunity.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2015). Following a disappointing presidential election, Croatia’s government now faces a challenge to hold on to power.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2015). Russia in the Balkans: Perceptions and Realities.
  • Becker, Amy Bree (2015). Political satire makes young people more likely toparticipate in politics: Trevor Noah’s The Daily Showis likely to continue that trend.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). But how do you know that it’s true? Notes from #nishbrverification workshop.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Election watch: media notes on #GE2015.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Good news is no news?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). How bad is breaking news?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). How journalism is turning emotional and what that might mean for news.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). In next week’s exciting blog post we will find out what happened to that brilliant new narrative device idea.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Is source protection dead? A Polis/ Journalistfonden report.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Is this the end of the future of news?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Networking across borders: from ancient Greece to today.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Our partisan press: does it matter to journalism or politics?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). This election will be complex, simple, social. so how do we cover it? polis conference preview #polis2015.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Why it matters who edits the Guardian. picture_as_pdf
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). The debate about the future of the Labour Party: the best and worst of times.
  • Beer, David (2015). Being trained by Twitter stats: Social media and the expanding ways we are measured in everyday life.
  • Beer, David (2015). Systems of measurement have a productive power in our lives.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). Push or jump? Why the UK could be facing a ‘Brexpulsion’ rather than a ‘Brexit’.
  • Begg, Iain (2015). What does the Five Presidents’ report mean for the future of the euro?
  • Behrens, Annette, Hartviksen, Julia (2015). Troubling borders: A brief reflection from Engenderings.
  • Behuria, Pritish (2015). What next after the Delhi Declaration? The challenges and opportunities of harnessing India-Africa relations.
  • Beim, Deborah (2015). Judicial dissents from ideological allies in lower court cases are more likely to lead to en banc review.
  • Beland, Louis-Philippe (2015). Under Democratic governors, Blacks are more likely to work, decreasing their earnings gap with whites.
  • Belau, Philip (2015). Shooting sparrows with cannons: national security and civil liberties under Britain’s terrorism laws.
  • Bell, Sarah (2015). Engineering Exchange: the democratic imperative for researchers to engage with local communities.
  • Belli, Luca (2015). The future of the IGF: mandate renewal?
  • Belli, Luca, Marsden, Chris (2015). Not Neutrality but ‘Open Internet’ à l’Européenne.
  • Ben-Gad, Micahel (2015). Ancient Greece is where Western civilisation began, and modern Greece is where it ends.
  • Benedetto, Giacomo (2015). The CAP fits: why farmers want to stay in the EU.
  • Benedetto, Giacomo (2015). How rising Euroscepticism could affect future EU budget revenue negotiations.
  • Bereitschaft, Bradley, Cammack, Rex (2015). Neighborhood diversity plays a limited role in the residential preferences of creative class workers in Chicago.
  • Berenson, Marc P. (2015). The West must outline its own long-term vision for the future of Ukraine.
  • Bergamini, Matteo (2015). The youth leaders’ debate: a new voice for the 2015 general election.
  • Bergan, Daniel (2015). Constituent contacts can influence how legislators vote.
  • Berges, Sandrine (2015). The caring citizen.
  • Berglund, Jenny (2015). Sweden’s protests against Islamophobia highlight the polarised views of Swedish citizens toward Muslims.
  • Bergmann, Julian, Niemann, Arne (2015). What the Belgrade-Pristina dialogue says about the EU’s role as a peace mediator.
  • Berkhout, Joost (2015). Economic rather than political forces shape the pattern of lobbying at the European level.
  • Bernal, Paul (2015). Internet rights – the crucial role of online rights.
  • Berntzen, Lars Erik, Weisskircher, Manès (2015). Anti-Islamic Pegida groups have spread beyond their German heartlands.
  • Berry, Craig (2015). Financialisation, home-ownership, and how democracy became a threat to economic growth.
  • Berry, Richard (2015). Book Review: Making British law: committees in action by Louise Thompson.
  • Berry, Richard (2015). Catch them while they’re registered: the case for voting at 16.
  • Berry, Richard (2015). Three reforms that would be more effective than adding a ‘None of the above’ option to ballot papers.
  • Berry, Richard (2015). Why we need an NHS election day.
  • Bertsou, Eri, Brown, Stuart A. (2015). Greek parliamentary elections: a final look at the parties and the polling.
  • Besimi, Fatmir, Prelec, Tena (2015). Five minutes with Fatmir Besimi: ‘Macedonia’s wire-tapping scandal is taking the country in the opposite direction of where it needs to go’.
  • Best, Katie (2015). How tour guides help museums execute their strategies.
  • Beyers, Jan, de Bruycker, Iskander, Baller, Inger (2015). Birds of a feather flock together: why EU party and interest group alignments reflect the left-right political cleavage.
  • Bezci, Egemen, Borroz, Nicholas (2015). The renewed Turkey-PKK conflict has shattered the illusion that Kurds can participate legitimately in Turkey’s political system.
  • Bhagwati, Jagdish, Campion, Sonali (2015). “Before you can do the social spending, you have to find the money for it” – Jagdish Bhagwati.
  • Bhartia, Shobhana, Campion, Sonali (2015). “The media want greater engagement from politicians but I wouldn’t at this stage say the quality of debate is under threat” – Shobhana Bhartia.
  • Bhopal, Kalwant (2015). Prioritising race equality: Senior leaders must do more to encourage BME talent to stay in UK higher education.
  • Bhunia, Abhirup (2015). Trends and lessons from India’s latest shock elections.
  • Bianchimani, Giuseppe (2015). Are Italian public debt forecasts too optimistic?
  • Bickerton, Christopher (2015). Frans Timmermans’ views on the integration process highlight the relevance of Europe’s ‘new intergovernmentalism’.
  • Bickerton, Christopher (2015). What the ‘new intergovernmentalism’ can tell us about the Greek crisis.
  • Bickerton, Christopher (2015). The real sins of Varoufakis: why Greece is being punished for refusing to play by the Eurogroup’s rules.
  • Bieber, Florian (2015). Ten rules by a 21st-century Machiavelli for the Balkan Prince.
  • Bieber, Florian (2015). The refugee crisis underlines the absurdity of Western Balkans states being outside of the EU.
  • Biggam, Ross (2015). The AVMS Directive: lacking a long-term political vision?
  • Biggers, Daniel, Hamner, Michael (2015). Despite heavy rhetoric, partisan considerations had little influence on states’ decisions to make voting easier.
  • Bilotkach, Volodymyr (2015). Increasing the number of destinations and passengers an airport serves has a positive effect on regional economic development.
  • Birch, Sarah (2015). A boundary allocation entailing more competitive results would not necessarily be more ‘political’, but it would be more democratic.
  • Birch, Sarah, Allen, Nicholas (2015). If the divide between politicians and the public is to be bridged, we need better understanding on both sides.
  • Bird, Gemma (2015). Book review: war and democratic constraint: how the public influences foreign policy.
  • Bird, Mia, Grattet, Ryken (2015). Offenders have better outcomes when released to counties prioritizing reentry services rather than enforcement.
  • Birkinshaw, Matt (2015). Muddy waters in Delhi’s ‘Dusty South’.
  • Birney, Mayling (2015). Why the fear of the Magna Carta in Beijing? Mayling Birney speaks to BBC Newshour.
  • Biswas, Asit, Kirchherr, Julilan (2015). Citations are not enough: Academic promotion panels must take into account a scholar’s presence in popular media.
  • Blais, André, Morin-Chassé, Alexandre, Singh, Shane P. (2015). Voters who support under-represented parties are more likely to express dissatisfaction with the political system.
  • Blanchard, Alexander (2015). Book review: a stranger in my own country: the 1944 prison diary.
  • Blanchard, Alexander (2015). Book review: sexuality: a psychosocial manifesto.
  • Blanchard, Alexander (2015). Book review: the question of peace in modern political thought edited by Toivo Koivukoski and David Edward Tabachnick.
  • Blanchard, Alexander (2015). Book review: women, incarceration, and human rights violations: feminist criminology and corrections by Alana Van Gundy and Amy Baumann-Grau.
  • Blaney, Harry (2015). The U.S. should encourage rapprochement andreconciliation between the Sunni and Shia states ofthe Middle East.
  • Blaney, Harry C. (2015). Despite all the controversy, an Iran deal Is still the best option.
  • Blaney III, Harry (2015). The Iran deal as outlined in the framework accord is a win-winfor all and is significant beyond itself.
  • Blaney III, Harry C (2015). The Iran deal shows that the U.S. can work with others to help make the world safer through preventative diplomacy.
  • Blaney III, Harry C (2015). President Obama’s historic meeting with Raul Castro marks thebeginning of a transformation in Cuban-American relations.
  • Blauberger, Michael, Schmidt, Susanne K. (2015). It remains unclear how much leeway member states have to restrict EU migrants’ access to benefits.
  • Blecher, Lara (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – the UK local government pension scheme: can pooled and passive funds adequately address human rights?
  • Blick, Andrew (2015). Federalism could be the only means of resolving some of the UK constitution’s fundamental difficultiies.
  • Blick, Andrew (2015). Four options for configuring the British constitution.
  • Blick, Andrew (2015). A new constitutional settlement for the UK would be the most fitting Magna Carta celebration.
  • Blick, Andrew, Thompson, Louise, Trench, Alan, Paun, Akash (2015). EVEL intentions, or a necessary solution? Experts respond to the Government’s English Votes for English Laws proposals.
  • Bloch, Alice, McKay, Sonia (2015). On immigration, the proposals of both Labour and the Conservatives disappoint.
  • Bloch, Alice, McKay, Sonia (2015). On immigration, the proposals of both Labour and the Conservatives disappoint.
  • Block, Alyssa (2015). Communicating suffering: where do you draw the line?
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). Blog: Does residential development always drive down local prices?
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). Fizzy and the ‘good landlord’ model.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). PRS Profiles: Learning from tenants’ experiences to improve private renting in London.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). Political party manifestos – anything for London’s housing?
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). Post-election event: Looking ahead – how should the new government address London’s housing supply crisis?
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). Towards a community of practice: notes from a London Local Authority roundtable.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). What is different about today’s big developments? Thoughts from a recent site visit.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). Workshop: Increasing the range of alternative approaches to supply in London can significantly increase output.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2015). Workshop: Is foreign money necessary for accelerating housing development in London?
  • Blog Admin, LSE Social Care Research Impact Blog (2015). Blogging… a piece of cake… isn’t it?
  • Blog Admin, LSE Social Care Research Impact Blog (2015). Consider impact early.
  • Blog Admin, LSE Social Care Research Impact Blog (2015). Musings about involvement in research….
  • Blog Admin, LSE Social Care Research Impact Blog (2015). Myth busting knowledge exchange methods.
  • Blog Admin, LSE Social Care Research Impact Blog (2015). The SCEiP project …. And six lessons (to date…).
  • Blog Admin, LSE Social Care Research Impact Blog (2015). A balancing act? Academic impact versus practice impact? Really?
  • Blonigen, Bruce, Cristea, Anca (2015). New evidence suggests that air services do boost regionaleconomic growth.
  • Bloom, Ben-Nun Pazit, Arikan, Gizem, Courtemanche, Marie (2015). Praying for both teams: how religion both facilitates anddampens anti-immigration sentiment.
  • Blumenau, Jack (2015). Do party leader approval ratings predict election outcomes?
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Focus on… London.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Focus on… the Midlands.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Focus on… the South West.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Focus on…Scotland.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Four electoral records that might be broken in May.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Predicting the polls – April.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Predicting the polls – March.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Predicting the polls – March 17th.
  • Blumenau, Jack, Hix, Simon, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). What would the election look like under PR?
  • Blumenau, Jack, Travers, Tony (2015). Five minutes with Nicola Sturgeon: “minority government is perfectly capable of being stable government”.
  • Boano, Camillo, Talocci, Giorgio (2015). Forced displacements in Cambodia: creative re-appropriation practices versus current models of urban development.
  • Bocchi, Alessandra (2015). The separation of knowledge and the concentration of power – what role can the media play today?
  • Bocci, Alessandra (2015). Government secrecy and the task of meta-journalists.
  • Bochsler, Daniel, Gerber, Marlène, Zumbach, David (2015). The 2015 Swiss elections: a landslide win for the right, despite limited changes in vote shares.
  • Bode, Leticia, Hanna, Alex, Yang, JungHwan, Shah, Dhavan V. (2015). #Politics on Twitter goes beyond the left-right ideology divide.
  • Bodea, Cristina, Higashijima, Masaaki (2015). Central banks and fiscal policy: why independent central banks can lead to lower fiscal deficits.
  • Boehmke, Frederick J., Osborn, Tracy L., Schilling, Emily U. (2015). How partisan gridlock in state legislatures encourages the use of citizen initiatives.
  • Boeri, Tito, Brown, Stuart A. (2015). Five minutes with Tito Boeri: “We don’t just need a welfare state in Europe, we also need a welfare union”.
  • Bojar, Abel (2015). How academia should respond to Europe’s refugee crisis.
  • Bol, Damien, Pilet, Jean-Benoit, Riera, Pedro (2015). Why do some countries use PR while others don’t? How electoral system trends spread across European democracies.
  • Bolel, Canan (2015). Book review: the sociologist and the historian by Pierre Bourdieu and Roger Chartier.
  • Bolel, Canan (2015). The best bookshops in Edinburgh.
  • Bolel, Canan (2015). The best bookshops in York.
  • Bolger, Conall (2015). Regulators are frequently the source of castigation, but they are bound by practical realities.
  • Bolleyer, Nicole (2015). The blurring of party-political and parliamentary roles can impede the effectiveness of regulatory regimes.
  • Bolton, Alexander, Thrower, Sharece (2015). How spending more money on Congress helps check the President’s executive power.
  • Bon, Florian (2015). Book Review: phishing for phools: the economics of manipulation and deception by George A. Akerlof and Robert J. Shiller.
  • Bon, Florian (2015). Book review: Hard times: inequality,recession, aftermath by Tom Clark withAnthony Heath.
  • Boock, Michael, Zhang, Hui (2015). How can universities increase Green Open Access? Article deposit rates soar after direct solicitation from library.
  • Book Reviews, LSE (2015). Reading List: 8 books on remembering the Holocaust.
  • Book Reviews, LSE (2015). Reading list: 8 books that help us understand why #NoMorePage3 is important.
  • Booth, Jonathan E. (2015). Workers need to question whether right to work laws arepromoting their rights or stripping them away.
  • Borges, Caio (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – progress depends on clarifying responsibilities.
  • Borke Tunali, Cigdem (2015). An overview of external imbalances in the Western Balkan Countries.
  • Borowski, Audrey (2015). Book Review: Radicals, revolutionaries and terrorists by Colin J. Beck.
  • Borrell Porta, Mireia (2015). Independence and the distribution of resources within Spain will once again take centre stage in Catalonia’s elections.
  • Bortolotti, Lisa (2015). Are delusions bad for you?
  • Bosman, Jeroen, Kramer, Bianca (2015). 101 Innovations in Scholarly Communication: How researchers are getting to grip with the myriad of new tools.
  • Boujemi, Hanane (2015). Since the Snowden revelations, more people have joined the discussion on digital rights, but change requires more than conversation.
  • Bousbah, Karima, Hänni, Miriam, Heyne, Lea, Müller, Lisa, Ruth, Saskia (2015). The UK has just held a General Election – but how democratic are we as a country?
  • Boutherin, Thibault (2015). The Four Plagues of Macedonia.
  • Bouçek, Francoise (2015). Sarkozy’s French local election victory sets the stage for the run up to the next presidential election.
  • Bowen, Kyle (2015). Internet freedom in Iran: attitudes to anonymity, privacy and FOI.
  • Bowman, Ben (2015). Effective representation is key to getting young people to vote.
  • Bowman, Vicky (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – encouraging transparency in Myanmar: Pwint Thit Sa.
  • Boyle, Katie (2015). The Government’s new EVEL timeline still isn’t sufficient to facilitate the necessary debate and deliberation.
  • Bošković, Mirko (2015). Why Montenegro’s protests are unlikely to spell the end for Milo Đukanović.
  • Braithwaite, Paul (2015). Northern Ireland desperately needs a deliberative model to prevent it becoming a dictatorship of electoral democracy.
  • Brake, Elizabeth (2015). Why can’t we be (legally-recognized) friends?
  • Brandstedt, Eric (2015). What should be expected from the forthcoming climate negotiations?
  • Breau, Sébastien (2015). New evidence points to emerging regional divides in thegeography of earnings inequality in Canada.
  • Brenner, David, Li, Hkun, Lat, Hkun (2015). A view from the border: everyday lives in Burma’s conflict zones in times of transition.
  • Brett, Daniel (2015). Corruption and anti-corruption in Romania. Finally turning the corner?
  • Brett, Daniel (2015). Romania’s anti-corruption drive might still fall short of cleaning up the country’s politics.
  • Brett, Daniel (2015). Romania’s politics on fire: why Victor Ponta resigned and what it means for the country.
  • Brett, Daniel (2015). Trouble at the Top: Corruption, anti-corruption, and the battle for political survival.
  • Brett, Daniel (2015). The corruption charges levelled at Victor Ponta have triggered a major political crisis in Romania.
  • Brett, Teddy (2015). Professor Teddy Brett: The Idea of Development in Theory and Practice.
  • Brett, Teddy (2015). Teddy Brett: Failed Markets, failed states and the Global Recession: Responding to the Financial Crisis.
  • Brewer, John D., Hayes, Bernadette C. (2015). There is a need to develop both a victim-led and victim-centred approach to dealing with the legacy of Northern Ireland’s violent past.
  • Brienza, Casey (2015). Book review: enhancing the doctoral experience: a guide for supervisors and their international students by Steve Hutchinson, Helen Lawrence, and Dave Filipović-Carter.
  • Brienza, Casey (2015). Book review: ethnography for the internet: embedded, embodied and everyday.
  • Brienza, Casey (2015). Book review: internet literature in China by Michel Hockx.
  • Brienza, Casey (2015). Book review: pressed for time: the acceleration of life in digital capitalism by Judy Wajcman.
  • Briggle, Adam, Frodeman, Robert, Barr, Kelli (2015). Achieving escape velocity: Breaking Free from the impact failure of applied philosophy.
  • Briggle, Adam, Frodeman, Robert, Holbrook, Britt (2015). The impact of Philosophy and the philosophy of Impact: A guide to charting more diffuse influences across time.
  • Bright, Jonathan, Döring, Holger, Little, Conor (2015). How do European democracies compare when it comes to the length of ministerial careers?
  • Brightwell, Ryan (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – what should banks do to take human rights seriously?
  • Brill, Frances (2015). Creating a sustainable model for the tourism industry.
  • Brill, Frances (2015). Innovative Governance and What it Means #LSEAfrica Summit.
  • Brill, Frances (2015). Novel approaches to governance in Africa could lead a worldwide revolution.
  • Brill, Frances (2015). Recognising the Real Value of African Cities.
  • Brixiová, Zuzana, Meng, Qingwei, Ncube, Mthuli (2015). Can intra-regional trade act as a global shock absorber in Africa?
  • Brock, Maria (2015). Pussy Riot as a symptom of Putinism.
  • Brodsky, Richard (2015). Bolton and Pence show the Republican Party’s slide towards war and bigotry.
  • Brodsky, Richard (2015). How not to run a congressional hearing on Benghazi: Republicans v Clinton.
  • Brodsky, Richard (2015). Mike Huckabee: smart enough to be the Republican nominee.
  • Brodsky, Richard (2015). Obama versus 47 Republican Senators: dangerous stuff.
  • Brodsky, Richard (2015). On vaccination, Hillary Clinton stakes out a strong position, while Rand Paul struggles for the base.
  • Brodsky, Richard (2015). Trump v. Eisenhower: no experience needed.
  • Brodsky, Richard (2015). What Hillary Clinton can learn from Mario Cuomo.
  • Brodsky, Richard (2015). What we can learn from New York’s 1997 Confederate flag fight.
  • Brooker, Charlie (2015). Healthcare policy for those on probation operates on a wing and a prayer.
  • Broome, André (2015). The EU’s deal on Greece shows that Europe remains wedded to the politics of austerity.
  • Broughton Micova, Sally (2015). Digital Single Market Strategy: Implications for European audiovisual content.
  • Broughton Micova, Sally (2015). Digital Single Market strategy: geo-blocking, copyright, and AVMS implications.
  • Broughton Micova, Sally (2015). European Digital Single Market Consultations Tackle Cross-Border Copyrights & Content.
  • Broughton Micova, Sally (2015). New Voices on the Future of Audiovisual Media Services in Europe.
  • Broughton Micova, Sally (2015). Radical proposals in the EC’s consultation on audiovisual media services.
  • Brown, Chris (2015). The Labour Party plans for ‘Progressive Internationalism’ if it returns to government.
  • Brown, Martin D. (2015). The battle for history: why Europe should resist the temptation to rewrite its own communist past.
  • Brown, Martin D., Romano, Angela (2015). Forty years later, the signing of the Helsinki Final Act continues to have an impact on European security.
  • Brown, Miko (2015). India’s quiet acceptance of the annexation of Crimea reflects its vision for a multi-polar world order.
  • Brown, Miko (2015). Modi – drumming up a beat for Japan?
  • Brown, R. Khari, Taylor, Robert Joseph, Chatters, Linda M. (2015). America is not losing its religion – population trends mean thatit is simply becoming more religiously diverse.
  • Brown, Richard (2015). More radical thinking than we are currently seeing will be needed to secure the devolved powers that London needs.
  • Brown, Sally (2015). Book review: father and daughter: patriarchy, gender and social science by Ann Oakley.
  • Brown Coverdale, Helen (2015). Book review: the human rights enterprise: political sociology, state power, and social movements by William T. Armaline et al.
  • Brown-Saracino, Japonica (2015). How cities shape social and sexual identities.
  • Bruzzone, Mario (2015). The work of sustaining change: lessons from Mexico.
  • Bryant, Rebecca (2015). The victory of Mustafa Akıncı in northern Cyprus gives hope to Turkish Cypriots of a better future.
  • Bryson, Alex, Gomez, Rafael, Zhang, Tingting (2015). Will you become an All-Star Athlete? The answer may depend on when you were born.
  • Brøgger, Tine E. J., Saltnes, Johanne Døhlie (2015). Federica Mogherini’s first seven months in office: a balancing act between supranational and intergovernmental decision-making.
  • Bucyana, Olivier (2015). Democracy Beyond Elections.
  • Budtz Pedersen, David (2015). Real impact is about influence, meaning and value: Mapping contributions for a new impact agenda in the humanities.
  • Buehler, Ralph (2015). The U.S. can learn from Germany’s successful transport policies to reduce CO2 emissions and petroleum dependence.
  • Buehler, Ralph (2015). While Americans are not yet giving up their cars, they are increasingly taking up walking, cycling, and public transport as well.
  • Buhari-Gulmez, Didem (2015). The clash between Putin and Erdoğan represents a turning point in Russian-Turkish relations.
  • Bulger, Monica (2015). Is using technology for learning a good idea?
  • Bulloch, Douglas (2015). The austerity tortoise and the Keynesian hare.
  • Bulman, George (2015). How making entrance exams more accessible can increase college attendance.
  • Bulzomi, Anna (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – human rights due diligence is redefining investment opportunities in frontier markets.
  • Burger, Anna S. (2015). Extreme working hours have radically increased in many western European countries since the start of the 1990s.
  • Burns, Anne (2015). ‘Picturing the Social’: Questions of method, ethics and transparency in the analysis of social media photography.
  • Burton, Sarah (2015). Book review: racism, class and the racialized outsider by Satnam Virdee.
  • Burton, Sarah (2015). Book review: the ‘postmodern turn’ in the social sciences by Simon Susen.
  • Busher, Joel (2015). Understanding the English Defence League: living on the front line of a ‘clash of civilisations’.
  • Bushnell, Alexis (2015). Book review: politics and philosophy in our time by Alain Badiou & Jean-Claude Milner, translated by Susan Spitzer.
  • Buttliere, Brett (2015). We need informative metrics that will help, not hurt, the scientific endeavor – let’s work to make metrics better.
  • Byanyima, Winnie (2015). An Alternative Perspective on Africa Rising.
  • Byrd, Carson (2015). How beliefs in biological differences can undergird racial and policy attitudes.
  • Byrd, Daniel, Hall, Deborah, Roberts, Nicole, Soto, José (2015). Implicit racial biases can undermine liberal and moderate Whites’ support for Black politicians.
  • Byrne, Christopher, Theakston, Kevin (2015). Leaving the House: the challenges former MPs face after leaving Parliament.
  • Bötticher, Astrid (2015). Germany is in great need of a meaningful discussion aboutIslamophobia.
  • Bøler, Ann, Javorcik, Beata, Helene, Ulltveit-Moe (2015). Exporters attract more competitive female workers, but pay them less than their male counterparts.
  • Bølstad, Jørgen, Cross, James P. (2015). Making EU decisions more visible to the public: how transparency in the Council has developed since 2001.
  • Bühlmann, Marc, Heyne, Lea, Merkel, Wolfgang, Müller, Lisa, Ruth, Saskia, Weßels, Bernhard (2015). Democracy barometer: a new approach to evaluating the quality of democratic systems.
  • Cadywould, Charlie (2015). Democratic participation can help to alleviate Britain’s housing crisis.
  • Cahan, Steven, Chen, Chen, Chen, Lily, Nguyen, Nhut H. (Nick) (2015). Some firms actively use CSR to improve their image in the public media.
  • Cain, Ruth (2015). Work at all costs? the gendered impact of Universal Credit on lone-parent and low-paid families.
  • Cairney, Paul (2015). Constitutional issues look set to only have a marginal influence on the General Election, at least in England.
  • Cairney, Paul (2015). Five political problems with ‘Full Fiscal Autonomy’ for Scotland.
  • Calca, Patricia (2015). Despite the crisis, Portugal’s 2015 election will be a straight contest between the country’s two mainstream parties.
  • Calca, Patricia (2015). The fall of Portugal’s government has rewritten the country’s political rules.
  • Calhoun, Craig (2015). LSE and South Asia: a history and future of engagement.
  • Caliari, Aldo (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – are infrastructure investors exempt from human rights duties? G20 surely thinks so….
  • Caliendo, Lorenzo, Parro, Fernando (2015). Latin American immigrants are less likely to be authorized to work in the U.S. than similar immigrants from other countries.
  • Call, Matthew, Nyberg, Anthony, Ployhart, Rob (2015). Companies face special challenges when employee departures pick up speed.
  • Cameron, David (2015). “Dear Donald…” The text of David Cameron’s letter to Donald Tusk.
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2015). Did Britain’s right-wing newspapers win the election for the Tories?
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2015). Jeremy Corbyn is the New Left.
  • Campbell, Cathy (2015). Teachers must be incentivised and rewarded if they are to become the new front line in helping children with complex social problems.
  • Campion, Sonali (2015). Gender violence, neoliberalism and the Hindu right: a panel discussion with Tanika Sarkar and Kavita Krishnan.
  • Campion, Sonali (2015). India at a crossroads: growth or green growth?
  • Campion, Sonali (2015). Myanmar on the brink: November’s election and beyond.
  • Campion, Sonali (2015). Political commitment to public services in India: evidence from Tamil Nadu.
  • Campion, Sonali (2015). The political success of the Dalit movement in North India: a historical perspective.
  • Campos, Nauro F. (2015). Why the UK will still be talking about a Brexit at the end of the next parliament.
  • Campos, Nauro F., Coricelli, Fabrizio (2015). Greece is a far more willing ‘reformer’ than it is given credit for.
  • Canetti, Daphna, Hirsch-Hoefler, Sivan, Hobfoll, Stevan (2015). Individuals exposed to political violence are less likely to support compromises in peace talks.
  • Cantor, Maurício, Gero, Shane (2015). Passing Review: how the R-index aims to improve the peer-review system by quantifying reviewer contributions.
  • Cantú Rivera, Humberto (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – the UN guiding principles in the Americas: moving forward?
  • Capussela, Andrea (2015). The paradoxical Kosovo ‘special court’ was a guarantee of political stability – that is why the ruling class wanted it.
  • Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo (2015). Kosovo’s pyramidal highway and remarkable generosity.
  • Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo (2015). Raising limits on cash payments sends the wrong signal in Italy’s fight against corruption.
  • Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo, Intini, Vito (2015). External pressure is needed to help Italy tackle its persistent corruption problem.
  • Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo, Intini, Vito (2015). Italy’s latest legislation on accounting fraud highlights the country’s difficulty in pursuing real economic and political reform.
  • Carabelli, Giulia, Lyon, Dawn (2015). Planning and imagining the future on the Isle of Sheppey.
  • Cardona, Helene (2015). Britain’s immigration system and its modern-day slaves.
  • Carlin, Ryan E., Love, Grogory J., Martínez-Gallardo, Cecilia (2015). Divided government shields leaders from blame for the economy but affords no quarter in the fight against terrorism.
  • Carlson, Jennifer (2015). The important relationship between socioeconomic decline, masculinity, and guns.
  • Carolyne, Waraga (2015). Can Kenya succeed in eliminating corruption?
  • Carr-West, Jonathan (2015). Local government needs fiscal devolution, more power in the hands of councils and communities and respect from the centre.
  • Carr-West, Jonathan (2015). A road map for pluralistic and ‘asymmetric’ devolution in the UK.
  • Carroll, Susan (2015). Susan Carroll, USA.
  • Carson, Jamie L., Crespin, Michael H., Madonna, Anthony J. (2015). Despite party pressures, House members’ support for their leadership in procedural votes is not guaranteed.
  • Carter, Andrew (2015). Fiscal devolution to cities is critical for tackling the UK’s two-tier economy.
  • Cassam, Quassim (2015). Intellectual vice and self-awareness.
  • Cassen, Robert, McNally, Sandra, Vignoles, Anna (2015). Making a difference in education: What the evidence says.
  • Castro-Conde, Cristina Ares (2015). Rather than abandoning integration, the Greek crisis should be the impetus for improving European democracy.
  • Catlaw, Thomas J., Kupchik, Aaron (2015). Frequent use of school suspension may be curtailing young people’s future political participation.
  • Catá Backer, Larry, Richard, W., Eshelman, Mary (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – the measure of … things: measurement first principles and the business and human rights assessment project.
  • Cengiz, Firat (2015). Success for the pro-Kurdish HDP in Turkey’s general election could reshape the country’s politics.
  • Cengiz, Firat (2015). Turkish elections: why Turkey’s opposition should remain hopeful despite Erdoğan’s victory.
  • Cenusa, Denis (2015). The EU risks alienating the Moldovan population if it fails to take a tougher line with the country’s pro-European parties.
  • Cestnik, Bojan, Kern, Alenka (2015). Research from Slovenia shows ‘administrative literacy’ is key in people getting the most from e-government services.
  • Cetrà, Daniel (2015). Catalan elections: three possible scenarios that could shape Catalonia’s future.
  • Chachage, Chambi (2015). Is the Tanzanian national electoral commission credible?
  • Chadha, Raghav, Shukla, Vandinika (2015). “AAP has been written off many times… but every time we bounce back and this time we will also come out strong” – Raghav Chadha.
  • Chakrabarti, Suma (2015). How the Sustainable Development Goals can be delivered.
  • Chalmers, Adam William, Dellmuth, Lisa Maria (2015). The effect of EU spending on support for the integration process depends on how ‘European’ citizens feel.
  • Chamberlain, Marty (2015). Peer review of teaching and the TEF – We need more than a tick-box exercise to improve the quality of teaching.
  • Chamberlain, Tim (2015). Book review: Shanghai homes: palimpsests of private life by Jie Li.
  • Chamberlain, Tim (2015). Book review: a historical atlas of Tibet by Karl E. Ryavec.
  • Chapman, Terence, Songying, Fang, Stone, Randall (2015). Greece illustrates how the politics of lending can undermine its effectiveness.
  • Chappell, Jules (2015). Jules Chappell, UK.
  • Charountaki, Marianna (2015). A European Union without Greece would be a much diminished force.
  • Chaskin, Robert J., Joseph, Mark L. (2015). Mixed-income development in Chicago helps residential integration but also continues social exclusion.
  • Chatziantoniou, Ioannis (2015). The new Syriza government must prioritise economic growth and job creation to get Greece back on its feet.
  • Cheetham, Tim (2015). Rigid statutory demands, budget cuts, and lack of political choice are strangling local government innovation.
  • Chemouni, Benjamin (2015). Failed coup in Burundi: what does it mean for the future of the country?
  • Chernow, Stefanie, White, Aidan (2015). Watching the watchdog: Making self-regulation work in journalism.
  • Chernyavskaya, Alexandra (2015). E-Safety – it’s not just for teens.
  • Chernyavskaya, Alexandra (2015). What parents need to know: latest trends in children’s internet use.
  • Cheshire, Paul (2015). A real housing crisis but only fake solutions on offer.
  • Chesterton, Fiona (2015). Book review: the media and financial crises: comparative and historical perspectives edited by Steve Schifferes and Richard Roberts.
  • Chhabra, Shikha, Mukhopadhyay, Ankita (2015). Not just another nobody: remembering Shikha Chhabra 1990-2015.
  • Chia, Aloysius (2015). Book review: the Oxford handbook of banking, Second Edition.
  • Chiappetta, Kathleen (2015). Book review: fishers and plunderers: theft, slavery and violence at sea by Alastair Couper, Hance D. Smith and Bruno Ciceri.
  • Chopin, Thierry (2015). The UK’s renegotiation: what a fair deal between London and its European partners might look like.
  • Chopra, Surabhi (2015). Impunity in India: no reckoning with mass violence.
  • Chow, Hugo (2015). The origins and harsh reality of human trafficking in Thailand.
  • Chowdhury, Areeq (2015). Online voting is the 21st century answer to poor voter turnout in the UK.
  • Christin, Angèle (2015). Web analytics in the workplace: What Amazon and web newsrooms have in common – and where they differ.
  • Christofis, Nikos (2015). Book review: The Europeanisation of contested statehood: the EU in Northern Cyprus by George Kyris.
  • Christofis, Nikos (2015). Book review: resolving Cyprus: new approaches to conflict resolution.
  • Christopher, Graham (2015). Working Effectively: Lessons from 10 years of the Freedom of Information Act.
  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2015). As the refugee crisis transforms the EU-Turkey relationship, there are no easy choices for Greek foreign policy.
  • Chwalisz, Claudia (2015). Canada’s election is turning out to be a three-way race to the finish.
  • Chwalisz, Claudia (2015). The cry of populism signals a wider frustration with ‘politics as usual’, and greater use of deliberation could be the answer.
  • Chwalisz, Claudia (2015). The moment of genuine interest in Canada’s democracy afforded by Stephen Harper’s defeat must not go to waste.
  • Cizmar, Anne (2015). Kentucky’s Republican primary moves to a ‘recanvass’ in the latest development in a noteworthy gubernatorial election.
  • Cizmar, Anne (2015). The first Democratic debate: some unity, but significantdisagreements on policy.
  • Clague, Terry (2015). Unbundling is over-rated: On the value of contributing to an edited book.
  • Clammer, John (2015). The creative ‘slum’.
  • Clark, Alistair, James, Toby (2015). The UK’s electoral infrastructure is functional due to the efforts of many individuals, but it cannot be taken for granted.
  • Clark, April K. (2015). Why we need to think again about the decline in social capital.
  • Clark, Jim, Meldrum, Ryan C. (2015). Spending unsupervised time online with friends encourages delinquency and drug and alcohol use among teenagers.
  • Clark, Michael, Cornes, Michelle (2015). Promoting ‘communities of practice’ can help to better support people experiencing multiple-exclusion homelessness.
  • Clark, Sam (2015). Good work.
  • Clark, Tom, Kastellec, John (2015). Partisan cues have a significant influence on the public’ssupport for the Supreme Court.
  • Clark, William A.V., Andersson, Eva, Osth, John, Malmberg, Bo (2015). In Los Angeles, increasing neighborhood diversity means that segregation is on the decline.
  • Clayden, Jon (2015). Was the REF a waste of time? Strong relationship between grant income and quality-related funding allocation.
  • Clegg, Daniel (2015). Despite the tax credit U-turn a radical upheaval in support for the working poor is still underway.
  • Clemens, Austin, Crespin, Michael H., Finocchiaro, Charles J. (2015). In Congress, committees are still at the center of pork barrel politics.
  • Clemens, Jeffrey (2015). Expanding Medicaid may also help to improve the coverage ofObamacare’s health insurance exchanges.
  • Clements, Ben (2015). Britain and the bomb: Surveying party supporters’ attitudes on the nuclear weapons debate.
  • Clifton, Judith (2015). Straitjacketing the state: Local and national governments have lost power over specific areas of public service governance to Brussels.
  • Clifton, Judith (2015). Straitjacketing the state: how local and national governments have lost power over public service governance to Brussels.
  • Cloonan, Becky, Fletcher, Brenden, Kerschl, Karl, Werdine Norris, Maria (2015). Comics and human rights: an interview with the Gotham Academy team.
  • Coban, Mehmet Kerem (2015). Book review: conceptualizing capitalism: institutions, evolution, future by Geoffrey M. Hodgson.
  • Coban, Mehmet Kerem (2015). Book review: global democratic theory: a critical introduction.
  • Cobb, Michael D., Taylor, Andrew J. (2015). State-level corruption scandals do little to change voters’ minds about political parties.
  • Cocca, Carolyn (2015). Comics and human rights: Wonder Woman and the trickiness of superheroines.
  • Cocca, Carolyn (2015). Comics and human rights: oracle and representations of disability in superhero comics.
  • Cocca, Carolyn (2015). Comics and human rights: the erasure of X-Women in days of future past.
  • Cochran, Joshua (2015). Minority youth who are sentenced are more likely to receivemore punishment and less rehabilitation.
  • Cochran, Joshua C. (2015). Black and Latino inmates are more likely to be adversely affected by distance and other barriers to prison visits.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2015). Grexit remains unlikely, but time is against the Greek government.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo, de Grauwe, Paul (2015). Both Greece and its creditors must compromise to prevent the risk of a Grexit.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo, de Grauwe, Paul (2015). Why Denmark should either abandon its peg to the euro or join the single currency.
  • Coelho, Miguel (2015). Understanding the institutional roots of persistent policy problems in the UK.
  • Coffé, Hilde (2015). Lower education levels goes hand in hand with support for direct democracy.
  • Cohen, Gidon (2015). The North East – continued Labour domination?
  • Coker-Appiah, Dorcas (2015). Dorcas Coker-Appiah, Ghana.
  • Coles, David (2015). Volunteerism in Ghana: Alive and well.
  • Colleau, Morgane (2015). Book review: the Hizbullah phenomenon: politics and communication.
  • Colleau, Morgane (2015). Book review: women and ICT in Africa and the Middle East: changing selves, changing societies by Ineke Buskens and Anne Webb.
  • Colonnelli, Alessio (2015). Eurosceptics at a Junction: Antagonising the EU for the Sake of it is Risky.
  • Colonnelli, Alessio (2015). Pegida shouldn’t be dismissed that easily.
  • Colonnelli, Alessio (2015). ‘Quickie’ divorce Italian style.
  • Colonnelli, Alessio (2015). Separatism does nothing for Catalan identity.
  • Comas-Herrera, Adelina (2015). Re-thinking dementia care: Day Care vs. Recreation.
  • Constant, Claire (2015). Book review: after civil war: division, reconstruction, and reconciliation in Europe.
  • Constantinos, Filis (2015). Could a Chinese-Russian strategic alliance challenge the power of the West?
  • Conway, Moira (2015). The link between casinos and problem gaming in nearby neighborhoods.
  • Cook, Mariam (2015). Challenge yourself: from PositionDial self-discovery to election engagement.
  • Cooke, Steve (2015). Europe should embrace a cosmopolitan approach to animal rights.
  • Cooper, Ian (2015). The story of the first ‘yellow card’ shows that national parliaments can act together to influence EU policy.
  • Cooper, Robert, Hanson, Joanna (2015). Five minutes with Sir Robert Cooper: “The Brussels Agreement between Serbia and Kosovo was based on conversation, not EU pressure”.
  • Coppock, Alexander, Green, Donald (2015). Experiments and eligibility cutoffs show that voting is habit-forming.
  • Corbett, Anne, Gordon, Claire (2015). The university challenge: what type of Brexit would work for Higher Education?
  • Corbett, Jack, Boswell, John (2015). Disillusionment with democratic governance is common to both elite and citizen actors.
  • Corbishley, Chris (2015). Book review: HIV/AIDS and the South African State by Anamarie Bindenagel Sehovic.
  • Corbridge, Stuart (2015). Stuart Corbridge: Arthur Lewis and Development Economics.
  • Cornford, Tony (2015). The new world of digital drugs.
  • Costa-i-Font, Joan (2015). Decentralised healthcare systems can help reduce regional inequalities in health provision.
  • Costa-i-Font, Joan (2015). Parallel trade in medicinal drugs is putting the welfare of EU patients at risk.
  • Costa-i-Font, Joan, Kossarova, Lucia (2015). Height increases in the Czech Republic and Slovakia illustrate the effect of self-determination on citizens’ well-being.
  • Costamagna, Christian, Denti, Davide (2015). The EU needs to step up its involvement in the political crisis in Macedonia.
  • Costas, Marta (2015). Sparks 2015: A view from the Chair.
  • Costello, Rory, Thomson, Robert (2015). The European Parliament’s transnational party groups are surprisingly cohesive, but don’t underestimate the potential for national divisions.
  • Cotula, Lorenzo (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – business and human rights in investment treaties: what progress?
  • Coulter, Steve (2015). Labour and the unions: the awkward couple.
  • Coulter, Steve (2015). Poking the beehive: at the cost of upsetting industrial relations, the Trade Union Bill will provoke further political strife within Labour.
  • Courtney, John (2015). The promise to change the Canadian electoral system is a bold commitment, and one that will be tough to meet.
  • Cowell-Meyers, Kimberley (2015). The Women’s Equality Party will struggle to win seats, but it can push women’s issues up the political agenda.
  • Cowling, Marc (2015). What really happens to smaller businesses in a global financial crisis?
  • Cox, Ed (2015). Evolution or revolution: Spending Review implications for local government and the Northern Powerhouse.
  • Cox, Michael (2015). Greece surrendered, but the real defeat was for Europe.
  • Cox, Michael (2015). The Greek crisis is about far more than one country’s debt – it is about Europe’s political future.
  • Cox, Michael (2015). When is a ‘No’ really a ‘Yes’? Why the referendum result could help Greece secure a deal.
  • Cox Han, Lori (2015). President Hillary Clinton? Nothing is inevitable in the 2016presidential campaign.
  • Cravens, Matthew, Karch, Andrew (2015). States are less likely to reform “three strikes” laws if they use them regularly and have higher levels of prison privatization.
  • Crescenzi, Riccardo, Gagliardi, Luisa, Iammarino, Simona (2015). The presence of foreign multinationals in the UK boosts innovation by domestic firms.
  • Crines, Andrew (2015). Jeremy Corbyn’s rhetoric is effective because his style of engagement contrasts so markedly with the other candidates.
  • Cross, Samantha (2015). Comics and human rights: something more. Saga and representation in comics.
  • Cuffe, James (2015). Book review: the eagle and the dragon by Serge Gruzinski.
  • Cullinane, Carl (2015). First-Past-the-Post means that many constituencies are foregone conclusions, so how much power do voters really have?
  • Cullinane, Carl (2015). Introducing the Democratic Dashboard.
  • Cullinane, Carl (2015). Introducing the Democratic Dashboard: a new voter information resource.
  • Cullinane, Carl (2015). The latest Commons Political Reform Committee report illustrates popular opinion on voter engagement measures.
  • Cummins, Phyllis, Harootyan, Bob (2015). As the workforce ages, older workers need more support and greater opportunities for training and development.
  • Curington, Celeste Vaughan (2015). In online dating, multiracial men and women are preferred above all other groups.
  • Curini, Luigi (2015). The cohesion of committees is key in determining their legislative effectiveness.
  • Curtice, John (2015). The 2015 election could reignite the debate about electoral reform in Britain.
  • Curtice, John (2015). Rules and practices of political opinion polls.
  • Cutts, David, Fieldhouse, Ed, Fisher, Justin, Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles (2015). Contact matters: voters like to be asked personally for their support.
  • Cvitanovic, Chris (2015). Amid mounting political and social uncertainty, institutions must evolve to support evidence-based decision-making.
  • Cynamon, Z., Fazzari, Steven M. (2015). Rising inequality is holding back the U.S. economy.
  • Dadgar, Ali (2015). Book review: The end of representativepolitics by Simon Tormey.
  • Dagney, Faulk, Hicks, Michael (2015). Fixed-route bus systems may help companies retain workers.
  • Damant, Jacqueline (2015). Digital Britain: We must do more to make technology accessible to older people.
  • Dandoy, Régis (2015). The demise of symmetry between ‘sister parties’ has opened up a new chapter in Belgian politics.
  • Dangoor, Margaret (2015). Dementia and day care – supporting the partnership of care.
  • Danielsson, Jon (2015). Iceland illustrates why political ‘hectoring’ from foreign countries is bound to fail in Greece.
  • Danielsson, Jon, Micheler, Eva, Neugebauer, Katja, Uthemann, Andreas, Zigrand, Jean-Pierre (2015). Europe’s proposed capital markets union: how disruptive technologies will drive investment and innovation.
  • Dannreuther, Roland (2015). Why the Arab Spring set Russia on the road to confrontation with the West.
  • Darroch, Peter (2015). Pursuing a multidimensional path to research assessment – Elsevier’s approach to metrics.
  • Davidson, Cathy (2015). Why Do Research? Mapping the futures of Higher Education through the CUNY map of New York City.
  • Davies, Marc (2015). Making elections work: leadership, legitimacy and longevity in Nigeria’s democratisation.
  • Davis, Jaclyn, Sirios, Catherine (2015). For many, leaving prison is followed by poverty and a heavy reliance on family support.
  • Davou, Bettina (2015). Investigating the psychological effects of the Greek financial crisis.
  • Dawson, Mark (2015). The Eurozone crisis has deeply eroded the EU’s accountability structures.
  • Dayal, Sakshi (2015). Politics and new platforms: from #Polis2015.
  • De Cleen, Benjamin (2015). The defeat of left-wing populism and the dangers for democracy in Greece.
  • De Conca, Silvia (2015). Online communities and the law: how e-participation is changing voting rights.
  • De Neve, Jan-Emmanuel (2015). Steady growth generates higher levels of wellbeing among citizens than ‘boom and bust’ cycles.
  • De Spiegelaere, Stan, Jagodzinski, Romek (2015). European works councils: progress and a long road ahead.
  • Dean, John (2015). Book review: good times, bad times: the welfare myth of them and us.
  • Dean, John (2015). Book review: on the state: lectures at the College de France 1989-1992 by Pierre Bourdieu.
  • Deconnick, Kelly Sue, Werdine Norris, Maria (2015). Comics and human rights: an interview with Kelly Sue Deconnick.
  • Defty, Andrew (2015). Andrew Parker’s BBC interview shows continuing weaknesses in how UK security services are scrutinised.
  • Defty, Andrew (2015). Proper scrutiny must not be set aside in Britain’s response to the attacks in Paris.
  • Defty, Andrew (2015). The delay in appointing a new Intelligence and Security Committee threatens to undermine its work before it has even begun.
  • Degens, Philipp (2015). Book review: the social life of money by Nigel Dodd.
  • Dehousse, Renaud, Rozenberg, Olivier (2015). There has been a substantial drop in EU legislative output since 2010.
  • Delcour, Laure, Wolczuc, Kataryna (2015). Armenia is becoming an important test-case for relations between the EU and the Eurasian Economic Union.
  • DellaPosta, Daniel, Shi, Yongren, Macy, Michael (2015). Why do liberals drink lattes? How lifestyles tied to political views can be self-reinforcing among partisan groups.
  • Dellepiane, Sebastian (2015). The clash of economic ideas: the striking resilience of expansionary austerity.
  • Deltas, George, Herrera, Herrera, Polborn, Mattias (2015). Why a move to a simultaneous Presidential Primary system might be counter-productive.
  • Deming, Stuart H. (2015). Misunderstood: The FIFA scandal and theextraterritorial reach of US law.
  • Dennehy, Jane (2015). How we define competition fuels gender inequality in business.
  • Dennis, Dannah (2015). Book review: Tamil Brahmans: the making of a middle-class caste by C.J. Fuller and Haripriya Narasimhan.
  • Dennison, James (2015). The EU referendum in Northern Ireland: good Europeans or sectarian politics as usual?
  • Dennison, James (2015). From Devo-max to West Lothian-Max.
  • Dennison, James (2015). Green Party voters look like Lib Dems, think like Labour voters and are as dissatisfied as ‘Kippers.
  • Dennison, James (2015). The Loser Takes It All – The SNP after the referendum.
  • Dennison, James, Brito Bastos, Filipe (2015). How Portugal’s election resembled the UK’s general election and what both contests indicate about European politics.
  • Dennison, James, Brito Bastos, Filipe (2015). Portugal’s change of government puts the country firmly in uncharted territory.
  • Denny, Zaneta (2015). Fighting from below in the favela: the work of Redes de Desenvolvimento da Maré in Rio de Janeiro.
  • Dermott, Esther (2015). The evolution of gender and poverty in Britain: solo-living men are emerging as a new poor group.
  • Deva, Sagar S., Kirkland, Christopher (2015). By abandoning ideology for short term pragmatism both left and right are trivialising important constitutional questions.
  • Devine, Amy (2015). Comics and human rights: Bitch Planet: yes, all women.
  • Dezuanni, Michael, Whateley, Anna (2015). Parenting in Babylon – a Minecraft digital backyard in Australia.
  • Dhingra, Swati, Ottaviano, Gianmarco, Sampson, Thomas (2015). Should we stay or should we go? The economic consequences of leaving the EU.
  • Dhir, Neha (2015). Sita says sorry: considering the culture of victim blaming in India.
  • Di Bernardo, Francesco (2015). Book Review: Venezuela reframed: Bolivarianism, indigenous peoples and socialisms of the 21st century by Luis Fernando Angosto-Ferrández.
  • Di Bernardo, Francesco (2015). Book review: land and freedom: the MST, the Zapatistas and peasant alternatives to neoliberalism by Leandro Vergara-Camus.
  • Di Bernardo, Francesco (2015). Book review: leadership in the Cuban Revolution: the unseen story by Antoni Kapcia.
  • Di Paolo, Jessica (2015). Engaging the reader: Vox.com.
  • Di Paolo, Jessica (2015). ‘Stuffocation’ and the pursuit of happiness: to do or to have?
  • DiIulio Jr, John J. (2015). Hiring more full-time federal bureaucrats will result in smaller and better government.
  • Dian, Matteo (2015). Book review: China’s challenges edited by Jacques deLisle and Avery Goldstein.
  • Dickerson, Bradley T. (2015). Economic perceptions shape attitudes toward the president during times of economic crisis.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Using anthropology to inform a book’s transition to digital.
  • Dickstein, Michael (2015). The performance of state Obamacare markets is heavily influenced by the size and makeup of coverage regions in the state.
  • Diessner, Sebastian (2015). Increasing the transparency of the ECB could do more harm than good.
  • Dietsch, Peter (2015). Common rules (not rates) should be the answer to tax competition in the EU.
  • Dimitrova, Diana (2015). Data protection: rights of passengers using Automated Border Control.
  • Dimitrova, Diana (2015). (Un)Safe Harbour: Stop! Or the Court of Justice will shoot.
  • Dinas, Elias, Riera, Pedro, Roussias, Nasos (2015). Making the breakthrough into Parliament boosts the electoral success of smaller political parties.
  • Dinic, Milan (2015). Engaging young people to vote: between “clickocracy” and realism.
  • Dinic, Milan (2015). Serbia holds a position few others in Europe can match – but is yet to find how to use it.
  • Dinic, Milan (2015). Serbia – Croatia relations: No way forward in sight.
  • Dinic, Milan (2015). Transparency of media ownership and privatisation: challenges faced by Serbia.
  • Diskin, Abraham (2015). Following Likud’s victory in Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu faces a challenge to secure a stable coalition.
  • Dodd, Lynda G. (2015). Civil rights suits against the police are an essential tool for enforcing the Constitution. But cops rarely pay and settlements don’t lead to change.
  • Doepke, Matthias (2015). How Rosie the Riveter led to the 1950s’ Baby Boom.
  • Dolan, Paul (2015). Happiness research draws our attention to both structure and agency.
  • Donald, Athene (2015). Expectations for all: Universities and supervisors have a responsibility to manage PhD career prospects.
  • Donceel, Laurent (2015). Splits are emerging in the EU over China’s push to gain market economy status.
  • Donnelly, Chris (2015). Why do some states elect two Senators from different parties?: don’t blame it on strategic voters.
  • Doran, Heather (2015). Planning your online engagement strategy? Don’t go it alone. Well-chosen partnerships can maximise reach and impact.
  • Dorey, Pete (2015). Voter dealignment, disillusion and the implications for the May 2015 election.
  • Dorey, Pete, Denham, Andrew (2015). The election of an ‘outsider’ as Labour leader is linked to new selection rules and the ideological alternative on offer.
  • Dorgan, Alex, Harrison, Beth (2015). WOMID: A mentoring initiative for women working in international development aims to connect research and practice.
  • Dorling, Danny (2015). Creating a more equal society will require understanding and generosity, hope, perseverance, but above all kindness.
  • Doukas, John (2015). Unintended consequences of the ECB’s quantitative easing programme could undermine Europe’s recovery.
  • Doukas, John (2015). A scarcity of government bonds could pose problems for the ECB’s quantitative easing programme.
  • Downing, Joseph (2015). Paris attacks: why France must avoid viewing its Muslim population as a security threat.
  • Drake, Helen (2015). Cut off: what leaving the EU would mean for university culture.
  • Drake, Helen (2015). The rise of the Front National is pushing France toward a genuine three-party system.
  • Draus, Paul, Roddy, Juliette (2015). Ghosts and Monsters in the Motor City: challenging the trope of Detroit’s decline.
  • Dryzek, John (2015). Deliberation’s domain extends well beyond Parliament.
  • Duede, Eamon (2015). Wikipedia is significantly amplifying the impact of Open Access publications.
  • Duffy, Rosaleen (2015). The EU should advocate a demand-reduction approach to tackling the global ivory trade.
  • Dulong de Rosnay, Melanie, Lynskey, Orla (2015). Defining a public domain for copyright and data legislation at the European Parliament (part 2).
  • Duncan, Grant (2015). What will the long term impact of the Cabinet Manual be? Developments in New Zealand may hold the answer.
  • Dungey, Mardi, Gajurel, Dinesh (2015). How can countries protect their banks against international contagion?
  • Dunham, Jennifer, Aghekyan, Elen (2015). How do Eastern Partnership countries rate on media freedom?
  • Dunin-Wąsowicz, Roch (2015). Broadening the concept of the Holocaust.
  • Dunn, Andrew (2015). The ‘choosiness’ of the unemployed: evidence on voluntary unemployment in the UK.
  • Dunne, Stephen (2015). Media mergers under scrutiny in Ireland.
  • Duong-Pedica, Anaïs (2015). Banning ‘suicide’ from the syllabus: We need a more sensitive pedagogic style without having recourse to bans.
  • Durbach, Andrea, Horner, Jed, Small, Andrew (2015). Comics and human rights: an interview with the team behind Sogi’s Story.
  • Durkin, Thomas (2015). History shows us that we should not be overly concerned with the recent growth in consumer credit.
  • Durose, Catherine, Justice, Jonathan, Skelcher, Chris (2015). The expansion of arms-length government is not necessarily at odds with democratic accountability.
  • Dusso, Aaron (2015). Partisan and economic cues fail to help low-information voterschoose the correct presidential candidate.
  • Dut, Jacob (2015). Overhaul needed in stalled South Sudan Peace process.
  • Dutceac Segesten, Anamaria (2015). Book review: Europe entrapped by Claus Offe.
  • Dutton, Joseph (2015). There are still serious obstacles to overcome before the benefits of an EU Energy Union can be realised.
  • Dwyer, Macdara (2015). Still mere figureheads? Why the Eurozone crisis has led to the growth of presidential power across Europe.
  • Dávid-Barrett, Elizabeth (2015). Parliamentary codes of conduct do not end political corruption, but they can help build a democratic political culture.
  • Düben, Björn Alexander (2015). The Legitimacy of Russia’s Actions in Ukraine.
  • Dür, Andreas, Bernhagen, Patrick, Marshall, David (2015). Contrary to popular opinion, business actors are less successful than citizen groups at lobbying EU legislators.
  • Easton-Calabria, Evan (2015). Book review: diasporas, development and peacemaking in the Horn of Africa, edited by Liisa Laakso and Petri Hautaniemi.
  • Eckerd, Adam, Heidelberg, Roy L. (2015). Federal and state reforms to incentivize brownfielddevelopments have only enhanced developers’profits on existing projects.
  • Edalere-Henderson, Anthea (2015). Learning more than Minecraft – a case from Jamaica.
  • Edwards, Barry (2015). Alphabetically ordered ballots make elections less fair anddistort the composition of American legislatures.
  • Eichengreen, Barry, Brown, Stuart A. (2015). Five minutes with Barry Eichengreen: “We are a matter of weeks away from a Greek default unless a deal can be reached”.
  • Eichhorn, Jan (2015). There was no rise in Scottish nationalism: Understanding the SNP victory.
  • Eichhorn, Jan, Kenealy, Daniel (2015). The people think it’s good to talk about how they are governed.
  • Eichler, Wiliam (2015). Book review: out of nowhere: the Kurds of Syria in peace and war by Michael M. Gunter.
  • Eichler, William (2015). Book review: Islam: an introduction.
  • Eichler, William (2015). Book review: Revolution is my name: an Egyptian woman’s diary from eighteen days in Tahrir.
  • Eichler, William (2015). Book review: enemy on the Euphrates: the battle for Iraq, 1914-1921.
  • Eichler, William (2015). Book review: mass communication in Israel: nationalism, globalization, and segmentation.
  • Eid, Joelle (2015). Strolling down Houghton Street, the war in Syria looks a little less real.
  • Eid, Joelle (2015). Tonight we mourn.
  • Eidlin, Barry (2015). How the power of Canada’s unions helped slow the growth of inequality.
  • Einstein, Katherine Levine, Glick, David (2015). How exposure to conspiracy theories can reduce trust in government.
  • Eisenstadt, Todd A., LeVan, A. Carl, Maboudi, Tofigh (2015). Can constitutions improve democracy? Sometimes, but not always.
  • Eiser, David (2015). In Scotland, public appetite for further fiscal decentralisation is fuelled by greater levels of trust in Holyrood than in Westminster.
  • El Sehrawey, Amani (2015). Book review: opting out of the European Union: diplomacy, sovereignty and European integration by Rebecca Adler-Nissen.
  • Elias, Anwen (2015). Far from settling the independence question, the Catalan elections have simply added to the uncertainty over Catalonia’s future.
  • Elias, Anwen (2015). Spain’s local elections underlined the profound changes taking place in the Spanish party system.
  • Elias, Anwen (2015). The rise of Podemos poses a challenge for pro-independence parties ahead of the 2015 Catalan elections.
  • Elizabeth, Folan O’Connor (2015). Book Review: the media and public life: A History by John Nerone.
  • Ellinas, Antonis (2015). The rise of the Golden Dawn in Greece.
  • Elliott, Heather (2015). Alabama’s resistance to marriage equality will be short lived.
  • Ellis, Geoff (2015). Internet delivers mixed messages for older people.
  • Ellis, Geoff (2015). Social investment in long-term care.
  • Ellison, Jared M., Spohn, Ryan E. (2015). Colorado’s legalization of medicinal marijuana is linked to a rise in marijuana-related arrests in some parts of Nebraska.
  • Elmqvist Thurén, Billie (2015). Uncovering entrenched gender norms in sustainable livelihood schemes in Gujarat.
  • Elsayed, Nourhan (2015). International Women’s Day: protecting the rights of Muslim women must not be used as a basis for denying their agency.
  • Emerson, Michael (2015). Britain’s political earthquake will create aftershocks for the UK and Europe.
  • Emery, Christian (2015). The GOP hawks’ attempts to undermine an Iran deal is strategic folly.
  • Enders, Claire (2015). What if there were no BBC television? Enders Analysis on BBC TV’s impact on investment in UK content.
  • Engasser, Florence, Gabriel, Madeleine (2015). Building social enterprise ecosystems in India: lessons from Sankalp.
  • Engeman, Cassandra (2015). How social movement unionism helped shape the 2006 immigrant rights marches in L.A.
  • Entwistle, Joanne, Slater, Don, Sloane, Mona (2015). Designing nocturnal cities: Illuminating the social role light plays in urban life.
  • Eriksen, Michael, Ross, Amanda (2015). Why we may need to reconsider the current one-size fits all approach to US housing policy.
  • Erzeel, Silvia, Caluwaerts, Didier (2015). Evidence from Belgium shows that gender quotas do not necessarily eliminate voter bias against women candidates.
  • Escobar, Oliver (2015). Reclaiming democracy: a systems approach to change the system.
  • Esposito, Mark, Tse, Terence (2015). Understanding how finance has moved from “Hubris to Disgrace”.
  • Evans, Alice (2015). Book Review: Women and power in postconflict Africa by Aili Mari Tripp.
  • Evans, Amelia, Winstanley, Stephen (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – asking the basic questions: are voluntary standard-setting initiatives protecting human rights?
  • Evans, Daniel (2015). No more ‘Welsh effect’? Why the EU may be becoming a scapegoat in Wales.
  • Evans, Harry (2015). Book review: the making of Eurosceptic Britain, Second Edition, by Chris Gifford.
  • Evans, Heather, Hayes Clark, Jennifer (2015). Female candidates are more likely to use Twitter to discuss policy issues and to ‘go negative’ in their campaign.
  • Evans, Jules (2015). Book review: the happiness industry: how government and big business sold us well-being.
  • Evans, Mary (2015). A message to Jon Cruddas and Labour: challenge, construct and connect.
  • Evans, Steffan (2015). How extending the right to buy in England could change the relationship between the government and housing associations.
  • Evens, Tom, Isoifidis, Petros, Smith, Paul (2015). FIFA, Mega Sporting Events and Sports Rights.
  • Ewen, Janine (2015). How to eliminate violence against women: the view from Scotland.
  • Ewing, Reid, Hamidi, Shima (2015). Urban sprawl leads to more fatal crashes, while denser areas experience higher rates of accidents which cause injuries.
  • Exadaktylos, Theofanis (2015). Assessing Syriza’s first month in office: why Greece remains a long way from a break with austerity.
  • Exadaktylos, Theofanis (2015). Syriza is now a mainstream party and there is little for Europe to fear in its electoral success.
  • Fabbrini, Sergio (2015). The tyranny of the familiar: why we should be wary of proposals to ‘parliamentarise’ EU decision-making.
  • Falkiner, Daniel (2015). Book review: Islamic State: the digital caliphate by Abdel Bari Atwan.
  • Fan, Maoyong, Gabbard, Susan, Alves Pena, Anita, Perloff, Jeffrey (2015). Governmental and economic changes in the U.S. and Mexico mean that migrant farm workers are disappearing.
  • Fankhauser, Sam (2015). How to make UK energy policy more predictable again.
  • Farah, Asma Ali (2015). Book review: from silence to protest: international perspectives on weakly resourced groups.
  • Farber, Henry S., Rothstein, Jesse, Valletta, Robert G. (2015). Extensions and rollbacks of US unemployment insurance benefits primarily affected how long people searched for work rather than job finding.
  • Faris, Daniel (2015). Distracted driving reveals the growing rift between technology and policy.
  • Farnell, Chad R. (2015). Rapid immigrant suburbanization means that for many, segregation has shifted to the periphery.
  • Farrer, Benjamin D. (2015). Voters react to ethnic minority candidates in different and sometimes unexpected ways.
  • Fasan, Olu (2015). Nigeria’s import restrictions: A bad policy that harms trade relations.
  • Fatsis, Lambros (2015). Greece must put aside divisive rhetoric if a solution to the country’s crisis is to be found.
  • Fatsis, Lambros (2015). The Greek crisis illustrates both the poverty of Syriza’s ideology and the flaws in the EU’s balance-sheet approach to decision-making.
  • Fatsis, Lambros (2015). How do citizens choose who to vote for? A sociological account of the 2015 UK general election.
  • Faullimmel, Natacha (2015). Book review: truth wars the politics of climate change, military intervention and financial crisis by Peter Lee.
  • Favotto, Alvise, Kollman, Kelly (2015). Corporate social responsibility in an era of economic crisis: Empty gesture or tool for corporate learning?
  • Fayolle, Ambroise, Taylor, Jonathan (2015). Paris climate conference: how public development banks can boost private climate investment.
  • Feast, Sara (2015). Poll results: Is technology essential to entrepreneurial success today?
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2015). Greece: when populism fails.
  • Fecher, Benedikt, Kaiser, Jonas (2015). Collapsing Ivory Towers? A hyperlink analysis of the German academic blogosphere.
  • Fecher, Benedikt, Wagner, Gert G. (2015). Flipping journals to open: Rethinking publishing infrastructure in light of Lingua/Glossa case.
  • Fedirko, Taras (2015). Book review: the limits of neoliberalism: authority, sovereignty and the logic of competition.
  • Feinstein, Leon (2015). Misunderstanding data: Can researchers simplify longitudinal data for policymakers without it leading to errors?
  • Felle, Tom (2015). Data journalism may be helping to solidify the divide between those who can afford to be in engaged in the political process and the rest.
  • Ferro, Mario (2015). Mario Ferro on Consultancy Projects, Fieldwork, and Social Enterprise.
  • Festré, Agnès, Garrouste, Pierre (2015). The economics of attention: Is there an appropriate balance between the interests of information providers and users?
  • Feuerborn, MJ (2015). Comics and human rights: thinking about us – queer inclusion in comics.
  • Fiel, Jeremy E. (2015). How policies that promote school competition and choice arelinked to school segregation.
  • Field, Bonnie N. (2015). How the next Spanish government might be formed after Spain’s election.
  • Finn, Peter (2015). More than a decade on, there are still unanswered questionsabout Abu Ghraib and the war on terror.
  • Firsing, Scott (2015). Are South Africans on the move?
  • Firsing, Scott (2015). What aerospace technology can do for Africa.
  • Fisher, Steve (2015). UKIP rise more among Church of England members.
  • Fitzpatrick, Caroline (2015). Disadvantaged and visible minority students may be less likely to benefit from supportive relationships with teachers.
  • Fitzpatrick, Kathleen (2015). Impact doesn’t have to be a dirty word – staying positive about the promotion of scientific excellence.
  • Fitzpatrick, Katie (2015). Lack of a car is more important to elderly residents of food deserts than lack of a nearby supermarket.
  • Flavin, Patrick, Hartney, Michael T. (2015). State mandatory collective bargaining laws can mean public employees are more likely to participate in politics.
  • Fleming, Andrew (2015). Ofcom should count the Greens as a major party.
  • Florensa, Clara, Hochadel, Oliver, Tabernero, Carlos (2015). Science on Television: Despite tensions, the potential of visual narrative and scientific storytelling is enormous.
  • Flynn, D.J., Harbridge, Laurel (2015). People can prefer a policy win for the party they oppose over Congressional gridlock.
  • Flynn, Niall (2015). Book review: Kittler now: current perspectives in Kittler studies.
  • Flynn, Niall (2015). Book review: media|matter: the materiality of media, matter as medium edited by Bernd Herzogenrath.
  • Fogelberg, Teresa (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – linking the UN guiding principles to global reporting practice: proof of increasing human rights reporting.
  • Folan O'Connor, Elizabeth (2015). Book review: the lure of technocracy.
  • Forbes, Claire (2015). Book review: education, work and social change by Robin Simmons, Ron Thompson and Lisa Russell.
  • Fortin-Rittberger, Jessica, Rittberger, Berthold (2015). Why the European Parliament has a better gender balance than national parliaments.
  • Fortin-Rittberger, Jessica, Rittberger, Berthold, Dingler, Sarah (2015). Recruitment procedures shape the gender composition of party lists in European Parliament elections.
  • Fortunato, David (2015). Cabinet participation erodes the distinctiveness of junior coalition partners’ ‘brand’.
  • Fossi, Julia (2015). Are social networking sites doing enough to keep children safe?
  • Foster, Jason, Taylor, Alison (2015). Growing immigration has meant Canadian unions have had to learn how to better represent migrant workers.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2015). Myths set in motion: the moral economy of Mai-Mai governance.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2015). “Say no to bad touches”: schools, sexual identity and sexual violence in northern Uganda.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2015). South Sudan: who got what?
  • Fowler, Anthony, Hall, Andrew B. (2015). Elections have big consequences that last for decades.
  • Fowlie, Meredith (2015). Energy efficiency is a tough sell, even when it is “free”.
  • Fox, Lindsay (2015). Black and Hispanic households tend to live in much poorerneighborhoods than White households with the same income.
  • Fox, Mary (2015). Poll results: Is crowdfunding a fad?
  • Fox, Mary (2015). Protecting the future of equity crowdfunding.
  • Fox, Stuart (2015). How can we get more young people voting in elections? Start by abandoning the myth of ‘politically alienated youth’.
  • Frame, W. Scott, Fuster, Andreas, Tracy, Joseph, Vickery, James (2015). While the rescue of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac was generally successful, there is still no end in sight to their conservatorship.
  • Franco, Francesco (2015). Portugal must rebalance its economy and improve education to continue its economic recovery.
  • Frantescu, Doru (2015). The top five likely effects of a Brexit on the EU’s policies.
  • Fredén, Annika (2015). Parties’ pre-election signals can and do influence strategic voting, according to evidence from Sweden.
  • Freedman, Des (2015). Google’s Digital News Initiative: Picking winners in the future of journalism.
  • Freeman, Richard, Bryson, Alex (2015). Why do firms run all-employee stock purchase plans?
  • Friesen, Amanda, Ksiazkiewics, Aleksander (2015). Political and religious attitudes are influenced by both environmental and genetic factors.
  • Friesike, Dr Sascha, Fecher, Benedikt, Hebing, Marcel, Linek, Stephanie (2015). Reputation instead of obligation: forging new policies to motivate academic data sharing.
  • Froehner, Meghan (2015). ‘Integrated’ workers, committed to professional and caring responsibilities, will help transform gender imbalance.
  • Froese, Paul (2015). First world problems.
  • Fuhrman, Sarah (2015). Do African-Americans have the right to internal self-determination?
  • Furlong, Shauneen, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Shauneen Furlong on Canada’s slide from digital government pre-eminence.
  • Furlong, Shauneen, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Shauneen Furlong on the challenges inherent in making the transition to digital government.
  • Furtado, Delia, Song, Tao (2015). How technological change and globalization are driving higher wages of immigrants married to natives.
  • Férdeline, Ayden (2015). As ICANN 54 Ends, More Uncertainty over the Future of the Internet.
  • Gadd, Elizabeth (2015). When are journal metrics useful? A balanced call for the contextualized and transparent use of all publication metrics.
  • Gaddie, Keith (2015). In its Arizona redistricting decision, the Supreme Court hasmade explicit that redistricting initiatives are a state legislativeaction.
  • Gaddie, Keith (2015). Madisonian Republicanism has a showdown with Progressivism in the Arizona redistricting case.
  • Gaffney, John (2015). French politics after the Paris attacks: polarised and deeply personal.
  • Galizzi, Matteo M. (2015). Paying incentives to be healthy only works in the long term if you pay to NOT do something.
  • Galsworthy, Michael J., Davidson, Rob (2015). Debunking the myths about British science after an EU exit.
  • Game, Chris (2015). Like our students, UK voters should have the option to vote for 'Re-open Nominations'.
  • Gandrud, Christopher, Grafström, Cassandra (2015). The ‘rule of thumb’ that left-wing parties cause inflation is probably bogus – and has democratic implications.
  • Gandrud, Christopher, Hallerberg, Mark (2015). Democratically elected politicians tend to push the cost of financial crises to the future in order to avert unpopularity.
  • Gangopadhyay, Partha (2015). The Greek crisis is merely a symptom of the EU’s inability to deal with recessions.
  • Gani, Jasmine (2015). Can the EU be hospitable?
  • Gani, Jasmine (2015). Europeans will be in no mood to show hospitality to refugees until they are hospitable to each other.
  • Ganson, Brian (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – is dialogue working? We need more dialogue to find out.
  • Garcia, Ginny E., Lewis Jr,, Richard, Ford-Robertson, Joanne (2015). Most Americans are now opposed to laws against interracial marriage, but their behavior does not yet reflect these attitudes.
  • Garcia V., Jose Angel (2015). Mexico: between a dangerous democracy and a democracy in danger.
  • Garcia-Lorenzo, Lucia (2015). Why do older entrepreneurs face unique challenges?
  • Gardiner, Laura (2015). The rise and rise (?) of zero-hours contracts.
  • Garland, Jess (2015). The UK needs a cleaner and fairer system of election funding.
  • Garland, Jess (2015). The UK’s political parties need to adapt if they are to retain a sustainable footing in the 21st Century.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Book review: bring back the bureaucrats by John J. Dilulio Jr.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Book review: personality politics? The role of leader evaluations in democratic elections.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Book review: ready for Hillary? Portrait of a President in waiting by Robin Renwick.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Book review: reporting the EU: news, media and the European Institutions by John Lloyd and Cristina Marconi.
  • Garlick, Alex (2015). Including party labels on ballots increases voting in localelections, especially among minorities.
  • Garroux, Camila (2015). Brazilian prospects for mediating children’s internet use?
  • Garrow, Eve E. (2015). White flight lowers the presence of nonprofit human services in minority neighborhoods.
  • Garvey, Brian (2015). Free will and human nature: should we be worried?
  • Gatfaoui, Shérazade (2015). Central African Republic Crisis: It is all about trust!
  • Gatterman, Katjana, Hefftler, Claudia (2015). Political motivation is crucial for parliamentary behaviour in the EU’s Early Warning System.
  • Gattermann, Katjana, Vasilopoulou, Sofia (2015). Newspapers focus on who MEPs are rather than on what they do in the European Parliament.
  • Gau, Jacinta M., Brunson, Rod K. (2015). Why more diverse police forces may not solve the problems which exist between police and disadvantaged communities of color.
  • Geary, Patrick (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – time for the UNGPs to grow up? Tracking children’s rights in national action plans on business & human rights.
  • Geipel, Jeff (2015). The chance to get it right: Africa’s opportunity to truly benefit from mining investment.
  • Gelbjerg-Hanen, Emma, Baker, Dillon, McLaughlin, Ben, Astor, Bonny (2015). The possibilities of positive news.
  • Geohegan, Pauline (2015). The Kerslake Review has shone a light on the deeply dysfunctional nature of Birmingham local government.
  • Geringer-Sameth, Ethan (2015). Micro-movement and the memory of slavery.
  • Geringer-Sameth, Ethan (2015). The anti-slavery series: perspectives on the past and present.
  • Gerner-Beuerle, Carsten (2015). There is little legal basis for Wolfgang Schäuble’s claim that debt restructuring is incompatible with euro membership.
  • Gerver, Mollie (2015). An EU quota trading system for refugees would offer a fair method for alleviating Europe’s migration crisis.
  • Gerver, Mollie (2015). Why the EU should consider decriminalising people smuggling.
  • Gheaus, Anca (2015). Token worries.
  • Gherghina, Sergiu, Groh, Adriana (2015). Poor visibility and design flaws are hampering the participatory potential of the European Citizens’ Initiative.
  • Ghosh, Jayati, Tiwari, Pragya (2015). “The single-minded focus on inflation targets is not necessarily desirable or even achievable in a country like India” – Jayati Ghosh.
  • Ghosh, Jayati, Tiwari, Pragya (2015). “The will of the people is not adequately reflected in macroeconomic choices made by Indian governments” – Jayati Ghosh.
  • Giannella, Eric (2015). Human intuition is essential to science: Why metrics will not improve scientific governance.
  • Gibson, Bryan R. (2015). For all parties involved, the Iran nuclear deal is a big win.
  • Gifford, Chris (2015). The UK’s ‘Brexit’ referendum represents a victory for the forces of populist Euroscepticism.
  • Gilbert, Paul (2015). Book review: making other worlds possible: performing diverse economies edited by Gerda Roelvink, Kevin St. Martin and J. K. Gibson-Graham.
  • Gilmore, Andrew, Raimundo, António, Sigalas, Emmanuel, Šelo Šabić, Senada (2015). European views on the UK’s renegotiation: Ireland, Portugal, Austria and Croatia.
  • Gilmore, Jonathan (2015). British foreign policy and the 2015 general election: Consensus on the continuity of a confused vision.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Baltimore’s shocking inequality: air pollution in New Mexico: and the most popular politician in America: US state blog round up for 25 April – 1 May.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Biden’s out of the running for president, Ryan’s in for Speaker, and Hillary Clinton’s great week: US national blog round up for 17 – 23 October.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Cheney slams Obama: Rand Paul announces presidential run:and new debate over police body cameras: US national bloground up for 4 – 10 April.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Clinton and Rubio are running: Obama in historic Castro meet: and Obamacare continues to drop uninsured rate: US nationalblog round up for 11 – 17 April.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Delaware’s ‘Biden Dynasty’, Florida’s orange problem, and Washington moves to end death penalty: US state blog round up for 24– 30 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Georgia’s transportation crisis: Indiana and Arkansasto ‘fix’ RFRA and California’s new drought measures:US state blog round up for 28 March – 3 April.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Grimm goes while Scalise stays, questions for Clinton, and the Jeb boom: U.S. national blog round up for 27 December – 2 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). New York’s Cuomo heads to Cuba: Nebraska moves towardsdeath penalty repeal: and Oregon’s Obamacare exchange woes:US state blog round up for 18 – 24 April.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). New York’s campaign finance loophole: Florida u-turns onMedicaid while Montana accepts: and South Dakota’s comingminimum wage fight: US state blog round up for 4 – 10 April.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). New York’s cigarette problem, Wisconsin’s poor job growth, and automatic voter registration debuts in Oregon: US state blog round up for 14 – 20 March.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Obama critiqued over Paris no-show, House rolls back immigration policies, and will Romney run again in 2016?: US national blog round up for 10 – 16 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Obama’s strident State of the Union, the House pulls back on abortion, and will the Supreme Court end the debate over same-sex marriage?: US national blog round up for 17 – 23 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). O’Malley moves to the left: Lynch is confirmed as AttorneyGeneral: and the huge cost of gun violence: US national bloground up for 18 – 24 April.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Reading list: 7 USAPP articles to help understand the Supreme Court’s same-sex marriage cases.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Romney’s out as Walker booms, Keystone XL passes, and the threat to Obamacare subsidies: US national blog round up for 24 – 30 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Same-sex marriage at the Supreme Court: Japan’s Abeaddresses Congress: and Jeb Bush’s fundraising power: USnational blog round up for 25 April – 1 May.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Speaker Boehner’s no squish, Warren’s stump speech, and Harvard’s healthcare woes: US national blog round up for 3 – 9 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). A new scandal for Christie, Chicago’s fiscal free-fall, and Ferguson’s damning DOJ report: US state blog round up for 28 February – 6 March.
  • Gilson, Chris, Kippin, Sean, Carroll, Susan (2015). Five minutes with Susan J. Carroll on women in politics: “There’s no question that some of the barriers are starting to come down, but others still remain”.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Alabama’s $137,000 missing Tasers, Indiana’s income problem,and New Mexico rolls back civil forfeiture: US state blog round up for 11 – 17 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Boosts for Clinton and Sanders in the Democrats’ first debate, the ‘ungovernable’ house, and Obamacare’s missing billions: US national blog round up for 10 – 16 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Brutal election for Maine liberals, North Carolina’s aggrieved Governor, and Houston’s equal rights ordinance fails: US state blog round up for 31 October – 6 November.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Budget rows in New York and Minnesota, Florida’s climate change ‘ban’, and Airbnb’s LA rental squeeze: US state blog round up for 7 – 13 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). California’s budget windfall, Minnesota expands voting rights as Ohio ponders a poll tax: US state blog round up for 9 – 15 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Carly Fiorina tries to upstage Clinton, ‘One person, one vote’ goes to the Supreme Court, and is Fox News damaging the GOP?: US national blog round up for 23 – 29 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Chris Christie demands an apology, Nebraska drops the death penalty, and Los Angeles raises minimum wage : US state blog round up for 16 – 22 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Chris Christie’s no good week, Mississippi’s high vaccination rate, and a ‘performance art’ budget in Wisconsin: US state blog round up for 31 January – 6 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Christie vetoes voter modernization in New Jersey, civil forfeiture in Arkansas, and how Wyoming saved itself into deficit: US state blog round up for 7 – 13 November.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Clinton’s bungled campaign reboot, Boehner in trouble, and shutdown threat looms again: US national blog round up for 5 – 11 September.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Clinton’s email troubles, Netanyahu addresses Congress, and Obamacare at the Supreme Court: US national blog round up for 28 February – 6 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Congress’ looming budget showdown, Trump pledges GOP loyalty, and should Jeb campaign in Spanish?: US national blog round up for 29 August – 4 September.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Cruz nearly tied with Trump in Iowa, Speaker Ryan’s House honeymoon is over, and civil asset forfeiture eclipses burglary in value: US national blog round up for 21 – 27 November.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Cuomo and de Blasio face falling approval ratings, Illinois’ pension crisis, and Arizona’s new welfare restrictions: US state blog round up for 23 – 29 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Cuomo and de Blasio meet to mend fences, North Carolina sued over court election change, and native Hawaiian election challenged: US state blog round up for 28 November – 4 December.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Cuomo flexes executive muscle, Crist to try for another Florida office, and why North Dakota is not like Greece: US state blog round up for 18 – 24 July.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Cuomo pushes gun control and a $15 minimum wage, Medicaid cuts in Texas, and California’s assisted dying bill: US state blog round up for 5 – 11 September.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Cuomo vs de Blasio, Wisconsin’s budget stalls, and Texas’ abortion law blocked: US state blog round up for 27 June – 3 July.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). DHS shutdown looms, Obama vetoes Keystone XL, and cuts mean IRS audit troubles: US national blog round up for 21 – 27 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). DOJ to investigate Baltimore police, marijuana in Texas, and John McCain’s bumpy ride to reelection: US state blog round up for 2 – 8 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). The Democrats’ bad election week, boots on the ground in Syria and can Jeb! fix his campaign?: US national blog round up for 31 October – 6 November.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Earthquakes in Oklahoma continue, Illinois’ Rauner vetoes labor bill, and Wyoming’s energy economy woes: US state blog round up for 29 August – 4 September.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Fiorina’s debate success, Clinton’s polling woes, and is mass incarceration a new form of welfare?: US national blog round up for 12 – 18 September.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Five minutes with Joseph Nye: “American dominance was never as great as some myths make it out to be”.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Florida’s tepid 2016 Senate race, Minnesota and Wisconsin’s policy battle, and Hawaii’s homeless emergency: US state blog round up for 10 – 16 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). GOP wrestles with immigration, Jeb raises $114 million, and why Puerto Rico is not Greece: US national blog round up for 4 – 10 July.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Georgia’s voter data dump, Alabama bans refugees while Montana welcomes them, and how does North Dakota’s unemployment rate stay so low?: US state blog round up for 14 – 20 November.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Gun debate continues, Trump calls for Muslim immigration ban, and Ted Cruz ascendant: US national blog round up for 5 – 11 December.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Hogan popular in Maryland as Walker is not in Wisconsin, and Crist is back in Florida: US state blog round up for 17 – 23 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). How Congress can improve the Iran deal, Cruz calls McConnell a liar, and how long can Trump go on?: US national blog round up for 18 – 24 July.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). It’s Labor Day today. Here are eight important USAPP posts on work, workers’ rights, and unions.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Lindsey Graham exits GOP primary, the Democrats’ low-rated debate, and why is drug spending so high?: US national blog round up for 19 – 25 December.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Little interest in New Jersey’s elections, Texas’ ‘abysmal’ vaccination rate, and Illinois’ Rauner doubles down on anti-union policies: US state blog round up for 24 – 30 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Maryland bans fracking, Alabama’s right-to-work success, and Indiana’s Pence signs controversial RFRA bill: US state blog round up for 21 – 27 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Massachusetts’ foreclosure law, Florida moves to repeal cohabitation ban, and does North Dakota need voter registration?: US state blog round up for 12 – 18 September.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). McCarthy’s withdrawal shakes up speaker race, Sanders draws crowds, and guns now outnumber people: US national blog round up for 3 – 9 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Medicare and Medicaid turn 50, Boehner’s leadership challenged, and could Obama win a third term? : US national blog round up for 25 – 31 July.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). NBC dumps Trump, Obamacare’s next challenges, and Puerto Rico’s debt crisis: US national blog round up for 27 June – 3 July.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). New Jersey’s pension amendment, Florida’s new Congressional map, and calls for Chicago Mayor Emanuel to resign: US state blog round up for 5 – 11 December.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). New Jersey’s pension death spiral, atheists win in Michigan, and Oregon’s new road usage fee: US state blog round up for 21 -27 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Obama supports mandatory voting, the GOP’s new budget, and Al Gore for 2016?: US national blog round up for 14 – 20 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Obama visits Nike, radical ideas for Clinton, and Iran dealmoves through the Senate: US national blog round up for 2 – 8May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Obama vs. Senate Democrats, Jeb Bush in trouble over Iraq,and America’s lottery shame: US national blog round up for 9 –15 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Obama’s Selma speech, Tom Cotton’s Iran letter, and questions remain over Clinton emails: US national blog round up for 6 – 13 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Obama’s controversial budget, America’s ‘new normal’ of war, and GOP vs vaccination: US national blog round up for 31 January – 6 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Obama’s popularity jumps, GOP grapples with Iraq legacy, andwhither the Highway Trust Fund? : US national blog round upfor 16 – 22 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Obama’s rest of term to do list, Carson under scrutiny, and Obamacare’s back at SCOTUS: US national blog round up for 7 – 13 November.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Paris turns 2016 into a national security election, Trump turns it up to 11, and will 2016 be the best year in a decade?: US national blog round up for 14 – 20 November.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Pennsylvania’s death penalty ban upheld, Virginia ends reciprocal concealed-carry, and a bleak outlook for South Dakota Democrats: US state blog round up for 19 – 25 December.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Questions for 2015: LSE Experts look ahead.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Rand Paul’s Pinterest woes, Jeb Bush struggles with family legacy, and Obama warns UK over defense spending: US national blog round up for 14 – 20 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Rubio tops GOP debate at Jeb’s expense, Ryan becomes Speaker, and Congress’s bipartisan budget deal: US national blog round up for 24 – 30 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Same-sex marriage in Texas, Michigan school funding and Utah votes for the firing squad: US state blog round up for 14 -20 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Shutdown avoided as debt limit fight looms, Trumpcare, and the GOP’s glass ceiling: US national blog round up for 26 September – 2 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Solar power in Massachusetts, Virginia’s budget ‘shell game’ and Iowa’s Branstad is now the longest serving Governor: US state blog roundup for 12 – 18 December.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). South Carolina furls Confederate flag, Wisconsin’s wet budget, and who’s governing New Jersey?: US state blog round up for 4 – 10 July.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Ted Cruz announces for president, budget ‘vote-a-rama’, and the decline of American exceptionalism: US national blog round up for 21 – 27 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Trump endures as Carson fades, Obama’s frustration over mass shootings, and Ryan’s vision for the House: US national blog round up for 28 November – 4 December.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Vermont’s Shumlin vs unions, Iowa’s bad budget choices, and Oregon’s new governor: US state blog round up for 7 – 13 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Vitter losing steam in Louisiana, Democrats struggling in the Dakotas, and will Vermont legalize marijuana in 2016?: US state blog round up for 19 – 25 September.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). ‘Voodoo economics’ in New Jersey, Louisiana’s ‘disgraceful’ gubernatorial debate, and Arizona’s transport funding woes: US state blog round up for 26 September – 2 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Walker mum on evolution, Rand Paul praises Eric Holder, and how Jon Stewart changed journalism: US national blog round up for 7 – 13 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Walker’s out…and so is Boehner, the Pope comes to Washington DC, and how many aircraft carriers does the US need?: US national blog round up for 19 – 25 September.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Why 2016 House races still matter, Sanders in voter data spat with DNC, and Congress’ budget deal: US national blog roundup for 12 – 18 December.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Women need better representation in Vermont, Florida senate to ditch Confederate flag, and is Governor Branstad ‘King of Iowa’? US state blog round up for 3 – 9 October.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). A bad year for Massachusetts Democrats, Illinois warned of credit downgrade, and votes for felons in Kentucky – for now: US state blog round up for 21 – 27 November.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). A review of the top Voter Advice Applications for the 2015 General Election.
  • Gilstad-Hayden, Kate, Meyer, Spencer R. (2015). Trees, a new partner in the fight against urban crime.
  • Gippner, Olivia (2015). Paris climate conference at the end of week one: taking stock.
  • Giuntella, Osea, Nicodemo, Catia, Vargas-Silva, Carlos (2015). Immigration may reduce the time you wait to see the doctor.
  • Gleibs, Ilka H. (2015). How women footballers can overcome negative stereotypes.
  • Glencross, Andrew (2015). The UK’s relationship with Europe is too complex to be settled by a simple ‘in/out’ referendum.
  • Glencross, Andrew (2015). The myth of ‘self-government’ is threatening both the UK’s place in the EU and Scotland’s place in the Union.
  • Glendinning, Simon (2015). ‘Neoliberal’ variants have dominated Europe’s history but they have paved the way for a new conception of human progress.
  • Glendinning, Simon (2015). Nietzsche, Europe and the German question.
  • Global Kids Online (2015). Children's rights in the digital age: paradoxes and problems.
  • Global Kids Online (2015). Launch of Global Kids Online.
  • Glück, Thorsten (2015). Why are commodity markets behaving like stock markets?
  • Goddard, John (2015). Addressing societal challenges: Joined-up research funding could facilitate innovation and engagement.
  • Godwin, Marcia (2015). American cities increased their use of civic engagement tools during the Great Recession, but did not fully embrace citizen involvement in decision-making.
  • Goes, Eunice (2015). Book review: five year mission: the Labour Party under Ed Miliband.
  • Goes, Eunice (2015). A Corbyn leadership can endure, but only if ‘Jez’ is ready to accept a fair share of Westminster culture.
  • Goes, Eunice (2015). Even if he wins, Jeremy Corbyn will never be able to lead the Labour Party.
  • Goes, Eunice (2015). Labour’s proposed public service reforms won’t undo the effects of privatisation.
  • Goes, Eunice (2015). The coalition effect on the Liberal Democrats: Driven to the edge of Europe.
  • Goes, Eunice (2015). The new Labour leadership contest rules are responsible for the lacklustre pre-campaign.
  • Goldman, Alan H. (2015). Learning from books.
  • Goldrick-Rab, Sara (2015). President Obama’s free community-college plan is a necessary plan – and a good one.
  • Goldstein, Adam, Fligstein, Neil (2015). How the upper and middle classes embraced a culture of household debt and aggressive financial risk taking.
  • Golubeva, Evgenia (2015). When managing risk, overconfident managers don’t always follow the fundamentals.
  • Gonenc, Defne (2015). The lesson from the Greek crisis should be that economics exists for the good of society, not for its own sake.
  • Gooch, Donald (2015). The Supreme Court is just as polarized as the rest of US politics – and this may have profound implications.
  • Goodhart, Charles, Tsomocos, Dimitrios P. (2015). The best way forward for Greece is a major debt restructuring and a ‘hard’ budget constraint.
  • Goodman, Ellen (2015). The FCC comes out swinging on net neutrality and municipal broadband: counterpunches to come.
  • Goodman, Ellen (2015). In Open Letter to Google, 80 Technology Scholars Press for More Transparency on Right to Be Forgotten Compliance.
  • Goodrich, Steve (2015). Lobbying reform: we need political will not gesture politics.
  • Goodwin, Matthew (2015). How soft is the Leave vote – and which issues will swing it?
  • Gopal Jayal, Niraja, Campion, Sonali (2015). “A democracy that does not provide the conditions for full inclusion, and thereby full citizenship, will necessarily be a fragile construct” – Niraja Gopal Jayal.
  • Goplerud, Max (2015). A new method for addressing parliamentary boundaries shows the extent of Britain’s “safe seat” problem.
  • Gordon, Gretchen, Mellini, Stephanie (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – follow the money: using development finance to hold corporations accountable.
  • Gordon, Stuart (2015). Romancing Principles and Human Rights: Are humanitarian principles salvageable? – Stuart Gordon.
  • Gossa, Marine (2015). How open data and data governance could change democracy in France and abroad.
  • Graef, Inge (2015). Digital Single Market strategy shouldn’t go ‘over the top’ with regard to future regulation of OTT services.
  • Graetz, Georg, Michaels, Guy (2015). Industrial robots have boosted productivity and growth, but their effect on jobs remains an open question.
  • Granbo, Kristin (2015). Childproofing the new formats.
  • Granbo, Kristin (2015). Is competitive online news changing the way we report news for children?
  • Grant, Sam, McDonagh, Kathryn (2015). Alumni interview: Sam Grant.
  • Graunt, John (2015). Citizens’ assemblies provide an institutional foothold for republican political practices.
  • Grauvogel, Julia, von Soest, Christian (2015). Sanctions can be counter-productive in instigating democratic reform in authoritarian regimes.
  • Grayston, Rose (2015). Emergency Budget 2015: mixed messages for working aged disabled people.
  • Grech, Aaron G. (2015). Pension reforms since the financial crisis could have a serious impact on the future retirement incomes of young Europeans.
  • Green, Colin (2015). In addition to saved travel time, the London congestion charge has saved lives.
  • Green, Duncan (2015). How can INGOs get better? Duncan Green’s ‘surprisingly interesting’ conversation with finance directors.
  • Green, Duncan (2015). What difference do remittances and migration make back home? Duncan Green selects from the Economist.
  • Green, Duncan (2015). An antidote to futility: Why academics (and students) should take blogging / social media seriously.
  • Green, Elliott (2015). The EU referendum and legislation on ‘English votes for English laws’ will be crucial for Scotland’s future in the Union.
  • Green, Elliott D. (2015). Elliott Green: South Africa’s De Klerk Boulevard and the historical legacy of political reformers.
  • Green, Matthew (2015). John Boehner is not the first Speaker to be forced from his post unwillingly, and likely will not be the last.
  • Gregory, Lee (2015). Book review: austerity: the great failure by Florian Schui.
  • Gregory, Lee (2015). Book review: how outer space made America: geography, organisation and the cosmic sublime by Daniel Sage.
  • Griffin, Leslie C. (2015). Dissenting Justices in Obergefell committed original sinagainst marriage equality.
  • Griffin, Leslie C. (2015). So-called Religious Freedom Restoration Acts (RFRAs) protectgender and sexual orientation discrimination, not religiousfreedom.
  • Griffiths, Heather (2015). Why I am proud to have an Ology!
  • Griffiths, Martin, Hasan, Mubashar (2015). Playing with fire: Islamism and politics in Bangladesh.
  • Griffiths, Simon (2015). What can the left learn from Friedrich Hayek?
  • Grigoryeva, Angelina, Ruef, Martin (2015). How post-Civil War segregation helped to shape the patterns of racial inequality that we see today.
  • Grimm, Sonja (2015). Conflicting objectives, neglected relationships, and authoritarian backlash: the crisis of EU democracy promotion.
  • Grimm, Sonja (2015). Conflicting objectives, neglected relationships, and authoritarian backlash: the crisis of EU democracy promotion.
  • Gromyko, Alexey, Getmanchuk, Alyona, Ulgen, Sinan (2015). Views on the UK’s renegotiation: Russia, Ukraine and Turkey.
  • Gropper, Daniel M., Jahera, John S., Park, Chul Park (2015). The less economic freedom a state has, the more political connections local firms need.
  • Gross, Martin, Debus, Marc (2015). Local politicians take the party affiliation of directly elected mayors into account when forming coalitions.
  • Grossman, Wendy (2015). ‘Barbie’: the smart choice of toy?
  • Grossman, Wendy (2015). Book review: disconnected: youth, new media and the ethics gap.
  • Grossman, Wendy (2015). Book review: distrusting educational technology – critical questions for changing times.
  • Grossman, Wendy (2015). Book review: it’s complicated – the social lives of networked teens.
  • Grossman, Wendy (2015). Online ‘baby role-playing’: between casual fantasy and real-life obsession.
  • Groth, Olaf, Esposito, Mark, Tse, Terence (2015). Using entrepreneurial innovation to stabilize Europe: Introducing EDIE.
  • Grube, Dennis (2015). The requirement for civil servants to “promote” government policy has inevitably led to the perception of partisanship.
  • Guerra, Simona (2015). Keep your distance: on the relationship between European integration and religion.
  • Guibernau, Montserrat (2015). Catalonia has taken the first step toward becoming a new nation in the EU.
  • Guidi, Mattia (2015). Delegating political powers to regulatory agencies does not guarantee better policy enforcement.
  • Guijarro-Usobiaga, Borja (2015). Economic sanctions: Past & Future.
  • Gupta, Pranav (2015). Bihar 2015: grand victory for the Mahagathbandhan, debacle for the BJP.
  • Gupta, Pranav (2015). The battle for Bihar.
  • Gutierrez, Carmen, Kirk, David (2015). Tough immigration enforcement likely hinders public cooperation with the police, and may undermine crime reporting.
  • Gómez Cervantes, Andrea, Kim, ChangHwan (2015). Male immigrants with darker skin have fewer job opportunities than women and those with lighter skin.
  • Habra, Katia, Trindle, Theadora (2015). Prefab is Back in Town.
  • Habra, Katia, Trindle, Theadora (2015). Why Pocket works: size may not matter when it comes to affordable housing.
  • Haddad, Moussa (2015). How the rising cost of essentials has tightened the squeeze on family incomes.
  • Haddaway, Neal (2015). The importance of meta-analysis and systematic review: How research legacy can be maximized through adequate reporting.
  • Haeder, Simon F., Webb Yackee, Susan (2015). The lobbying you have never heard of: targeting the US President’s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs.
  • Hagelund, Camilla, Goddard, Jonathan (2015). If Parliament is to be truly effective, committees must become more powerful and independent.
  • Hakelberg, Lukas, Lefkofridi, Zoe (2015). Why European integration remains the best option for meeting the challenges posed by globalisation.
  • Halfon, Robert (2015). Democracy must evolve with the times if it is to retain the trust of the UK public.
  • Halikiopoulou, Daphne, Vasilopoulou, Sofia (2015). Syriza won with a radical left programme, but keeping the middle class on side may be key to retaining power.
  • Hall, Andrew B. (2015). Extremists who win primaries are 37 percent less likely to win the general election compared to more moderate candidates.
  • Hall, Edward (2015). There is ample scope for questioning Nick Clegg’s political integrity.
  • Hall, Gary (2015). Playing the (open) publishing game – Top Posts of 2015: open access.
  • Hall, Gary (2015). What does Academia_edu’s success mean for Open Access? The data-driven world of search engines and social networking.
  • Hall, Gavin E (2015). Book review: deciphering Sun Tzu: how to read the art of war by Derek M Yuen.
  • Hallams, Ellen (2015). Despite his attempts at pragmatism, Obama will leave an incoherent legacy in a post-American world.
  • Hambleton, Robin (2015). The devolution deception in the Queen’s Speech.
  • Hamilton, Sue (2015). Sue Hamilton, UK.
  • Hammond, Ed (2015). The devolution of public services requires better governance systems than currently proposed.
  • Hammond, Ed, Ogunye, Temi (2015). Involve’s ‘Room for a View’ is an exciting contribution to the debate on the shape of democracy’s future.
  • Han, Kyung Joon (2015). How mainstream parties react to the rise of radical right-wing parties.
  • Hanretty, Chris (2015). The 2015 election has been described as the most disproportional ever – but it wasn’t disproportional everywhere.
  • Hanretty, Chris (2015). Reconciling to other forecasts.
  • Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Ben, Vivyan, Nick (2015). If not polls, then betting markets?
  • Hansen, Bjarke (2015). Book review: the reject: community, politics and religion after the subject by Irving Goh.
  • Hansen, Randall (2015). An Australian points system for immigration would be entirely inappropriate for the UK’s economy.
  • Hansen, Stephen, McMahon, Michael, Prat, Andrea (2015). Greater transparency at the Fed has led to better informed, though sterile, internal debate and discussion.
  • Hanson, Joanna (2015). The Association of Serbian Municipalities: “The sum of all fears”.
  • Hanson, Joanna (2015). The Brussels Agreement “generated by conversations, not by relentless pressure”.
  • Hanson, Joanna (2015). Views from north Kosovo: the ethnic distance is not getting any closer.
  • Harden, Jeff, Clark, Chris (2015). Americans don’t need to agree with elected officials in their districts, they just need someone in government to represent them.
  • Harish, Megha (2015). The Economic Forum for India at LSE 2015: frustration and optimism in equal measure.
  • Harish, Megha (2015). Jaipur-on-Thames 2015: a weekend at home.
  • Harish, Megha (2015). The Modi effect: from challenger to Prime Minister.
  • Harkins, Steven (2015). Book review: The best bookshops in Glasgow, Scotland.
  • Harkins, Steven (2015). Book review: first world hunger revisited: food charity or the right to food? Second Edition, edited by Graham Riches and Tiina Silvasti.
  • Harrison, Elizabeth, Jew, Eleanor, Smith, Thomas, Ahmed, Iqbal (2015). Building bridges in development: Five recommendations to connect the islands of research, policy and practice.
  • Hartlapp, Miriam, Metz, Julia, Rauh, Christian (2015). Conflict inside the European Commission is a key factor in shaping EU legislation.
  • Hartley, James (2015). Students can write: Making writing tasks relevant and personal can bring out hidden skills.
  • Hartley, Kris (2015). Elephants in the room: urban primacy and economic growth in Africa.
  • Hartviksen, Julia (2015). The Attack Against Mamá Maquín and Guatemala’s “Eternal Spring”.
  • Hartviksen, Julia (2015). Interrogating Trudeau’s brand of equality “Because it’s 2015”.
  • Hasan, Mubashar (2015). Migration and Madrasahs: stemming people-smuggling in Bangladesh.
  • Hasan, Mubashar (2015). Rock ‘n’ Roll, social change and democratisation in Bangladesh.
  • Hasan, Mubashar, Alam, Khurshed (2015). As governments gather for the Paris Climate Summit the effects of climate change are escalating in Bangladesh.
  • Hasan, Mubashar, Kanti Das, Suvra (2015). The Indo-Bangladesh enclave exchange: revealing conceptions of the state.
  • Hassell, Hans J.G., Oeltjenbruns, Kelly R. (2015). Despite the traditional narrative, Congressional campaignsdon’t normally follow the trajectory of positive, negative,positive.
  • Hassell, Hans J.G., Visalvanich, Neil (2015). Racial cues not only change the opinions people have, but also the public political actions they take.
  • Hatch, Megan, Rigby, Elizabeth (2015). States can fight growing economic inequality through lowering taxes on the poor, and stricter labor market policies.
  • Hathaway, Terry (2015). Contemporary capitalism is not really a system of choice.
  • Haucap, Justus (2015). Empirical analysis reveals significant discrepancy between journal reputation and perceived relevance in economics.
  • Haverland, Markus, de Ruiter, Minou, Van de Walle, Steven (2015). Eurobarometer surveys provide an important insight into the European Commission’s role as an agenda setter.
  • Hawthorn, Tom (2015). Plans to detect and prevent electoral fraud are under way ahead of this May’s General Election.
  • Hayes, Thomas (2015). Obama’s highlighting of economic inequality poses a dilemmafor the Republican Party in the lead up to 2016.
  • Hayes, Thomas, Vidal, D. Xavier Medina (2015). How states can influence inequality with tax and spending tools.
  • Haynes, Suyin (2015). Positive Living: Art and AIDS in South Africa.
  • Heasman, Brett (2015). New MSc publication on how to advance the wellbeing of older people in disaster settings.
  • Heasman, Brett (2015). New assessment form likely to underestimate disability.
  • Heasman, Brett (2015). The cultural psychology of morality: reflections on Professor Richard Shweder’s talk.
  • Heasman, Brett, Corti, Kevin (2015). How to build an echoborg: PhD researcher Kevin Corti featured on the BBC.
  • Heath, Oliver (2015). Has the rise of middle class politicians led to the decline of class voting in Britain?
  • Heath, Oliver (2015). Why the UK’s pre-election polls got it so wrong: is it time to take probability sampling seriously?
  • Heath, Oliver (2015). Why the pre-election polls get it so wrong: Is it time to take probability sampling seriously?
  • Heath, Oliver (2015). The rise of middle class politicians and the decline of class voting in Britain.
  • Heawood, Jonathan (2015). Summer reading ideas from the LSE Media Policy Project.
  • Heere, Cees (2015). We’re all in “it” together: Without votes at work, people’s wages are pressed to the minimum wall.
  • Heilman, James, West, Andrew (2015). Towards ‘Health Information for All’: Medical content on Wikipedia received 6.5 billion page views in 2013.
  • Heller, Lambert (2015). What will the scholarly profile page of the future look like? Provision of metadata is enabling experimentation.
  • Hellowell, Mark (2015). The move from PFI to PF2 is likely to make it more, rather than less, expensive to deliver new healthcare facilities in the future.
  • Helsper, Ellen (2015). Measuring Inequalities in a Digital Britain.
  • Hemmings, Jo (2015). LSE research impact.
  • Hemmings, John (2015). Reparations & Justice: Re-appraising imperialism.
  • Henao, Alejandro (2015). How cities are reducing auto dependence by investing insustainable transportation infrastructure.
  • Henbest, Seb (2015). The energy sector is changing fast, but is it enough to keep global warming within 2ºC?
  • Hendrick, Rebecca, Shi, Yu (2015). Is local government fragmentation good or bad for cities? These indices will help inform the debate.
  • Hendrickson, Ryan C. (2015). One year and one war later: still no vote from Congress onmilitary action.
  • Henkel, Imke (2015). German public opinion is caught between scapegoating Greeks and love-bombing them.
  • Henriques, Adrian (2015). Adrian Henriques – is reporting child’s play?
  • Hensby, Alex (2015). Book review: networks of sound, style and subversion: the punk and post-punk worlds of Manchester, London, Liverpool and Sheffield, 1975–80.
  • Henwood, Melanie (2015). The lack of collective will in Europe regarding refugees is indefensible.
  • Hepp, Andreas (2015). Young people’s mediatised lives and communities in Germany: implications for parenting.
  • Herman, Bill (2015). Emailgate shows Clintonian exceptionalism — in press coverage, not her behavior.
  • Herrmann, Michael, Munzert, Simon, Selb, Peter (2015). The conventional wisdom about tactical voting is wrong.
  • Hertner, Isabelle (2015). The Europe Jeremy Corbyn wants is very different from the one David Cameron seeks.
  • Hertner, Isabelle (2015). The Labour Party’s European policy under Jeremy Corbyn: no Brexit, no Grexit.
  • Hesdin, Farah (2015). Media diversity or simply pluralism?
  • Hesdin, Farah (2015). Women in the media: who shapes what?
  • Hesdin, Farah (2015). The issue of consent in photojournalism.
  • Heslop, Robert (2015). Transatlantic cooperation: it’s in the UK’s interest for the US and the EU to forge a strong relationship on the basis of TTIP.
  • Hezser, Catherine (2015). Book review: among the ruins: Syria past and present by Christian C. Sahner.
  • Hicks, William D. (2015). Partisan competition undermines legislative efficiency in state legislatures only in very specific situations.
  • Hill, Andrew J. (2015). Having opposite gender friends can reduce highschool achievement.
  • Hill, Eleanor (2015). Political parties need to take greater responsibility for Pakistani and Bangladeshi clan politicking in order to protect our democracy.
  • Hill, Steven (2015). Using REF results to make simple comparisons is not necessarily responsible. Careful interpretation needed.
  • Hintz, Arne, Dencik, Lina (2015). The Post-Snowden Surveillance Policy Turmoil.
  • Hiraki, Takato, Wang, Xue, Liu, Wang (2015). Mutual funds that concentrate on a specific industry earn superior returns.
  • Hirsch, Donald (2015). The number of households in the UK falling below the Minimum Income Standard continues to rise.
  • Ho, Kate, Lee, Robin S. (2015). Is health insurance competition good for consumers?
  • Hochschild, Jennifer, Einstein, Katherine Levine (2015). None of the remedies to political misinformation and voter ignorance are perfect, but they are worth trying.
  • Hochschild, Jennifer, Einstein, Katherine Levine (2015). None of the remedies to political misinformation and voter ignorance are perfect, but they are worth trying.
  • Hodgkins, Sara (2015). Why we need coverage of suffering.
  • Hoepner, Jacqui (2015). Who would want to live in a world made up entirely of scientists? Australia’s chief scientist calls for cooperation.
  • Hoerner, Julian (2015). Closer cooperation between the AfD and the ‘Pegida’ movement could reshape the German right.
  • Hoerner, Julian (2015). How the split in Germany’s Eurosceptic AfD is likely to help Angela Merkel.
  • Hoffmann, Bert (2015). Cuba’s slow motion glasnost: more focused on boostingforeign investment than domestic reforms.
  • Hogwood, Patricia (2015). Book review: security in cyberspace: targeting nations, infrastructures, individuals edited by Giampiero Giacomello.
  • Hogwood, Patricia (2015). Book review: the social atlas of Europe by Dimitris Ballas, Danny Dorling and Benjamin Hennig.
  • Holbein, John B., Hillygus, D. Sunshine (2015). How preregistration can help increase youth voter turnout.
  • Holliman, Richard (2015). Towards an open research university: creating the conditions where engaged research can flourish.
  • Holman, Mirya R., Schneider, Monica C., Pondel, Kristen (2015). Political candidates can successfully use targeted appeals to increase support from female voters.
  • Holyoke, Thomas T. (2015). Without reforms, ethical lobbying in Congress may remain theexception.
  • Honwana, Alcinda (2015). Excluded youth are becoming angrier.
  • Hooghe, Mark, Marien, Sofie, Oser, Jennifer (2015). Hashtag activism is not the solution to democratic inequality.
  • Hopwood, Julian (2015). Customary land, public authorities and the reform agenda: the background to three reports from northern Uganda.
  • Hopwood, Karl (2015). Online extremism: why we need to be concerned and what we can do.
  • Horton, Laurence (2015). Digital Object Identifiers: Stability for citations and referencing, but not proxies for quality. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.u3kkwiq7g9xa
  • Horton, Simon (2015). Book Review: Postcapitalism: a guide to our future by Paul Mason.
  • Housby, Elaine (2015). Book review: Muslim citizens in the West.
  • Hovhannisyan, Hayk (2015). Turkey’s Gallipoli centenary events are set to become the latest focal point in the Armenian genocide dispute.
  • Hronesova, Jessie (2015). A flawed recipe for how to end a war and build a state: 20 years since the Dayton Agreement.
  • Hu, Jia (Jasmine), Linden, Robert (2015). Why do some teams succeed while others fail?
  • Hudson, Bob (2015). DevoManc and the NHS: Mind the gaps.
  • Hudson, Bob (2015). Instead of more inspections and regulation, the NHS needs to adopt a ‘bottom-up’ improvement model.
  • Hudson, Bob (2015). The four deficits of the English devolution process.
  • Hughes, Ceri (2015). (E)quality not quantity matters: the role of apprenticeships in an equality agenda.
  • Hughes, Melanie, Brush, Lisa (2015). The price of protection?: women who petition for restrainingorders against abusers typically see decreased earnings.
  • Hughes, Niall (2015). In a multi-party political environment, the First-Past-The-Post electoral system may mitigate polarisation.
  • Hughes, Tyler, Carlson, Deven (2015). How party polarization makes the legislative process even slower when government is divided.
  • Hughley, Matthew W., Goss, Devon R. (2015). In its focus on genetics and race, global newspaper coverage of athletics is far from “post-racial”.
  • Humphreys, Adam (2015). How do we decide what is in the national interest?
  • Hurka, Steffen, Kaeding, Michael, Obholzer, Lukas (2015). New member states are structurally underrepresented in important rapporteur positions in the European Parliament.
  • Hurst, Steven (2015). The Iran nuclear deal: driven by international factors for the US, and domestic ones for Iran.
  • Hwang, Jackelyn (2015). Immigration is an important dimension in how we understand gentrification across US cities.
  • Hyatt, Jordan, Barnes, Geoffrey (2015). Intensive community supervision for high-risk offenders does little to reduce crime.
  • Hye, Daniel (2015). Protected category or target: the civilian in global conflict and warfare.
  • Hänska, Max (2015). Europe’s gravest threat: Doctrines diverged.
  • Hänska, Max (2015). Greece – Deal or no deal? Parameters of a decision.
  • Hänska, Max (2015). Greece’s government deserves benefit of doubt.
  • Hänska, Max (2015). The end of austerity in Europe?
  • Hänska, Max, Bauchowitz, Stefan (2015). #aGreekment in the Twittersphere.
  • Hänska, Max, Stefan, Bauchowitz (2015). How visible are Britain’s EU renegotiation demands across Europe’s twitterspheres?
  • Häussler, Mathias (2015). Why Cameron shouldn’t gamble with Germany: Helmut Schmidt’s story.
  • Högenauer, Anna-Lena, Neuhold, Christine (2015). Parliamentary administrations: an important pillar in the parliamentary scrutiny of EU affairs.
  • Hölsgens, Sander (2015). Book Review: The cinema of Agnès Varda: resistance and eclecticism by Delphine Bénézet.
  • Hölsgens, Sander (2015). Book review: mutuality: anthropology’s changing terms of engagement.
  • Hölsgens, Sander (2015). Book review: the Ashgate research companion to media geography by Paul C. Adams et al.
  • Ibrahim, Monica (2015). London, we need to talk about sexual harassment.
  • Iff, Andrea (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – measuring progress on human rights, and peace, in conflict affected areas.
  • Illing, Gerhard (2015). Europe’s political leaders cannot afford to be complacent about deflation in the Eurozone.
  • Ineichen, Michael (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – business and human rights: no progress without protection for defenders.
  • Ingenbleek, Paul T.M, Reinders, Machiel J. (2015). Market forces and competition are not necessarily detrimental to sustainability.
  • Ingram, B. Lynn (2015). To cope with California’s drought, policymakers must gobeyond water conservation and rationing.
  • Inmaculada, Martinez-Zarzoso (2015). Eastern Partnership states benefit from free trade agreements with the EU, but gain little from similar agreements with Russia.
  • Institute of Public Affairs, LSE (2015). Harris Academies students visit LSE for closing event of LSE Research Festival 2015.
  • Institute of Public Affairs, LSE (2015). LSE research festival exhibition 2015.
  • Institute of Public Affairs, LSE (2015). Posters in Parliament – Undergraduate research on display at Westminster.
  • Institute of Public Affairs, LSE (2015). Social science soapbox.
  • International Development (2015). MSc Development Studies Alumna wins the 2014 Global Development Network Next Horizon Essay Contest.
  • International Development (2015). Response to the Repeal of China’s One-Child Policy: Part 1 – How Revolutionary?
  • International Development (2015). Response to the Repeal of China’s One-Child Policy: Part 3 – Managing a Population.
  • International Development (2015). Ruben Andersson receives BBC award for Mediterranean migration study.
  • International Development (2015). Security, Interventions, Distance, and Danger: New Publications, August 2015.
  • International Development (2015). What are we reading in 2015?
  • Inês Teixeira, Maria (2015). Beyond the straight path: obstacles and progress for atheism in Turkey.
  • Iqtidar, Humeira (2015). The killing of British citizens without democratic oversight raises questions over the government’s use of drones.
  • Ishida, Hiroshi (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – business and human rights progress in the Japanese context.
  • Ismail, Nasrul (2015). Cure over prevention: the boost to NHS funding is at the expense of preventative healthcare.
  • Ivandic, Ria (2015). Book review: unexplored dimensions of discrimination edited by Tito Boeri, Eleonora Patacchini and Giovanni Peri.
  • Iyengar, Shanto (2015). Fear and loathing across party lines now means that for some, partisan prejudice can be stronger than racial prejudice.
  • Iñiguez de Heredia, Marta (2015). #DRCDecides2016: Political actors hold the key reversing the current electoral crisis.
  • Jackson, Emma (2015). How young homeless people experience London and the homeless system.
  • Jacobs, Alan M., Matthews, J. Scott (2015). Why citizens don’t like paying for public goods with their taxes– and how institutions can change that.
  • Jacobsmeier, Matthew L. (2015). Black candidates are perceived as more liberal than similar white candidates, and this may be hurting them at the ballot box.
  • Jain, Mahima A (2015). The Tamil Jains: a minority within a minority.
  • Jakštaitė, Gerda, Česnakas, Giedrius (2015). Lithuania’s reintroduction of conscription is a clear response to the threat posed by Russia in the Baltics.
  • Jamal, Amaney A., Keohane, Robert O., Romney, David, Tingley, Dustin (2015). Anti-Americanism in Arabic Twitter discourses is driven by perceptions of U.S. impingement in the region.
  • James, Alex (2015). Governments of resource-rich states lower income taxes and restrict public expenditure in response to revenue shocks.
  • James, Toby (2015). Individual electoral registration needs further reform to counteract its negative side effects.
  • Jansa, Joshua, Garrett, Kristin (2015). How states plagiarize interest group model bills on manyissues.
  • Jeffes, Jennifer (2015). Getting smarter about engaging with Parliament: Embrace digital, think interdisciplinary and plan for serendipity.
  • Jerrim, John, de Vries, Robert (2015). Can social science still be used as a foundation for public policy? On improving the reliability of evidence.
  • Jerven, Morten (2015). Africa: Why economists get it wrong. Morten Jerven and revisionism.
  • Joassin, Thomas (2015). Book review: Zambia: the first 50 Years by Andrew Sardanis.
  • Joassin, Thomas (2015). Book review: engaging enemies: Hayek and the Left.
  • Jobson, Richard (2015). ‘The ghost of Keir Hardie’: Nostalgia and the modern Labour Party.
  • Johan, Sofia (2015). As venture capitalists cross borders, they look for institutional trust.
  • John, Fenwick (2015). The North-East Combined Authority represents another step in the uncertain progress of English devolution.
  • Johnson, April (2015). Party environments shape the way that we, as citizens, think about politics.
  • Johnson, Craig, Rodger, Sunil (2015). Economic solutions are unlikely to ease immigration concerns.
  • Johnson, David Kyle (2015). Surprise! Christmas spending isn’t good for the economy.
  • Johnson, Jeffrey Alan (2015). How data does political things: The processes of encoding and decoding data are never neutral.
  • Johnston, Jack, Hanretty, Chris, Lauderdale, Benjamin, Vivyan, Nick (2015). Focus on… the North East.
  • Johnston, Ron (2015). Book review: rank hypocrisies: the insult of the REF by Derek Sayer.
  • Johnston, Ron (2015). The South West – contest by contest.
  • Johnston, Ron, Cutts, David, Pattie, Charles (2015). The Tories and Donations to Constituency Campaigns (or, Beware of Journalists’ Hyperbole).
  • Johnston, Ron, Manley, David, Pattie, Charles, Pemberton, Hugh, Wickham-Jones, Mark (2015). The Labour leadership and deputy leadership candidates: where are their support bases – does geography matter?
  • Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles (2015). The British party system – or systems: how many on the ground?
  • Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles, Cutts, David (2015). At £13 a vote – a bargain? Donations to the Tories’ 2015 constituency campaigns.
  • Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles, Cutts, David (2015). Have the Tories gone on the defensive and narrowed the focus of their constituency targets? Donations to local parties in 2014.
  • Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles, Manley, David (2015). The case of the missing marginals: Labour’s task in 2020 is harder than they currently realise.
  • Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles, Rossiter, David (2015). Ensuring equal representation in Parliament: who counts?
  • Johnston, Ron, Pattie, Charles, Rossiter, David (2015). There are fewer people registered to vote in 2015 than there were in 2010: is that to Labour’s advantage?
  • Jones, Bethan (2015). Book review: celebrity capital: assessing the value of fame by Barrie Gunter.
  • Jones, David (2015). Public frustration with Congress harms the majority party’s brand and its chances of winning both local and presidential elections.
  • Jones, Ed (2015). Book review: Islamic political thought: an introduction.
  • Jones, Ed (2015). Book review: cool shades: the history and meaning of sunglasses by Vanessa Brown.
  • Jones, Phillip (2015). Favela pacification and mega-events in Rio: shifting the nature of ‘narco politics’.
  • Jones, Steven (2015). Anonymising UCAS forms is only a first step towards fair and discrimination-free university admissions.
  • Jones, Steven (2015). “Fulfilling Our Potential”: what policymakers’ rhetoric reveals about the future of Higher Education.
  • Jonker-Hoffrén, Paul (2015). Finnish competitiveness-raising policies and their discontents.
  • Jowitt, Josh (2015). Book review: Kant’s politics in context by Reidar Maliks.
  • Jowitt, Josh (2015). Book review: the nature and limits of human equality.
  • Joy, Genevieve (2015). Analysing Tata Chemicals’ sustainable livelihoods projects in West Bengal.
  • Jun, Hee-Jung (2015). More walkable neighborhoods are not necessarily better for building social capital between residents.
  • Jung, Heung-Jun, Kim, Dong-One (2015). The dark side of corporate social responsibility.
  • Jung, Jiwook (2015). Labor unions’ decline since the 1980s has given corporate management a free hand to make massive, permanent layoffs.
  • Jungk, Margaret (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – implementing the guiding principles: the challenge of measurement.
  • Jungk, Margaret (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – three is the magic number.
  • Jurado, Ignacio, Konstantinidis, Nikitas, Walter, Stefanie (2015). Why Greeks voted the way they did in the bailout referendum.
  • Jørgen, Wettestad, Jevnaker, Torbjørg (2015). Some much needed momentum is finally building behind the EU’s emissions trading system.
  • Kabeer, Naila (2015). Gender equality, the MDGs and the SDGs: achievements, lessons and concerns.
  • Kabura, Shezane (2015). Kenya and the El-Niño floods – Why early warning systems are not working.
  • Kalpokas, Ignas (2015). Book review: Waging war: a new philosophical introduction by Ian Clark.
  • Kalpokas, Ignas (2015). Book review: community engagement 2.0? Dialogues on the future of the civic in the disrupted university edited by Scott L. Crabill and Dan Butin.
  • Kalpokas, Ignas (2015). Book review: reading the comments: likers, haters, and manipulators at the bottom of the web.
  • Kalpokas, Ignas (2015). Book review: the Middle Ages.
  • Kalt, Brian (2015). The US law permitting permanent expatriates to vote in federal elections needs to be placed on a sturdier constitutional footing.
  • Kaltwasser, Cristóbal (2015). Populist forces are not foolish – they are posing legitimate questions about the state of democracy.
  • Kamat, Payal (2015). Looking beyond elections: political communications for a thriving democracy.
  • Kamat, Payal (2015). The power of positive campaign in the Delhi elections.
  • Kamga, Camille (2015). Investing in existing passenger rail and building new high-speed services will help to decarbonize America’s transportation.
  • Kamminga, Menno T. (2015). Menno T. Kamminga – company responses to human rights reports as an indicator of compliance with human rights responsibilities.
  • Kang, Karam (2015). Lobbying can have a small effect on policy enactment but very valuable returns.
  • Kankanhalli, Atreyi, Teo, Hock-Hai, Hua, (Jonathan) Ye (2015). How can firms motivate users to innovate on their platforms?
  • Kanthak, Kristin, Woon, Jonathan (2015). Election aversion means that leveling the electoral playing field may not be enough to convince women to run for office.
  • Kapoor, Sony (2015). Why Greece never got a fair chance.
  • Kara, Helen (2015). Book Review: Research justice: methodologies for social change edited by Andrew J. Jolivette.
  • Kara, Helen (2015). How to write a killer conference abstract: The first step towards an engaging presentation.
  • Kardefelt-Winther, Daniel (2015). Support children by supporting parents (because grown-ups need guidance too!): examples from Sweden.
  • Karoulas, Gerasimos (2015). Greek political culture has changed beyond recognition since the crisis began.
  • Karoulas, Gerasimos (2015). Syriza’s victory underlines the transformation of Greek political culture during the crisis.
  • Karpowitz, Christopher F., Pope, Jeremy C. (2015). Compared to primaries, caucuses are less representative andmore likely to select an ideologically extreme nominee.
  • Karppi, Tero (2015). Humans are losing the battle against social media algorithms.
  • Karppi, Tero (2015). Interpreting foreign policy through discourse analysis.
  • Karvonen, Andrew (2015). Book review: eco-cities and the transition to low carbon economies.
  • Katsanidou, Alexia, Otjes, Simon (2015). Mapping the Greek party system after the 2015 elections: how the economy and Europe have merged into a single issue.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2015). Partition: It’s time to recognise reality in Syria.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2015). Positive contact or “white flight”?: why whites in diverse places are more tolerant of immigration.
  • Kaun, Anne, Opermann, Signe (2015). E-residency – the beginning of a new era or the end of citizenship as we know it?
  • Kayaoglu, Aysegul (2015). Book review: being German, becoming Muslim.
  • Kaye, Simon (2015). Friedrich Hayek and the left: A response to Simon Griffiths.
  • Kaye, Simon (2015). On the complex relationship between political ignorance and democracy.
  • Kayser, Mark, Leininger, Arndt (2015). Voters seem to respond to the the ‘reported’ rather than the ‘real’ economy.
  • Kaza, Nikhil, McCarty, Josh (2015). How the way we build cities and communities affects thequality of the air that we breathe.
  • Kelly, Nathan J., Keller, Eric (2015). How Republicans and Democrats enhanced inequality by undermining financial regulation.
  • Kemman, Max (2015). Standing on the shoulders of the Google giant: Sustainable discovery and Google Scholar’s comprehensive coverage.
  • Kemmerling, Achim (2015). Why the lump of labour fallacy helps explain some countries being more anti-austerity than others.
  • Kenealy, Daniel (2015). Scottish Labour face a multitude of problems.
  • Kennedy, Helen (2015). Seeing Data: Visualisation design should consider how we respond to statistics emotionally as well as rationally.
  • Kennedy, Paul (2015). Is Spain heading for a four party system? Assessing the state of play ahead of a series of key Spanish elections.
  • Kennedy, Paul (2015). Spanish general election preview: The PSOE.
  • Kennedy, Paul (2015). Where do Spain’s political parties stand after the country’s local and regional elections?
  • Kenny, Caroline (2015). The impact of academia on Parliament: 45 percent of Parliament-focused impact case studies were from social sciences.
  • Keranen, Outi (2015). Euro-Scepticism Is Here to Stay: Finnish Election Results.
  • Kern, Anna, Marien, Sofie, Hooghe, Marc (2015). Fierce but short-lived: how does economic crisis affect political participation?
  • Kerr, William, Lincoln, William, Mishra, Prachi (2015). The largest firms do the most lobbying and rarely stop once they begin.
  • Kerridge, Simon (2015). The Management of Metrics: Globally agreed, unique identifiers for academic staff are a step in the right direction.
  • Kettell, Steven (2015). Sticks and stones: the use of anti-secular discourse in Britain.
  • Ketti, Donald F. (2015). The American government has expanded through theinterweaving of public functions with private power.
  • Kettl, Donald F. (2015). Despite fears about overregulation, we do need to have somecaution about what our kids eat in school.
  • Kettl, Donald F. (2015). How Hurricane Katrina made the feds more powerful.
  • Kettl, Donald F. (2015). On welfare, Indiana and Michigan are proving that states canstill be ‘labs of democracy’.
  • Keuleers, Floor (2015). Public opinion indicates the EU is not seen as a better development partner than China in most African countries.
  • Khalid, Saad (2015). Analysing the economic impact of military expenditure in Pakistan.
  • Khan, Sadaf (2015). Greek media in disarray.
  • Khan, Sadaf (2015). Internet regulation and counter-terrorism: the dangerous clash in Pakistan’s regulatory regime.
  • Khan, Sadaf (2015). Passenger Name Records and data protection issues: busting some myths.
  • Kiapidou, Nikoleta (2015). Greek elections: how Syriza managed to sign a bailout agreement yet retain its support base.
  • Kiapidou, Nikoleta (2015). This month’s elections will underline the fundamental changes to the Greek party system that have occurred since the crisis.
  • Kiguwa, Melissa (2015). From anger to nuance: Melissa Kiguwa discusses her evolution as a writer.
  • Kim, Kyung-Nyun (2015). Share this:.
  • King, Marissa (2015). School pressures are driving stimulant use among middle class children.
  • Kippin, John (2015). A participatory exploration: understanding the relationship between democracy and photography.
  • Kippin, Sean (2015). 10 key contests to look out for on election night.
  • Kippin, Sean (2015). Ten key contests to look out for on election night in the UK.
  • Kippin, Sean, Gilson, Christopher (2015). Interview: Professor Susan J. Carroll on the barriers facing women in politics on both sides of the Atlantic.
  • Kirget, Alex (2015). Spammers should be given prison sentences under the CAN SPAM Act.
  • Kiss, Yudit (2015). New trends in weapons production in East Central Europe reflect major changes in the global arms industry.
  • Klahm, Charles, Steiner, Benjamin, Meade, Benjamin (2015). Using force in arrests against those who are not resisting can mean more violent prisoners.
  • Klein, Christian, Stellner, Christoph, Zwergel, Bernhard (2015). Good corporate social performance may lead to higher credit ratings.
  • Klein, Martin, Van de Sompel, Herbert (2015). Reference rot in web-based scholarly communication and link decoration as a path to mitigation.
  • Kmezić, Marko (2015). Serbia’s EU progress report: no progress for press freedom.
  • Knebel, Christian, Peters, Ralf (2015). Direct and indirect linkages between non-tariff measures and the SDGs.
  • Knight, Richard (2015). Poll results: Is rule-breaking essential to entrepreneurial success?
  • Knoll, Benjamin, Shewmaker, Jordan (2015). Concern for protecting the American culture and wayof life is strongly associated with opposition toObamacare.
  • Knott, Eleanor (2015). Following the Riga summit, more realism is required over what the EU can offer its eastern partners.
  • Kogan, Vladimir, Lavertu, Stéphane, Peskowitz, Zachary (2015). No Child Left Behind’s school performance metrics may bepunishing disadvantaged school districts and students.
  • Konisky, David M., Teodoro, Manuel P. (2015). Compared to private firms, government agencies are more likely to violate regulations and less likely to be punished.
  • Kono, Daniel Yuichi, Montinola, Gabriella R. (2015). Foreign aid encourages trade liberalization when given topolitically insecure leaders.
  • Konstantinidis, Nikitas (2015). Only a major political compromise from all sides can keep Greece in the euro.
  • Konstantinidis, Nikitas (2015). With negotiations reaching an impasse, a more radical approach is needed to solve the Greek debt crisis.
  • Konstantinou, Panagiotis, Panagiotidis, Theodore (2015). A note on Greece’s net investment position.
  • Koob, Marion (2015). Book review: British pirates and society 1680-1730 by Margarette Lincoln.
  • Koob, Marion (2015). Book review: elites: a general model.
  • Koob, Marion (2015). Book review: the House of Commons: an anthropology of MPs at work by Emma Crewe.
  • Koob, Marion (2015). Book review: thrive: the power of evidence-based psychological therapies.
  • Koob, Marion (2015). Book review: wombs in labor: transnational commercial surrogacy in India by Amrita Pande.
  • Korkovelos, Yiannis (2015). Why should ‘the German pensioner’ care about bailing out Greece?’.
  • Kostova Karaboytcheva, Miroslava, Silva, Carolina (2015). The shadow economy should be included in credit rating calculations for European countries.
  • Kraker, Peter (2015). The researcher’s guide to literature: Visualising crowd-sourced overviews of knowledge domains.
  • Kraker, Peter, Jordan, Katy, Lex, Elizabeth (2015). The ResearchGate Score: a good example of a bad metric.
  • Kraker, Peter, Weller, Katrin, Peters, Isabella, Lex, Elisabeth (2015). Bringing together bibliometrics research from different disciplines – what can we learn from each other?
  • Kral, Daniel (2015). Despite a controversial referendum on same-sex marriage, democracy remains alive and well in Slovakia.
  • Kral, Daniel (2015). There is more to the Eurozone than the division between ‘North’ and ‘South’.
  • Krause, Rachel (2015). How US cities dropped climate protection commitments inresponse to mainstream political opposition and programmaticstagnation.
  • Kreilinger, Valentin (2015). David Cameron’s proposal to give national parliaments a ‘red card’ over EU laws is deeply flawed.
  • Kreilinger, Valentin (2015). Efforts to increase inter-parliamentary cooperation in the EU are progressing at a snail’s pace.
  • Kreilinger, Valentin (2015). The ‘euro toolkit’: how to save Schengen in four key steps.
  • Kreitzer, Rebecca, Long, Doan, Chatfield, Sara (2015). Supreme Court rules in favor of same-sex marriage across theU.S.: USAPP experts react.
  • Kreitzer, Rebecca J. (2015). The states are now the battleground in the fight over abortion rights.
  • Kriner, Douglas, Reeves, Andrew (2015). Presidents create political inequality by allocatingfederal dollars to electorally useful constituenciesacross the country.
  • Kromjong, Linda (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – the guiding principles have been a game changer.
  • Krueger, Brian, Xu, Ping (2015). Conservative controlled states cut infrastructure and welfarespending in response to increased exposure to global trade.
  • Krumel Jr, Thomas P., Enami, Ali (2015). Pairing with an extreme running mate helps moderatepresidential candidates to appeal to more voters.
  • Krupa, Joel (2015). Book review: Aboriginal power: clean energy and the future of Canada’s first peoples by Chris Henderson.
  • Krupa, Joel (2015). Book review: why America is not a new Rome.
  • Krusky, Allison M (2015). Produce gardens can help to tackle urban blight in rust beltcities.
  • Kryvoi, Yaraslau (2015). The west should not hold its breath in expecting real change to emerge from the 2015 presidential election in Belarus.
  • Kuczerawy, Aleksandra, Ombelet, Pieter-Jan (2015). Not so different after all? Reconciling Delfi vs. Estonia with EU rules on intermediary liability.
  • Kudrna, Laura (2015). Book review: measuring happiness: the economics of wellbeing.
  • Kuha, Jouni (2015). Explaining the Exit Poll.
  • Kuha, Jouni (2015). The exit poll in 2010 was almost exactly correct, but what is it, and how does it actually work?
  • Kukathas, Chandran (2015). Immigration controls resemble apartheid in failing to treat workers as people.
  • Kulich, Clara (2015). The glass cliff: Evidence that women and ethnic minorities contest “hopeless” seats.
  • Kumar, Ankit (2015). Book review: biopolitics of security: a political analytic of finitude.
  • Kumhof, Michael, Ranciere, Romain, Winant, Pablo (2015). Income inequality causes higher debt leverage among all but the richest households, and makes economies more vulnerable to financial crises.
  • Kummer, Markus (2015). WSIS+10 Series: Reflections on the Internet Governance Forum (IGF).
  • Kumpulainen, Kristiina (2015). Parenting for a digital future: Finnish imaginaries and realities.
  • Kundnani, Hans (2015). The return of the German question: why conflict between creditor and debtor states is now the defining feature of European politics.
  • Kunkel, Dale (2015). Digital deception: legal questions surround new “YouTube Kids” app.
  • Kuntz, Philipp, Odinius, Daniel (2015). Dictators don’t necessarily favour cooperation with other authoritarian regimes over democracies.
  • Kyriakidou, Maria (2015). Syriza’s win and the Greek elections: many shades of grey.
  • Kyriakidou, Maria (2015). Varoufakis on the international media catwalk: on the politics of style.
  • Kölln, Ann-Kristin (2015). Despite their manifest flaws, political parties improve democracy and it is implausible that it could be successful without them.
  • Kölln, Ann-Kristin (2015). Not all parties lose members but those that do are older and more institutionalised.
  • Küçük, Esin (2015). The interests of refugees should not be forgotten in the attempt to distribute them fairly across the EU.
  • LSE, Psychology (2015). The Department of Social Psychology held its annual Cumberland Lodge weekend of 6th November to discuss new ideas at the intersection of psychology and society.
  • LSE, Psychology (2015). New article warns against incorrect use of psychological terms.
  • LSE Ideas, Team (2015). Sam Moyo 23 September 1954- 22 November 2015.
  • La Raja, Raymond J., Schaffner, Brian (2015). Campaign finance laws may be making political polarization worse by encouraging ‘purist’ donors.
  • Lacey, Justine, Howden, Mark, Cvitanovic, Chris (2015). In a changing world, climate adaptation researchers play a key role in addressing risk and ethical responsibilities.
  • Ladi, Stella (2015). Syriza leads the polls in Greece, but it remains unclear who the party could enter coalition with after the election.
  • Lahiri, Indrani (2015). Book review: China and post-socialist development by Andrzej Bolesta.
  • Lahiri, Indrani (2015). Book review: cyber policy in China by Greg Austin.
  • Laine, Heidi (2015). The case against the journal article: The age of publisher authority is going, going, gone — and we’ll be just fine.
  • Lalli, Gurpinder (2015). Book review: protest: a cultural introduction to social movements.
  • Lalli, Gurpinder (2015). Book review: the Oxford handbook of sociology, social theory and organisation studies.
  • Landman, Todd (2015). Sound evidence on Human Rights – podcast exploring new perspectives on advocacy and cutting-edge research.
  • Lang, Corey, Pearson-Merkowitz, Shanna (2015). Partisan sorting is a very recent phenomenon, and has been driven by the Southern realignment.
  • Lang, Rachel (2015). The Whitemans of Grenada: illegitimacy and the “ownership” of family members.
  • Langan Teele, Dawn (2015). Militancy shines on the big screen, but democratic tactics actually won British women the vote.
  • Lanteigne, Marc (2015). What the EU could learn from Switzerland’s free trade agreement with China.
  • Lantz, Brendan (2015). Not all arrests reduce crime: how offender networks impactoffending rates and arrest efforts.
  • Lara Otaola, Miguel Angel (2015). It remains to be seen whether recent reforms can reverse Mexico’s decline in electoral integrity.
  • Lara-Millan, Armando (2015). In hospital emergency rooms, many patients are treated like criminals, even as actual inmates and arrestees are prioritized.
  • Larcinese, Valentino (2015). Crime and punishment the British way: how the expenses scandal affected the 2010 general election.
  • Large, Daniel (2015). The limits of Modi-fying India’s Africa engagement.
  • Larkins, Erika Robb (2015). A different kind of security: The need for appropriate healthcare policies in Rio de Janeiro’s favelas.
  • Larobina, Michael D., Pate, Richard L. (2015). Friday timing plus social media multipliers may mean Paris attacks have more impacts on markets.
  • Larsen, Henrik (2015). What the Danish ‘no’ vote on Justice and Home Affairs means for Denmark and the EU.
  • Laurence, James (2015). The UK experienced a sharp drop in volunteering behaviour following the Great Recession.
  • Laurison, Daniel, Friedman, Sam (2015). ‘Poshness tests’ and the class ceiling: there is much more research to be done.
  • Laverack, Peter (2015). Oliari v. Italy: a missed opportunity for equality in Strasbourg.
  • Lavery, Scott, Greem, Jeremy (2015). Quantitative easing and labour market restructuring underline the ‘regressive recovery’.
  • Lavi, Liron (2015). Understanding democracy as a product of citizen performances reduces the need for a defined ‘people’.
  • Lawal, Wale (2015). Subtle tragedies.
  • Lawrence, Mat (2015). Democratic revival can come from devolved democracy.
  • Lawrence, Mathew, Gottfried, Glenn (2015). Tackling political inequality requires a “carrot and stick” approach.
  • Layard, Richard (2015). A Global Apollo Programme to tackle climate change.
  • LeBas, Sam, Brooker, Will (2015). Comics and human rights: a change is gonna come. Women in the superhero genre.
  • LeDuc, Lawrence (2015). Significant changes to the referendum process are required to make direct democracy deliberative in practice.
  • LeRoux-Rutledge, Emily (2015). Boys may suffer the social effects of HIV/AIDS more than girls.
  • Leach, Anna (2015). The UK’s productivity challenge takes different shapes across sectors.
  • Leal, Wanda, Mier, Carrie (2015). The relationship between drugs and crime differs by age.
  • Leblay, Aurelien (2015). Africa’s youth are saying enough but will it lead to political change?
  • Leblay, Aurelien (2015). Delivering the sustainable development goals: a new partnership between the state and private sector.
  • Lebo, Matthew, Norpoth, Helmut (2015). PM-Pendulum Model: Conservatives Edge Labour in Votes and Seats.
  • Lee, Christopher J. (2015). Sixty Years of Asian-African Solidarity.
  • Lee, Jia Hui (2015). Book review: The upright thinkers: the human journey from living in trees to understanding the cosmos by Leonard Mlodinow.
  • Lee, Shaka (2015). “We charge genocide” and the case for grassroots organising.
  • Lefèvre, Catherine (2015). Arming Ukraine and the Baltics could prove counter-productive in the West’s stand-off with Russia.
  • Legrain, Philippe (2015). Five minutes with Philippe Legrain: “The Eurozone has become a glorified debtors’ prison”.
  • Lehndorff, Steffen (2015). The paradox of the ‘German model’.
  • Leighley, Jan, Nagler, Jonathan (2015). Oregon’s new voter registration law will make votingeasier—but higher turnout will depend on parties andcandidates.
  • Leiter, Debra, Clark, Michael (2015). Voters do not improve their evaluations of the political system simply because the government is behaving well.
  • Lemionet, Gabriela (2015). News in the mobile era.
  • Leninger, Arndt (2015). Direct democracy is ill-fitted to engaging the politically disengaged, but popular with more active citizens.
  • Leonard, Meghan E., Ross, Joseph V. (2015). Elected and appointed justices face different constraints inwriting opinions.
  • Leonardi, Marco (2015). How the consumption preferences of rich and poor households is fuelling inequality and job polarization.
  • Leonelli, Sabina, Bezuidenhout, Louise (2015). The Politics of Data: The rising prominence of a data-centric approach to scientific research.
  • Leonelli, Sabina, Carrigan, Mark (2015). Sabina Leonelli: What constitutes trustworthy data changes across time and space.
  • Leonelli, Sabina, Prainsack, Barbara (2015). To what are we opening science? Reform of the publishing system is only a step in a much broader re-evaluation.
  • Leontitsis, Vasilis (2015). The radicalisation of lower middle class Greek families was the key to Syriza’s victory.
  • Lepenies, Phillip (2015). Event: Philipp Lepenies challenges growth indicators ahead of general election.
  • Lester, Sarah (2015). Book review: handbook of disaster policies and institutions: improving emergency management and climate change adaptation, 2nd Edition.
  • Leston-Bandeira, Cristina (2015). The Digital Democracy Commission report is about far more than just digital.
  • Leurs, Koen (2015). The digital imaginaries of urban youth.
  • Levine, Diane (2015). Teenagers just seem to get bad press.
  • Levitin, Daniel (2015). The organized mind: how to better structure our time in the age of social media and constant distraction.
  • Lewis, Jenny (2015). Collaborate or die? Interdisciplinary work holds great promise but goal-oriented assumptions must be challenged.
  • Lewis-Pye, Andrew (2015). 5 minutes with Andre Nies.
  • Lewis-Pye, Andrew (2015). 5 minutes with Frank Wilczek.
  • Lewis-Pye, Andrew (2015). 5 minutes with Yannai A. Gonczarowski.
  • Lewis-Pye, Andrew (2015). Andy Lewis-Pye: the strange patterns of segregation.
  • Lewthwaite, Sarah (2015). Book review: creative research methods in the social sciences: a practical guide.
  • Leys, Colin (2015). The private provision of NHS clinical services: how is the NHS handling the contracts?
  • Lezova, Katarina (2015). Why Slovakia has become the focal point for opposition against EU refugee quotas.
  • Li, Zhiyi (2015). A golden carnival in the golden era?
  • Liang, Jiaqi (2015). States with more generous welfare policies are more likely to protect vulnerable African-American communities from environmental risks.
  • Lichtner, Giacomo, Seymour, Mark, Abbenhuis, Maartja (2015). Between cohesion and division: reconciling the faultines of Europe’s past.
  • Lidbetter, Tom (2015). Tom Lidbetter: being “hunted”: how randomness can help.
  • Liddle, Roger (2015). Understanding Cameron’s renegotiations: the ‘ever-closer union’ problem.
  • Lim, Sun Sun (2015). ‘Facebook surveillance = parental love’, and other puzzling equations of the mobile age.
  • Lim, Wilfred (2015). Art, displacement and sociology.
  • Lindgren, Karl-Oskar (2015). Why participatory governance offers a realistic route to addressing the EU’s legitimacy crisis.
  • Link, Nathan, Kelly, James (2015). Questioning the Logic of Broken Windows: Some People “See” More Local Incivilities than Others.
  • Lisbonne de Vergeron, Karine (2015). China-EU relations and the future of European soft power: a strategy for a European cultural diplomacy.
  • Litman, Todd (2015). Urban sprawl costs the American economy more than $1 trillionannually: smart growth policies may be the answer.
  • Littlewood, David, Rivera-Santos, Miguel (2015). African data can bring fresh insights to management and social entrepreneurship studies.
  • Livingstone, Judith (2015). Reasons to love parenting in the digital age.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). The Delfi AS vs Estonia judgement explained.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). Digital skills for European citizens and consumers.
  • Ljubojević, Ana (2015). Croatian war veterans: Coup de théâtre or coup d’état?
  • Llamazares, Iván (2015). Spanish general election preview: Podemos.
  • Lloren, Anouk (2015). Building long-term relations of trust between civil society, voters and female politicians is essential to gender quotas’ success.
  • Lloyd, Marie-Pierre (2015). Marie-Pierre Lloyd, Seychelles.
  • Lock, Daniella (2015). Freedom of expression and the UK counter-terrorism bill.
  • Locy, Toni (2015). The NSA’s mass surveillance program: illegal and opaque.
  • Loewe, Marie-Noelle (2015). The coalition myth.
  • Loftis, Matt W., Kettler, Jaclyn J. (2015). More U.S. cities are paying to lobby Congress and they have astrategy to maximize their influence.
  • Logan, John R., Zhang, Weiwei, Turner, Richard, Shertzer, Allison (2015). The seeds of the black ghetto were sown in the 1880s, longbefore the Great Migration.
  • Lombard, Daniel, Lrenz, Klara (2015). A day in the life of people with dementia.
  • Longden, Vanessa (2015). Book review: how to write a thesis by Umberto Eco.
  • Lord, Beth (2015). Are we morally equal by nature?
  • Lorimer, Marta (2015). The first round of the French regional elections: the far right turn.
  • Lornez, Klara (2015). When Hollywood touches on our research.
  • Loveday, Barry (2015). The current configuration of personnel within police forces now calls for radical reform.
  • Lovett, Clare (2015). Political marketing can be an asset rather than a threat to democracy.
  • Lowatcharin, Grichawat, Menifield, Charles (2015). Internet access levels are not the sole determinant of howtransparent government websites are.
  • Lowry, Robert C. (2015). Federal campaign committees vary in their reliance on highincome, high education, urban, and highly partisan districts forcontributions.
  • Luallen, Jeremy (2015). Aging baby boomers partly explain the rise in older prisonpopulations.
  • Luallen, Jeremy (2015). Some veterans live longer in prison: what we don’t know is why and how.
  • Lubbock, Tom (2015). Thinking specifically about your own constituency….
  • Lubbock, Tom (2015). Will the electoral system continue to ‘skew’ towards Labour in 2015?
  • Lubbock, Tom (2015). The new “skew” of the electoral system in 2015.
  • Luttig, Matthew D., Lavine, Howard (2015). Politicians’ ability to persuade citizens about policies depends on people’s values and priorities.
  • Lyons, Rebecca (2015). The Academic Book of the Future: exploring academic practices and expectations for the monograph.
  • López, Diego (2015). As sovereign wealth funds come of age, they grow rapidly but face a number of challenges.
  • López, Diego (2015). Zero growth wouldn’t bring the world anywhere near the necessary reduction in CO2 emissions.
  • López Ruiz, Isabel (2015). Book review: ethnographies of breastfeeding: cultural contexts and confrontations, edited by Tanya Cassidy and Abdullahi El Tom.
  • López Ruiz, Isabel (2015). Book review: little emperors and material girls: sex and youth in modern China.
  • López Ruiz, Isabel (2015). Book review: marching through suffering: loss and survival in North Korea by Sandra Fahy.
  • López Ruiz, Isabel (2015). Book review: men in charge? Rethinking authority in muslim legal tradition by Ziba Mir-Hosseini at al.
  • López Ruiz, Isabel (2015). Book review: the politics of third wave feminisms: neoliberalism, intersectionality, and the state in Britain and the US.
  • López Ruiz, Isabel (2015). The best bookshops in Granada, Spain.
  • MacKinnon, Rebecca (2015). Holding the “sovereigns of cyberspace” accountable.
  • MacWilliams, Matthew C. (2015). Forecasting models using Facebook data can be more accurate at predicting election outcomes than polling.
  • Machin, Stephen (2015). Real wages and living standards: the latest UK evidence.
  • Maciel González, Julia (2015). Julia Maciel González, Paraguay.
  • Madon, Temina (2015). Incentives for open science: New prizes to encourage research integrity and transparency in social science.
  • Maestri, Gaja (2015). Book review: injustice: why social inequality still persists by Danny Dorling.
  • Maheshwari, Laya (2015). The power of low blows: when attacking communication works.
  • Maier, George (2015). Addressing digital inequality in the United Kingdom.
  • Maiga, Ibrahim (2015). The impact of scale-ups on the Graduate job market.
  • Makholm, Jeff (2015). Congress can stop the boom in oil tank cars.
  • Makholm, Jeff (2015). If Europe wants to embrace natural gas as a bridge to a low-carbon future, it should draw from America’s stunning success.
  • Makrydemetres, Anthony, Zervopoulos, Panagiotis D., Pravita, Maria-Eliana (2015). The crossroad of reforms for the Greek public administration.
  • Malek, Rafael (2015). The 2015 election was won and lost on brands, messages, and leaders rather than policy.
  • Malik, Jasim (2015). Navigating Islamic-Democratic politics.
  • Malik, Ridhi (2015). Commercial surrogates in India: victims of globalisation?
  • Mammone, Andrea (2015). The Greek crisis represents the humiliation of European democracy.
  • Manby, Bronwen (2015). Important new guidelines on the right to birth registration and a nationality in Africa launched in Côte d’Ivoire.
  • Manning, Alan (2015). Attempts to raise more tax revenue from the wealthy need to go hand in hand with strong rules against avoidance.
  • Manning, Alan (2015). The National Living Wage: a policy experiment well worth trying.
  • Manoussakis, Savas (2015). Crisis in Greece: Will history repeat itself?
  • Manzoorul Islam, Syed, Tully, Mark, Allman, Karen, de Mel, Neloufer, Walder, Dennis, Campion, Sonali (2015). DSC Prize shortlisting: reflections on South Asian literature.
  • March, Luke (2015). Beyond Syriza and Podemos, other radical left parties are threatening to break into the mainstream of European politics.
  • Marchetti, Kathleen (2015). How interest group advocacy is shaped by state policy environments.
  • Margulies, Ben (2015). How the European far right discovered the dark side of the liberal tradition.
  • Margulies, Ben (2015). The fragmentation of Britain’s party system may have contributed to the Lib Dems’ demise.
  • Marino, Bruno (2015). Liberal-democratic parties face unprecedented challenges, but remain a viable part of European party systems.
  • Markovikj, Nenad (2015). Coup d’état or a Macedonian post-Snowden syndrome?
  • Marland, Alex (2015). Could Labour and the Liberal Democrats merge? If so, they should look to Canada for inspiration.
  • Marolov, Dejan (2015). The EU must take its share of the blame for the political crisis in Macedonia.
  • Marschall, Melissa, Rutherford, Amanda (2015). School boards were more likely to have Latino members incounties covered by the language assistance provisions of thenow defunct Section 4 of the Voting Rights Act.
  • Marsden, Sarah (2015). Cameron’s counter extremism plan rests on shaky foundations.
  • Marsh, Ian (2015). Select Committees are engaging better than ever before, but while much as been accomplished, much more remains possible.
  • Marsh, Ian (2015). Twelve recommendations to strengthen public engagement by Commons committees.
  • Marsh, Jackie (2015). Unwrapping the unboxing craze.
  • Marsh, Sue (2015). Sue Marsh, UK.
  • Martin, Ian (2015). People’s vews about what kind of region they want to live in will inform their views on local and regional devolution.
  • Martin, Jeanne (2015). The debate around climate change is no longer about the science.
  • Martin, Kenneth (2015). Book review: adapting to win: how insurgents fight and defeat foreign states in war by Noriyuki Katagiri.
  • Martin, Richard (2015). Book review: museums in the new mediascape: transmedia, participation, ethics by Jenny Kidd.
  • Martin, Susan Marie (2015). Book review: leading the inclusive city: place-based innovation for a bounded planet.
  • Martin, Susan Marie (2015). Book review: on the commodity trail: the journey of a bargain store product from East to West.
  • Martin, Susan Marie (2015). Book review: strengthening communities with neighborhood data.
  • Martinez i Coma, Ferran, Van Ham, Carolien (2015). How seriously should we take the opinions of academics and experts when it comes to complicated issues like electoral integrity?
  • Martín, Iván (2015). The EU must back up its rhetoric and provide meaningful support to Tunisia.
  • Masiero, Silvia (2015). Jan Dhan Yojana, Aadhaar, mobile platforms: an anti-poverty system in peril?
  • Masiero, Silvia (2015). Solving the leakage crisis in India’s subsidised food programme.
  • Mason, Lilliana (2015). Why victory trumps the greater good in American politics.
  • Mason, Olivia (2015). Book review: everyday feminist research praxis. Edited by Domitilla Oliveri and Koen Leurs.
  • Matamoros, Cristina, Bains, Bani (2015). Children’s rights in the digital age.
  • Matczak, Anna (2015). Book review: Immigration judges and U.S.asylum policy by Banks Miller, Linda CampKeith and Jennifer S. Holmes.
  • Matczak, Anna (2015). Restorative justice, photography…and theory.
  • Mathew, Donna (2015). Why great brands tell a story.
  • Mathews-Schultz, A. Lanethea, Marshall, Bryan W., Mariani, Mack D. (2015). Partisanship and ideology are likely to shape how women will react to Hillary Clinton and Carly Fiorina’s candidacies.
  • Matras, Yaron (2015). Why plans for a European Roma Institute might be a setback for Europe’s Roma.
  • Matthews, Felicity (2015). As the current parliament progresses, the dissonance between constitutional norms and governing reality may prove too great to ignore.
  • Matthews, Jodie (2015). Book review: Nancy now edited by Verena Andermatt Conley and Irving Goh.
  • Matthews, Neil (2015). Candidate selection in Northern Ireland: A cold house for women?
  • Matthews, Neil, Raymond, Christopher, Garry, John (2015). Jeremy Corbyn’s republican and socialist sympathies add even greater uncertainty into Northern Ireland politics.
  • Maxwell, Hailey (2015). Book review: Moroccan fashion: design, culture and tradition.
  • Mayoral, Juan A., Nowak, Tobias, Jaremba, Urszula (2015). Why more needs to be done to improve national judges’ knowledge of EU law.
  • Mazumder, Bhashkar (2015). More accurate estimates of social mobility suggest that the American dream is not so easily attainable.
  • Mazzucato, Mariana (2015). The Future of the BBC: the BBC as Market Shaper and Creator.
  • Mazzucato, Mariana (2015). Negotiating the Data Protection Thicket: Life in the Aftermath of Schrems.
  • McAngus, Craig (2015). How do nationalist parties reform their organisational profiles? The cases of Plaid Cymru and the SNP compared.
  • McCluskey, Ben (2015). Impact doesn’t have to be a dirty word – staying positive about the promotion of scientific excellence.
  • McCrone, David (2015). Unions and Constitutions.
  • McDonald, Keith (2015). Why academics (and students) should take blogging / social media seriously – Duncan Green.
  • McDonald, Tom (2015). Is social media bad for learning? The view from a Chinese village.
  • McEwen, Nicola (2015). Scotland – an SNP Tsunami?
  • McFadden, Pat, Tarrant, Andy (2015). The Swiss model doesn’t stand up to scrutiny.
  • McGuire, Alistair, Van Reenan, John (2015). The NHS under the coalition government and after the Election.
  • McHarg, Aileen (2015). The constitutional implications of the rise of the SNP.
  • McKenna, Colleen (2015). The Great Lecture Notes Debate – The Educational Research.
  • McLachlan, Chris (2015). Book Review: Class by Will Atkinson.
  • McLachlan, Chris (2015). Book review: social insurance, informality and labor markets: how to protect workers while creating good jobs.
  • McLachlan, Chris (2015). Book review: the sociology of work, 4th edition by Keith Grint and Darren Nixon.
  • McLaughlin, Hugh (2015). How to write a peer review to improve scholarship: Do unto others as you would wish them do unto you.
  • McLean, Iain (2015). The Government’s narrow EVEL proposals are likely to repeat the mistakes of the past.
  • McLeod, Ben (2015). The right academic partner can help smaller enterprises bring innovation to market.
  • McMahon, Simon (2015). The grey areas of migration control: quick asylum decisions risk denying individuals their right to protection.
  • McMahon, Simon, Allen, Jessica (2015). Young people feel distant from the ‘pale, male and stale’ political class, but are eager for change.
  • McManus, Laura, McCormack, Sam (2015). The aftershocks: migrant workers vulnerable to exploitation in post-earthquake Nepal.
  • McQuillan, Dan (2015). Bottom-up citizen science projects could challenge authority of orthodox science through community-led investigations.
  • McTernan, Emily (2015). Should the state pay for you to have kids?
  • Meade, Benjamin, Steiner, Benjamin, Klahm, Charles (2015). How police use of force at arrest can lead to greater mental health problems among prison inmates.
  • Mears, Daniel P., Cochran, Joshua C., Cullen, Francis T. (2015). We are still largely in the dark as to whether incarceration reduces recidivism.
  • Mebarek-Daza, Daniel (2015). ‘Africa’ in the media: between starving children and smiling children.
  • Medha (2015). Book review: caricaturing culture in India: cartoons and history in the modern world.
  • Medha (2015). Book review: standardizing diversity: the political economy of language regimes.
  • Meehan, Elizabeth (2015). Is “freedom of information” a viable research tool? Step one: composing a request.
  • Meeks, Geoff, Meeks, J. Gay (2015). The curious case of bank tax since the bailout.
  • MeeksWhitley, Edgar (2015). The government’s Verify service demonstrates the benefits of focusing on user needs.
  • Megalokonomou, Rigissa (2015). How young Greeks changed their degree choices as the economy crashed.
  • Mehrotra, Mandavi (2015). The strides of transformation: from planning commission to NITI Aayog.
  • Melissaris, Emmanuel (2015). The Golden Dawn trial is a legitimate criminal case, not political persecution.
  • Melissaris, Emmanuel (2015). The Greek referendum was a clear break with the past that could pave the way forward for Europe.
  • Melissaris, Emmanuel (2015). Why Syriza might be up to the task of tackling corruption in Greece.
  • Mell, Andrew (2015). The relationship between political donations and peerages shows the need for party finance and House of Lords reform.
  • Menon, Anand (2015). The next UK government must not let talk of a Brexit undermine its attempts to influence EU decision-making.
  • Merkur, Sherry, Maresso, Anna, McDaid, David (2015). Health system developments in former Soviet countries.
  • Merkur, Sherry, Maresso, Anna, McDaid, David (2015). Providing emergency medical care (New Eurohealth issue).
  • Merle, Patrick F. (2015). The Le Pen family feud goes to the heart of what the Front National stands for.
  • Merz, Prisca (2015). The Paris agreement shows we need a paradigm shift to tackle climate change.
  • Mestres, Laia, Jokela, Juha, Bahovski, Erkki, Pegasiou, Adonis (2015). European views on the UK’s renegotiation: Spain, Finland, Estonia and Cyprus.
  • Meyer, Thomas M., Haselmayer, Martin, Wagner, Markus (2015). The media’s gatekeeping function means that party press coverage often reproduces and reinforces existing power structures.
  • Meyer, William B. (2015). Book Review: Happiness and place: why life is better outside of the city by Adam Okulicz-Kozaryn.
  • Meza, Oliver D. (2015). Failure to take into account existing institutions risks jeopardising the success of new reforms.
  • Michel, Valerie (2015). Valerie Michel – reporting parameters and children’s rights.
  • Michener, Gregory (2015). The presence of more parties in a governing cabinet can encourage greater transparency.
  • Middlekoop, Paul (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – radical transparency, or how to use public data for large scale social-impact assessments.
  • Middleton, Alia (2015). What effect do leader visits to constituencies have on a party’s vote?
  • Milas, Costas (2015). How monitoring online ‘Brexit’ talk can weigh the EU referendum result.
  • Milas, Costas (2015). To raise or not to raise interest rates?
  • Milas, Costas, Panagiotidis, Theodore, Boumparis, Perikilis (2015). On structural reforms and debt relief.
  • Miles, Matthew R. (2015). Fair governance and interaction with government bothencourage voters to participate.
  • Miletzki, Janna, Wardrop, Hazel (2015). Political representation in Britain is becoming more diverse; political engagement less so.
  • Milita, Kerri (2015). Restrictive ballot access laws reduce the technical complexityof initiatives and make them more likely to pass.
  • Milićević, Zorana (2015). Big dreams, big numbers: Facebook, parents and children’s networking opportunities in rural Mexico.
  • Millar, Nancy E. (2015). The U.S. Supreme Court is about to re-evaluate how some states carry out lethal injections.
  • Miller, Cherry (2015). The West Midlands – a bellwether for the election?
  • Miller, Daniel (2015). The impact of social media on school taunting in the UK.
  • Miller, Patrick R. (2015). Partisan voters treat politics and elections like a competitive sports rivalry.
  • Milne, Claire (2015). BT and Broadband: Ofcom’s Strategic Review of Digital Communications.
  • Milne, Claire (2015). Time to stop nuisance calls in their tracks.
  • Milne, Claire (2015). An end to nuisance calls? Not yet.
  • Milosevic, Tijana (2015). ESafety and education in the United States: what this means for parents.
  • Minas, Stephen (2015). Book review: diplomatic afterlives by Andrew F Cooper.
  • Minde, Nicodemus (2015). Opposition politics in Tanzania and why the country will benefit from a strong unified opposition.
  • Miring’u., Caroline (2015). The expansion of primary education in Kenya – realistic or idealistic.
  • Mistry, Mark (2015). Direct rule from Delhi imposed in restive Kashmir.
  • Mitrovic, Olga (2015). Used during the Balkan crises, the EU’s Temporary Protection Directive may now be a solution to Europe’s refugee emergency.
  • Mo, Cecilia Hyunjung (2015). An implicit bias against women as leaders means that many are reluctant to vote for women candidates.
  • Modood, Tariq (2015). In remembering the Charlie Hebdo attack we must not forget the responsibility that goes with free speech.
  • Mogo, Ebele (2015). Health and equity must be central to the Africa rising narrative.
  • Mogwe, Alice (2015). Alice Mogwe, Botswana.
  • Mohan, Deepanshu, Singh Maini, Tridivesh (2015). India in Latin America: a missing story?
  • Mols, Frank (2015). 'Nudges' may be effective at times, but policymakers will be disappointed if they rely on them to tackle entrenched problems.
  • Mols, Frank (2015). ‘Nudges’ may be effective at times, but policymakers can’t rely on them to tackle entrenched social problems.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The ECB’s decision to toughen its stance on Greece signals the end of the Greek government’s honeymoon period.
  • Monk, Ellis P. (2015). How skin color matters for the physical and mental health of African Americans.
  • Montaigne, Maxine (2015). Book review: policy change, public attitudes and social citizenship: does neoliberalism matter?
  • Montalvo, Jose G. (2015). Spain has reason to be concerned at its latest unemployment figures.
  • Montgomerie, Johnna (2015). The UK’s debt economy creates new forms of inequality.
  • Moore, Martin (2015). How not to measure the news plurality problem.
  • Moreno, Luis (2015). The ‘ages of welfare’: why Europe’s welfare states are at risk of terminal decline.
  • Morisi, Davide (2015). Would cutting the BBC licence fee benefit the consumer?
  • Morley, Bruce (2015). Greece shows the flaws in pursuing a common monetary policy response to economic shocks across the EU.
  • Morris, Hanna (2015). The mobile newsroom: FT evolving for 21stC readers.
  • Morris, Marley (2015). Reforming laws on free movement will be a headache for any future government.
  • Morton, Sarah (2015). A ‘contributions’ approach to impact: The influential role of research users in facilitating wider outcomes.
  • Moten, Matthew (2015). Book review: presidents and their generals: an American history of command in war by Matthew Moten.
  • Moumoutzis, Kyriakos (2015). The Greek referendum will likely be the beginning of the end for Alexis Tsipras.
  • Moumoutzis, Kyriakos (2015). Syriza’s victory in Greece could undermine the effectiveness of EU foreign policy.
  • Moumoutzis, Kyriakos, White, Jonathan, Codogno, Lorenzo, Konstantinidis, Nikitas, Bertsou, Eri (2015). Experts react: Greek referendum.
  • Mounce, Ross (2015). Opening-up the early stages of research: new journal RIO to publish research proposals.
  • Mueller, Ben (2015). Book review: sex, lies and the ballot box: 50 things you need to know about British Elections by Philip Cowley and Robert Ford.
  • Mughan, Anothony (2015). On the dynamics of leader effects in British general elections.
  • Mughan, Anthony (2015). On the dynamics of leader effects in British general elections.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita (2015). The Amartya Sen Lecture 2015: law, economics and the Republic of Beliefs.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita (2015). Book review: start-up city: ten tales of exceptional entrepreneurship from Bangalore’s software miracle.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita (2015). Book review: start-up city: ten tales of exceptional entrepreneurship from Bangalore’s software miracle by Moloy K. Bannerjee, Siddharth Bannerjee and P. Ranganath Sastry.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita (2015). Discovering the fire: Amitav Ghosh on history, language and his latest book.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita, Kumar, Arushi (2015). New challenges and opportunities for governance in India: a session with Ajit Seth.
  • Mulgan, Geoff (2015). It’s time to face it: some meetings can be a waste of your time.
  • Mungiu-Pippidi, Alina (2015). If the European Union wishes to increase its standing with the public, improved performance and greater accountability will be required.
  • Munro, Gayle (2015). Book review: Immigration detention: the migration of a policy and its human impact edited by Amy Nethery and Stephanie J. Silverman.
  • Muravska, Julia (2015). Book review: killing hope: US military and CIA interventions since World War II, Updated Edition, by William Blum.
  • Murkens, Jo (2015). David Cameron’s tactics may take the UK out of the EU, and Scotland out of the UK.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2015). A referendum on Britain’s EU membership is a sure fire way to encourage the breakup of the UK.
  • Murphy, Fiona (2015). Book review: Yaya’s story: the quest for well-being in the world by Paul Stoller.
  • Murphy, Mahon (2015). Book review: German colonialism in a global age.
  • Murphy, Mahon (2015). Book review: The liberation of the camps: the end of the Holocaust and its aftermath by Dan Stone.
  • Murr, Andreas (2015). Citizens forecast a hung parliament with the Conservatives as the largest party.
  • Murray, Rainbow (2015). French regional elections: failure for the Front National, but little to celebrate for the mainstream.
  • Murray, Rainbow (2015). Merit vs Equality? The argument that gender quotas violate meritocracy is based on fallacies.
  • Musella, Fortunato (2015). Recent trends in Italy showcase the ‘presidentialised’ future of democratic politics in Europe.
  • Musella, Fortunato (2015). The emergence of lucrative post-Prime Ministerial and Presidential business careers raises questions which go to the heart of democracy.
  • Mutabazi, Richard (2015). Looking Beyond the International Criminal Court.
  • Muth, Karl T. (2015). The paradoxical “selfishness” of aid – Karl Muth on stifling development.
  • Muñoz, Jordi, Tormos, Raül (2015). Economic considerations play only a limited role in explaining support for Catalonian independence, but could be crucial in deciding the final outcome.
  • Mycock, Andrew (2015). Learning to vote? Don’t start with a referendum.
  • Mycock, Andy (2015). The manifesto for youth: young people are demanding to be heard in the General Election.
  • Mycock, Andy, Giovannini, Arianna (2015). The prospect of greater regional and city devolution raises the spectre of the “Manchester Withington question”.
  • Myers, Martin (2015). Traveller planning policy continues to marginalise Gypsy families.
  • Myria, Georgiou (2015). Where is diversity in PSB? Can the BBC carry BAME viewers and producers with it?
  • Myrodias, Konstantinos, Chatzinikolaou, Panos (2015). Is the BRICS Bank an alternative for Greece?
  • Möller, Almut, Tzogopoulos, George, Bilčík, Vladimír, Zuleeg, Fabian (2015). European views on the UK’s renegotiation: Germany, Greece, Slovakia and the EU’s institutions.
  • Narula, Surina, Gunesekera, Romesh, Daruwalla, Keki (2015). DSC prize interviews: celebrating on South Asian literature.
  • Nasr, Leila (2015). ‘In conversation with Amartya Sen’ at the LSE.
  • Navari, Cornelia (2015). How the Badinter Commission on Yugoslavia laid the roots for Crimea’s secession from Ukraine.
  • Navarro, Vicente (2015). After Syriza’s victory, Podemos now poses a major threat to the Spanish political establishment.
  • Naydenova, Pressiana (2015). What Capitalism isn’t and what it could be.
  • Ndombet-Assamba, Aloun (2015). Aloun Ndombet-Assamba, Jamaica.
  • Neajai Pailey, Robtel (2015). In a world obsessed with passport tiers, citizenship is personal and political.
  • Nelson, Kim (2015). Provocative, honest, fierce: a review of Ai Weiwei’s London exhibition.
  • Nelson, Lise, Trautman, Laurie, Nelson, Peter B. (2015). Landscapes of luxury in the rural US depend on the recruitment of low-wage and often undocumented Latino workers.
  • Newell, James, Giovannini, Arianna (2015). The election of Italy’s new president has strengthened Matteo Renzi’s grip over Italian politics.
  • Ngubeni, Bhekinkosi (2015). Xenophobia is a stain on post-apartheid South Africa.
  • Nicolescu, Agnes, Larsen, Henrik, Heine, Sophie, Huberty, Martine (2015). European views on the UK’s renegotiation: Romania, Denmark, Belgium and Luxembourg.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2015). Moscow’s ‘reactive’ foreign policy risks turning Russia into a declining power.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2015). The ‘Russian threat’ has revived nationalism in the ‘new’ Europe.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2015). Why is Klaus Iohannis outsourcing Romania’s foreign policy?
  • Nkwanga, Waiswa (2015). The Ebola crisis in West Africa and the enduring legacy of the structural adjustment policies.
  • Nkwanga, Waiswa (2015). Rhetoric, Reality and Obama’s Speech to the African Union.
  • Nkwanga, Waiswa (2015). Why the 2015 African Union Summit a missed opportunity?
  • Noguera, José A. (2015). A ‘basic income’ system could be feasible in Spain, but only by reframing the current debate.
  • Noort, Mark C. (2015). Putting the culture back into safety culture.
  • Nord, Roger (2015). Global Value Chains: The Missing Link in Sub-Saharan Africa’s Trade Integration.
  • Norris, Pippa (2015). The debate – a gender gap in leadership performance?
  • Norton, Edward (2015). Are bigger nursing homes better?
  • Noster, Anja (2015). Lessons from Germany for the BBC.
  • Noulas, Anastasios (2015). OpenStreetCab: addressing the need for simplicity andtransparency in urban transport.
  • Novy, Dennis (2015). Britain needs Europe a lot more than Europe needs Britain.
  • Novy, Dennis (2015). Britain needs Europe a lot more than Europe needs Britain.
  • Novy, Dennis (2015). Governments have to come up with much more convincing narratives and concrete examples if they want to sway the public debate on TTIP.
  • Novy, Dennis (2015). Governments need a more convincing narrative if they want to sway the public debate on TTIP.
  • Nye, Joseph S. (2015). Book review: “is the American century over?”.
  • O'Byrne, Ryan Joseph (2015). Development in Pajok is an investment in the future of South Sudan.
  • O'Connor, Cliodhna (2015). Brain study confirms gender stereotypes: How science communication can fuel modern sexism.
  • O'Connor, Pat, O'Hagan, Clare (2015). Interrogating ‘excellence’: Implicit bias in academic promotion decisions perpetuates gender inequality.
  • O'Connor, Philip (2015). The coverage of the Irish marriage referendum shows that sometimes media ‘balance’ is impossible.
  • O'Dwyer, Muireann (2015). Book review: which policy for Europe? Power and conflict inside the European Commission by Miriam Hartlapp, Julia Metz, and Christian Rauh.
  • O'Farrell, Fergus (2015). Book review: the origins and rise of dissident Irish republicanism: the role and impact of organizational splits by John F. Morrison.
  • O'Geen, Andrew J., Parker, Christopher M. (2015). Supreme Court justices cooperate strategically to strengthen coalitions.
  • O'Leary, Duncan (2015). When shareholders and customers have distinct interests.
  • O'Reilly, Carole (2015). Book review: Thomas Fitzpatrick and the Lepracaun Monthly 1905-1915.
  • O'Reilly, Carole (2015). Book review: periodicals and journalism in Twentieth Century Ireland edited by Mark O’Brien and Felix M. Larkin.
  • O'Riordan, Tamsine (2015). Researchers agree interdisciplinary work makes an impact—but will collaboration flourish in the current environment?
  • Obadare, Ebenezer (2015). Nigeria: What is to be done.
  • Oberthür, Sebastian, Dupont, Claire (2015). Paris climate conference: why the EU should redouble its efforts to reach full decarbonisation.
  • Ognyanova, Nelly, Spassov, Orlin (2015). Media Pluralism Monitor: lessons have been learned, but concern remains for Bulgarian media.
  • Oh, Do Young (2015). Book review: urban revolution now: Henri Lefebvre in social research and architecture.
  • Ojok, Donnas (2015). The Aid Debate: Views from a personal journey.
  • Ojok, Donnas (2015). Is social entrepreneurship the magic bullet for African development?
  • Ojok, Donnas (2015). My bet on the Gates’ Big Bet on development in Africa.
  • Ojok, Donnas (2015). A Second Chance: Reinvigorating agricultural co-operatives in Africa.
  • Ojok, Donnas (2015). War Child or Warlord? The Justice Paradox in Ongwen’s ICC case.
  • Oklopcic, Zoran (2015). Why the role of international actors could be key in settling Catalonia’s standoff with Madrid over independence.
  • Olivas, Jose Javier (2015). Ciudadanos: the ‘tortoise’ that may beat the ‘hare’ in the race for political reform in Spain.
  • Olivas, Jose Javier (2015). Why Ciudadanos’ Albert Rivera is the candidate best placed to oust Mariano Rajoy as Spanish PM.
  • Olivas, Jose Javier (2015). A bitter victory for Catalan pro-independence nationalists.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). How the EU responds to a British withdrawal will be determined by five key factors.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). An elephant in the room: Brexit and the UK’s Defence Review.
  • Olivetti, Claudia, Paserman, Daniele (2015). A land of opportunity no more: poor intergenerational mobility in the US is a feature of both the past and present.
  • Ombelet, Pieter-Jan (2015). Send in the robots: automated journalism and its potential impact on media pluralism (part 2).
  • Ongwec, Joel (2015). Namuwongo: Key to Kampala’s present and future Development.
  • Orbea, Álvaro (2015). I feel smart after leaving the LSE.
  • Orden, David, Zulauf, Carl (2015). The 2014 Farm Bill reaffirmed protection for farmers against low prices, but limits US leadership in trade reform.
  • Orji, Nkwachukwu (2015). #NigeriaDecides 2015: What Does the Emerging Opposition Challenge Mean for Democracy?
  • Orr, Graeme (2015). The answer to the crisis of democracy is not to abandon the ritual of voting on election day.
  • Orrenius, Pia M., Zavodny, Madeline (2015). Giving migrants temporary legal status can help them into work and increase their earnings.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2015). Europe’s future and Jihad.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2015). The Ukrainian crisis: A year on.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2015). Weaponisation of war memories and anti-German sentiment.
  • Orsini, Giacomo (2015). Focusing on Lampedusa risks distorting the debate over undocumented migration into the EU.
  • Osler, Carol (2015). Greece illustrates the importance of staying within economic limits.
  • Osorio, Francisco (2015). Exploring the publishing model of the Open Library of Humanities: A view from Latin America.
  • Ostrander, Ian (2015). Why US Senators obstruct some executive agency nominations over others.
  • Osuala, Chiaka (2015). How to fix Nigeria – But is it broken? Pertinent issues facing Africa’s largest economy ahead of impending elections.
  • Otanocho, Omonigho (2015). Curbing crude oil theft.
  • Otero-Iglesias, Miguel (2015). Intentionally or otherwise, Schäuble has killed off the prospect of a Grexit.
  • Otero-Iglesias, Miguel (2015). We should be wary of removing the ECB from the troika to facilitate the use of outright monetary transactions.
  • Ottaviano, Gianmarco I. P., Peri, Giovanni, Wright, Greg (2015). We have been overlooking the relationship between immigration and international trade in services.
  • Ozyurek, Esra (2015). Being German, becoming Muslim: how German converts to Islam balance their national identity and their faith.
  • Ozyurek, Esra (2015). Turkey’s war against the Kurds threatens to create turmoil both inside and outside the country.
  • O’Cahill-Callaghan, Rachel (2015). Judicial diversity in the supreme court – Does it matter?
  • O’Dwyer, Muireann (2015). Book review: sexual politics in modern Ireland.
  • O’Rear, Eric (2015). The Obama administration’s focus on fuel economy standardsis less effective at reducing greenhouse gas emissionscompared to an oil tax.
  • O’Shea, Éidín (2015). Ireland’s referendum on same sex marriage could be a watershed moment for equality.
  • Paarlberg, Laurie E. (2015). How changing local economic structures can undermine community philanthropy when it is needed most.
  • Pabst, Adrian (2015). The Double death of Europe.
  • Padley, Matt (2015). Around 1 in 3 Londoners do not have the income needed for a minimum standard of living.
  • Padula, Danielle, Williams, Catherine (2015). Applied Altmetrics: How university presses, academic publishing services and institutional repositories benefit.
  • Padula, Danielle, Williams, Catherine (2015). Enter Alternative Metrics: Indicators that capture the value of research and richness of scholarly discourse.
  • Padula, Danielle, Williams, Catherine (2015). Top ten tips for getting your research the attention it deserves.
  • Pager, Devah, Pedulla, David S. (2015). African Americans respond to labor market discrimination bysearching more widely for jobs, which in turn hurts their wages.
  • Paipais, Vassilis (2015). Greek elections 2015: a short overview.
  • Paipais, Vassilis (2015). So this is how it all ends….
  • Palmer, Carl, Peterson, Rolfe (2015). For many citizens attractiveness is linked to political expertise.
  • Panah, Hamid Yazdan (2015). Who is funding Iran’s pursuit of the death penalty?
  • Pangburn, Aaron (2015). Mobutu’s lingering legacy in Gbadolite.
  • Pannini, Elisa (2015). Book review: the power to dismiss: trade unions and the regulation of job security in Western Europe by Patrick Emmenegger.
  • Papagaryfallou, Ioannis (2015). Book review: the European Union: an introduction by Mark Corner.
  • Papanagnou, Vaios (2015). What is wrong with the Greek media?
  • Papanikos, Gregory T. (2015). A Grexit would not be a catastrophe for all Greeks.
  • Parenting for a Digital Future, LSE (2015). Parenting for a Digital Future – recent media appearances.
  • Park, Bill (2015). A web of unholy alliances: how the US has indirectly aided Ankara’s attempts to undermine the Kurds in Syria and Turkey.
  • Parry, Lucy J (2015). Flogging a dead fox: why hunting is still on the agenda – and why it has nothing to do with animals.
  • Parvin, Phil (2015). There is real cause for concern when the persuasiveness of a story depends more on public attitudes than the facts.
  • Parycek, Peter, Edelmann, Noella, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Peter Parycek and Noella Edelmann on digital democracy best practice, localism, and e-government.
  • Parycek, Peter, Kippin, Sean (2015). Interview: Peter Parycek on artificial intelligence, dystopia, and democracy’s digital future.
  • Patrick, Ruth (2015). The realities of living on welfare are significantly different from government and media characterisations.
  • Patrikios, Stratos, Curtice, John (2015). Public support for freedom of choice in schools does not translate into backing for all forms of diversity of provision.
  • Paudel, Shreya (2015). The “unofficial blockade” has precipitated a significant shift in Nepal’s relationship with its neighbours.
  • Paul, Newly, York, Chance (2015). Endorsement ads are primarily used by incumbents and female candidates in the early stages of campaigns.
  • Pautz, Michelle (2015). Films can have a major influence on how people view government.
  • Pedaliu, Effie G. H. (2015). The Greek referendum has generated unprecedented uncertainty over Greece’s future in the euro.
  • Pedley, Keiran (2015). Polling Matters: Could the Lib Dems be kingmakers again and what do they do next?
  • Pedley, Keiran (2015). Polling Matters: Political Betting – Place your bets now.
  • Pedley, Keiran (2015). Polling Matters: Why Plaid Cymru are not the SNP.
  • Pedley, Keiran (2015). Polling Matters: Will it be 1992 all over again for the pollsters?
  • Pedley, Keiran (2015). Polling matters: The ‘unstoppable’ rise of Boris Johnson?
  • Peers, Steve (2015). The Commonwealth and the EU: let’s do (trade with) both.
  • Pejović, Aleksandar Andrija, Brown, Stuart A. (2015). Montenegro’s Chief EU Negotiator: “We made it clear to Russia we are joining NATO: this will not affect our relations”.
  • Pelletier, Adeline (2015). International transmission of shocks via internal capital markets of multinational banks: evidence from South Africa.
  • Pendle, Naomi (2015). Violence, legitimacy, and prophecy: Naomi Pendle on South Sudan.
  • Penny, Dan (2015). Author survey data reveals changing perceptions of scholarly communication and wider participation in open access.
  • Pereira, Isabella Nunes (2015). As criminal as criminals?
  • Pereira, Isabella Nunes (2015). Real life entrepreneurship in Rio de Janeiro’s largest favela.
  • Pereira, Isabella Nunes (2015). A realidade do empreendedorismo na favela.
  • Perkowski, Nina (2015). Legal entry routes are the only real solution to migrant deaths in the Mediterranean.
  • Perrin, Kristen (2015). Book review: debating the end of Yugoslavia edited by Florian Bieber, Armina Galijaš, and Rory Archer.
  • Perrone, Giuliana (2015). Litigating emancipation: legacies of slavery in the post-emancipation United States.
  • Perry, Brea (2015). The overuse of suspension in American public schools threatens the success of all students.
  • Perry, Brittany N., DeSante, Christopher D. (2015). Larger Latino populations are linked to smaller knowledge gapsbetween citizen and non-citizen Latinos.
  • Pertusot, Vivien, Korteweg, Rem, Lovec, Marko, Hiršs, Mārtinš (2015). European views on the UK’s renegotiation: France, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Latvia.
  • Peter, Fabienne (2015). Democracy or decision-making by experts?
  • Peterson, David A. M., Miller Vonnahme, Beth (2015). How what type of news you watch can influence how you reactto a scandal in a presidential primary.
  • Pfeiffer, Deirdre (2015). U.S. minorities are faring better in suburbs that matured after the civil rights era.
  • Phalkey, Jahnavi, Chattapadhyay, Sumandro (2015). The Aakash tablet and technological imaginaries of mass education in contemporary India.
  • Phillimore, Jenny (2015). Where is integration in the refugee crisis?
  • Phillips, Christopher (2015). Syria’s refugees: When did the West become so heartless?
  • Phillips, Siobhan, Heywood-Roos, Rhona (2015). Job security for early career researchers is a significant factor in helping research make an impact.
  • Piaskowski, Henry (2015). Book review: monetary policy operations and the financial system by Ulrich Bindseil.
  • Picard, Robert G. (2015). How Europe talks about itself: Lessons from the Euro Crisis.
  • Pierce, Douglas (2015). Why the views of ‘political experts’ may be just as biased and error ridden as those of ‘non-experts’.
  • Pierre-Alexandre, Balland, Rigby, David, Boschma, Ron (2015). Socio-economic and technological flexibility is key to the resilience of American cities in times of crisis.
  • Pijnenburg, Katharina (2015). How rising and falling house prices spill over into other nearby regions.
  • Pince, Ann-Victoire (2015). The challenges facing Generation-Y.
  • Pinfield, Stephen (2015). Making Open Access work: Clustering analysis of academic discourse suggests OA is still grappling with controversy.
  • Pinzani, Allesandro (2015). As mulheres de Itinga: Bolsa Família e consciência política.
  • Pinzani, Allesandro (2015). The women of Itinga: bolsa família and political empowerment.
  • Pirro, Andrea L.P. (2015). The rise of Jobbik poses a credible threat to Fidesz’s dominance in Hungary.
  • Plane, Mathieu (2015). Despite a difficult 2014 for the French economy, France is still far from being the ‘sick man of Europe’.
  • Plant, Bob (2015). Death, fear, and self-mourning.
  • Playforth, Rachel (2015). The future of knowledge sharing for development in a digital age: Delivering an open and fair digital society.
  • Pluck, Graham (2015). Challenges and strengths, thinking about ´street children´.
  • Pochet, Phillipe (2015). Greece: the triumph of an alternative narrative.
  • Poitevin, Arnaud (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – whistleblowing: a powerful tool to monitor human rights compliance.
  • Polese, Abel (2015). Between ‘Wizards of Oz’, Madagascari Lemur and Megalomaniac Presidents: The Amusements of Research in Post-Socialist Spaces.
  • Poli, Eleonora, Gostyńska-Jakubowska, Agata, Primatarova, Antoinette, Pace, Roderick (2015). European views on the UK’s renegotiation: Italy, Poland, Bulgaria and Malta.
  • Pollicino, Oreste, Bassini, Marco (2015). An Internet Bill of Rights? Pros and cons of the Italian way.
  • Polonski, Vyacheslav (2015). Book review: smartphones as locative media.
  • Polonski, Vyacheslav (2015). How can businesses measure social media influence to create value?
  • Polonski, Vyacheslav (2015). How can businesses measure social media influence to createvalue?
  • Ponder, Daniel, Simon, Christopher, Wendell, Dane, Tatalovich, Raymond (2015). How Obama’s economic stewardship could help Democrats forgenerations to come.
  • Poni Lado, Susan (2015). Social Media could usher in a universal third culture phenomenon.
  • Popov, Julian (2015). South East Europe has the ingredients to become the energy generation and storage powerhouse of Europe.
  • Porter, Lauren, King, Ryan (2015). Having a father incarcerated can increase an adolescent’s destructive and violent criminal behavior.
  • Potter, Joshua D., Tavits, Margit (2015). Leftist and rightist parties talk to voters in different ways when inequality is high, but not when inequality is low.
  • Poulsen, Taudal, Ponte, Stefano (2015). Maritime shipping must come to grips with its CO2 emissions.
  • Powell, Matt (2015). Full Fibre Broadband – The high-speed solution to Government broadband targets?
  • Power, Nina (2015). The ‘transferable skills’ paradigm is cover for the creation of transferable people.
  • Power, Sam (2015). The ‘Joyce Affair’ changed party funding in Britain forever, and possibly also our understanding of how reform occurs.
  • Prada, Preeti (2015). The campaign to include India’s children in urban planning.
  • Prelec, Tena (2015). Fatmir Besimi: wire-tapping scandal is taking Macedonia ‘in the opposite direction’.
  • Prelec, Tena, Brown, Stuart A. (2015). Croatian elections: a final look at the parties and the campaign.
  • Prelec, Tena, von Eggert, Konstantin, Petrov, Nikolay (2015). Russian foreign policy: what are we missing?
  • Priego-Hernandez, Jacqueline (2015). Participatory workshops with non-academics foster positive social impact and work as a research validation mechanism.
  • Priego-Hernandez, Jacqueline (2015). Talleres participativos con usuarios noacadémicosde la investigación promueven elimpacto social positivo y funcionan como unmecanismo de validación de la investigación.
  • Pugh, John (2015). The Government’s approach to “Metro Mayors” amounts to imposition rather than devolution.
  • Pukallus, Stefanie (2015). If the EU is serious about freedom of expression it should take aim at Spain’s controversial ‘gag law’.
  • Puschmann, Cornelius, Bastos, Marco (2015). A tale of two scholarly blog platforms: comparing and conceptualizing online research communities.
  • Pype, Katrien (2015). Grandparents, grandchildren and mobile phones in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
  • Pytlas, Bartek (2015). Hungary, Poland and Slovakia show the risks associated with mainstream parties co-opting the platforms of the radical right.
  • Pytlas, Bartek (2015). The Polish presidential election highlights increasing disenchantment with the country’s political establishment.
  • Pérez, Efrén O. (2015). How the questions we ask can influence our judgments of people’s political knowledge.
  • Pérez, Efrén O. (2015). Politicians’ trash-talk about immigration means that Latinos become less politically trusting and more ethnocentric.
  • Pérez Esparza, David (2015). The elephant in the room: human rights and the Mexico-UK “dual year”.
  • Quah, Danny (2015). Danny Quah: the world’s tightest cluster of people.
  • Quinn, Tom, Griffiths, Simon, Bale, Tim, Barker, Rodney, Garnett, Mark (2015). Experts react to the Spending Review: what next for the Conservative Party?
  • Quinney, Johanna (2015). Prime minister of “sexy”.
  • Quinonez, Claudia (2015). When even central banks use Twitter to communicate, the markets turn to social media.
  • Quiroga, Alejandro (2015). Despite the rise of Ciudadanos and Podemos, there is plenty of life left in the Spanish political establishment.
  • Qvortrup, Matt (2015). “Oops I did it again!” Cameron and the Britney Spears model of constitutional reform.
  • Rabinovich, Stanislav, Mitman, Kurt (2015). Reducing the duration of unemployment benefits as arecession progresses can speed economic recovery.
  • Rackey, John, Bell, Lauren C. (2015). Nuclear fallout: limiting the filibuster has led to more delays.
  • Ragusa, Jordan (2015). Why the House is to blame for the Senate’s polarization.
  • Ragusa, Jordan M., Birkhead, Nathaniel A. (2015). Understanding when and why Congress repeals laws is as important as looking at how it makes them.
  • Rahman, Tasmiah (2015). Not just a tick box: NGOs should look beyond women’s employment and address household power dynamics.
  • Rahman, Tasmiah (2015). Protecting domestic worker rights in Bangladesh: could a cross-class alliance work?
  • Rama, Arlind (2015). In need of a final solution: property rights in Albania.
  • Ramapurath Chemmencheri, Sudheesh (2015). Marginalisation and the media: how does the subaltern respond to mediation?
  • Ramarajan, Lakshmi, LeRoux-Rutledge, Emily (2015). Resisting discrimination and embracing marginalized identities: a catalyst for global entrepreneurship.
  • Ramaswamy, Megha, Daniels, Jessie (2015). Encouraging racial pride can help protect young black and latino men from police violence and incarceration.
  • Raos, Višeslav (2015). Croatia is set for an unusually tight race in the second round of its presidential election.
  • Rapoport, Hillel (2015). How a tradable refugee-admission quota system could help solve the EU’s migration crisis.
  • Rasmussen, Anne, Otjes, Simon (2015). Why political context is key in determining the parties interest groups choose to collaborate with.
  • Rauh, Jonathan (2015). Depending on how they are appointed, State Ethics Commissions can be vulnerable to political influence from elected officials.
  • Raunio, Tapio (2015). Finland’s 2015 parliamentary elections: a final look at the parties and the polling.
  • Raunio, Tapio (2015). The new Finnish government could offer a natural ally for David Cameron.
  • Ray, Debika (2015). Book review: the resilience dividend: being strong in a world where things go wrong.
  • Ray, John (2015). Adam Boulton – “2015: a post-TV election?”.
  • Ray, John (2015). Andrew Marr: British politics is due for an earthquake.
  • Ray, Jon (2015). A message of inspiration: promoting Olympic sports.
  • Raymond, Christopher (2015). David Cameron may have to emphasise the partisan consequences of a divided Tory party to his MPs if he is to get through this Parliament.
  • Raymond, Christopher (2015). The nature of contemporary politics means that first-past-the-post is unable to prevent multiparty systems.
  • Read, Sanna, Grundy, Emily, Foverskov, Else (2015). Socioeconomic position and subjective health and well-being among older people in Europe.
  • Reddy, Geetha (2015). The vision of social psychology: photo gallery.
  • Redford, Kate (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – rhetoric of corporate responsibility is not enough: corporations must walk the walk, not just talk the talk.
  • Rees, Susannah (2015). LSE research festival workshops: Susannah Rees on poster design.
  • Reher, Stefanie (2015). As long as politicians continue to ignore the concerns of the public, satisfaction with democracy will continue to decline.
  • Reich, Simon (2015). The two faces of Germany: how Germany’s support for refugees could counteract criticism of its handling of the Greek debt crisis.
  • Reid, Richard (2015). The Conservatives will not ‘suspend’ the House of Lords, but neither will they reform it.
  • Reid, Richard, Dunleavy, Patrick (2015). Is a British Senate any closer now? Or will the House of Lords still go on and on?
  • Reid, Richard, Dunleavy, Patrick (2015). It is time to adopt a different approach to appointing members of the Intelligence and Security Committee.
  • Reis, Sara (2015). Book review: career behaviour and the European Parliament: all roads lead through Brussels?
  • Ren, Ling, Zhang, Yan, Zhao, Jihong Solomon (2015). Media coverage of stand your ground laws deters crime in some cities, but not in others.
  • Rengifo, Andres F., Slocum, Lee Ann (2015). A lack of civically focused groups, combined with previouspolice involvement, may be making it harder for somecommunities to mobilize against intensive policing.
  • Revington, Nick (2015). North American cities aren’t just gentrifying, they’re youthifying as well.
  • Reyer, Bob (2015). Comics and human rights: taking the long way. The super-heroine’s struggle for respect.
  • Reynolds, Andrew (2015). LGBT MPs and Candidates in the British General Election May 2015: The State of Play.
  • Rhode, Ann Kristin (2015). Do you see what I see? How language and culture shape visual perception.
  • Rhodes, Jesse H. (2015). Standardized testing is eroding the foundation of parentalsupport and engagement essential to student success.
  • Rhodes, Jesse H., Albert, Zachary (2015). Contrary to popular belief, American presidential election campaigns have become less partisan over time.
  • Rich, Timothy (2015). Evidence from abroad suggests that mixed legislative systems have much to commend them, but close attention must be paid to national contexts.
  • Richards, Dave, Smith, Martin (2015). Whatever happened to the strange death of Tory England?
  • Richards, Dave, Smith, Martin (2015). The strange resurrection of the British Political Tradition.
  • Richardson, Ann (2015). Eurohealth Volume 20, Number 4: Migrants and Health.
  • Rickard, Stephanie (2015). This year Trade Adjustment Assistance has been a stumbling block rather than a stepping stone.
  • Rickard, Stephanie J. (2015). Greece’s creditors are paying the price for not relaxing their conditions prior to the 2015 election.
  • Riddervold, Marianne (2015). The Commission exerts far more influence over EU foreign and security policy than is commonly recognised.
  • Rissing, Ben, Castilla, Emilio (2015). Latin American immigrants are less likely to be authorized to work in the U.S. than similar immigrants from other countries.
  • Ritchey, Mark (2015). State “Blue Ribbon” commissions can help small interestgroups to defeat the aims of big industry.
  • Roach, Trevor (2015). Book review: artwash: Big Oil and the arts.
  • Robertson, Hamish, Travaglia, Joanne (2015). Big data problems we face today can be traced to the social ordering practices of the 19th century.
  • Roelofs, Portia (2015). Photo Essay: Is there space for roadside traders in the modern city?
  • Rohrer, Sam (2015). Charismatic and power-driven Prime Ministers are perceived as the most effective by voters.
  • Rome, Emma (2015). Allowing MPs to job share would bring benefit constituents, democracy, and the MPs themselves.
  • Rome, Emma, Berry, Richard (2015). Debate part 1: should adding ‘none of the above’ to ballot papers be a priority for UK political reformers?
  • Rome, Emma, Berry, Richard (2015). Debate part 2: should adding ‘none of the above’ to ballot papers be a priority for UK political reformers?
  • Rooduijn, Matthijs (2015). Populism has been used to describe countless and often conflicting political parties, but it can be defined.
  • Rooduijn, Matthijs (2015). Populist arguments have become more pervasive in Western European countries.
  • Rooduijn, Matthijs (2015). Populist arguments have become more pervasive in the UK and other Western European countries.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2015). Book review: Asian imperial banking history.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2015). Book review: aftermath: the makers of the postwar world by Richard Crowder.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2015). Book review: conflict in the academy: a study in the sociology of intellectuals.
  • Rose, Andrew K. (2015). A positive international image helps countries export more.
  • Rothstein, Richard (2015). From Ferguson to Baltimore: the fruits of government-sponsored segregation.
  • Rothstein, Richard (2015). If the achievement gap is to be closed, policymakers must firstre-learn the history of state sponsored racial segregation in U.S.metropolitan areas.
  • Rothstein, Richard (2015). The racial academic achievement gap cannot be closed insegregated schools.
  • Rothwell, Nancy (2015). Nancy Rothwell, UK.
  • Rowell, Carli Ria (2015). The personal pull of sociology.
  • Rueda-Sabater, Enrique (2015). How we can go beyond GDP to measure the success of nations.
  • Rumbul, Rebecca (2015). Citizens worldwide are embracing civic technology but the profile of users varies markedly between countries.
  • Rumbul, Rebecca (2015). The representation of women in elected positions in Wales is not mirrored by the number of women giving evidence.
  • Ruser, Alexander (2015). Saving the Euro at all costs could lead to an eventual hollowing out of European democracy.
  • Ruser, Alexander (2015). Saving the euro at all costs could lead to the hollowing out of European democracy.
  • Rusinek, Hans (2015). God in Berlin, Newton in Brussels: On the power of linguistic images in the Eurozone crisis.
  • Russell, Andrew (2015). The North West – an important battleground.
  • Ryan, Josh (2015). Evidence from the United States shows that the gerrymandering of district boundaries is not necessarily a cause of political polarisation.
  • Ryan, Josh (2015). Evidence shows that the gerrymandering of district boundaries is not necessarily a cause of political polarisation.
  • Rye, Danny (2015). A victory for Jeremy Corbyn in the Labour leadership race could bring about a realignment of British politics.
  • Sa, Filipa (2015). Higher university fees reduce applications and attendance.
  • Sagarzazu, Inaki, Kluever, Heike (2015). Parties in coalitions find themselves caught between the need to cooperate and differentiate.
  • Saitone, Tina, Sexton, Richard, Volpe, Richard (2015). Focusing on eligible products, not retailer markups, may be a more effective way to contain the WIC food assistance program’s costs.
  • Sajuria, Javier (2015). For social movements, the online world replicates traditional offline structures and networks of social capital.
  • Salamone, Anthony (2015). Britain’s EU membership will now be the subject of several years of negotiation and debate.
  • Salloum, Cynthia (2015). The foreign politics of diasporas plays an important role in shaping U.S. foreign policy.
  • Saltman, Richard B. (2015). In the current bitterly contested political atmosphere, theSupreme Court’s second decision on Obamacare has resolvedlittle.
  • Sandelind, Clara (2015). National identity plays a key role in determining whether people view immigration as a threat.
  • Sander, Harald (2015). The ‘Juncker plan’ does not offer a genuine route to boosting the Eurozone’s recovery.
  • Sander, Harald (2015). The use of overly intrusive conditionality in Greece is threatening the European project.
  • Saouli, Adham (2015). Lebanon: contesting trash politics.
  • Sargent, Daniel J. (2015). Though facing complex challenges, America’s foreign policy strategy must remain a continual work in progress.
  • Sarrionandia, Barbara (2015). The drama of the migration in the Mediterranean – The view from Italy.
  • Savage, Mike, Hills, John (2015). The politics of inequality: Atkinson, Piketty and Stiglitz at the LSE’s International Inequalities Institute.
  • Savigny, Heather (2015). The departure (and return) of “Page 3″: the media’s conflicted relationship with cover-ups.
  • Sawicki, Dawid (2015). Rising inequality in the Eurozone underlines the need for a fiscal union.
  • Saxena, Sanchita, Campion, Sonali (2015). “Workers in the textiles industry are portrayed by the media as victims. I wanted to challenge that narrative” – Sanchita Saxena.
  • Sayce, Liz (2015). Liz Sayce, UK.
  • Sayer, Andrew (2015). We need to challenge the myth that the rich are specially-talented wealth creators. picture_as_pdf
  • Scala, Dante J., Johnson, Kenneth M. (2015). Demographic and economic change is helping to grow supportfor the Democratic Party in rural America.
  • Scanlon, Kathleen (2015). From our own corRUPSpondent: Site visit to Goodman’s Fields.
  • Scharff, Christina (2015). Life as an enterprise: Ten ways through which neoliberalism is experienced on an emotional level.
  • Scheuer, Florian (2015). A Grexit may be plausible from an economic perspective, but politically it would be a disaster.
  • Schimmelfennig, Frank (2015). Claims of a ‘new intergovernmentalism’ in European integration have been overstated.
  • Schindler, Seth (2015). Other cities in crisis can learn from Detroit’s bankruptcy-fostered Degrowth Machine Politics.
  • Schlosberg, Justin (2015). Half empty or full? The politics of measuring media plurality.
  • Schlosberg, Justin (2015). Ofcom’s Plurality Framework: Protecting the Status Quo?
  • Schmitt, Kenny (2015). Book review: Jerusalem: the spatial politics of a divided metropolis by Anne B. Shlay and Gillad Rosen.
  • Schmitt, Maya (2015). Book review: on their watch: mass violence and state apathy in India.
  • Schoemaker, Emrys (2015). New Facebook crowd in Pakistan courts controversy – Emrys Schoemaker comments.
  • Schofield Clark, Lynn (2015). Encountering a surprising response to cyberbullying among an immigrant community.
  • Scholtens, Bert (2015). Falling oil prices should help Europe’s ailing economies, but the wider implications of the price drop remain to be seen.
  • Schoonvelde, Martijn (2015). Countries with less Government interference in the media have higher levels of voter knowledge.
  • Schoonvelde, Martijn (2015). Countries with less government interference in the media have higher levels of voter knowledge.
  • Schoultz, Asa von, Wass, Hanna (2015). Political elites and voters have highly congruent preferences for representation both in the UK and Finland. picture_as_pdf
  • Schröder, Carolin, Schuster, Anna (2015). Smartphone apps can be used to create a climate of local participation, but challenges remain.
  • Schuetz, Jenny (2015). Shops and services don’t necessarily flock to new subway stations.
  • Schäfer, Constantin (2015). If Eurosceptic parties continue to prosper European elections could hinder further European integration.
  • Schöch, Christof (2015). Fast and made to last: Academic blogs look to ensure long-term accessibility and stability of content.
  • Scott, Alistair (2015). Who’s talking about your research? Tune in to the digital debate and discover what happens post-publication.
  • Scrollini, Fabrizio (2015). Latin America: surveillance and human rights in the digital age.
  • Scully, Roger (2015). Going west: voters in Wales turn against the EU.
  • Scully, Roger (2015). Labour in Wales: perhaps the biggest polling movement in recent UK history that almost no-one has heard of.
  • Seabrook, Nicholas R., Dyck, Joshua J., Lascher, Jr., Edward L. (2015). The ballot initiative process does not make people moregenerally knowledgeable about politics.
  • Seck, Sara (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – measuring progress: lawyers and climate change.
  • Selke, Stefan (2015). Despite low unemployment, large sections of German society remain at risk from poverty.
  • Sen, Amartya, Campion, Sonali, Odayar, Taryana (2015). “India is the only country trying to become a global economic power with an uneducated and unhealthy labour force” – Amartya Sen.
  • Senninger, Roman, Bischof, Daniel (2015). Domestic and European parliamentarians of the same party tend to pay attention to the same policy issues.
  • Senninger, Roman, Wagner, Markus (2015). Parties now talk about the EU in national election campaigns, but they still tend to talk past each other.
  • Seran, Justine (2015). Book review: who’s afraid of academic freedom? Edited by Akeel Bilgrami and Jonathan R. Cole.
  • Serdült, Uwe (2015). The baloti.ch project shows the difficulties in engaging the disenfranchised in the political process using e-participation apps.
  • Settle, Jaime (2015). How analyzing social media data can help determine whether or not people will vote.
  • Sevenans, Julie, Walgrave, Stefaan, Vos, Debby (2015). Research from Belgium shows that partisan, rather than policy goals lead to MPs’ media responsiveness.
  • Seyd, Ben (2015). Expectation management: can politicians win back political trust by limiting what the public expects of them?
  • Shabnaz Akkas, Zerina, Alam, Khurshed (2015). Protecting girls in Bangladesh’s tea garden communities: ends and means.
  • Shadlen, Kenneth C. (2015). Intellectual Property, Access to Medicines, and Health – Ken Shadlen.
  • Shah, Hetan (2015). Both the Government and the private sector must harness the transformative potential of data.
  • Shah, Hetan (2015). Our democracy relies on the quality of data in the public domain.
  • Shall, Nicci (2015). Redeeming the human: direct action and human rights at Yarl’s Wood.
  • Shanahan, Daniel (2015). Why perpetuate a 300-year-old anachronism? Reincarnating the research article into a ‘living document’.
  • Shankar, Shobana (2015). Long before Boko Haram, dissenters were driven to the brink in Northern Nigeria.
  • Sharifi, Nafiseh (2015). Book review: policing sexuality: the mann act and the making of the FBI by Jessica R. Piley.
  • Sharma, Sudhanshu (2015). Book review: water security in India: hope, despair, and the challenges of human development by Vandana Asthana and A. C. Shukla.
  • Sharma, Sudhanshu (2015). The political economy of the water-energy nexus in Indian irrigation.
  • Sharp, Chloe (2015). Book review: improving health services: background, method and applications by Walter Holland.
  • Shaw, Christopher (2015). Book review: the sustainable economics of Elinor Ostrom: commons, contestation and craft by Derek Wall.
  • Shaw, Eric (2015). All change in Scotland?
  • Shawcross, Valerie (2015). Vandemonium – Can or should London government try to curb the spiraling growth of home deliveries by van?
  • Shayer-McLeod, Desiree (2015). Western Sahara: Separating fact from fiction in the independence debate.
  • Shelton, Taylor (2015). Social media data provides an opportunity for rethinking spatial inequalities in American cities.
  • Sheppard, Jill (2015). Enforced compulsory voting results in more evenly distributed political knowledge than in voluntary systems.
  • Shiels, David (2015). Queen Elizabeth in Germany: It is important to remember the dangers of a divided Europe.
  • Shiner, Michael (2015). Drug possession should be removed from police performance indicators.
  • Shiraz, Shabana (2015). The good, bad and ugly of Modi’s urban agenda so far.
  • Shivananda, Sammith (2015). The Land Acquisition Bill debate: more political than practical.
  • Shor, Eran (2015). Why men receive much more media coverage than women.
  • Shorrocks, Rosalind (2015). The Liberal Democrats could get an electoral boost from undecideds – especially women.
  • Shoshan, Nitzan (2015). Pegida is only the latest in a long line of German far-right movements to mobilise against Islam.
  • Shukla, Vandinika, Campion, Sonali (2015). Strengthening relations between Europe and India: which partnership for the 21st Century?
  • Shutters, Shade (2015). Cities which plan to transform into a creative engine of innovation may face a long and difficult journey.
  • Siddi, Marco (2015). Despite Ukraine and legal disputes, the EU is unlikely to break from its reliance on Russian gas imports.
  • Siddi, Marco (2015). EU and Russian leaders should avoid turning WWII commemorations into quarrels over Ukraine.
  • Sidorsky, Kaitlin (2015). From ballot to binder: how women in political appointments tell a different story of political ambition than women in elected office.
  • Sikk, Allan (2015). Estonia’s 2015 election result ensures the Reform Party will continue to dominate the country’s politics.
  • Silva, Rafael (2015). The promise of eradicating poverty through human rights.
  • Simmons, Joel W. (2015). Evidence suggests that America’s resource wealth undermines women’s economic and political power.
  • Simon, David (2015). Expansions to the Earned Income Tax Credit improved thehealth of children born to low income mothers.
  • Simon, Felix (2015). The best bookshops in Frankfurt, Germany.
  • Simpson, Mark (2015). As Scotland and Wales demand greater devolution Northern Ireland is handing power back to Westminster.
  • Sims, Sam (2015). Back to the future with academy chain accountability?
  • Singh, Amandeep, Nikhil, George (2015). For the net by the net: initial thoughts on India’s save the internet campaign.
  • Singh, Chandni (2015). Book review: why are we waiting?: the logic, urgency and promise of tackling climate change by Nicholas Stern.
  • Singh, Matt (2015). Polling divergence – phone versus online and established versus new.
  • Singh, Shane P., Dunn, Kris (2015). The success of populist radical right parties is not a result of heightened participation in politics by authoritarians.
  • Siodla, James (2015). Differences in housing density show that the impact of the 1906 San Francisco Fire is still evident today.
  • Siva, Anushika, Niaz, Laraib (2015). Student Experience: Consultancy project informs new report on food insecurity in Central America.
  • Sked, Alan, Brown, Stuart A. (2015). Five minutes with Alan Sked: “I think UKIP’s campaign was dreadful”.
  • Skiba, Paige Marta (2015). Americans with payday loans spent or saved their tax rebates,rather than using it to pay off debt.
  • Skinner, Gideon (2015). Five minutes with Gideon Skinner: “The trend in the polling is clearly toward support for the UK staying in the EU”.
  • Sloam, James, Kisby, Ben (2015). Education can provide both the opportunities and capabilities to make active citizens of our young people.
  • Sloman, Peter (2015). Activation or redistribution? The mystery of tax credits.
  • Sloman, Peter (2015). Where next for the Liberal Democrats?
  • Small, Andrew (2015). Dialling democracy: mobile phones and political participation in Ghana.
  • Smidt, Hannah (2015). #CotedIvoire: Why the 2015 Presidential Election was Peaceful.
  • Smirnova, Olga V., Leland, Suzanne (2015). Most transit agencies did not turn to contracting out services in response to the fiscal pressures of the Great Recession.
  • Smith, Graham (2015). Involve’s ‘Room for a View’ represents an important intervention in the debate on democracy’s future direction.
  • Smith, Jacob, Weinberg, Neil (2015). How an elevator can be key to a candidate’s electoral success.
  • Smith, Jeff (2015). Constituent pressure may be more effective than lobbying in determining whether a bill passes or fails.
  • Smith, Jeffrey A., Noyes, Alexander (2015). Gambia’s longtime dictator isn’t going anywhere any time soon.
  • Smith, Julie (2015). The UK should follow the Dutch example and share European policy across Parliament’s committees.
  • Smith, Julie (2015). The UK should follow the Dutch example, and share European policy across Parliament’s committees.
  • Smith, Megan (2015). Book review: Syria and Lebanon: international relations and diplomacy in the Middle East.
  • Smith, Megan (2015). Book review: national and state identity in Turkey: the transformation of the Republic’s status in the international system by Toni Alaranta.
  • Smith, Melissa M. (2015). Even as they complain about campaign finance ethics, many candidates are holding their hands out for large donations.
  • Smith, Melissa M. (2015). FEC dysfunction means a free-for-all in the 2016 elections.
  • Smith, Nicola (2015). The queerness of political science: challenging and destabilizing the discipline’s boundaries.
  • Smith, Tim (2015). The UK electoral system now decisively favours the Conservatives.
  • Smith-Anthony, Adam, Edwards, Laura (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – where does human rights fit within business?
  • Smyth, Stewart (2015). Housing policy can’t be fixed until we treat houses as homes and not as stores of wealth.
  • Smyth, Stewart (2015). Inviting market forces in: financing Social Housing from the Coalition to the Spending Review.
  • Snaith, Holly (2015). Germany is stuck with a crisis it did not foresee and can no longer control.
  • Sneddon, Laura (2015). Comics and human rights: the forgotten women of comics.
  • Snowden, Nicholas (2015). The origins of the 2008 financial crisis should be traced to the 1980s.
  • Sobolewska, Maria (2015). The Conservatives’ BME MPs may be game changers in the way we think about ethnic minority representation.
  • Solana, Javier, Brown, Stuart A. (2015). Five minutes with Javier Solana: ‘Europe must respond to the refugee crisis as it would have liked the world to respond to its suffering’.
  • Sorbo, Paul (2015). Why journalists should talk about geography.
  • Soroka, Stuart, Stecula, Dominik, Wlezien, Christopher (2015). The media and public opinion react to changes in economic conditions, not the state of the economy in general.
  • Sosnowski, Marika (2015). Book review: Rule of law in war: internationallaw and United States counterinsurgency inIraq and Afghanistan by Travers McLeod.
  • Southwell, Priscilla (2015). Oregon’s Governor Deserved Better.
  • Spanke, Till (2015). South Ossetia’s unification referendum poses a dilemma for both Georgia and Russia.
  • Spasojevic, Nemanja, Rao, Adithya, Li, Zhisheng, Bhattacharyya, Prantik (2015). When is the best time to post on social media? Analysis of 100+ million posts suggests there is no single answer.
  • Speller, Catherine (2015). Progress, pressures and politics: challenges at self-regulatory media councils in South East Europe.
  • Spencer, David (2015). The budget did nothing to tackle barriers that prevent higher productivity.
  • Spiller, Keith (2015). Gaining access to CCTV images is far more difficult than the legislation suggests it ought to be.
  • Springman, Sarah (2015). Sarah Springman, Switzerland.
  • Staggs Kelsall, Michelle (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – a cartographer’s guide to measurement: mapping where we are, determining where we want to be and getting into the messy in-roads of legislation.
  • Stanley, Jamie (2015). The 2015 General Election shows why we need a ‘None of the Above’ option on ballot papers.
  • Stanley, Jamie (2015). Why ‘none of the above’ is the starting point for electoral reform and should be the priority of all political and electoral reformers at this time.
  • Stark, Jamie (2015). The Americas are ill prepared for the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.
  • Stauffer, Hilary (2015). An unlikely bestseller sheds some light on Guantanamo.
  • Stazyk, Edmund C. (2015). Education matters in how public servants approach administrative ethics.
  • Steel, Griet (2015). ‘The world in your hands’: smartphones and women’s connectivity in Sudan.
  • Steeves, Jennifer, Surminski, Swenja (2015). Investigating private sector adaptation to climate change: the case of Tata Teleservices.
  • Stein, Rachel, Griffith, Candace (2015). Community policing strategies need to take into account police and residents’ different perceptions of neighborhood crime.
  • Stern, Nicholas H (2015). Prospering wisely: How research helps us confront the tough choices we face in creating a healthier society.
  • Stewart, Kitty, Lupton, Ruth (2015). Social mobility under the coalition government: have the life chances of the poorest children improved?
  • Stewart, Michael (2015). The Porous University: Impact is not some added extra of academic life, but lies at the core of what we do.
  • Stiefel, Leana, Zabel, Jeffrey (2015). High levels of student mobility mean that kids who begin school in poor neighborhoods may not stay there.
  • Stoica, Mihnea (2015). Romania’s party system remains in flux ahead of next year’s local and parliamentary elections.
  • Stokes, Leah C. (2015). Governments who push popular climate policies can be punished at the ballot box by local and vocal minorities.
  • Strandberg, Kim (2015). Online discussion could foster more democratically focused citizens – but only if the forums in which they take place are designed with this aim in mind.
  • Straw, Ed (2015). As well as being a democratic outrage, first past the post also has additional unseen consequences.
  • Street, Alex (2015). Google data suggest millions of Americans are prevented fromvoting by early registration deadlines.
  • Streib, Jessi (2015). If preschools are to level the social class playing field, they must prevent four year old children and their teachers from tilting it.
  • Strelkov, Alexander (2015). National parliaments focus too much on subsidiarity and not enough on the actual content of EU proposals.
  • Strong, James (2015). British foreign policy and the 2015 general election.
  • Strong, James (2015). On balance Britain should join anti-ISIS strikes in Syria, argues James Strong. But it should do so cautiously and take care to establish clear legal grounds for such action.
  • Strong, James (2015). U-turn if you want to: Why Cameron isn’t bound to pre-election promises on defence.
  • Studdert, Jessica (2015). Engagement at the local level should be citizen-led rather than institution-led.
  • Sullivan, David (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – competition, collaboration, and corporate accountability rankings.
  • Sun, Ivan, Wu, Yuning (2015). Arab Americans’ confidence in the police has been stable and favorable over the past decade.
  • Sung Min, Han (2015). Income inequality and party polarisation proceed together in some countries, but not in others.
  • Surette, Ray (2015). Journalists do a poor job of correctly identifying copycat crime and social science hasn’t helped.
  • Surubaru, Neculai-Cristian (2015). Governing a dysfunctional state: the challenges facing Romania’s new technocratic government.
  • Sutherlin, Gwyneth (2015). Book review: language in mind: an introduction to psycholinguistics by Julie Sedivy.
  • Sutton, Matthew Avery (2015). Book review: American apocalypse: a history of modern evangelicalism by Matthew Avery Sutton.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). If bombing the Middle East was the way to peace, it would be the most peaceful place on Earth.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). The Northern Ireland Secretary’s suggestion that Stormont’s impasse could be solved by the return of London rule is dangerous and wrong.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). Once again the Constitution seems vulnerable to piecemeal reform arising out of sectional party interest.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). Overcoming the UK’s constitutional crisis may require the development of more flexible relationships between the constituent nations.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). The SNP’s exponential rise is throwing the British system of government into turmoil.
  • Swan, Sean (2015). An invitation to adventurism: the Fixed-term Parliaments Act can and will crucify a minority government.
  • Swedler, David (2015). Homicide rates of police officers are much more associated with gun ownership than violent crime.
  • Swidlicki, Pawel (2015). Labour IN for Britain: the challenges Alan Johnson’s campaign faces.
  • Swift, Clint S., VanderMolen, Kathryn A. (2015). If citizens want to get rid of selfishness and gridlock in legislatures, term limits are not the answer.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). Can Civic Platform still win the 2015 Polish election?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). How will Poland’s Law and Justice party govern?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). Law and Justice now have the momentum in the lead up to Poland’s general election.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). Law and Justice’s stunning victory in Poland reflected widespread disillusionment with the country’s ruling elite.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). Polish election: a final look at the parties and the campaign.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). The Polish left is in a state of turmoil ahead of the country’s 2015 parliamentary elections.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). What does Law and Justice’s election victory in Poland mean for Europe?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). What does Paweł Kukiz’s election success mean for Polish politics?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). Who won Poland’s ‘referendum war’ and how will it affect the October election?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2015). Why the 2015 presidential election in Poland could be closer than many expected.
  • Szyszkowitz, Tessa (2015). Book review: Germany, Russia, and the rise of geo-economics.
  • Tabachnik, Alexander, Kedem, Nadav (2015). Is Moldova the next Ukraine? Why the EU must address the concerns of Moldova’s Russian-speaking minority.
  • Tago, Atsushi (2015). Ignore the vetoes, and forget about Coalitions of the Willing: How the U.S. can achieve higher levels of foreign public support for its military operations.
  • Takacs-Haynes, Katalin, Josefy, Matthew, Hitt, Michael A. (2015). Altruistic CEOs can be as risky as greedy ones.
  • Takahashi, Toshie (2015). What digital tattoos for your children?
  • Talbot, Colin (2015). Supply side deficiencies in our parties, parliament, and local government each contribute to our democratic malaise.
  • Tambini, Damian (2015). BBC Charter Green Paper: Goldilocks and the BBC.
  • Tambini, Damian (2015). BBC Governance: Is a New Settlement Possible?
  • Tambini, Damian (2015). Moses’ theory for IPSO: less independence, not more.
  • Tambini, Damian (2015). Social Value and Spectrum: A new report.
  • Tambini, Damian, Labo, Sharif (2015). Ofcom consultation – implications for Google and Facebook?
  • Tambini, Damian, Labo, Sharif (2015). Ofcom’s Plurality Framework: A step in the right direction, but still unfinished work.
  • Tambini, Damian, Labo, Sharif (2015). Passenger Name Records and data protection issues: busting some myths.
  • Tan, Kuo Siong (Gordon) (2015). Becoming more connected to the financial human capitalnetwork may hold the key to improving wage inequality withinthe US finance industry.
  • Tanczer, Leonie Maria (2015). Book review: the coming swarm: DDoS actions, hacktivism, and civil disobedience on the internet.
  • Tapscott, Rebecca (2015). The government has long hands.
  • Taschini, Luca (2015). New reforms to the EU’s emissions trading system are welcome, but the devil will be in the details.
  • Tasselli, Stefano (2015). How does knowledge flow in organisations?
  • Tatchell, Angus (2015). Liberty and security: the price of peace after Paris.
  • Tatsak, Jenny (2015). GOP candidates unite to attack the media in the third presidential debate.
  • Tatsak, Jenny (2015). The first debate saw no clear winner in the GOP’s credibility contest.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2015). For many academics, the web is just a means to an end: Shifting gears to solve the digital divide.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2015). Who, What, Where, When, Why: Using the 5 Ws to communicate your research.
  • Taylor, J. Benjamin (2015). Extreme media may polarize opinions, but they also educate viewers about politics and policy.
  • Taylor-Gooby, Peter (2015). Paid work is never enough: we need to pay attention to the quality as well as the quantity of jobs created.
  • Teik Hua, Law (2015). Economic growth means more road injuries in less developed countries, but fewer in those which are highly developed.
  • Tenorio, Zarate (2015). In Latin America, strikes can help bring about increases in social security and welfare spending, while mass protests can help safeguard education spending.
  • Tenreyro, Silvana, Ngai, L. Rachel (2015). You have more chance of finding the house you want in the summer. But you’ll pay more for it.
  • Terman, Jessica (2015). The Weatherization Assistance Program shows that successful state implementation of federal policies depends on preexisting state regulations.
  • Terry, Chris (2015). Blocking the Front National from power risks increasing its supporters’ disenchantment with the political system.
  • Terry, Chris (2015). Deliberative democracy is starting a quiet democratic revolution worldwide.
  • Terry, Chris (2015). Party system fragmentation is incompatible with our electoral system.
  • Terry, Chris, Garland, Jess (2015). The 2015 General Election was further proof that First Past the Post is not fit for purpose.
  • Tesei, Andrea (2015). Racial income inequality reduces levels of trust and social capital in communities.
  • Thakur, Vikramaditya (2015). Forced resettlement: lessons from the Bhils affected by the Sardar Sarovar Dam in Maharashtra.
  • Thatcher, Tom (2015). Book Review: How nations innovate: the political economy of technological innovation in affluent capitalist economies by Jingjing Huo.
  • Thatcher, Tom (2015). Book review: a government that worked better and costlLess? Evaluating three decades of reform and change in UK central government by Christopher Hood and Ruth Dixon.
  • Theodossopoulos, Dimitrios (2015). How to study the crisis anthropologically? Theoretical and methodological puzzles.
  • Thi Nguyen, Mai (2015). When local law enforcement officers become immigration agents, communities suffer.
  • Thibodeaux, Jarrett (2015). City specific ‘racial threat’ can push neighborhood resources,like supermarkets, away from African Americans.
  • Thiede, Brian C., Lichter, Daniel T., Sanders, Scott R. (2015). Working poverty is a widespread but under-analyzed and poorly-measured problem in the US.
  • Thomas, Adrien (2015). Luxembourg illustrates how trade unions have responded to the challenges posed by free movement in the EU.
  • Thomas, Edward (2015). South Sudan: a slow liberation.
  • Thomas, Elli (2015). Book review: governing megacities in emerging countries.
  • Thomas, Elli (2015). Book review: masculinities and place by Andrew Gorman-Murray and Peter Hopkins.
  • Thomason, Nicholas (2015). Book review: masters of the universe, slaves of the market.
  • Thompson, Ian (2015). The potential for public dialogue and deliberation in the development of national infrastructure policy.
  • Thompson, Louise (2015). EVEL, Brexit, and the SNP: what does the 2015 election mean for the House of Commons?
  • Thompson, Louise (2015). We shouldn’t focus solely on the Syria vote when assessing Parliament’s power over military deployments.
  • Thompson, Louise (2015). While far from perfect, the work of bill committees should not be underestimated.
  • Thomsen, Michael R., Nayga, Rodolfo M., Alviola, IV, Jr.,Pedro A., Rouse, Heather L. (2015). Living in an urban food desert is a risk factor for weight gain during childhood.
  • Thorpe, Rebecca (2015). How rural prison economies impede bipartisan efforts to end mass incarceration.
  • Threlfall, Natalie (2015). Revealing the real-world benefits of the UK’s Human Rights Act.
  • Tierney, Stephen (2015). The Smith Commission, federalism, or independence: Can the Union survive the election?
  • Tillman, Erik R. (2015). Pre-electoral coalitions increase voter turnout by making elections more decisive.
  • Timbeau, Xavier (2015). Investing in a zero carbon economy could help the EU escape secular stagnation.
  • Tinkler, Jane (2015). Rather than narrow our definition of impact, we should use metrics to explore richness and diversity of outcomes.
  • Tiwari, Pragya (2015). The Murty Classical Library is a key to the treasures of India’s past.
  • Tober, Tobias (2015). Political integration has contributed to rising inequality in the Eurozone.
  • Tomaskovic-Devey, Donald (2015). The rise of financialization has led to lower living standards and reduced growth in the U.S.
  • Tomkins, Adam (2015). The Scotland Bill implements and improves upon the Smith Commission recommendations.
  • Tonkiss, Katherine (2015). Administrative reform is threatening the independence of the Equality and Human Rights Commission.
  • Torry, Malcolm (2015). Why we should pay everyone: cutting tax credits brings the idea of a Citizen’s Income closer to the mainstream.
  • Toygür, Ilke (2015). Having won back his majority, Erdoğan must now focus on reuniting Turkish society.
  • Trantidis, Aris (2015). From war reparations to ‘profligate Greeks’: why political rhetoric is obscuring the real issues in Greece.
  • Trantidis, Aris (2015). Greece alone cannot convince Europe to pursue a different economic course.
  • Travers, Tony (2015). The debate over Labour’s mansion tax reflects an increasingly federal political landscape.
  • Traynard, Clementine (2015). From our own corRUPSpondent: Marching for homes.
  • Trench, Alan (2015). The UK is at a constitutional crossroads and major change is needed if it is to work effectively.
  • Trench, Alan (2015). The UK is at a constitutional crossroads.
  • Trevitt, Vittorio (2015). The UK would reap the benefits if it were to adopt the Swiss model of direct democracy.
  • Trevitt, Vittorio (2015). The emergence of a genuine system of multiparty politics in the United Kingdom is a positive development for British democracy.
  • Trevitt, Vittorio (2015). A written British constitution would do much to enhance Britain’s democracy and the wellbeing of its citizens.
  • Triandafyllidou, Anna (2015). EU migration talks: what EU governments can do to help solve the crisis.
  • Triandafyllidou, Anna (2015). Irregular migration in the Mediterranean: four key principles for solving the crisis.
  • Triandafyllidou, Anna (2015). Irregular migration is feeding into the growth of anti-establishment politics in southern Europe.
  • Triantaphyllou, Dimitrios (2015). The EU has reason to be concerned over relations between Greece and Russia.
  • Tripathi, Dhananjay (2015). EU-India relations: why Narendra Modi is likely to make the case against Brexit on his visit to the UK.
  • Tronconi, Filippo (2015). Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement must adapt if it wants to become a permanent feature of Italy’s party system.
  • Trondal, Jarle, Murdoch, Zuzana, Geys, Benny (2015). National officials working for the Commission display a surprising amount of independence from their own governments.
  • Trounstine, Jessica (2015). How segregation has helped lead to greater inequality in cities’ public services.
  • Tröster, Christian, Mehra, Ajay, van Knippenberg, Daan (2015). Culturally diverse teams may require more central coordination than others.
  • Tsarwe, Stanley, Mare, Admire (2015). Mediating electoral conflict in Zimbabwe.
  • Tse, Terence, Esposito, Mark (2015). Europe’s innovations, China’s Capital.
  • Tse, Terence, Esposito, Mark (2015). Germany, the giant with the feet of clay.
  • Tsekeris, Charalambos (2015). Greece requires political reform as much as structural reform of its economy.
  • Tsouvalis, Judith (2015). How social and citizen science help challenge the limits of the biosecurity approach: the case of ash dieback.
  • Tsygankov, Andrei P. (2015). Nobody loves Russia: how western media have perpetuated the myth of Putin’s ‘neo-Soviet autocracy’.
  • Turcotte, Jason, Paul, Newly (2015). Despite progress on gender equity in US politics, female journalists and candidates do little to diversify debate agendas.
  • Turner, Adair (2015). We need to address the role private debt and real estate play in our economies.
  • Turner, Ed (2015). What the UK could learn from Germany’s Sunday trading laws.
  • USAPP, LSE (2015). USAPP’s top ten most read articles of 2015.
  • Uberio, Varun (2015). Multiculturalism isn’t a dirty word.
  • Uldam, Julie (2015). The electoral success of the Danish People’s party: Something rotten in the state of Denmark?
  • Ulrich, Dave, Kryscynski, David (2015). Winning in challenging markets requires stronger attention to human capital.
  • Ulrichsen, Kristian Coates (2015). The geopolitical implications of the House of Commons’ decision to reject military intervention in Syria.
  • Umamaheswar, Janani (2015). Despite public fear of Islamic radicalization in U.S. prisons, newspaper reports capture the nuanced role of Islam behind bars.
  • Unadkat, Kalpana (2015). After the deadline, women remain underrepresented in India Inc. boardrooms. What happens next?
  • Unnikrishnan, Shalini, Bedford, Juliet (2015). What the Ebola Crisis Means for the UN’s new sustainable development goals.
  • Vadera, Rohin (2015). Democracy demands that a ‘none of the above’ option be added to ballot papers for UK elections.
  • Valdiviezo, Claudia (2015). The everyday sexism project: a media tool to shape policy?
  • Valer, Anna, Van Reenen, John (2015). Productivity Plan: A sound framework, but gaps in policy persist. More is needed to get productivity growing again.
  • Valero, Anna (2015). Productive Labour? How a Labour government would address the productivity challenge.
  • Valero, Anna (2015). Productivity: the elephant in the room.
  • Valero, Anna (2015). Summer budget: High hopes for the productivity plan – is enough being done?
  • Van Alsenoy, Brendan, Verdoodt, Valerie (2015). Why EU authorities are taking a closer look at Facebook’s privacy practices.
  • Van Der Spuy, Anri, Gahnberg, Carl (2015). Welcoming a UN special rapporteur to the Online Human Rights Choir.
  • Van Reenen, John (2015). Austerity in the UK: past, present and future.
  • Van Reenen, John (2015). Budget 2015: What the Chancellor said and didn’t say.
  • Van Reenen, John (2015). Where is the real Manifesto for Growth?
  • Van Stekelenburg, Jacquelien (2015). People protest for many reasons, yet we don’t know how effective protests are.
  • Van Vechten, Renée (2015). Replacing a veteran U.S. Senator won’t be simple in the Golden State.
  • Van Wart, Montgomery (2015). Eric Shinseki’s failure at the Department of Veterans Affairs shows the difficulty in evaluating transformational public sector executives.
  • Van Wesel, Maarten (2015). Scholarly behaviour and evaluation criteria: Uncovering the superficial characteristics that lead to higher citations.
  • Van der Spuy, Anri (2015). WSIS+10 series: Truly multistakeholder? Participation in Internet governance debates: an African perspective.
  • Van der Spuy, Anri, Bogdan-Martin, Doreen (2015). WSIS+10 series: WSIS+10 and Women’s Empowerment.
  • Van der Spuy, Anri, Seidler, Nicolas (2015). WSIS+10 series: From access to trusted access – human rights in the WSIS+10 Review.
  • Vangerven, Pieterjan, Crombez, Christophe (2015). The ratification of TTIP in the European Parliament promises to be a highly contested issue.
  • Vasey, Connor (2015). Parliament does the Pata Pata: the Africanism of Democracy.
  • Vasilaki, Rosa (2015). Policing the crisis: the other side of the story.
  • Vasilaki, Rosa (2015). Syriza’s choice: the coalition government in Greece from a different perspective.
  • Vasilopoulou, Sofia, Halikiopoulou, Daphne (2015). Golden Dawn’s ‘nationalist solution’: explaining the rise of the far-right in Greece.
  • Vasselin, Melanie (2015). Eradicating institutional slavery, past and present.
  • Vaughan, Laura (2015). Book review: beyond live/work: the architecture of home-based work.
  • Veale, Michael (2015). Book review: action research for sustainability by Jonas Egmose.
  • Veale, Michael (2015). Book review: fantasy islands: Chinese dreams and ecological fears in an age of climate crisis by Julie Sze.
  • Veale, Michael (2015). Book review: the formula: how algorithms solve all our problems … and create more by Luke Dormehl.
  • Veale, Michael (2015). Book review: the problem-solving capacity of the modern state.
  • Velander, Marielle (2015). Epistemologies of water: in search of new approaches to the looming South Asian crisis.
  • Velander, Marielle (2015). Throw your heart out into the world: a tribute concert to Pakistani human rights activist Sabeen Mahmud.
  • Velander, Marielle (2015). The converging politics of water scarcity and renewable energy in Pakistan’s Thar Desert.
  • Venables, Tony (2015). Making cities work for development: perspectives from South Asia.
  • VerWay, John (2015). Book review: hall of mirrors: the Great Depression, the Great Recession, and the uses – and misuses – of history.
  • Verbist, Tim (2015). Media literacy in Europe: inspiring ways to involve parents.
  • Verge, Tània, Alonso, Alba (2015). The gendered dimensions of constitutional change: women and the independence referendums in Scotland and Catalonia.
  • Vergne, Clémence (2015). Ghana: what medium-term development model?
  • Verkhivker, Alex (2015). Book review: The courage to act: a memoir ofa crisis and its aftermath by Ben S. Bernanke.
  • Verkhivker, Alex (2015). Book review: dealing with China: an insider unmasks the new economic superpower by Henry Paulson.
  • Verkhivker, Alex (2015). Book review: the butterfly defect: how globalization creates systemic risks, and what to do about it.
  • Vermeiren, Mattias (2015). The limits of German power: how ECB decisions have put constraints on Berlin’s management of the crisis.
  • Verthé, Tom, Beyens, Stephanie, Flacco, Fernanda, Nikolic, Louise (2015). Voters care about government formation even when the landscape is fragmented and coalition signals are ambiguous or absent.
  • Verweijen, Judith (2015). From ‘autochthony’ to violence? ‘sons of the soil’ discourses and practices of violence.
  • Vibert, Frank (2015). Immigration and the UK’s Referendum Vote – EU attitudes are more fluid, but barriers to change remain substantial.
  • Vickery, Jonathan (2015). Book review: developing cultural industries: learning from the palimpsest of practice by Christiaan De Beukelaer.
  • Vidal, Laura (2015). Why does including modern slavery in the S.D.G.s matter?
  • Vieira, Helena (2015). Book review: deconstructing Brad Pitt.
  • Vining Jr, Richard L., Wilhelm, Teena, Collens, Jack D. (2015). Market forces determine media coverage of death penalty decisions by state high courts.
  • Vis, Farida (2015). Studies in social data: how industry uses social media for communications and research.
  • Volonté, Alessandro (2015). The rising tide of social media.
  • Vorley, Tim, Williams, Nick (2015). In the Balkans, investors operate within a devil’s circle.
  • Vīķe-Freiberga, Vaira (2015). Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga, Latvia.
  • Wade, Robert Hunter (2015). Robert Wade: Rethinking the Ukraine Crisis.
  • Wade, Robert Hunter (2015). “Wow!” – Robert Wade’s glowing review of Carles Boix, Political Order and Inequality.
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan (2015). Fears about the adverse consequences of rising immigration have not materialised.
  • Waite, Sean, Denier, Nicole (2015). How your sexual orientation can affect how much you earn.
  • Walch, Benjamin, Peon-Veiga, Rodrigo (2015). Learning from live/work.
  • Walker, Bethany (2015). Carers’ attitudes towards direct payments.
  • Walker, David (2015). Social science embedded in science: Innovation depends on greater understanding of attitudes and social processes.
  • Walker, Matthew (2015). Russia’s economic troubles threaten support for breakaway republic of Transnistria.
  • Wall, Derek (2015). Book review: the two degrees dangerous limit for climate change: public understanding and decision making by Christopher Shaw.
  • Wall, Matthew (2015). Diverse, popular, and growing in importance: Voter Advice Applications and the 2015 General Election.
  • Walsh, Gareth (2015). Less no more: why it’s time for marriage equality in Ireland.
  • Ward, Bob (2015). Congress is targeting the academic freedom of climate change scholars that they do not agree with.
  • Ward, Bob (2015). New figures published by the IMF show the UK provides more subsidies for fossil fuels than renewables.
  • Ward, Steven C. (2015). What if we turned the skills-gap debate around?
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: Britain’s nuclear experience: the roles of beliefs, culture and identity.
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: against their will: the secret history of medical experimentation on children in Cold War America by Judith L. Newman et al.
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: beyond freedom’s reach: a kidnapping in the twilight of slavery.
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: the emotional politics of social work and child protection.
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: the end game: how inequality shapes our final years.
  • Warren, Michael (2015). Book review: the psychology of strategy: exploring rationality in the Vietnam War by Kenneth Payne.
  • Webb, Paul (2015). The South East – still overwhelmingly blue?
  • Webber, Douglas (2015). By most objective measures, Europe must now be classed as a declining power.
  • Weber, Jeremy G. (2015). US agricultural subsidies may have merits, but rural economic development is not one them.
  • Weeds, Helen (2015). The EC’s Digital Single Market strategy: implications for territorial licensing of audio-visual rights, geo-blocking and public broadcasting.
  • Welikala, Asanga (2015). The Nineteenth Amendment is a historic constitutional milestone in Sri Lanka’s ongoing political development.
  • Welikala, Asanga (2015). The Rajapaksa Regime and the constitutionalisation of populist authoritarianism in Sri Lanka.
  • Welikala, Asanga (2015). Sri Lanka and its democratic revolution: the constitutional challenge of unity and diversity.
  • Wellings, Ben (2015). The UK: no longer the EU’s ‘awkward partner’.
  • Wellings, Ben, Baxendale, Helen (2015). The power of the Anglosphere in Eurosceptical thought.
  • Wellings, Ben, Vines, Emma (2015). Are EU referendums undermining parliamentary sovereignty?
  • Werdine Norris, Maria (2015). Comics and human rights: Kamala Khan and the narrative of terror.
  • Werdine Norris, Maria (2015). Comics, human rights and representation: an introduction.
  • Werner, Timothy (2015). Corporate managers protect themselves at shareholders’expense with campaign spending to encourage states to passantitakeover legislation.
  • West, William (2015). US presidents exercise centralized control over thebureaucracy primarily through reactive oversight.
  • Weyerstrass, Klaus (2015). Austria’s economy weathered the crisis well, but now risks falling behind.
  • Wheatley, Jonathan (2015). Politics is too complex to be understood just in terms of Left and Right.
  • Wheelhouse, Andrew (2015). The ‘Anderson Report’ on surveillance powers does fudge the issues, but its findings should be implemented.
  • White, Calum W. (2015). Book review: Nye: the political life of Aneurin Bevan by Nicklaus Thomas-Symonds.
  • White, Jonathan (2015). The Greek referendum offers an opportunity to challenge the EU’s preoccupation with the ‘politics of emergency’.
  • White, Sharon (2015). Consumers and consolidation: Sharon White of Ofcom.
  • Whitehead, Christine, Sagor, Emma (2015). New housing developments in the UK generally do not lower prices in surrounding areas.
  • Whitehead, Christine, Sagor, Emma (2015). The increasing complexities of the welfare cap.
  • Whitney, Teresa (2015). A weekend in the country: dept of Social Psychology’s annual academic retreat.
  • Whittaker, Matthew (2015). Could the Conservatives and the Lib Dems find common ground on fiscal policy?
  • Wickham-Jones, Mark (2015). Trade union members did not shape the Labour leadership result as much as in past elections.
  • Wieser, Sonia (2015). Book review: the foreign policy of post-Yugoslav states: from Yugoslavia to Europe.
  • Wieslander, Anna (2015). The EU requires a more coherent strategy on future sanctions against Russia.
  • Wigan, Henry, Papi-Thornton, Daniela (2015). Poll result: Should social entrepreneurs prioritise social good over profit?
  • Wild, Morgan (2015). ‘Depoliticising infrastructure’: can a strategic approach enhance public engagement?
  • Wilde, Luke (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – think before you measure!
  • Wilford, Rick (2015). The current talks in Northern Ireland exemplify the mistrust that has attended devolution from the outset.
  • Wilkin, Peter (2015). Hungary’s ‘Milla’ movement shows that social media driven protest movements only succeed when they connect meaningfully with civil society.
  • Willett, Joanie (2015). Cornwall is a logical place to begin with rural devolution, but a coherent UK-wide plan is sorely needed.
  • Williams, Christopher (2015). Why some parties respond to Eurosceptic public opinion while others don’t.
  • Williams, Colin C (2015). Europe’s hidden economy: how governments can bring undeclared work out of the shadows.
  • Williams, Colin C. (2015). Europe’s hidden economy: how governments can bring undeclared work out of the shadows.
  • Williams, Gareth (2015). Detroit’s post-bankruptcy redevelopment has been marred by a fragmented approach focused on short-term gains.
  • Williams, Gemma, Noori, Teymur (2015). No evidence of a higher burden of measles among migrant populations in the European Union and European Economic Area.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book Review: Food and femininity by Kate Cairns and Josée Johnston.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: being gorgeous: feminism, sexuality and the pleasures of the visible by Jacki Willson.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: critical approaches to international security, 2nd Edition.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: feminism, gender, and universities: politics, passion and pedagogies by Miriam E. David.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: gendered readings of change: a feminist pragmatist approach.
  • Williams, Katherine (2015). Book review: women of power: half a century of female presidents and prime ministers worldwide by Torild Skard.
  • Williams, Linda M. (2015). Despite scarce resources, to improve relations many policedepartments have deliberately developed welcoming practicestowards immigrants.
  • Williams, Shirley (2015). Shirley Williams, UK.
  • Williams, Sierra (2015). 2015 Year-In-Review: LSE Impact Blog’s Most Popular Posts.
  • Williams, Sierra, Cullinane, Carl (2015). Five minutes with Carl Cullinane on the Democratic Dashboard: “There’s a big difference between open data and accessible data.”.
  • Williamson, Mark, Walter-Joseph, Robert (2015). How suburban ways of living are shaping the geography of income in Canadian cities.
  • Willits, Dale, Broidy, Lisa, Denman, Kristine (2015). Evidence indicates that drug crime is greater in neighborhoods with middle and high schools.
  • Willoughby, Syerramia (2015). Bridging the gap of African leadership identity – not yet Uhuru.
  • Willoughby, Syerramia (2015). Touched by the pain of the Ebola epidemic.
  • Willy, Craig J. (2015). Belgium must do more to prevent its citizens from joining Islamic State.
  • Wilson, Charles P., Wilson, Shirley A., Thou, Malane (2015). African American police officers are concerned about the racial profiling of communities of color by their own agencies.
  • Wilson, G. Willow, Werdine Norris, Maria (2015). Comics and human rights: an interview with G. Willow Wilson.
  • Wilson, Gary (2015). Book review: the search for peace in the Arab-Israeli conflict: a compendium of documents and analysis, edited by Terje Rod-Larsen et al.
  • Wingrove, Paul (2015). Book review: the limits of partnership: US-Russian relations in the twenty-first century.
  • Winters, Kristi, Carvalho, Edzia (2015). In defence of televised debates in UK elections.
  • Wintgens, Sophie (2015). A revised DR Congo mining code could lead to a decrease in Chinese investment in the country.
  • Wise, David (2015). Charleston is a microcosm of how the history of slavery intertwines with the history of America.
  • Wise, David (2015). In measures of economic strength, social cohesion, and fiscal position, blue and purple states are generally outperforming red states.
  • Witko, Christopher (2015). Financialization is more rapid when interested sectors are more active in politics and unions and the Democratic Party are weaker.
  • Wiśniewski, Jarosław (2015). Postcard from Visegrad: five lessons for South East Europe.
  • Wolf, Birge, Heß, Jürgen, Häring, Anna Maria (2015). Beyond scientific impact: An evaluation approach that captures societal benefit and minimises documentation effort.
  • Wolff, Emily (2015). COP21 a monster party?
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2015). UKIP’s future hangs on the strength of its leadership, not its internal democracy.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2015). What Austria’s migrant crisis says about the country’s sovereignty.
  • Wong, Alfred (2015). Is China losing the New Great Game? How China’s Central Asian energy strategy is threatened by poor governance in the region.
  • Wood, Mara (2015). Comics and human rights: the importance of representation in comics. A social psychology perspective.
  • Wood, Matt (2015). Book review: the relevance of political science.
  • Woodcock, Scott (2015). You must be joking!
  • Woods, Lorna (2015). Explaining the ruling that overturned the UK’s Data Retention & Investigatory Powers Act.
  • Woods, Lorna (2015). Safe Harbour: Key Aspects of the ECJ Ruling.
  • Woods, Lorna (2015). Secrecy, distrust, and interception of communications.
  • Woollard, Matthew (2015). Data enriched research, data enhanced impact: the importance of UK data infrastructure.
  • Worthy, Ben (2015). The Government’s Freedom of Information commission tilts the political discussion towards damage and cost.
  • Worthy, Ben (2015). If he handles his leadership well, Jeremy Corbyn could become the successful rebel head of an anti-establishment party.
  • Wozniak, Kevin H. (2015). American public opinion about gun control remained polarized and politicized in the wake of the Sandy Hook mass shooting.
  • Wright, Matthew (2015). There is growing polarization in youth social capital as economic inequality increases.
  • Wroe, Andrew (2015). Americans don’t trust government because they feel economically insecure.
  • Wu, Honghong, Williams, Daniel W. (2015). In the New York state legislature patronage earmarking is alive and well.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2015). David Cameron faces similar internal divisions as did Harold Wilson over Europe.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2015). Jeremy Corbyn could change British politics and out-perform expectations – provided the Conservatives split over Europe.
  • Wyness, Gill (2015). Paying for higher education.
  • Wyss, Marco (2015). Will history repeat itself? The Presidential elections and security in Ivory Coast.
  • Xiarchogiannopoulou, Eleni (2015). Greece’s U-turn in negotiations signifies a new era in Syriza’s internal politics.
  • Xiarchogiannopoulou, Eleni (2015). Syriza’s internal opposition may risk Greece’s future into the Eurozone.
  • Xu, Ping, Garand, James C., Zhu, Ling (2015). How immigration makes income inequality worse in the US.
  • Yakovlev, Pavel, Gilson, David (2015). Public trust in leaders is highest in more isolated and autocraticcountries.
  • Yamada, Kazuo, Takahashi, Hidenori (2015). Lower restrictions for start-ups to list on stock exchanges have mixed results.
  • Yang, Wei, Mu, Lan, Shen, Ye (2015). How we can use Twitter data to better understand weather-related depression.
  • Yeung, Ryan (2015). High school athletes and athletic leaders gain higher testscores.
  • Yin, Li (2015). How we can use Google Street View data to help build healthier communities.
  • Yoon, Soon-Young (2015). Soon-Young Yoon, USA.
  • Young, Penny (2015). The 32nd British Social Attitudes Survey sheds a light on the public opinion trends that will decide the General Election.
  • Young, Penny (2015). The 32nd British Social Attitudes sheds a light on the public opinion trends that will decide the General Election.
  • Youngs, Richard (2015). Will the EU’s Global Strategy meet the foreign policy challenges of the future?
  • Ypi, Lea (2015). Jeremy Corbyn’s rise shows the true value of political parties.
  • Yunus, Muhammud (2015). “Capitalism in its current form is incomplete because it misinterprets human beings as robots driven only by self-interest” – Muhammud Yunus.
  • Yusuf, Juita-Elena (Wie), Neill, Katharine A., St. John III, Burton, Ash, Ivan K., Mahar, Kaitrin (2015). In Virginia, disagreement about the threat of sea-level rise and climate change politics prevent action on a pressing problem.
  • Zaiotti, Ruben (2015). The elephant in Europe’s living room: why the EU’s crisis summit must tackle the root causes of migration.
  • Zarali, Kally (2015). Book review: Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement: organisation, communication and ideology.
  • Zarkin, Gary A., Cowell, Alexander J. (2015). Diverting recently released state prison offenders who abuse substances to treatment would reduce crime and save billions.
  • Zartaloudis, Sotirios (2015). Greek elections 2015: the beginning of the end or the end of the beginning?
  • Zendejas, Marcela, Ramírez, Darío (2015). No place for silence- freedom of expression in Mexico.
  • Zhang, Li (2015). China’s expectations of the European Union change according to its own national interests.
  • Zhang, Nan (2015). Anti-corruption accountability measures may actually erode citizens’ trust in political institutions, though they don’t have to.
  • Zhu, Ling, Clark, Jennifer H. (2015). Inequality in health care persists at the state level, especially in red states with diverse populations.
  • Zhu, Ling, Rocco, Philip, Barrilleaux, Charles (2015). Supreme Court rules in favor of Obamacare subsidies in King v. Burwell: USAPP experts react.
  • Zhu, Yushu (2015). Communal space as a nurturing ground for grassroots participation in urban China.
  • Ziemer, Julia (2015). Activist, unicorn or content curator? What do today’s journalists need to be?
  • Ziemer, Julia (2015). The future of the BBC: the debate continues.
  • Ziemer, Julia, Huang, Yanning (2015). “I manage the fear” : being a dissident writer in China.
  • Ziller, Conrad, Schübel, Thomas (2015). Voter experience of corrupt officials is an overlooked reason for the electoral success of radical right parties.
  • Zinnbauer, Dieter (2015). Been there – done that! The amazing things that transparency advocates can learn from architects.
  • Zoido-Oses, Paula (2015). Female-only carriages: Corbyn’s proposal shows an alarming lack of understanding of the real causes of harassment.
  • Zontos, Michail (2015). Book review: American conspiracy theories by Joseph E. Uscinski and Joseph M. Parent.
  • Zontos, Michail (2015). Book review: gilded age: American capitalism and the lessons of a New World Order.
  • Zontos, Michail (2015). Book review: the theater of operations: national security affect from the Cold War to the War on Terror.
  • Zoogah, David B. (2015). Multinational firms still have a lot to learn about doing business in Africa.
  • Zubía Pinto, Verónica Aranzazu (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – measuring progress through national action plans and sustainability reports.
  • Zucman, Gabriel (2015). Inequality: Are we really ‘all in this together’?
  • Závecz, Gergő (2015). Viktor Orbán’s views on the death penalty could push Hungary further to the margins of EU politics.
  • [Unknown], CG (2015). Comics and human rights: visibility and the black nerd girl.
  • [Unknown], LSE International Development (2015). The Great Lecture Notes Debate Part Four – The student point of view.
  • [Unknown], LSE International Development (2015). The Great Lecture Notes Debate Part Three – The Case For; the lecturers’ view.
  • [Unknown], LSE International Development (2015). The Great Lecture Notes Debate Part Two – The Case Against; Notes vs. Knowledge.
  • d'Haenens, Leen (2015). No pain, no gain: how kids who are discriminated against use the internet.
  • de Barra, Graham (2015). Book review: access to justice for disadvantaged communities by Marjorie Mayo, Gerald Koessl, Matthew Scott, Imogen Slater.
  • de Besi, Elena (2015). Only an approach founded on rights and obligations can allow for effective and legitimate public infrastructure provision.
  • de Clercy, Cristine (2015). In Canada’s election, Trudeau got the messaging right, as the other parties fumbled.
  • de Clercy, Cristine (2015). A languid Canadian election turns into a highly competitive race.
  • de Grauwe, Paul (2015). Debt relief for Greece is necessary to avoid a crisis in the Eurozone.
  • de La Barre, Jorge (2015). Festiva vigilância (e seus descontentes): o Rio dos megaeventos.
  • de La Barre, Jorge (2015). A festive surveillance (and its discontents): mega-events in Rio de Janeiro.
  • de Meza, David (2015). Self-employment attracts people with an optimistic personality.
  • de Sousa, Luís, Casal Bértoa, Fernando (2015). Portuguese elections: Portugal is now a country caught between stability and disaffection.
  • de Sousa Assis, João (2015). Book Review: The European Union illuminated:its nature, importance and future by Ali M. El-Agraa.
  • de Vries, Catherine E. (2015). Five minutes with Catherine de Vries: “The left is now split over whether they simply oppose the EU’s policies or oppose what the EU stands for overall”.
  • de Vries, Gerdien (2015). If you have no intention of considering employee suggestions, then don’t ask.
  • del Real Tovar, Ines, Neglia, Maddalena (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – the importance of local partnerships and robust research: agricultural workers in the Morocco tomato food chain.
  • du Toit, Jessica (2015). Pets and dependency.
  • van Hulten, Michiel (2015). The Greek crisis shows that what we need is more Europe, not less.
  • van Hulten, Michiel (2015). Why debt relief could save Greece but would destroy the Eurozone.
  • van Prooijen, Jan-Willem (2015). Voters on the extreme left and right are far more likely to believe in conspiracy theories.
  • van der Meer, Tom (2015). Care is required when making assertions about the relationship between diversity and social cohesion.
  • von Eggert, Konstantin, Petrov, Nikolay, Brown, Stuart A., Prelec, Tena (2015). Five minutes with Konstantin von Eggert and Nikolay Petrov: “If the West backs Putin into a corner, nothing can be excluded”.
  • von Stengel, Bernhard (2015). Bernhard von Stengel: Supermarket pricing tricks.
  • von Stengel, Bernhard (2015). A mathematician takes issue with supermarket price promotion gambits.
  • von Weitershausen, Inez (2015). Book review: the European Council and the Council: new intergovernmentalism and institutional change by Uwe Puetter.
  • von Weitershausen, Inez (2015). Book review: the hungry mind: the origins of curiosity in childhood.
  • Çollaku, Bekim, Prelec, Tena (2015). Five minutes with Bekim Çollaku: “Greece and Romania could soon recognise Kosovo”.
  • Öney, Sezin (2015). Turkey’s repeat elections in November are unlikely to ease the country’s political tensions.
  • Öney, Sezin, Erdoğan, Emre (2015). Turkey’s 2015 general election: a final look at the parties and the campaign.
  • Školkay, Andrej (2015). Complex amendment to Slovakia’s FOI Act might make it one of the most liberal in Europe.
  • Školkay, Andrej (2015). Complex amendment to Slovakia’s FOI Act might make it one of the most liberal in Europe.
  • LSE Cities
  • Africa@LSE (2015). Double Vision: A photographic exhibition of South End, Port Elizabeth, South Africa.
  • Hall, Suzanne (2015). Focus: migration and election 2015.
  • Hall, Suzanne, Vogkli, Maria-Christina (2015). Are we living in an urban vortex? An interview with Suzi Hall (2 of 2).
  • LSE Health
  • Angelis, Aris, Kanavos, Panos (2015). Large scale mergers and acquisitions in the pharmaceutical industry: 1 + 1 = 1?
  • Coast, Ernestina (2015). Zambia urged to tackle the stigma of abortion and unwanted pregnancies.
  • Coast, Ernestina, Freeman, Emily (2015). Lack of awareness of Zambia’s abortion law leads to unsafe practices.
  • Dixon, Josie (2015). Thousands are missing out on palliative care because of unfair provision.
  • García-Gómez, Pilar, Hernández-Quevedo, Cristina, Jiménez-Rubio, Dolores, Oliva-Moreno, Juan (2015). Is access to long-term care services unequitable? The Spanish case.
  • Leone, Tiziana (2015). Rising overmedicalisation of births in India: a demand or supply phenomenon?
  • Oliver, Adam (2015). Book review: misbehaving: the making of behavioural economics.
  • Schimmel, Noam (2015). The international human rights law responsibilities of NGOs.
  • Wouters, Olivier J., Kanavos, Panos (2015). Primary health care should play bigger role in treating chronic kidney disease.
  • LSE Housing & Communities
  • Power, Anne (2015). Your vote counts when you remember Selma.
  • LSE Human Rights
  • Engelke, Matthew (2015). Renowned Zimbabwe Writer Chenjerai Hove Remembered.
  • Klug, Francesca (2015). Francesca Klug, UK.
  • Manby, Bronwen (2015). Important new guidelines on the right to birth registration and a nationality in Africa launched in Côte d’Ivoire.
  • Stauffer, Hilary (2015). Libya can do better: the trial of Saif Gaddafi.
  • LSE IDEAS
  • Cox, Michael (2015). Better times for Greeks?
  • Cox, Michael (2015). The Great Game.
  • Cox, Michael (2015). Scylla and Charybdis.
  • Filis, Konstantin (2015). Between dilemmas, difficult decisions and a looming impasse.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). de Blasio and the police, Georgia’s economy, California’s newlaws: US state blog round up 27 December – 2 January.
  • Gippner, Olivia, Mohan, Garima (2015). Women in United Nations peacekeeping holding up half the Sky?
  • Katsoulas, Spyros (2015). From Grexit to Greekment.
  • Katsoulas, Spyros (2015). Greek-22: the paradoxical situation of the Greek problem.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2015). EU should cooperate with Eurasian Union: Putin's legacy.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2015). Leaving the EU might revive Britain’s influence on the foreign policies of the new EU member states.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2015). Romania’s coming of age: how the transition generation could push Romania toward real political change.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Brexit is an issue President Obama has every right to be concerned about.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Brexit: Europe’s awkward questions about its awkward partner.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Britain's European question will not be answered by an in-out vote.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Cameron’s letter: European views on the UK’s renegotiation.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Can an in-out referendum solve the European question in British politics?
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Europe’s brexit question.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Little Britain’s big election: a declining power that we should not shy away from.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). UK would lose 8% of its economy by quitting the EU.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Why it might not be all right on the Euro-referendum night.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Will the UK’s general election lead to an in-out referendum?
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). Will the ‘British question’ go away if Labour wins?
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). An in-out referendum will not solve the European question in British politics.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). The referendum will be decided in England – but it’s London that has most to lose.
  • Oliver, Tim (2015). The stance the rest of Europe takes on the British question will be crucial in shaping the UK’s EU referendum.
  • Oliver, Tim, Brok, Elmar, Corbett, Richard, Schöpflin, György (2015). The European Parliament and the UK’s renegotiation: what do MEPs think?
  • Oliver, Tim, Lacatus, Cora (2015). Eight centuries on from Magna Carta, upholding the rule of law remains a challenge on both sides of the Atlantic.
  • Oliver, Tim, Lacatus, Cora (2015). Magna Carta and the transatlantic relationship.
  • Ryan, John (2015). Credit rating agencies and their credibility problem.
  • Ryan, John (2015). Differences over Outright Monetary Transactions (OMT) could lead to constitutional conflict between German and EU courts.
  • Ryan, John (2015). The Eurozone should be flexible with Greece.
  • Ryan, John (2015). Greek debt restructuring is preferable to continued austerity or default.
  • Ryan, John (2015). Swiss franc policy conundrum solved.
  • Ryan, John, Polner, Gergely, Dorrington, Ashley (2015). What EU member states want from the CMU proposals?
  • Springford, John (2015). Same job, different income: withdrawing EU migrants’ benefits would violate an EU founding principle.
  • Yu, Jie (2015). The golden age of Sino-British relations has begun. Quitting the EU could halt it.
  • Zurawski, Jan (2015). A British departure from the EU will not inevitably lead to Scottish independence. Referenda are always unpredictable.
  • LSE London
  • Scanlon, Kathleen (2015). Book review: housing: where’s the plan? by Kate Barker.
  • Travers, Tony (2015). Book Review: Taking power back: putting people in charge of politics by Simon Parker.
  • LSEE - Research on South Eastern Europe
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). Between two poor alternatives, either is ok(-ish).
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). From hope to concern and from concern to hopefulness.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The IMF’s preliminary draft debt sustainability analysis: what does it mean?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The benign somersault.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The going gets tough….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The negotiation that never happened….
  • Law School
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). Nigel Dodd grilled by Conor Gearty on the social life of money.
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). The People’s Constitution.
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). Terrorism does not destroy, provided we restrain our excusable instinct to dive into the false security of a police state.
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). Tim Allen faces Gearty Grilling on fieldwork in Africa.
  • Gearty, Conor, Regan, Daniel (2015). Crowdsourcing the UK Constitution.
  • Humphreys, Stephen (2015). Climate change and human rights: anthropocentric rights.
  • Humphreys, Stephen (2015). Climate change poses an existential threat to human rights.
  • Lacey, Nicola (2015). Childcare is a central issue in women’s participation and advancement in business.
  • Martin, Richard (2015). Informers (criminal evidence).
  • Murray, Andrew D. (2015). Time for the media shadow boxing to end, and for the democratic deficit in the expansion of the UK’s surveillance powers to be tackled.
  • Management
  • Addo, Atta (2015). A Farewell to Africa Rising, and other grand narratives on Africa.
  • Chakravarti, Amitav (2015). A fun toy or a useful watch? How do people make purchasing decisions?
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). 165,000 and counting!
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Billions of pounds and the internet of things.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Books about the future of medicine, digital doctors, patient safety etc.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). D3 Research presents a poster at the LSE Research Festival.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Digital necklace wins Unicef award.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). E-prescribing and ADE in primary care – data and evidence from meaningful use in the US.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Enduring and emerging challenges of informed consent.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Mental health monitoring through ‘selfie’ videos and social media tracking.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). NHS England initiative: ‘combinatorial innovation’ in NHS test beds.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). National systems of patient unique identifiers – nations pro and against.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Non-adherence to prescriptions is categorical construct. Non-persistence adds a time dimension to it.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Personalized medicine: a podcast.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Precision medicine on BBC Radio 4 Today Programme.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Results of latest international action on counterfeit and unlicensed medicines.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Serialisation of individual pills to defeat counterfeiters.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Sounds like a diagnosis?
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Stratified medicine in 2015 – Leeds Christmas lecture.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Tackling the problem of sub-standard therapeutic drugs in Kenya.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Type 1 diabetes breakthrough.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). Worrying about data.
  • Dickson, Jane (2015). A decision support tool for warfarin prescribing.
  • Estrin, Saul, Ute, Stephan, Vujić, Sunčica (2015). Women CEOs in social enterprises earn 29% less than their male counterparts.
  • Lee, Hyun-Jung (2015). How can firms manage multi-ethnic workforces in countries with violent ethnic conflicts?
  • Whitley, Edgar A., Manby, Bronwen (2015). Questions of legal identity in the post-2015 development agenda.
  • Willcocks, Leslie P., Lacity, Mary (2015). Nine likely scenarios arising from the growing use of robots.
  • Willcocks, Leslie P., Lacity, Mary C. (2015). Businesses will increasingly use robots to deal with theexplosion of data.
  • Mathematics
  • Norman, Biggs (2015). Norman Biggs – Strictly not dancing.
  • Media and Communications
  • Archbold, Emma (2015). Politics, the public and the media: research on journalism and democracy.
  • Archbold, Emma (2015). Student journalism and beyond.
  • Banaji, Shakuntala (2015). Five issues raised by BBC ‘India’s Daughter’ documentary.
  • Banaji, Shakuntala (2015). Have you seen The Hobbit films? Fill out this questionnaire.
  • Banaji, Shakuntala, Ledwell, Christian (2015). Human rights, self-censorship and regulation: Shakuntala Banaji on the media under Modi (Part 1).
  • Banaji, Shakuntala, Ledwell, Christian (2015). The internet, inclusion and democracy: Shakuntala Banaji on the media under Modi (Part 2).
  • Battini, Noémie (2015). Media for social change.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). 2015: a year of crisis journalism that is reshaping news.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Are we losing the art of listening? (And how journalism can help get it back).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). But how do you know that it’s true? Notes from #nishbr verification workshop.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Ethics will be as central as economics to the future of the news industry.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Journalism is a childish practice: the future of news is hot tub time machine part two.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). Polis photography competition 2015: ‘political news’.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). This new noise: the extraordinary birth and troubled life of the BBC (book review).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). The best Tweets from #Polis2015.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2015). The lesson for journalism from the VW diesel test scandal: get help.
  • Beckett, Charlie, Chung, Nina (2015). How should corporations apologise? A new Polis research report.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). Alan Kurdi and parents as witnesses.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). Decoding the ‘hour of code’.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). Five tips for doing research with schools, charities and NGOs.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). Five tips for doing research with schools, charities and NGOs.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). Headphones in or out? (De)prioritising the social in digital media and learning.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). How parents make the future.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). Parents are now ‘digital natives’ too – thoughts from the 2015 family online safety institute conference.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). Playing games together or hiding the tablet in the cupboard: what works when managing kids’ media use?
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). What foster and adoptive parents need to know about digital media part 1: the benefits.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). What foster and adoptive parents need to know about digital media part 2: the risks.
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2015). Charlie Hebdo and the other within (guest blog).
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2015). Did Britain’s right-wing newspapers win the election for the Tories? Guest blog.
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2015). There is no ‘Belgian problem’ with radical Islam – only a European one.
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2015). Victims and perpetrators.
  • Di Paolo, Jessica (2015). Young people and politics: off-line social actions and digital activism.
  • Dinic, Milan (2015). Citizen terrorism: the Paris killings and networked media.
  • Diobaye, Ndeye Diarra (2015). French journalists have won back their gatekeeping function.
  • Diobaye, Ndeye Diarra (2015). Should editors share analytics with journalists ?
  • Eid, Joelle (2015). Merry Christmas from a Syrian refugee camp in Lebanon.
  • Forbess, Alex (2015). From ‘the interview’ to Charlie Hebdo.
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). Snowden and beyond (guest blog).
  • Garland, Ruth (2015). A ‘bizarre’ election of big money and hidden campaigning.
  • Haddon, Leslie (2015). The pitfalls of parenting the internet.
  • Hardman, Isabel (2015). Better to be a cat: how to be a political journalist.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). As ever younger kids go online, how is the family responding?
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). Children’s internet use is more personal, mobile and even fair – while parents pick up the cost.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). Mobile opportunities for children.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). “The Parent App” is the anxious parent’s dream.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). Parental education and digital skills matter most in guiding children’s internet use.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). When is sexual content online more a right than a risk? And how can parents figure this out?
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). Why label our time and life digital?
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). Why study parenting from a media studies perspective?
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). Young juries want a fair internet: deliberating over digital rights.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2015). iRights – advocating for children’s rights online.
  • Mansell, Robin (2015). The WSIS+10 lessons for digital development.
  • Morris, Hanna (2015). Calling for a revolution in climate change rhetoric.
  • Orgad, Shani (2015). Why does the media ‘love stay at home mums’?
  • Ottovordemgentschenfelde, Svenja (2015). How do parents influence their children’s attitudes to life?
  • Ottovordemgentschenfelde, Svenja (2015). Young children and digital technology in Europe: important but not dominating.
  • Polonska-Kimunguyi, Eva (2015). Research focus: European media discourses of Africa.
  • Quinney, Johanna (2015). Public relations is not the devil after all.
  • Quinney, Johanna (2015). The death of consortium network TV debates in Canada’s 42nd general election.
  • Sefton-Green, Julian (2015). Not just playing games: moving on from hobbies to digital jobs.
  • Szulc, Lukasz (2015). Histories of sexualities in Central and Eastern Europe.
  • Uhls, Yalda T., Blum-Ross, Alicia (2015). New advice for ‘media moms and digital dads’: an interview with Yalda T. Uhls.
  • Zamurd-Butt, Henna (2015). How digital spaces can disrupt the media landscape.
  • Methodology
  • Bauer, Martin W. (2015). New report for the European Commission identifies indicators for responsible research and innovation.
  • Cornish, Flora (2015). Thinking about our research partnerships as part of our method.
  • Cornish, Flora (2015). When the demand for ‘evidence’ is unscientific: An example from HIV/AIDS.
  • Jones, Alasdair (2015). Operationalising capacities theory to integrate quasi-experimental and inductive designs in evaluation.
  • Montenegro, Cristian R (2015). “To explore” or the power of small words in social research.
  • Tarr, Jen (2015). Ethics and visual research.
  • Middle East Centre
  • Dionigi, Filippo (2015). Do we need a regional compact for refugee protection in the Middle East?
  • Dionigi, Filippo (2015). Lebanon is revising its policies towards the Syrian refugee crisis, but are the new measures in its real interest?
  • Dionigi, Filippo (2015). A risky move by Israel in the Golan?
  • Kaya, Zeynep (2015). Cautious hope for Turkey: between a coalition government and early elections.
  • Kaya, Zeynep (2015). The declining health of Turkish democracy.
  • Philosophy, Logic and Scientific Method
  • Bovens, Luc (2015). Nudging the pub: a change in choice architecture can help pubgoers drink less.
  • Bovens, Luc, Bartsch, Anna (2015). Why the refugee quota system is unfair on poorer eastern and southern EU states.
  • LSE Philosophy Blog (2015). BJUP interview with John Worrall.
  • LSE Philosophy Blog (2015). Can we design a perfect democratic decision procedure?
  • Roberts, Bryan W. (2015). Weak interactions and the curious little arrow of time.
  • Rodgers, Ewan (2015). Facing difficult decisions: when to give priority and why.
  • Rodgers, Ewan (2015). Free will, determinism and the possibility of doing otherwise.
  • Rodgers, Ewan (2015). Making fair choices on the path to universal health coverage.
  • Rodgers, Ewan (2015). You can’t have it both ways: Peter Dennis on disjunctivism.
  • Psychological and Behavioural Science
  • Bauer, Martin W. (2015). New report for the European Commission identifies indicators for responsible research and innovation.
  • Chilintan, Laura, Sarkar, Tanushree (2015). MSc fieldwork gallery 2015.
  • Garcia-Lorenzo, Lucia (2015). Something is missing in the idea of entrepreneurs as young and empowered.
  • Garcia-Lorenzo, Lucia (2015). When do charismatic leaders rise to the top job?
  • Gleibs, Ilka H. (2015). The importance of informed consent in social media research.
  • Olafsrud, Sindre (2015). Are you prepared for life after LSE?
  • Terjesen, Siri (2015). The state of gender representation on corporate boards around the world.
  • Uher, Jana (2015). Introspection put back on its feet: new research reveals conceptual leap.
  • Voyer, Benjamin G. (2015). Understanding teamwork and leadership: the role of self-construal.
  • Public Policy Group
  • Cullinane, Carl, Dunleavy, Patrick (2015). How to use the Democratic Dashboard.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2015). 'First you see, then you know’: becoming more creative in academic work.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2015). The remaking of a Euro Brit? Unless many more UK voters express positive support for things European, a ‘spiral of silence’ could yet undermine the campaign to stay in.
  • Gilson, Chris (2015). Florida’s redistricting deadlock: Walker’s falling approvalratings: and Montana cuts 52k voters: US state blog round upfor 15 – 21 August.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Biden meets Warren, the Pentagon’s missing $8.5 billion andwhy the Fed may not raise rates – yet: US national blog round up for 22 – 28 August.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Chris Christie’s pension win: North Carolina’s right turn: and Kansas’ big tax hike: US state blog round up for 6 – 12 June.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Georgia’s far-reaching abortion law, Nixon donation raisesquestions, and California expands healthcare to undocumentedchildren: US state blog round up for 13 – 19 June.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Landmark SCOTUS rulings, Obama’s trade win, andcontroversy over the Confederate flag continues: US nationalblog round up for 20 – 26 June.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Maryland’s ‘Mr. Nasty’ Governor: Illinois’ progressivelegislature: and Alabama votes to defund Medicaid – twice: US state blog round up for 1 – 7 August.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). New Jersey considers gambling expansion, NebraskaGovernor pushes for death penalty, while Idahosaves for a rainy day: US state blog round up for 30May – 5 June.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). New York approves the ‘Big Ugly’, South Carolina GOP’sConfederate flag turnaround, and South Dakota’s minimumwage success: US state blog round up for 20 – 26 June.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). New York’s uneven recovery: Alabama’s ‘hostage’ budget andIdaho’s busy Senator: US state blog round up for 8 – 14 August.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Reading list: Hurricane Katrina ten years on.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Rubio channels JFK, Obama’s trade agenda stalls, and theunending Iraq war: US national blog round up for 6 – 12 June.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Schumer gives Iran deal the thumbs down: the GOP’s firstdebate and will Joe Biden run?: US national blog round up for 1 – 7 August.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). TPA is resurrected, Jeb! and Trump announce, and does theGOP have an Obamacare alternative?: US national blog roundup for 13 – 19 June.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Trump vs. Fox: the GOP splinters on Planned Parenthood: andObamacare not killing jobs: US national blog round up for 9 – 14 August.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Trump’s $166 billion immigration plan: Clinton’s email woescontinue: and Walker’s Obamacare alternative: US national blog round up for 15 – 21 August.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). Upstate New York’s secession plans: North Carolina’s budgetwoes: and North Dakota okays armed drones: US state bloground up for 22 – 28 August.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). An airport upgrade for New York, prison policy in Illinois and Wisconsin, and Boston gives the Olympics the flick – but could LA take over?: US state blog round up for 25 – 31 July.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2015). The death of the Iowa Straw Poll, Senate decides onsurveillance, and does China take the U.S. seriously?: USnational blog round up for 30 May – 5 June.
  • Jones, George (2015). Changing the centralist culture.
  • Subrahmanyam, Gita (2015). Vocational education: why the Finns do it best.
  • STICERD
  • Bandiera, Oriana, Prat, Andrea, Sadun, Raffaella (2015). In family-owned businesses, professional CEOs work longerhours than owner-CEOs.
  • Bandiera, Oriana, Tobias, Julia (2015). Hiring do-gooders or go-getters: attracting talent to improve public service delivery.
  • Burgess, Robin (2015). Tackling extreme poverty: in conversation with Robin Burgess.
  • Costa-Font, Joan, Cowell, Frank (2015). How European integration influences the way we think about redistribution of income.
  • Faguet, Jean-Paul (2015). Bolivia after the Boom: Are hard times coming? Q&A with Jean-Paul Faguet.
  • Power, Anne (2015). Your vote counts when you remember Selma.
  • Shadlen, Kenneth C. (2015). Ken Shadlen wins Open Article prize for 2014.
  • Stern, Nicholas, Zenghelis, Dimitri (2015). Climate change and cities: a prime source of problems, yet key to a solution.
  • School of Public Policy
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). Nigel Dodd grilled by Conor Gearty on the social life of money.
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). The People’s Constitution.
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). Terrorism does not destroy, provided we restrain our excusable instinct to dive into the false security of a police state.
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). Tim Allen faces Gearty Grilling on fieldwork in Africa.
  • Gearty, Conor, Regan, Daniel (2015). Crowdsourcing the UK Constitution.
  • Social Policy
  • Angelis, Aris, Kanavos, Panos (2015). Large scale mergers and acquisitions in the pharmaceutical industry: 1 + 1 = 1?
  • Coast, Ernestina (2015). Zambia urged to tackle the stigma of abortion and unwanted pregnancies.
  • Coast, Ernestina, Freeman, Emily (2015). Lack of awareness of Zambia’s abortion law leads to unsafe practices.
  • Coast, Ernestina, Jones, Eleri, Lattof, Samantha R., Portela, Anayda (2015). Integrating culture into maternity care programmes: a systematic mapping of interventions.
  • Costa-Font, Joan, Cowell, Frank (2015). How European integration influences the way we think about redistribution of income.
  • Dyson, Tim (2015). Birth control can solve problems: Tim Dyson talks sustainability at the UN Commission.
  • Dyson, Tim (2015). Demographer Dyson in demand ahead of World Population Day.
  • Fox, Sean, Dyson, Tim (2015). Part 2: is population growth good or bad for economic development?
  • Hildebrandt, Timothy (2015). End of China's one-child policy will ease pressure on gays and lesbians to bear children.
  • Hopkin, Jonathan, Moreno, Luis, Quiroga, Alejandro, Olivas, Jose Javier, Basta, Karlo, Costa-i-Font, Joan, Borrell Porta, Mireia (2015). Experts react: Catalan elections.
  • Ishkanian, Armine, Bechler, Rosemary (2015). The Squares and Beyond.
  • Johnston, David, Lordan, Grace (2015). In brief...Prejudice in a time of recession. https://doi.org/Paper No' CEPCP453
  • Lacey, Nicola (2015). Childcare is a central issue in women’s participation and advancement in business.
  • Leone, Tiziana (2015). Rising overmedicalisation of births in India: a demand or supply phenomenon?
  • Lewis, David (2015). Book review: non-governmental organizations, management and development, 3rd Edition.
  • Lewis, David (2015). Is civil society in trouble in Bangladesh?
  • Mok, Tze Ming (2015). Research in the age of mass surveillance: Finding an ethical consensus over new digital visual research methods.
  • Oliver, Adam (2015). Book review: misbehaving: the making of behavioural economics.
  • Power, Anne (2015). Your vote counts when you remember Selma.
  • Sociology
  • Ali, Suki, Sweeney, Aisling (2015). Discussing gender: an interview with Dr Suki Ali.
  • Azar, Riad (2015). Brain waste: the deskilling of London’s migrant professionals.
  • Azar, Riad (2015). Marxist theory and the Greek crisis.
  • Beecham, Nell (2015). A love letter to Bourdieu.
  • Blinkhorn, Perdita (2015). To study sociology is to study oneself….
  • Brill, Frances (2015). Three things a year of sociology has taught me.
  • Buerger, Mira (2015). Algorithms: neither makers nor mirrors of reality.
  • Buerger, Mira (2015). Putting the T in sociology.
  • Crumless, Harry (2015). Sociology is discomforting.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2015). Political sociology – a tool to question ideologies.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2015). ‘Poor people don’t come to the LSE’: my first month at university.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2015). Sociology opens your eyes.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2015). What now for the precariat?
  • Degens, Philipp (2015). Book review by Philipp Degens: the social life of money by Nigel Dodd.
  • Denaro, Elena (2015). Suspended between armageddon and immortality? A sociology for the 21st century.
  • Dodd, Nigel, Azar, Riad (2015). Social theory and the sociological imagination: an interview with Nigel Dodd (1 of 2).
  • Dodd, Nigel, Azar, Riad (2015). Social theory and the sociological imagination: an interview with Nigel Dodd (2 of 2).
  • Gearty, Conor (2015). Nigel Dodd grilled by Conor Gearty on the social life of money.
  • Hall, Suzanne (2015). Focus: migration and election 2015.
  • Hall, Suzanne, Vogkli, Maria-Christina (2015). Are we living in an urban vortex? An interview with Suzi Hall (2 of 2).
  • Lewin, Sian (2015). Can sociological thinking help to address the bad apples and rotten barrels of the financial industry?
  • Loeschner, Isabell (2015). The “why” that made me discover sociology.
  • McArthur, Daniel (2015). Stigmatising beliefs about people in poverty in cross-national perspective.
  • McKenzie, Lisa (2015). For whom the bell tolls? It’s us again the working class.
  • Movaghary-Pour, Jalal (2015). Sociology as a martial art.
  • Muggeridge, Lisa (2015). Anything becomes possible at the LSE.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2015). Does language define your identity?
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2015). Fragile future for Afghanistan’s security, and the repercussions for its neighbours.
  • Pour, Jalal M., Khan, Naveen, Ofori-Danso, Ruth (2015). Theorising theory – reflections on the BJS annual lecture.
  • Prata Castelo, Leonor (2015). The mirage of self-finance in UK higher education; or how to keep non-elites out.
  • Savage, Mike (2015). Successful societies – “self, individualism and moral communities under neo-liberalism.”.
  • Savage, Mike, Mansell, Rebecca, Daniel, Ronda (2015). Social class in the 21st century: an interview with Mike Savage.
  • Sklair, Leslie (2015). Leslie Sklair: the icon project.
  • Sweeney, Aisling (2015). Sociology is kind.
  • Traill, Helen (2015). Feeding our sociological imaginations….
  • Traill, Helen (2015). Sociology as a Pandora’s Box.
  • Vogkli, Maria-Christina (2015). The lost honour of Europe.
  • Wansleben, Leon (2015). What money can’t buy.
  • Woodford, Phil (2015). Why it’s always sociological….
  • Statistics
  • Kotecha, Meena (2015). Addressing anxiety in the teaching room:innovative techniques to enhancemathematics and statistics education.
  • Kotecha, Meena (2015). Barriers and Enablers to Learning Maths conference.
  • Urban and Spatial Programme
  • Ahlfeldt, Gabriel M., Cheshire, Paul (2015). What is good architecture worth?
  • Cheshire, Paul (2015). Are they green *belts* by accident?
  • Cheshire, Paul, Hilber, Christian A. L. (2015). Business rates: hoorah! But watch out for housing!
  • Gibbons, Stephen (2015). UN FORUM SERIES – human rights reporting: 2016 could be a pivotal year.
  • Gibbons, Stephen (2015). The effect of NSS scores and league tables on student demand and university application rates is relatively small.
  • Hilber, Christian A. L. (2015). Help-to-Buy ISAs will end up feathering nests of the wealthy – here’s how.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). Between two poor alternatives, either is ok(-ish).
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). From hope to concern and from concern to hopefulness.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The IMF’s preliminary draft debt sustainability analysis: what does it mean?
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The benign somersault.
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The going gets tough….
  • Monastiriotis, Vassilis (2015). The negotiation that never happened….
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). City devolution.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). Transport for the North and the Northern Power House.
  • Sanchez Vidal, Maria (2015). The mothballing of SSI: is all lost for Teesside?
  • Sanchis-Guarner, Rosa (2015). Facebook or Wikipedia? ICT and education: evidence from student home addresses.
  • What Works Centre
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). City devolution.
  • Overman, Henry G. (2015). Transport for the North and the Northern Power House.