Items where type is Online resource and year is 2016

Number of items: 3371.
None
  • Banerjee, Mukulika (2016). Smart villages for smart voters.
  • Crowe, Pascal (2016). Could the European GDPR undermine the UK Investigatory Powers Act?
  • Dill, Janina (2016). Assessing proportionality: an unreasonable demand on the reasonable commander?
  • Dill, Janina (2016). The DoD law of war manual and the false appeal of differentiating types of civilians.
  • Dill, Janina (2016). Five ‘don’ts’ for introducing a female speaker.
  • Downing, Joseph (2016). Applying for post-doc funding?
  • Downing, Joseph (2016). Doing and learning in Paris and London.
  • Galizzi, Matteo M., Loewenstein, George (2016). In obesity fight, UK's heavy-handed soda tax beats US' watered-down warning.
  • Galizzi, Matteo M., Loewenstein, George (2016). The soda tax as a measure for sustained change in consumption.
  • Harris, Geoffrey, Oliver, Tim (2016). From Brexit to Trump: transatlantic allies in an era of unpredictability.
  • Hertog, Steffen (2016). Late populism: state distributional regimes and economic conflict after the Arab uprisings.
  • Kitchen, Nicholas (2016). Guantanamo Bay: countries cannot keep offshoring their security.
  • Kotecha, Meena (2016). Addressing anxiety in the teaching room: techniques to enhance mathematics and statistics education.
  • Kuper, Adam (2016). Philosopher among the Indians.
  • Mann, Laura (2016). Africa’s turn to industrialize?
  • Mann, Laura (2016). Voices of the next generation.
  • Meagher, Kate (2016). Gambling with demography: investor confidence and Islamic values in Nigeria.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Brexit or Bremain for British security.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Brexit: what happens next?
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Inglorious Brexit: the defence and security implications of Brexit.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Understanding non-British views of Brexit.
  • Ottovordemgentschenfelde, Svenja (2016). Introducing “beyond 140 characters”: a Tow Center project about the forces that shape journalists’ strategic Twitter engagement.
  • Ottovordemgentschenfelde, Svenja (2016). Of Twitter, time, and talking: reflections on interviewing political journalists.
  • Pechatnov, Vladimir, Rajak, Svetozar (2016). British-Soviet relations in the Cold War, 1943-1953 documentary evidence project.
  • Power, Anne (2016). A question of growth.
  • Ryan, John (2016). The European Central Bank rules in a democratic void.
  • Shin, Hyun Bang (2016). 젠트리피케이션, 누구를 위한 도시인가? (Gentrification: whose city?). https://doi.org/080
  • Surminski, Swenja (2016). Loss and damage of climate change – from managing risks to the politics of compensation.
  • Szulc, Lukasz (2016). Operation Hyacinth and Poland's pink files.
  • Szulc, Lukasz (2016). The new Polish government and 'gender ideology'.
  • Van der Stede, Wim A. (2016). Accounting matters.
  • Willems, Wendy (2016). Mr. Zuckerberg goes to Africa.
  • Zenghelis, Dimitri (2016). A breakthrough in Paris.
  • Zenghelis, Dimitri, Stern, Nicholas (2016). This is humankind's 'great urbanisation' era. We must do it right, or the planet will pay.
  • Public
  • LSE Review of Books (2016). Reading list: 10 must-read books for International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia (#IDAHOBIT2016).
  • LSE Impact of Social Sciences (2016). The richness and diversity of impact – top posts of 2015: research impact and public engagement.
  • Aasland, Aadne, Cook, Linda (2016). Russia is facing a pension dilemma as the country goes to the polls.
  • Abad, Francisco (2016). 48 hours in Dubai: MPAers compete in the Hult Prize Regional Finals.
  • Abad, Francisco (2016). Transforming a business model to change lives in Nairobi.
  • Abbas, Tahir (2016). How to prevent the collapse of the liberal-left after Brexit and Trump.
  • Abbasi, Asad (2016). Book review: a book of conquest: the Chachnama and Muslim origins in South Asia by Manan Ahmed Asif.
  • Abbasi, Asad (2016). Book review: democratic dynasties: state, party and family in contemporary Indian politics edited by Kanchan Chandra.
  • Abbasi, Asad (2016). Book review: the Pakistan paradox: instability and resilience by Christophe Jaffrelot.
  • Abbasi, Asad (2016). Democratic dynasties: state, party and family in contemporary Indian politics edited by Kanchan Chandra.
  • Abbasi, Asad (2016). Lessons from Africa: how can Pakistan make the most of Chinese investment?
  • Abdelnour, Samer (2016). Cookstove advocates must place gender and violence at the centre of research designs.
  • Abdolmohammadi, Pejman (2016). Iran’s Hardliners: The unexpected winners of the US elections.
  • Abdulla, Ghada (2016). Between Trump and Clinton, GCC states prefer business as usual.
  • Aboagye, Amma (2016). Second-Generation Africans in the west could spur an era of brain gain.
  • Abrams, Nathan (2016). British Jews are using Facebook to create new “pop-up” communities.
  • Achtnich, Marthe (2016). Migrants and the ‘business’ of the boat journey from Libya to Europe.
  • Ackerman, Graham (2016). #BetterThanThat campaign aims to stop hate crime from increasing in Britain.
  • Adaire, Esther (2016). Book review: on the world and ourselves by Zygmunt Bauman and Stanislaw Obirek.
  • Addington, Lynn (2016). Focusing on interactions with the criminal justice system can promote high school students’ interest in civics education.
  • Adedeji, Ifeoluwa (2016). The vocabulary of a development world view.
  • Adena, Maja (2016). How we behave when asked for donations while buying concert tickets online.
  • Adenle, Leye (2016). Of Lagos, startups, cigarettes and prostitutes: a Nigerian writer unveils his literary inspiration.
  • Adler, Nicole, Hashai, Niron (2016). When multinationals choose locations, consumers and competitors matter.
  • Adua, Lazarus, Lobao, Linda (2016). Local governments that offer greater incentives for businessesdo not retrench welfare services.
  • Africa Educational Trust (2016). UN International Mother Language Day – Africa Educational Trust on the importance of teaching children in their mother language.
  • Africa@LSE (2016). Photo Blog: The First World War in East Africa.
  • Africa@LSE (2016). West African history and culture unveiled in British Library exhibition.
  • Aggarwal, Simran, Garg, Lovish (2016). The new surrogacy law in India fails to balance regulation and rights.
  • Agnihotri, Srishti, Das, Minakshi (2016). Guaranteeing children with disabilities the right to be heard.
  • Agrawal, David R. (2016). Local sales taxes can reduce the differences between taxes at state borders.
  • Agrawal, Silky, Reed, Brooks, Saxena, Riya (2016). Student Experience: Development Management consultancy project presents report to leaders in the field.
  • Ahlfeldt, Gabriel M. (2016). Every generation votes in their own interest. But in an ageing world, that’s a problem.
  • Ahmad, Ayyaz (2016). Partitioned histories: promoting critical engagement and tolerance by comparing narratives.
  • Ahmed, Sajjad (2016). Book review: the cosmopolitan military: armed forces and human security in the 21st century by Jonathan Gilmore.
  • Ainley, Kirsten (2016). Jaw-jaw, war and law.
  • Ainley, Kirsten (2016). The great escape? The role of the International Criminal Court in the Colombian peace process.
  • Aisbitt, Lexi (2016). Waiting for the moon: anticipating Eid in an Indian village.
  • Ajala, Fisayo (2016). Book review: 'eat the heart of the Infidel': the harrowing of Nigeria and the rise of Boko Haram by Andrew Walker.
  • Ajala, Fisayo (2016). Book review: The Syrian Jihad: Al-Qaeda, the Islamic state andthe evolution of an insurgency by Charles Lister.
  • Akkerman, Tjitske (2016). Netherlands election preview: will Geert Wilders follow Trump and win power?
  • Akkerman, Tjitske, de Lange, Sarah, Rooduijn, Matthijs (2016). Avoiding the mainstream: why radical right-wing populist parties remain ‘radical’ in government.
  • Al-Mubarak, Imtenan (2016). How to pave the way for greater energy cooperation in the GCC.
  • Al-Sarihi, Aisha (2016). Can climate change speed up economic diversification in the GCC?
  • Alaaldin, Ranj (2016). Islamic State may have attacked Brussels, but it is losing in Syria and Iraq.
  • Alacevich, Caterina, Tarozzi, Alessandro (2016). Honey, I grew the kids: evidence from ethnic Indians in England.
  • Alam, Khurshed (2016). “Bulge hunger” in a developing country: understanding escalating corruption in Bangladesh.
  • Alava, Henni, Ssentongo, Jimmy Spire (2016). ‘For God and my country’ – fighting the (spirits of) violence and chaos in Uganda’s elections.
  • Albarazi, Zahra (2016). Syrian refugee or stateless refugee: The challenges of statelessness in exile.
  • Albertazzi, Daniele (2016). Stop the drama: Italy’s referendum outcome will not lead to the break-up of the EU.
  • Albright, Jonathan (2016). How Trump’s campaign used the new data-industrial complex to win the election.
  • Alburez-Gutierrez, Diego (2016). Genocide is the tip of the iceberg: reviewing the Guatemalan case.
  • Aldaz, Raul (2016). Book review: the Presidentialization of political parties: organizations, institutions and leaders edited by Gianluca Passarelli.
  • Aldred, Joe (2016). Pentecostalism in Britain today: making up for failures of the past.
  • Aldrich, Howard (2016). Write as if you don’t have the data: the benefits of a free-writing phase.
  • Alemanno, Alberto, Bodson, Benjamin (2016). How to nudge Barroso out of the revolving door.
  • Alemanno, Alberto, Newell, James, Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo, Merler, Silvia, Piccoli, Lorenzo, Draege, Jonas Bergan, Martelli, Angelo, Morisi, Davide, Guida, Mattia & Dennison, James et al (2016). Reaction: Italian referendum and Matteo Renzi’s resignation.
  • Alexander, Kate (2016). “Brexit chaos proves that I was right all along,” says everyone. Our political narratives need to change, or they’ll become barriers to thought.
  • Alexander Shaw, Kate (2016). Brexit budget or business as usual? Unpicking the 2016 Autumn statement.
  • Alexandrova, Anna (2016). Value-added science.
  • Alexis, Papazoglou (2016). Brexit voters: misled victims or conscious agents?
  • Ali, Abdifatah A., Lyons, Brent J (2016). Rude interviewers discourage people from looking for a job.
  • Ali, Nimo-ilhan (2016). Parents in Somaliland are going to great lengths to stop their children from migrating to Europe.
  • Ali, Salamat (2016). Trade costs and potential: removing barriers to growth in Pakistan.
  • Ali, Sana, Komaitis, Konstantinos (2016). Marching Closer: The Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA) Transition.
  • Allbeson, Janet (2016). Cracking down on parents with child maintenance debts: why it is hard to be optimistic.
  • Allchorn, William (2016). Cut from the same cloth?: Pegida UK looks like a sanitised version of the EDL.
  • Allchorn, William (2016). When anti-Islamic protest ends: explaining the decline of the EDL.
  • Allchorn, William (2016). When anti-Islamic protest ends: explaining the decline of the English Defence League.
  • Allen, Liz (2016). It’s time to put our impact data to work to get a better understanding of the value, use and re-use of research.
  • Allen, Natalie (2016). Cybersecurity weaknesses threaten to make smart cities morecostly and dangerous than their analog predecessors.
  • Allen, Nicholas, Birch, Sarah (2016). ‘Post-truth’ politics are a debasement of standards in public life.
  • Allen, Nicholas, Siklodi, Nora (2016). Theresa May asserts control in a revamped cabinet-committee system.
  • Allen, Pauline (2016). Co-operation, collaboration and competition – inside the mindset of NHS managers.
  • Allen, Tim (2016). We need to know more about Africa.
  • Almalki, Hamed, Segarra, Laura (2016). Big data helps firms improve efficiency and customer relationships.
  • Almandoz, John, Tilcsik, András (2016). Experts on corporate boards: more is not always better.
  • Almunia, Joaquín (2016). The UK needs the EU – but the EU needs the UK, too.
  • Alonso Alonso, Lucas Juan Manuel (2016). Crony capitalism and Neoliberal paradigm (Part I).
  • Alonso Alonso, Lucas Juan Manuel (2016). Crony capitalism and neoliberal paradigm (Part II).
  • Alonso Alonso, Lucas Juan Manuel (2016). European Union’s key figures.
  • Alonso Alonso, Lucas Juan Manuel (2016). Socio-economic reflections on the Euro Zone.
  • Alpern, Steven, Binmore, Ken (2016). A tribute to Anatole Beck (1930-2014).
  • Altieri, Katye, Keen, Samantha (2016). The cost of air pollution in South Africa.
  • Alwin, Duane F., Tufiş, Paula A. (2016). How the culture wars are driving political polarization.
  • Aman-Rana, Shan (2016). 5 questions with Shan Aman-Rana, an MPA teaching fellow in Economics.
  • Amberg, Stephen (2016). The 2016 election needs a class-oriented agenda.
  • Amboko, Julians (2016). Commodity price shocks in times of crisis: securing growth in sub-Saharan African economies.
  • Amboko, Julians (2016). The commodity price rout and Africa’s unusual electoral cycle.
  • Ambrosius, Joshua D. (2016). Clinton performed very well in most urban areas relative to Obama, despite losin the Rustbelt — and the Presidency with it.
  • Amit, Roni (2016). African refugees in South Africa are often unable to access their rights.
  • Amuedo-Dorantes, Catalina (2016). The Supreme Court’s inability to rule on the United States vs. Texas sends us back to square one on immigration policy.
  • Anastasopoulos, L. Jason (2016). Women’s lack of representation in the House is not down to discrimination from voters or campaign donors.
  • Anciaes, Paulo Rui (2016). Book review: what is environmental history? by J. Donald Hughes.
  • Andelic, Patrick, Sexton, Jay (2016). Expatriate Americans are the most important voting bloc you’ve never heard of.
  • Anderson, Joseph (2016). Book review: cold war anthropology: the CIA, the Pentagon and the growth of dual use anthropology by David H. Price.
  • Anderson, Liam (2016). Distorting discourse: transparent debate needs sincerity, not soundbites.
  • Anderson, Miranda (2016). Book review: The materiality of research: ‘textual autopoiesis: extending minds and selves’ by Miranda Anderson.
  • Anderson, Paul (2016). Brexit and Spain: would the Spanish government really block Scotland’s EU membership?
  • Andrews, Leighton (2016). We need European regulation of Facebook and Google.
  • Angelis, Aris (2016). Why are the prices of new medicines so high and what can we do about it? (F8).
  • Angueli, Daniella (2016). Perversion at work: organising colleagues against one another.
  • Anonymous (2016). Estate ‘regeneration’: why it isn’t just about the money.
  • Anonymous (2016). From studying EC455 to a summer internship at the OECD.
  • Anonymous (2016). Nuit Debout, observations and evidence: a response.
  • Anonymous (2016). Playing fields and political football: the case of forced academisation.
  • Anson, Ian (2016). Just the facts? Why Republicans and Democrats see the economy so differently.
  • Anstead, Nick (2016). Transparency has to be open to all and designed with a purpose in mind.
  • Anteby, Michel, Knight, Carly, Tilcsik, András (2016). There may be some truth to the ‘gay jobs’ stereotype.
  • Appelo, Jurgen (2016). Traditional targets and bonuses often don’t improve performance in an organisation.
  • Aqui, Lindsay (2016). ‘A majority attained by fraud’? The Government Information Unit and the 1975 referendum.
  • Arapoglou, Vassilis (2016). Experiments with austerity and anti-poverty policies in Greece: “Like Hodja’s donkey: it died just after it learned not to eat”.
  • Arceneaux,, Kevin, Butler, Daniel (2016). How to make better mistakes in public policy.
  • Ardittis, Solon (2016). Flexible solidarity: rethinking the EU’s refugee relocation system after Bratislava.
  • Arimatsu, Louise, Chinkin, Christine (2016). From Haiti to Kosovo, it’s time for the UN to accept legal responsibility for its human rights violations.
  • Armstrong, Kenneth (2016). On your marks, get set LEAVE! The technical challenge of the Great Repeal Bill.
  • Armstrong, Kenneth (2016). Why there should be a general election before Article 50 is triggered.
  • Armstrong, Scott (2016). Our biographical model predicts Clinton would defeat Trump by a landslide, but would be tied with Cruz.
  • Arnaud, Nicolas, Mills, Colleen (2016). Middle managers play an essential role in executing change.
  • Aron, Jae (2016). ‘A parallel universe’: David Aaronovitch on growing up communist.
  • Arzheimer, Kai (2016). The AfD’s second place in Mecklenburg-West Pomerania illustrates the challenge facing Merkel in 2017.
  • Arzheimer, Kai (2016). Look ahead to 2017: the German federal election.
  • Asadullah, M Niaz, Wahhaj, Zaki (2016). Social attitudes that view female child marriage as a means of protecting respectability need to change.
  • Ashraf, Nava, Bau, Natalie, Nunn, Nathan, Voena, Alessandra (2016). Bride & prejudice: the price of education.
  • Astill, Stuart (2016). The UK is missing a great opportunity to improve productivity: people data.
  • Astudillo, Javier, Romero, Marta (2016). Rajoy’s new government: Spain’s deadlock is over, but uncertainty continues.
  • Atanasova, Dimitrinka (2016). Book review: fat activism: a radical social movement by Charlotte Cooper.
  • Atanasova, Dimitrinka (2016). How the media’s language of obesity may have made the sugar tax inevitable.
  • Atanasova, Dimitrinka (2016). The media’s language of obesity may have made the sugar tax inevitable.
  • Atherton, Graeme (2016). Success isn’t just about money: rethinking social mobility.
  • Atherton, Michelle, Wesley, Leckrone (2016). Despite rising inequality, Mayors are still focusing on economic development – not redistribution – to help the poor.
  • Atif Mirza, Angbeen (2016). Delays and lapses in Pakistan’s criminal justice system.
  • Atsu Ayee, Joseph (2016). Ghana continues to be a beacon for democracy in Africa.
  • Atsu Ayee, Joseph (2016). The National Electoral Commission is under scrutiny ahead of #GhanaDecides 2016.
  • Audette, Andre (2016). The Indiana primary was the crossroads of the 2016 election.
  • Audette, Andre P. (2016). With Evan Bayh’s surprise entry, Indiana’s Senate race hasturned from red to purple overnight.
  • Audette, Andre P., Weaver, Christopher L. (2016). Politics in church may hurt religion, but it helps churches.
  • Avlijaš, Sonja (2016). From Brexit to Trump: why mobilising anger in a constructive way is now one of the key challenges in modern politics.
  • Avlijaš, Sonja (2016). From Brexit to Trump: why mobilising anger in a constructive way is now one of the key challenges in modern politics.
  • Awan, Imran (2016). Prison radicalisation: the focus should be on rehabilitation and integration not segregation, Muslim chaplains can help with this.
  • Aylott, Nicholas, Bolin, Niklas (2016). Selecting party leaders: who chooses and who shapes the choice?
  • Azmeh, Shamel, Foster, Christopher (2016). New trade conflicts and the race for technological leadership in the digital economy.
  • Azoulay, Anaelle (2016). Africa: Some thoughts on how to tackle the water crisis.
  • Babajanian, Babken V (2016). The skills development seminars: equipping MPA students with key transferable skills.
  • Baccini, Alberto, De Nicolao, Giuseppe (2016). Peer review and bibliometric indicators just don’t match upaccording to re-analysis of Italian research evaluation.
  • Bach, Maria (2016). Exploring the archives: the architects of the Indian School of Political Economy.
  • Bader, Julie (2016). China’s rise is not making the world more authoritarian, at least not for now.
  • Baerg, Nicole Rae (2016). An uneven playing field: larger EU member states receive weaker Commission oversight than smaller states.
  • Bagchi, Kanad (2016). Argentina debt restructuring deal – 15 years too late!
  • Baglioni, Angelo (2016). Europe’s next headache: Italy’s banking crisis.
  • Baglioni, Angelo (2016). The Italian banking crisis: where it comes from and where it’s going.
  • Bahceci, Sergen (2016). Parliament Square and cultural balance of power in Britain.
  • Bailey, Hannah (2016). A Friday night of student research.
  • Bailey, Kate (2016). Book Review: Academic diary: or why Higher Education still matters by Les Back.
  • Bailur, Savita, Schoemaker, Emrys (2016). WhatsApp, Facebook and pakapaka: Digital lives in Ghana, Kenya and Uganda.
  • Bajomi-Lazar, Peter (2016). Public Service Television in the Western Balkans: A Mission Impossible.
  • Bajwa, Nehaal (2016). Book review: gender and sexuality in muslim cultures edited by Gul Ozyegin.
  • Baker, Catherine (2016). Brexit has echoes of the breakup of Yugoslavia.
  • Baker, Samuel (2016). Far more than an all-Africa passport is needed for a fully-integrated continent.
  • Baker, Samuel (2016). Rwanda’s performance contracts could serve as a model for other African countries.
  • Baker, Samuel (2016). Technology could prove to be a gamechanger for Africa.
  • Baker, Thomas (2016). Americans are more supportive for policies that will save rather than punish youth criminals, and are willing to pay for them.
  • Baker, Travis J. (2016). Why talking won’t help presidents win bipartisan support.
  • Bakker, Bert (2016). Are extroverts more Eurosceptic? How personalities shape attitudes toward the EU.
  • Bakker, Bert, Klemmensen, Robert, Nørgaard, Asbjørn Sonne, Schumacher, Gijs (2016). Staying loyal or leaving the party? How open and extrovert personality traits help explain vote switching.
  • Bakker, Bert, Rooduijn, Matthijs, Schumacher, Gijs (2016). Donald Trump’s support comes from two distinct groups:authoritarians who oppose immigration and anti-establishmentvoters.
  • Bale, Tim (2016). ‘Banging on about Europe’: how the Eurosceptics got their referendum.
  • Bale, Tim, Vasilopoulou, Sofia, Cowley, Philip, Menon, Anand (2016). Speaking for Britain? MPs broadly reflect the views of their supporters on Europe – but one side should worry a little more than the other.
  • Bale, Tim, Webb, Paul, Poletti, Monica (2016). Minority views? Labour members had been longing for someone like Corbyn before he was even on the ballot paper.
  • Bale, Tim, Webb, Paul, Poletti, Monica (2016). Minority views? Labour members had been longing for someone like Corbyn before he was even on the ballot paper.
  • Bammer, Gabriele (2016). Moving interdisciplinary research forward: Top down organising force needed to help classify diverse practices.
  • Bammer, Gabriele (2016). Why are interdisciplinary research proposals less likely to be funded? Lack of adequate peer review may be a factor.
  • Banda, Kevin K., Carsey, Thomas M. (2016). Primary election candidates change their campaign strategies in response to both their current and (potential) future opponents.
  • Bandyopadhyay, Kuntala (2016). Could emerging economies change the rules of the global labour standards game?
  • Banerjee, Mukulika (2016). For the vast majority, being able to cast a vote freely is an affirmation of their status as equal citizens of India.
  • Banerjee, Paroj (2016). The crackdowns on universities and the narrowing of “nationalism” in India.
  • Bang, Henrik Paul (2016). Book review: Foucault’s political challenge: from hegemony to truth by Henrik Paul Bang.
  • Bang, Henrik Paul (2016). Contemporary politics requires the simultaneous having and eating of cakes, as Jeremy Corbyn is finding out over Europe.
  • Banks, Marcus A. (2016). Challenging the print paradigm: web-powered scholarship is setto advance the creation and distribution of research.
  • Bannerman, Gordon (2016). Book review: Harold Wilson: the unprincipled Prime Minister? Reappraising Harold Wilson edited by Andrew S. Crines and Kevin Hickson.
  • Barassi, Veronica (2016). My child is an anarchist, a feminist, a communist.
  • Barber, Michael, Thrower, Sharece, Canes-Wrone, Brandice (2016). For Congressional donors, politicians’ policy preferences are more important than their party.
  • Barber, Stephen (2016). The Sun newspaper has set out the terms for Britain remaining in the EU.
  • Barberis, Janos (2016). Banks’ cautious approach to financial startups has matured.
  • Bardhan, Pranab, Campion, Sonali (2016). “Experimental evidence shows that when people are given unconditional cash they will by and large spend it on worthwhile things” – Pranab Bardhan.
  • Bardhan, Pranab, Campion, Sonali (2016). “Inequality harms cooperative efforts. In India we see the problems this creates at local, state and national level” – Pranab Bardhan.
  • Bargout, Remy (2016). Book review: adapting to climate uncertainty in African agriculture: narratives and knowledge politics by Stephen Whitfield.
  • Barham, Peter (2016). Book review: madness, distress and the politics of disablement edited by Helen Spandler, Jill Anderson and Bob Sapey.
  • Barker, Chris (2016). An American view on the Brexit vote: an opportunity not worth seizing.
  • Barker, Chris (2016). How the failure of two political parties helped lead to Brexit and the rise of Donald Trump.
  • Barker, Rodney (2016). How foreigners became the convenient scapegoat of the referendum campaign.
  • Barmby, Tim, Zangelidis, Alexandros, Sessions, John (2016). People avoid calling in sick if that adds to their colleagues’ burden.
  • Barnard, Catherine, Ludlow, Amy, Fraser Butlin, Sarah (2016). What minimum wage? Why enforcement of EU migrants’ employment rights matters.
  • Barnes, Naomi (2016). Considering the monstrous in digital methods can inform researchers’ ethical decision making.
  • Barnum, Jeremy D., Campbell, Walter L., Trocchio, Sarah, Caplan, Joel M., Kennedy, Leslie W. (2016). How the physical landscape of the urban environment affects drug dealing.
  • Baron, Denise (2016). Are humans getting smarter?
  • Baron, Denise, Donszelmann, Sophie, Gilson, Christopher (2016). The Ballpark podcast episode 3: power, person, people: US foreign policy.
  • Baron, Denise, Gilson, Christopher (2016). The Ballpark extra innings: Erich McElroy’s imperfect guide to the US Presidential debates.
  • Barr, Nicholas (2016). EU membership is not the only way to foster labour mobility. But it is the best.
  • Barr, Nicholas (2016). Letter to friends (2): why Britain voted to leave, and what to do about it.
  • Barr, Nicholas (2016). Letter to friends: this is why I will vote Remain in the referendum.
  • Barrett, Gavin (2016). Brexit means Brexit, but the Norway model is clearly the least worst option.
  • Barrett, Gavin (2016). Theresa May has two clear options on Brexit – neither of them easy.
  • Barrett, Gavin (2016). What the UK could learn from Ireland’s EU referendum campaigns.
  • Barry, Michael, Wilkinson, Adrian (2016). The HR literature won’t give you a complete picture of employee voice.
  • Bartling, Sönke, Fecher, Benedikt (2016). Could Blockchain provide the technical fix to solve science’s reproducibility crisis?
  • Bashir, Ali (2016). Twenty five years later, Somaliland comes of age.
  • Bateman, Victoria (2016). Brexiteers on the left are following a Yellow Brick Road, destined for disappointment.
  • Bateman, Victoria (2016). Patriotism: last refuge of a scoundrel, or foundation of a healthy trading state?
  • Bates, Jo (2016). Towards a critical data science – the complicated relationship between data and the democratic project.
  • Batten, Michelle (2016). Are you an MPA offer-holder? Read about year one’s curriculum.
  • Batten, Michelle (2016). Are you an MPA offer-holder? Read about year two’s curriculum.
  • Battini, Noémie (2016). The gap in how we think about change.
  • Bauchowicz, Stefan, Hänska, Max (2016). How Leave won Twitter: an analysis of 7.5m Brexit-related tweets.
  • Bauer, Nichole (2016). The Trump tape has transformed the 2016 election into a referendum on gender.
  • Baum-Snow, Nathaniel, Henderson, J. Vernon, Turner, Matthew A., Zhang, Qinghua, Brandt, Loren (2016). When models fall short: Evidence from Chinese road infrastructure investments.
  • Baxendale, Helen, Wellings, Ben (2016). Anglosphere cooperation given a surprise boost after the Brexit vote.
  • Baxter, Graeme, MacLeod, Iain (2016). Scottish Parliament election preview: continued SNP dominance in the North East, but who will pick up the scraps?
  • Baxter, Jacqueline (2016). Book review: The life project: the extraordinary story of our ordinary lives by Helen Pearson.
  • Bayley, Julie (2016). A call to build an impact literate research culture.
  • Beaulieu, Emily, Searles, Kathleen (2016). Disrupting implicit bias: crowdsourced database highlights women experts in the social sciences #WomenAlsoKnowStuff.
  • Beauregard, T. Alexandra (2016). Work and family in the UK: Perspectives of minority Asian women expatriates.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2016). Turkey’s failed coup has firmly tightened Erdoğan’s grip on power.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2016). A game of polls: Bulgaria’s presidential election threatens to shake up the country’s party system.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2016). The murder of Russia’s ambassador shows Turkey in the worst possible light.
  • Bechev, Dimitar (2016). A very Bulgarian drama: what Rumen Radev’s presidential election victory means for Bulgarian politics.
  • Beck, Gunnar (2016). Germany and the EU can’t afford to drive a hard bargain over Brexit.
  • Becker, Peter (2016). Understanding Germany: why Berlin’s policies reflect its role as the ‘status quo power’ in Europe.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). 2017: media will get messier, journalism must show courage.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). As Trump takes power, what can journalists, politicians and the public learn?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). BBC escapes, for now.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Beware the ‘false consciousness’ theory: newspapers won’t decide this referendum.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Brussels: reporting the horrible truth.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Deliberation, distortion and dystopia: the news media and the referendum.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Don’t blame ‘the media’ for the state of the referendum campaign.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Fanning the flames: reporting on terror in the networked age.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). How do we get our news about conflict and war? (BBC radio programme).
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). How do you report on something that isn’t true? Dealing with Trump’s tweets and other fake news.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). John Oliver’s high moral view of journalism is part of the problem.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Journalism and emotions.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Journalism is getting personal: latest trends from the digital front line.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Liberalism Trumped. It’s time to listen to the angry mob.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Networked journalism updated: lots of examples.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). No effort required: how technology should foster creativity.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Reporting crisis: let’s do it better.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Reporting terror: new ideas needed.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Subscription redux: the news as a service.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). That VICE Corbyn film: beware your friends in the media – especially if you are paranoid and incompetent.
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). This is what I said about the future of news in 2009 – you fools, why didn’t you listen??!!
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Was the BBC biased over Brexit?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). Whittingdale and the ex-dominatrix: conspiracy of silence or good press behaviour?
  • Beckett, Charlie (2016). The future of news.
  • Beckett, Charlie, Deuze, Mark (2016). The role of emotion in the future of jJournalism.
  • Beer, David (2016). Is neoliberalism making you anxious? Metrics and the production of uncertainty.
  • Beer, David (2016). Measuring and engineering influence on social media: what does this mean for political power?
  • Begg, Iain (2016). By engaging with the media academics can enjoy benefits to their research.
  • Begg, Iain (2016). Despite strong GDP data, it is difficult to ascertain what effect Brexit will really have on the economy.
  • Begg, Iain (2016). Lies, damned lies and yet more misleading statistics on Europe.
  • Begg, Iain (2016). Theresa May’s timeline for Brexit: canny tactics or Brexishambles?
  • Begg, Iain (2016). Why both sides of the UK’s debate are misleading the public on EU budget contributions.
  • Begg, Iain (2016). The economics of Brexit: which side should we believe?
  • Begg, Iain (2016). The welfare state in Europe: still worth having?
  • Begun, Stephanie (2016). Connecting homeless youth to supportive others and boosting their belief in their abilities can help them to address problems in their lives.
  • Behuria, Pritish (2016). Africa’s turn to industrialize? Shifting global value chains, industrial policy and African development.
  • Behuria, Pritish (2016). Aspiring to new heights with no ladder: the barriers to technology acquisition in India’s solar energy sector.
  • Behuria, Pritish (2016). The challenge of thinking and working politically to reform public services.
  • Bell, Clive, Squire, Lyn (2016). Can drawing on preliminary findings boost the impact of evidence on policymaking?
  • Bell, Lauren (2016). The stakes are high in the looming fight to replace Justice Scalia on the Supreme Court.
  • Belling, Daniel (2016). ‘The alternatives are worse’ – the message that unites EU referendum campaigners.
  • Belotti, Alice (2016). Buying a house takes more than hard work and willpower – contrary to government belief.
  • Benes, Keith, Cheon, Andrew, Urpelainen, Johannes, Yang, Joonseok (2016). Low oil prices: an opportunity for fuel subsidy reform.
  • Bennister, Mark, Worthy, Ben (2016). Why is real leadership in such short supply in UK politics?
  • Bentley, Daniel (2016). The more the State has withdrawn from housebuilding, the more it has found itself propping up the private market.
  • Beresford, James (2016). Book review: angry white people: coming face-to-face with the British far right by Hsiao-Hung Pai.
  • Bernal, Paul (2016). Corbyn’s digital meh-nifesto is too rooted in the past to offer much for the future.
  • Bernal, Paul (2016). How the UK passed the most invasive surveillance law in democratic history.
  • Bernal, Paul (2016). You can’t deny message encryption to some individuals without denying it to all.
  • Bernstein, Mary (2016). How a country’s political system works can be integral to whether or not same-sex marriage becomes legal.
  • Berry, Christopher R., Fowler, Anthony (2016). Congressional committee membership is less important thanpreviously thought, but chairs are really influential.
  • Berry, Mike (2016). Understanding the role of the mass media in the EU Referendum.
  • Berry, Richard (2016). Book review: locating localism: statecraft, citizenship and democracy by Jane Wills.
  • Berry, Richard (2016). Book review: the VP advantage: how running mates influence home state voting in presidential elections by Christopher J. Devine and Kyle C. Kopko.
  • Berry, Richard (2016). Elections to the NHS show that online voting is still in its infancy.
  • Berry, Richard (2016). Heavy duty: what are the shortcomings of the BBC’s reporting of the EU?
  • Bertomeu, Jeremy (2016). CEO pay should factor in market risk, regardless of its effect on their performance.
  • Bertsou, Eri, Pastorella, Guilia (2016). Attitudes in established democracies show there is still a place for independent experts in politics.
  • Bertuzzi, Luca (2016). Stumbling on the verge of catastrophe? The media and the transforming world order.
  • Besimi, Fatmir (2016). The 2016 Enlargement Package: the EU must maintain its commitment to enlargement following Brexit.
  • Betsill, Michele, Stevis, Dimitris (2016). Colorado’s move to the New Energy Economy offers lessons on the challenges facing the US transition away from coal towards renewables.
  • Beunza, Daniel (2016). Why bankers need management.
  • Bevan, Shaun, Greene, Zachary (2016). Setting the policy agenda: the role of economic context, parliamentary majority and party membership.
  • Bevan, Shaun, John, Peter (2016). More than just drama: the agenda of Prime Minister’s Questions.
  • Bevington, Matthew (2016). Unrepresentative democracy and how to fix it: the case for a mixed electoral system.
  • Bhandari, Avash (2016). Book review: sport: a critical sociology by Richard Giulianotti.
  • Bhattacharya, Aveek (2016). The government’s own numbers show that alcohol is under-taxed.
  • Bhattarai, Baburam, Kc, Pragya, Paudel, Manoj (2016). “We need a new system where individual rights are respected and the state plays a responsible role in providing security to those who need it” – Baburam Bhattarai.
  • Bhatti, Omar (2016). Looking forward to the Future of Pakistan conference.
  • Bhimani, Alnoor, Silvola, Hanna, Sivabalan, Prabhu (2016). Firms adopt corporate social responsibility for complex reasons.
  • Bhopal, Kalwant (2016). Improving the lack of racial diversity amongst academic staff:will the Race Equality Charter make a difference?
  • Bhopal, Kalwant (2016). White academia: will the Race Equality Charter make a difference?
  • Bhusal, Thanesh (2016). Democracy without elections: 15 years of local democratic deficit in Nepal.
  • Bickerton, Christopher (2016). What happens after Brexit is up to us. Why not open our borders to non-EU workers?
  • Bidé, Jasmina (2016). The EU referendum debate is targeting Central-Eastern European migrants.
  • Bieber, Florian (2016). Serbia’s latest election is entirely unnecessary.
  • Biggs, Norman (2016). Norman Biggs – Calculus on Clay?
  • Bigoni, Maria, Bortolotti, Stefania, Casari, Marco, Gambetta, Diego, Pancotto, Francesca (2016). Regional disparities in Italy may have to do with trust and cooperation.
  • Bilgel, Fırat, Karahasan, Burhan Can (2016). Estimating the economic cost of Turkey’s PKK conflict.
  • Bilgiç, Abdurrahman (2016). Brexit Ambassador series: the view from Turkey.
  • Binti Zainal, Afiqah (2016). #LSEreligionLecture: “We need to re-imagine understandings of the British identity” – Tariq Modood.
  • Birch, Kean (2016). How to think like a neoliberal: can every decision and choice really be conceived as a market decision?
  • Bishin, Benjamin G., Hayes, Thomas J., Incantalupo, Matthew B., Smith, Charles Anthony (2016). Granting gay rights does not lead to public opinion backlash, even among evangelicals.
  • Bishop, Dorothy (2016). Cost-benefit analysis of the Teaching Excellence Framework.
  • Biswas, Asit K., Kirchherr, Julian (2016). Is a college degree worth it? Interventions are needed to enhance the practical relevance of higher education.
  • Bjork, Jim (2016). Don’t be deceived: referenda seldom tell us much about national identity.
  • Björkman, Lisa, Campion, Sonali (2016). “It’s local staff who keep Mumbai’s water flowing in the face of systematic planning violations done in the name of world-class city making” – Lisa Björkman.
  • Black, Ian (2016). Book Review: Allin & Simon’s ‘Our Separate Ways’.
  • Black, Ian (2016). Book Review: Christopher Phillips’ ‘The Battle for Syria’.
  • Black, Ian (2016). Book Review: Roger Hardy’s The poisoned well.
  • Black, Ian (2016). Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030: The road to a new economic paradigm in the Middle East?
  • Blackburn, Dean (2016). If the Conservatives are now committed to a philosophy of inequality, they are no longer conservatives.
  • Blades, Chloe (2016). On Rabia Nasimi – making a difference to refugees from Afghanistan finding a place within British society.
  • Blain, Harry (2016). Why are Republicans scared of America’s cities?
  • Blair, Karen L. (2016). A ‘basket of deplorables’? A new study finds that Trumpsupporters are more likely to be Islamophobic, racist,transphobic and homophobic.
  • Blanchard, Alexander (2016). Book review: Foucault with Marx by Jacques Bidet.
  • Blanchard, Alexander (2016). Book review: conceptualizing terrorism by Anthony Richards.
  • Blaney III, Harry C (2016). President Trump would be a mortal danger to the US and to the world.
  • Blaney III, Harry C. (2016). Donald Trump’s comments on Cuba show his disregard for longterm strategy.
  • Blaney III, Harry C. (2016). Trump’s likely foreign policy cabinet picks range from the unqualified to the dangerous.
  • Blanton, Robert, Peksen, Dursun (2016). The dark side of economic freedom: neoliberalism has deleterious effects on labour rights.
  • Blick, Andrew (2016). Assuming Brexit takes place, we are at the beginning of a fundamental transition – but we do not know where it will lead us.
  • Blick, Andrew (2016). Federalism provides a desirable path forward for the UK’s constitution – and may be the only means of preserving the Union.
  • Blick, Andrew (2016). To appreciate the importance of the Brexit referendum, we must consider the series of constitutional issues that it raises.
  • Blick, Andrew, Kippin, Sean (2016). How Labour’s internal disputes threaten the functioning of our political system.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Accelerating housing production in London: Making national housing policy work in the capital.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Building relationships with central and local government, blog from our roundtable event.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). GLA publishes LSE London research on housing density.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Growing demand for renting across Europe: report on the private rented sector in Europe.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). HEIF5 Accelerating housing production in London Roundtable 1: Setting the priorities.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Housing strategies for the new mayor, seminar blog.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Housing zones as new housing acceleration tools.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Innovative construction methods.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). LSE London Seminar: Housing strategies for the new Mayor.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Market VS Planning: is deregulation the answer?
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). The Mayor of London has asked LSE London to investigate the impact of foreign investment on London’s housing market.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Mayoral hustings debate summary: ‘Why I should be Mayor of London Tomorrow’.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Prof Christine Whitehead provides an economic overview at The Residential Funding Conference.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Profiling UK private landlords, report for Council of Mortgage Lenders.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Roundtable on planning and the role of SME Builders.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Social mobility in Great Britain: Evidence on obstacles young people face.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Taking stock: Understanding the effects of recent policy measures on the private rented sector and Buy-to-Let, report launch.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). Towards a sustainable private rented sector: What can we learn from other countries?
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). A case for greater planning certainty.
  • Blog Admin, LSE London Housing Blog (2016). The future of urban housing, Melissa Fernández speaks to Design & Build Review.
  • Bloom, Nicholas (2016). What is Brexit-related uncertainty doing to UK growth?
  • Blum, Florian (2016). Livestock services: agricultural technology & service delivery in rural Tanzania.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2016). #Parentfails and triumphs – favourite podcasts and learning from others.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2016). When parents choose ‘screen time’ – real lives behind the new AAP guidelines.
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2016). Where and when does a parent’s right to share end online?
  • Blum-Ross, Alicia (2016). Why we post – why people use social media around the world.
  • Boberg-Fazlic, Nina, Sharp, Paul (2016). Welfare budget lessons from Pre-Industrial England: why the ‘big society’ idea may not work.
  • Bodelier, Ralf (2016). Photo Blog: At work in Blantyre’s Ndirande Slum.
  • Bodelier, Ralf (2016). Slums can transform peoples’ lives for the better.
  • Bodin, Örjan (2016). Greater than the sum of its parts: How to develop collaborative networks to solve complex social issues.
  • Bodregi, Bea (2016). The European Court of Human Rights rules again on liability for third party comments.
  • Boerner, Lars, Severgnini, Battista (2016). Mechanical clocks prove the importance of technology for economic growth.
  • Boivie, Steven, Graffin, Scott D., Gentry, Richard (2016). A trusted analyst’s opinion is worth gold for a company’s investors.
  • Boivie, Steven, Graffin, Scott D., Oliver, Abbie G., Withers, Michael C. (2016). Serving on corporate boards plays a vital role in the career success of executives.
  • Bojar, Abel (2016). Orbanism at its limits? Hungary’s referendum has exposed the first cracks in Viktor Orban’s rule.
  • Bokova, Irina, Pralec, Tena (2016). Interview with Irina Bokova, candidate for UN Secretary General: “My biggest priority is to keep the United Nations relevant”.
  • Bol, Damien (2016). Reforming European elections: could a pan-European ballot paper engage EU voters?
  • Bolander, Willy, Satornino, Cinthia (2016). If you’re in sales, don’t build relationships only with customers.
  • Boley, Thomas (2016). Cyber 9/12 Student Challenge event 2016.
  • Bolleyer, Nicole, Gauja, Anika (2016). What does the new charities (protection and social investment) act mean for the voluntary sector?
  • Bolton, Alexander, Thrower, Sharece (2016). Despite Obama’s actions on gun control, there is little he is able to do to change the status quo.
  • Bon, Florian (2016). Book review: Is decentralization good for development? Perspectives from academics and policy makers edited by Jean-Paul Faguet and Caroline Pöschl.
  • Bongardt, Annette, Torres, Francisco (2016). For the EU to work, outlying member states should opt for associative membership.
  • Bonino, Stefano (2016). Muslims in Scotland: demographic, social and cultural characteristics.
  • Boodoo, Muhammad Umar (2016). Volkswagen affair: global coordination is needed to enforce ethical corporate behaviour.
  • Boodoo, Muhammad Umar (2016). Why pay packages based on fair criteria matter.
  • Boone, Catherine (2016). Catherine Boone wins 2016 Luebbert Book Award for ‘Property and Political Order in Africa’.
  • Boone, Catherine, Manji, Ambreena (2016). Kenya’s devolved land administration marks the start of a new phase of political struggle over land control.
  • Booth, Jonathan E. (2016). Listen carefully: The voice of transgender employees is not being heard.
  • Bordignon, Fabio (2016). Will Italy’s constitutional referendum mark the beginning of a ‘Third Republic’?
  • Boring, Anne, Ottoboni, Kellie, Stark, Philip B. (2016). Student evaluations of teaching are not only unreliable, they are significantly biased against female instructors.
  • Bornmann, Lutz, Haunschild, Robin, Marx, Werner (2016). Measuring the societal impact of research: references to climate change research in relevant policy literature.
  • Borowski, Audrey (2016). Book review: Leibniz: on god and religion: a reader edited by Lloyd Strickland.
  • Borowski, Audrey (2016). Book review: The long read: a theory of the drone by Grégoire Chamayou.
  • Borowski, Audrey (2016). Book review: no need for geniuses: revolutionary science in the age of the guillotine by Steve Jones.
  • Borowski, Audrey (2016). Book review: the glass cage: where automation is taking us by Nicholas Carr.
  • Borriello, Arthur, Crespy, Amandine (2016). Less and more Europe: the EU at a crossroads between federalism and political disintegration.
  • Botti, Simona (2016). Book review: why people (don’t) buy: the GO and STOP signals by Amitav Chakravarti and Manoj Thomas.
  • Bourbonnais, Nicole (2016). A brief history of women’s history.
  • Bouçek, Françoise (2016). Fillon vs Juppé: what policy differences are there between the French centre-right’s candidates?
  • Bowman, Benjamin (2016). The under 30s in the UK: a generation used to not getting what they voted for.
  • Bowman, Gary (2016). Plans for future scenarios are hard to communicate to employees.
  • Bown, Alfie (2016). Book review: create or die: essays on the artistry of Dennis Hopper by Stephen Lee Naish.
  • Boyd, Christina L. (2016). Diverse Federal trial judges are more likely to rule in favor of minorities and women in sex and racial discrimination cases.
  • Boyd, Monica, Couture-Carron, Amanda (2016). Immigrants and their grandchildren who marry people born in their destination country are more likely to be politically active.
  • Bošković, Mirko (2016). Montenegro parliamentary election: going beyond the ‘NATO vs Russia’ dichotomy.
  • Bracey, Phil (2016). A call for safe passage: end avoidable risk and death in the Aegean crossing.
  • Bramley, Glen (2016). Structure rather than behaviour: on the causes of poverty.
  • Brandt, Reuven (2016). Genetic fallacies?
  • Brassett, James (2016). Satire is (un)dead: how comedy became a language of democratic politics.
  • Braunstein, Juergen, Caoili, Arianne (2016). Indonesia: the vanguard of a new wave of sovereign wealth funds?
  • Braunstein, Jürgen, Laboure, Marion, Sen, Julius (2016). Windfall revenues in Europe: What’s next?
  • Brechlin, Laura (2016). Book review: going to war in Iraq: when citizens and the press matter by Stanley Feldman, Leonie Huddy and George E. Marcus.
  • Breschi, Stefano, Lenzi, Camilla (2016). How urban social networks help to inspire creativity in American cities.
  • Bressanelli, Edoardo, Koop, Christel, Reh, Christine (2016). The growth of informal EU decision-making has empowered centrist parties.
  • Brett, Daniel (2016). Igor Dodon’s election: a victory for Moldova’s oligarchs?
  • Brett, Daniel (2016). Romania’s local elections: why has the ‘old guard’ done so well?
  • Brett, Teddy (2016). Aid Relationships, Global Governance and the International Crisis – Professor Teddy Brett.
  • Brett, Will (2016). Disappointed? That’s a sign you’re doing democracy.
  • Brett, Will (2016). The people have spoken. Or have they? Doing referendums differently after the EU vote.
  • Brexit, LSE (2016). The EU deal: expert commentary.
  • Brexit, LSE (2016). Referendum Night with the LSE.
  • Brexit, LSE (2016). The UK renegotiation deal: what’s the verdict?
  • Brexit, LSE (2016). What now? Our guide to Britain’s future outside the EU.
  • Bright, Jonathan, Garzia, Diego, Lacey, Joseph, Trechs, Alexander (2016). Allowing transnational voting during European elections could alleviate the EU’s democratic deficit.
  • Briscoe, Forrest, Gupta, Abhinav, Anner, Mark (2016). For activist campaigns, disruption gains attention, but evidence-based education changes minds.
  • Brock, Maria (2016). Fantastic Mr President: The hyperrealities of Putin and Trump.
  • Broga, Dominykas (2016). Youth bulge or bomb? Harnessing the potential of Pakistani youth.
  • Bronk, Richard (2016). Let young people move: why any post-Brexit migration deal must safeguard youth mobility.
  • Bronk, Richard (2016). Letter to MPs from a Remain voter: a plea for realism, tolerance and honesty.
  • Brooke, Erika J., Gau, Jacinta M. (2016). For veterans in prison, longer military service is linked to lower rates of overall offending.
  • Broughton Micova, Sally (2016). Why the UK’s creative industries are better off in the EU.
  • Brown, Campbell (2016). Moral Mathematics: an interview with Campbell Brown.
  • Brown, Jennifer (2016). Domestic abuse in the Archers: putting the storyline into context.
  • Brown, Jennifer (2016). A ‘Helen Archer’ moment? the abused, the perpetrator and the fall-out from domestic violence.
  • Brown, Jennifer, Mackie, Jeannie, Shell, Yvonne (2016). Defending Helen Archer – marital rape and the role of expert testimony in cases involving domestic abuse.
  • Brown, Stuart A. (2016). How democratic is the UK’s participation in the European Union?
  • Brown, Stuart A., Pralec, Tena (2016). Croatian parliamentary elections 2016: voters reject the centre-left’s tilt to the right.
  • Brown, Stuart A., Prelec, Tena (2016). Scenarios of a new UK-EU relationship: a ‘Bremain’.
  • Brown Coverdale, Helen (2016). Book Review: care ethics and political theory edited by Daniel Engster and Maurice Hamington.
  • Bruter, Michael (2016). Meet our LSE100 award-winning students.
  • Bruzelius, Cecilia, Seeleib-Kaiser, Martin (2016). The case for a European minimum income scheme for jobseekers.
  • Bryant, Rebecca (2016). Bargaining bodies: the EU’s deal with Turkey has sacrificed Europe’s principles to appease domestic politics.
  • Buckley, Fiona (2016). The 2016 Irish election demonstrated how gender quotas can shift the balance on female representation.
  • Buckley, Fiona, McGing, Claire (2016). Analysis of the women selected and elected by quota in Ireland dispel the myth that they were under-qualified.
  • Bucur, Cristina (2016). In coalitions, parties tend to receive their proportional share of ministries.
  • Budra, Max (2016). Book review: foreign pressure and the politics of autocratic survival by Abel Escribà-Folch and Joseph Wright.
  • Buhari-Gulmez, Didem (2016). Turkey’s relations with Europe are in flux following Ahmet Davutoğlu’s resignation.
  • Bullard, Ashley R. (2016). Book review: the state: past, present, future by Bob Jessop.
  • Bunker, Kenneth (2016). What turnout can we expect in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales?
  • Burdin, Gabriel (2016). Worker-managed firms reduce their internal wage gap, but top performers tend to quit.
  • Burgos-Martínez, Elena (2016). Book review: modes of uncertainty: anthropological cases edited by Limor Samimian-Darash and Paul Rabinow.
  • Burkhardt, Brett C. (2016). The federal Bureau of Prisons’ move to phase-out private prisons is a largely symbolic one.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). The 1930s realignment of German politics shows that in times of crisis, political equilibriums can quickly fall out of balance.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). Breitbart, Steve Bannon and Donald Trump against the world.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). In 2017, Trump and the ultra-right wrecking crew will continue to roll back history.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). Lessons for 2016 from the smashup of the Second Party System and the War of the Whig succession.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). This year’s election is not likely to mean the end of political gridlock in Washington.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). This year’s upside-down election is part of a political realignment which encompasses both parties, and is fueled by public rancor.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). Welcome to Trumpland.
  • Burnham, Walter Dean (2016). The current realignment of US politics means that the outcome in November could be anyone’s guess.
  • Burri, Susanne (2016). London under attack.
  • Burrows, Roger (2016). Ancient cultures of conceit reloaded? a comparative look at the rise of metrics in higher education.
  • Busch, Christian (2016). Five steps to scaling social impact.
  • Bushnell, Alexis (2016). Book review: Collateral damage: a cndid history of a peculiar form of death by Frederik Rosén.
  • Bushnell, Alexis (2016). Book review: notes toward a performative theory of assembly by Judith Butler.
  • Bushnell, Alexis (2016). Book review: preventive detention of terror suspects: a new legal framework by Diane Webber.
  • Buskell, Andrew (2016). What makes humans special?
  • Busygina, Irina (2016). There are few political incentives for Russia and the EU to normalise their relations.
  • Butler, Jeffrey (2016). The belief in meritocracy perpetuates inequality.
  • Butler, Jeffrey V, Giuliano, Paola, Guiso, Luigi (2016). Values we learn from our parents influence our trust in others with money and business.
  • Butlin, Helen (2016). The materiality of motherhood in academic research: notes on ”workflow” from a mid-life doctoral mother.
  • Butlin, Helen (2016). The materiality of research: ‘the materiality of motherhood in academic research: notes on ”workflow” from a mid-life doctoral mother’ by Helen Butlin.
  • Button, Beth (2016). Wake up, students – the freedoms you take for granted are under threat.
  • CASPeR, Study Team (2016). The impact of postponement of reforms to long-term care financing in England.
  • Cacciotti, Gabriella, Hayton, James, Mitchell, Robert, Giazitzoglu, Andreas (2016). Fear of failure may inhibit entrepreneurs, but may also drive them to work harder.
  • Cadywould, Charlie (2016). There are sound practical reasons why free movement should accompany free trade.
  • Caines, Michael (2016). LSE lit fest 2016: 'More's Utopia – and more utopias' by Michael Caines.
  • Cairney, Paul (2016). The time is right for an audit of Scottish democracy.
  • Calcara, Antonio (2016). Trump’s election victory offers a clear opportunity for EU defence policy.
  • Calhoun, Craig (2016). How does religion matter in Britain’s secular public sphere?
  • Call, Maia (2016). The persistence of child poverty since 1990 despite massive social and economic changes reinforces the importance of place-based policies.
  • Camas-Garcia, Francisco (2016). Spanish general election preview: the multi-party system is here to stay.
  • Camfield, Graham (2016). Making space for books and readers: a history of LSE’s Library.
  • Camfield, Graham (2016). Sidney Webb the bibliographer.
  • Camfield, Graham (2016). Three who shaped LSE Library collections.
  • Camfield, Graham (2016). The beginnings of the Russian Collection at LSE.
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2016). Brussels 22/3 (guest blog).
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2016). Should the news media link the murder of Jo Cox with the Brexit campaign?
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2016). The polls were right but they were interpreted badly.
  • Cammaerts, Bart (2016). A recipe for a right-wing assault on public service media?
  • Campion, Sonali (2016). Audit 2017: how effectively is gender equality achieved in the political and public life of the UK?
  • Campion, Sonali (2016). “Can we do better?” Raghuram Rajan on rethinking the global monetary system.
  • Campion, Sonali (2016). Educate, agitate, organise: a short biography of Dr B.R. Ambedkar.
  • Campion, Sonali, Kippin, Sean (2016). How democratic is the UK’s House of Lords, and how could it be reformed?
  • Campos, Nauro, Macchiarelli, Corrado (2016). How the Eurozone’s core versus periphery pattern evolved over time.
  • Campos, Nauro F. (2016). Football and Brexit: how freedom of movement has affected England’s chances of winning Euro 2016.
  • Canhoto, Ana, Quinton, Sarah (2016). Research collaboration between universities and industry: Five practical principles to make it work.
  • Cannizzo, Fabian (2016). Is it ethical to be passionate in academia? passion is a central concept for understanding academic labour.
  • Canonico, Esther (2016). What is wrong with working from home?
  • Cao, Benito (2016). Albert Rivera is emerging as the clear winner from Spain’s political deadlock.
  • Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo (2016). Italy’s double standards: the Regeni and Abu Omar cases reveal a contradictory approach to human rights.
  • Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo (2016). Kosovo’s political crisis suggests its citizens are no longer willing to accept large-scale electoral fraud.
  • Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo (2016). The West’s state-building policy in Kosovo requires a radical overhaul.
  • Carattini, Stefano, Baranzini, Andrea, Lalive, Rafael (2016). People first resist but later tend to embrace garbage taxes.
  • Carayannis, Tatiana (2016). Making justice work: the Bemba case and the ICC’s future.
  • Carel, Havi (2016). Breathing life into a phenomenology of illness, part I.
  • Carlin, Ryan E., Love, Gregory (2016). Mind the partisan trust gap: why the 2016 elections are making some Americans worse off.
  • Carolyn, Côté-Lussier (2016). How rising social inequality may be fueling public demands for increasingly harsh criminal justice policies.
  • Carozzi, Felipe (2016). Brexit and the location of migrants.
  • Carozzi, Felipe (2016). Turnover is not supply.
  • Carpernter, Griffin (2016). The grievances of the fishing industry would be better aimed at the UK government, not the EU.
  • Carrano, Biagio, Monasterolo, Irene (2016). Italy’s off shore oil referendum: another lost opportunity.
  • Carrol, Peter (2016). Book review: another day in the death of America: a chronicle of ten short lives by Gary Younge.
  • Carrol, Peter (2016). Book review: diaries: volume 5: outside, inside, 2003-2005 by Alastair Campbell.
  • Carrol, Peter (2016). Book review: speaking out: lessons in life and politics by Ed Balls.
  • Carrol, Peter, Klaas, Brian (2016). Author Interview with Brian Klaas: how Can We Fix Democracy?
  • Carroll, Chris (2016). The number behind the number: suggesting a truer measure of academic impact.
  • Carter, Adam (2016). Book review: Pragmatic humanism: on the nature and value of sociological knowledge by Marcus Morgan.
  • Carter McKee, Kirsten (2016). Book review: The hero building: an architecture of Scottish national identity by Johnny Rodger.
  • Cartwright, Laura (2016). The EU debate, young people, and the giant, neoliberal-shaped ‘elephant in the room’.
  • Carwyn, Morris (2016). Book review: China’s contested internet edited by Guobin Yang.
  • Cascino, Stefano, Gassen, Joachim (2016). Have unified standards made financial reporting more comparable?
  • Cassino, Dan (2016). Gender is costing Hillary Clinton big among men.
  • Cassino, Dan (2016). Small donors still put their money behind candidates who are already falling, while big donors know when to get out.roundup for 2 – 8 April.
  • Cassino, Dan (2016). Why are there more and more guns in America? Blame Fox News.
  • Cassino, Dan (2016). The “evidence” that the US Presidential Election will have been stolen.
  • Cassino, Dan, Paul, Newly, Tatsak, Jenny (2016). The third presidential debate: USAPP expert reaction and commentary.
  • Cassino, Dan, Paul, Newly, Tatsak, Jenny, Klaas, Brian, Parmar, Inderjeet (2016). The second presidential debate: USAPP expert reaction and commentary.
  • Castelar, Roberto A. (2016). Book review: historically inevitable: turning points in the Russian revolution edited by Tony Brenton.
  • Castells-Quintana, David, Lopez-Uribe, Maria del Pilar, McDermott, Tom (2016). Climate change impacts the economic development of low-income countries.
  • Cayton, Adam (2016). Enshrining policy in a state’s constitution means that it is more likely to be rewritten as the makeup of the state legislature changes.
  • Cech, Erin A. (2016). Future family plans don’t influence how men and women choosetheir college major or occupation.
  • Ceesay, Ismaila (2016). Gambia continues to defy existing political norms on the African continent.
  • Cengiz, Farat (2016). The EU policymaking paradox: Citizen participation is a must, but the shaping of policies has become too technical.
  • Centre, for Macroeconomics (2016). The Brexit question will increase financial market volatility.
  • Centre for Economic Performance, LSE (2016). What are the UK’s options outside the European Union?
  • Cesar Cunha Leite, Alexandre (2016). Book review: the wanda way: the managerial philosophy and values of one of China’s largest companies by Wang Jianlin.
  • Chadi, Adrian, Hetschko, Clemens (2016). Changing jobs does not necessarily bring you happiness.
  • Chakravarti, Amitav (2016). Hit-or-miss strategies may be the reason why products flop.
  • Chalise, Bishal (2016). Community participation should be at the heart of Nepal’s post-earthquake reconstruction.
  • Chalise, Bishal (2016). If India wants a meaningful place in the Asian Century it must act big and act now.
  • Chalmers, James (2016). Schrödinger’s pardon: the difficulties of the Turing Bill.
  • Chamberlain, Alyssa W., Boggess, Lyndsay N. (2016). Why disadvantaged neighborhoods are more attractive targetsfor burgling than wealthy ones.
  • Chamberlain, Tim (2016). Book review: the Oxford illustrated history of modern China edited by Jeffrey N. Wasserstrom.
  • Chambers, Chris (2016). How to deal with being “scooped”: the vast majority of science is a process of derivative, incremental advance.
  • Chamon, Merijn, Van der Loo, Guillaume (2016). A Brexit could make it easier for Scotland to join the EU as an independent state.
  • Chang, Woojung, Taylor, Steven (2016). Customer participation is no panacea for the development of new products.
  • Charlton, Ed (2016). Photo blog: Johannesburg: A City Between.
  • Charlwood, Andy, Stuart, Mark, Kirkpatrick, Ian, Lawrence, Mark T (2016). Why HR is set to fail the big data challenge.
  • Charmley, John (2016). Trade is not – and never has been – the reason for the European Union’s existence.
  • Chatelard, Géraldine (2016). Iraqi and Syrian refugees in Jordan adjusting to displacement: Comparing their expectations towards UNHCR and their capacities to use their educational assets.
  • Chatty, Dawn (2016). The Syrian humanitarian disaster: Understanding perceptions and aspirations in Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey.
  • Cheesman, Nick (2016). Everyday impunity in Myanmar, lessons from Bangladesh.
  • Cheffins, Brian R. (2016). How corporate governance moved to the forefront of management.
  • Chen, Anqi (2016). The EU referendum and the shaming of leave voters.
  • Cheng, Yunfei (2016). Quizzes and polls – is this trend in journalism here to stay?
  • Chenhall, Robert H., Moers, Frank (2016). Management control systems have evolved to address the need for innovation.
  • Cheshire, Paul (2016). Greenbelt madness: or how to get it back to front.
  • Cheshire, Paul (2016). A housing failure: it’s not more rental stock we need; it’s more of the right kind of houses.
  • Cheung, Celeste (2016). What are the effects of touchscreens on toddler development?
  • Chiappetta, Kathleen (2016). Book review: concentration and power in the food system: who controls what we eat? by Philip H. Howard.
  • Chiappetta, Kathleen (2016). Book review: water and development: good governance after neoliberalism edited by Ronaldo Munck, Narathius Asingwire, G. Honor Fagan and Consolata Kabonesa.
  • Chigudu, Simukai (2016). Academic freedom in Africa: 25 years after the Kampala declaration.
  • Chigudu, Simukai (2016). “Am I going to eat Peace?” – The politics of redistribution and recognition in Women’s Peace Activism.
  • Chinkin, Christine (2016). The ‘Comfort Women’ of World War II must be honoured in the UNESCO Memory of the World.
  • Chinkin, Christine, Henry, Marsha, Holvikivi, Aiko (2016). Women and Peacekeeping: Time for the UN to Commit to Gender Equality.
  • Chiriyankandath, James (2016). The Kerala election: a shift to the left – and a move to the right.
  • Chol, Jacob D. (2016). South Sudan’s leaders have tarnished the dreams of Independence for their people.
  • Chopra, Surabhi (2016). Judging the soldiers: confronting extrajudicial killing on India’s borders.
  • Choudhury, Yasmin (2016). How death turned my hand, eyes & heart towards the ‘third world’.
  • Choudhury, Yasmin (2016). What the Bangladeshi people told me.
  • Christenson, Dino, Kriner, Douglas (2016). When it comes to executive actions, Americans’ partisan and policy preferences trump constitutional concerns.
  • Christofis, Nikos (2016). Book review: designing peace: Cyprus and institutional innovations in divided societies by Neophytos Loizides.
  • Christofis, Nikos (2016). Book review: the revival of Islam in the Balkans: from identity to religiosity edited by Arolda Elbasani and Olivier Roy.
  • Christos, Genakos, Roumanias, Costas (2016). What makes consumers switch mobile phone tariffs?
  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2016). Hopes and doubts: Kyriakos Mitsotakis as New Democracy leader.
  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2016). How Brexit will affect the balance of power in the European Parliament.
  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2016). NATO’s migrant mission in the Aegean raises major questions for Greek foreign policy.
  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2016). Nato’s new migrant mission in the Aegean is a victory for Turkey and proof of Europe’s strategic irrelevance.
  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2016). No respite: Greece’s relationship with Europe after Brexit.
  • Chryssogelos, Angelos (2016). Still Europeanized? Greek foreign policy during the Eurozone crisis.
  • Chua, Roy, Roth, Yannig (2016). Countries with tight social norms innovate less in the international arena.
  • Cingano, Federico, Leonardi, Marco, Messina, Julián (2016). The unintended consequences of an Italian labour protection law.
  • Cirone, Alexandra (2016). Choose your own adventure: my time as a capstone supervisor.
  • Ciurea, Andreea (2016). Book review: Fractured identities: changing patterns of inequality by Harriet Bradley (2nd Edition).
  • Clancy, Annette (2016). The tyranny of satisfaction reigns in organisations.
  • Clark, Alistair (2016). Scottish Parliament election preview: from four party politics to further consolidation in the South of Scotland?
  • Clark, Andrew, Flèche, Sarah, Layard, Richard, Powdthavee, Nattavudh (Nick) (2016). The big factors affecting life satisfaction are all non-economic.
  • Clark, Ian (2016). Internet freedom for all: public libraries have to get serious about tackling the digital privacy divide.
  • Clark, Janine Natalya (2016). Rape and sexual violence in war: The vexing issue of causation and some reflections from Bosnia.
  • Clark, Tom (2016). Case method in the digital age: how might new technologies shape experiential learning and real-life story telling?
  • Clarke, Harold D., Goodwin, Matthew, Whiteley, Paul (2016). Leave was always in the lead: why the polls got the referendum result wrong.
  • Clarke, Harold D., Goodwin, Matthew, Whiteley, Paul (2016). Leave was always in the lead: why the polls got the referendum result wrong.
  • Clements, Ben (2016). Who are the ‘religious nones’ in Britain? Atheists, agnostics or something else?
  • Clewett, Paul (2016). Book review: Just work? Migrant workers’ struggles today edited by Aziz Choudry and Mondli Hlatshwayo.
  • Clifford, Damian, Schroers, Jessica (2016). Take 2: Personal data and dynamic IPs – time for clarity?
  • Close, Caroline (2016). As both major parties struggle with internal divisions, it is crucial to engage with different facets of party cohesion.
  • Close, Caroline, Núñez, Lidia (2016). Reluctant elites: democratic innovations are popular – but rare. Brexit shows why.
  • Coban, Mehmet Kerem (2016). Book review: better bankers, better banks: promoting good business through contractual commitment by Claire A. Hill and Richard W. Painter.
  • Cochrane, Allan (2016). Thinking in and beyond the market: housing, planning, and the state.
  • Cockayne, Daniel (2016). The “entrepreneurial society” is lauded as the new normal, butmeans that an individual’s worth is now measured by theirearning capacity.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2016). Brexit poses serious political ramifications for the rest of the EU.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2016). Greece: a bumpy road to salvation.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2016). Italy’s constitutional referendum: mapping the possible political scenarios.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2016). Italy’s referendum: Renzi’s big gamble failed. What’s next?
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2016). Watch Italy’s referendum for potential banking problems.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2016). You can’t get it all: Italy’s public finances.
  • Codogno, Lorenzo (2016). The long-term economic implications of a Brexit might not be as negative as many studies suggest.
  • Cohen, Philip (2016). Developing SocArXiv: a new open archive of the social sciences to challenge the outdated journal system.
  • Cohen-Almagor, Raphael (2016). Freedom of expression on the internet is of utmost importance but it needs to be weighed against social responsibility.
  • Cohen-Almagor, Raphael (2016). Freedom of expression on the internet needs to be weighed against social responsibility.
  • Colbert, Amy e., Bono, Joyce E., Purvanova, Radostina (Ina) K. (2016). Flourishing at work is all about relationships.
  • Colbran, Marianne (2016). Leveson’s lasting effect on press-police relations.
  • Cole, Thomas (2016). What Michel Barnier’s October 2018 timeline means for the Brexit negotiations.
  • Coleman, Robin (2016). Web analytics 101: how to use statistics to drive online engagement to your institutional page or research project.
  • Coleman, Stephen, Anstead, Nick, Blumler, Jay G, Moss, Giles, Homer, Matt (2016). “What is a referendum?” How we might open up pre-vote TV debates to genuine public scrutiny.
  • Collins, Katie (2016). The materiality of research: ‘woven into the fabric of the text: subversive material metaphors in academic writing’ by Katie Collins.
  • Colombo, Céline, De Angelis, Andrea, Morisi, Davide (2016). New survey evidence: Renzi’s support is damaging the chances of a Yes vote in Italy’s referendum.
  • Colonnelli, Alessio (2016). EU migrant workers’ welfare rights: the new fair game.
  • Colonnelli, Emanuele, Haas, Astrid (2016). Corruption in construction.
  • Comi, Simona, Grasseni, Mara, Origo, Federica, Pagani, Laura (2016). Quotas have led to more women on corporate boards in Europe.
  • Concha, Paz (2016). Book Review: be creative: making a living in the new culture industries by Angela McRobbie.
  • Concha, Paz (2016). Book review: craft and the creative economy by Susan Luckman.
  • Concha, Paz (2016). Book review: the creative citizen unbound: how social media and DIY culture contribute to democracy, communities and the creative economy edited by Ian Hargreaves and John Hartley.
  • Concha, Paz (2016). Privatisation of street food markets in London: curating markets and place.
  • Cond, Anthony (2016). The university press Redux: balancing traditional university values with a culture of digital innovation.
  • Condon, Meghan (2016). Improving verbal learning in schools can increase political engagement and encourage voting later in life.
  • Condon, Meghan, Filindra, Alexandra, Wichowsky, Amber (2016). Excluding Latino immigrant families from the social safety net hurts their children’s educational outcomes – and effects spill over onto Latino children who are not excluded.
  • Conner, Thaddieus W., Witt, Stephanie L. (2016). Why some tribal governments are more likely to partner with state and local law enforcement than others.
  • Conner, Thaddieus W., Witt, Stephanie L. (2016). Why some tribal governments are more likely to partner withstate and local law enforcement than others.
  • Conrads, Julian, Reggiani, Tommaso (2016). People are more likely to promise to help you if you ask them in person or by phone.
  • Constant, Claire (2016). Book Review: Israel and South Africa: the many faces of apartheid edited by Ilan Pappé.
  • Consterdine, Erica (2016). All bark and no bite: why EU temporary migration programmes have failed to live up to their promise.
  • Conti, Gabriella, Kinnan, Cynthia, Laxminarayan, Ramanan, Malani, Anup, Voena, Alessandra (2016). Expanding Indian public health insurance above the poverty line.
  • Cooper, Christopher A., Gibbs Knotts, H., Ragusa, Jordan (2016). Governors tend to appoint Senators who most resemble voters in the state, rather than ideologues.
  • Cooper, Davina (2016). Conversing with ghosts: prefigurative talk and the shifting contours of intellectual debate.
  • Cooper, Davina (2016). How a referendum might actually support democracy.
  • Cooper, Ian (2016). How the ‘red card’ system could increase the power of national parliaments within the EU.
  • Cooper, Rachel (2016). What does hoarding tell us about mental health?
  • Cooper, Robert (2016). Sir Robert Cooper: “Trump’s victory puts Europe in unknown territory”.
  • Copelovitch, Mark, Frieden, Jeffry, Walter, Stefanie (2016). Four lessons from the Eurozone crisis – and why the future of the euro remains uncertain.
  • Corbett, Anne (2016). But we can’t do it alone: the future of British universities post-Brexit.
  • Cornée, Nathalie (2016). Book review: altmetrics: a practical guide for librarians, researchers and academics edited by Andy Tattersall.
  • Costa, Oriol, Mestres, Laia (2016). Three key choices facing Spain as the country continues to search for its next government.
  • Costamagna, Francesco (2016). Book review: economic governance in Europe: comparative paradoxes and constitutional challenges by Federico Fabbrini.
  • Costas, Milas (2016). Brexit is already affecting the economy – despite the short-term fluctuations of the stock market.
  • Cotter, Richard (2016). Book review: Smarter, faster, better: the secrets of beingproductive by Charles Duhigg.
  • Cotton, Elizabeth (2016). By providing more money without looking at how treatment isoffered, Clinton’s mental health agenda is a false economy.
  • Cotton, Elizabeth (2016). Deprofessionalised, downgraded and demoralised: why mental healthcare is going backwards.
  • Cotton, Elizabeth (2016). How can you maintain your sanity in a toxic workplace?
  • Cotton, Elizabeth (2016). Job coaches in GP surgeries: another attempt to pathologise the unemployed?
  • Cotton, Elizabeth (2016). Poor working conditions affect mental health workers’ state of mind.
  • Cotton, Elizabeth (2016). Self-employment is precarious work.
  • Cotton, Elizabeth (2016). A matter of principles: the psychodynamics of solidarity in trade unions.
  • Cotton, Elizabeth (2016). The side effect of treating higher education as a commodity: less free expression.
  • Couldry, Nick (2016). What’s at Stake in Algorithmic Accountability.
  • Coulter, Steve (2016). City of London beware: the perils of leaving the single market.
  • Coulter, Steve (2016). UK trade unions come out against Brexit.
  • Cox, Ed (2016). If devolution in England is to be effective the government needs to address the lack of process.
  • Cox Pahnke, Emily, Katila, Riitta, Eisenhardt, Kathleen (2016). Startups working with venture capital firms perform the best.
  • Craft, Anna, R. (2016). Libraries and Open Journal Systems: hosting and facilitating the creation of Open Access scholarship.
  • Craig, Malcolm (2016). Explaining Obama’s intervention: why an EU without Britain would be the worst of all worlds for the United States.
  • Cram, Laura, Llewellyn, Clare (2016). If Twitter is the medium of the underdog, are the ‘reluctant Remainers’ poised to bite?
  • Craun, Sarah W., Tiedt, Andrew D. (2016). Compared to other crimes, law enforcement closes warrants for sex crimes and violent crimes more quickly.
  • Crescenzi, Riccardo, Giua, Mara (2016). UK’s less developed regions stand to suffer most when top-down EU funding is gone.
  • Crescenzi, Riccardo, Holman, Nancy, Orrù, Enrico (2016). From brain drain to brain circulation: how labour mobility can help less developed European regions.
  • Crescenzi, Riccardo, Luca, Davide, Milio, Simona (2016). Beyond the nation state: how European cities and regions responded to the financial crisis.
  • Crespin, Michael H., Edwards, Barry (2016). Redistricting encourages more out-of-district contributions to Congressional candidates from individuals.
  • Crespy, Amandine (2016). CETA has laid bare the need to reconfigure sovereignty in the EU.
  • Crompton, Andrew (2016). The Tate Modern multi-faith room: where sacred space and art space converge and merge.
  • Crookes, Heather (2016). Improved integration of communications and scholarly roles can help academics become successful digital influencers.
  • Crossley, Stephen (2016). The trouble with the Troubled Families Programme – repeating the failed attempts of the past.
  • Crowe, Brian (2016). Diplomacy post-Brexit: the UK sidelined and Nato damaged.
  • Cruz, Melany (2016). Book review: Knowledge and ethics in anthropology:obligations and requirements edited by Lisette Josephides.
  • Csaky, Zselyke (2016). Central Europe could be the region most damaged by Brexit.
  • Cubel, Maria, Nuevo-Chiquero, Ana, Sanchez-Pages, Santiago, Vidal-Fernandez, Marian (2016). Personality influences individual productivity and wages.
  • Cullen, John (2016). Book review: enhancing teaching practice in higher educationedited by Helen Pokorny and Digby Warren.
  • Cullen, Matt (2016). InsureTech firms look to disrupt, but not to overtake incumbents.
  • Cumming, Douglas, Zahra, Shaker A. (2016). Brexit can have profound implications for firms on both sides of the Atlantic.
  • Curchin, Katherine (2016). Beyond nudging: it’s time for a second generation of behaviourally-informed social policy.
  • Curtis, April (2016). Book review: from Washington to Moscow: US-Soviet relations and the collapse of the USSR by Louis Sell.
  • Cvijanovic, Dragana, Dasgupta, Amil, Zachariadis, Konstantinos E. (2016). Some mutual funds do business with firms whose shares they own.
  • Cvitanovic, Chris (2016). From science to action: principles for doing research that enables knowledge exchange and evidence-based decision-making.
  • Cylus, Jonathan, Nolte, Ellen, Figueras, Josep, McKee, Martin (2016). What, if anything, does the EuroHealth Consumer Index actually tell us?
  • Czerniewicz, Laura (2016). How do students access the resources they need? Survey finds only one in five obtain all resources legally.
  • Côté-Lussier, Carolyn, Fitzpatrick, Caroline (2016). Lessons for 2016 from the smashup of the Second Party System and the War of the Whig succession.
  • Côté-Lussier, Carolyn, Fitzpatrick, Caroline (2016). Making teens feel safer at school could help improve their achievement.
  • Daddow, Oliver (2016). Project Fear is the legacy of decades of Euroscepticism. Dare Cameron make a positive case for the EU?
  • Dalacoura, Katerina (2016). Dr Katerina Dalacoura workshops on contemporary Turkish discourses on culture in IR.
  • Dalmia, Ritush, Baek, Jiin, Doshi, Siddhi (2016). An attempt to unpick the ‘productivity paradox’ and other barriers to growth.
  • Dalton, Russell (2016). Political parties do represent their voters, but the degree of representation varies across issues and parties.
  • Daly, Jack (2016). Regional value chains: enhancing productivity in East Africa.
  • Damian, Alexandru (2016). Romania may have the most to lose from Moldova’s presidential election.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2016). Cathy come home: why it is still relevant 50 years on and why the world needs people like Ken Loach.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2016). #HowToGetACouncilHouse – an unfair representation.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2016). In support of the junior doctors’ strike.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 1.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 3.
  • Daniel, Ronda (2016). Should sociologists care about #OscarsSoWhite?
  • Daniel, Ronda (2016). A week of black feminism and colourism – in pictures.
  • Danielson, Caroline (2016). Growth in food assistance began well before the Great Recession, and was driven by a poor economy.
  • Danielsson, Jon, Valenzuela, Marcela, Zer, Ilknur (2016). Low volatility makes a financial crisis more likely.
  • Daouli, Joan, Demoussis, Michael, Giannakopoulos, Nicholas (2016). Greek women rushed to look for work when the crisis left their husbands jobless.
  • Darlington, Rolda (2016). How Congressional Democrats are employing a Civil Rights era tactic to address a problem from today.
  • Darlington, Rolda (2016). In Florida, Marco Rubio looks set to win a Senate race that will have a lasting impact on US politics.
  • Darlington, Rolda L. (2016). Florida’s primary results: a boring story with a sad ending for Senator Marco Rubio.
  • Darr, Joshua (2016). Targeting local newspapers can be an effective tactic forcampaign field offices.
  • Das, Ranjana (2016). (Mediated) parenting wars: a new mum’s account.
  • Dasgupta, Aditya (2016). Rethinking clientelism: politics of service delivery in rural India.
  • Davidson, Anjali (2016). A northerner ventures south.
  • Davie, Grace (2016). Changing Britain: whilst the non-religious are growing, new religious life is flourishing in urban areas.
  • Davies, Ewan (2016). Counting the number of ways a gas can fill a room.
  • Davies, Marc (2016). South Africa’s greatest hope lies at the ballot box – Mmusi Maimane.
  • Davies, Philip HJ (2016). UK security will both gain and suffer from Brexit. The EU will only lose.
  • Davis, Mike, Vogkli, Maria-Christina, Souvlis, George (2016). ‘Fight with hope, fight without hope, but fight absolutely’: an interview with Mike Davis.
  • Davis, Owen (2016). Food banks and austerity: what the data tell us about rising food insecurity in the UK and Europe.
  • Davis, Jr, Theodore J. (2016). Delaware’s case shows why the racial achievement gap in education remains stubbornly large.
  • Dawkins, Marika, Rodriguez, Frank (2016). Undocumented and unaccompanied Latino youth who are exposed to violence are more likely to turn to crime to overcome disadvantage.
  • Day, Abby (2016). The conflict between religion and media has deep roots.
  • De Haas, Ralph, Poelhekke, Steven (2016). Mining causes infrastructure bottlenecks that hurt nearby manufacturers.
  • De Neve, Emmanuel, Powdthavee, Nick (2016). As the richest get richer, everyone else gets less happy.
  • De Rosa, Pierluigi (2016). A different approach to public communication in Italy.
  • De Vito, Antonio (2016). Book review: the hidden wealth of nations: the scourge of tax havens by Gabriel Zucman.
  • De Vries, Catherine (2016). Could Brexit be a unifying moment for Europe?
  • DeCillia, Brooks (2016). From “Watchdog” to “Attackdog”: Media depictions of Jeremy Corbyn are an affront to democracy.
  • DeLargy, Pamela (2016). Deadly journeys and disappointing arrivals: the Role of Africa in Europe’s migration “crisis”.
  • DeVerteuil, Geoffrey (2016). Book review: planetary gentrification by Loretta Lees, Hyun Bang Shin and Ernesto López-Morales.
  • Dean, John (2016). Book review: Populism’s power: radical grassroots democracyin America by Laura Grattan.
  • Defty, Andrew (2016). Improvements in turnout and more partisan voting: the consequences of embedding PCC elections in the electoral cycle.
  • Dehejia, Rajeev, Pop-Eleches, Cristian, Samii, Cyrus (2016). From local to global: extrapolating experiments.
  • Dejaeghere, Yves, Russo, Luana, Nikolic, Louise (2016). Political habits learned in home country are determinants of EU expats’ registration in European elections.
  • Delatolla, Andrew (2016). Book Review: John Chalcraft’s ‘Popular Politics in the Making of the Modern Middle East’.
  • Deller, Rosemary (2016). Feature: the inspiration that makes for knowledge: relaunching the left book club.
  • Deller, Rosemary (2016). Four things we’ve learned from the LSE RB reader community survey.
  • Deller, Rosemary (2016). Reading list: 10 must-read books on gender in the workplace.
  • Deller, Rosemary (2016). Reading list: recommended reads on Brazilian politics, history and culture for the 2016 Rio Olympics.
  • Demary, Markus (2016). Why European firms need more securitised bonds (not bank loans).
  • Demary, Markus (2016). Why the ECB is not to blame for low interest rates.
  • Dempster, Helen (2016). Demons of density: delivering water and sanitation to the poor.
  • Dempster, Helen (2016). Demons of density: growth of the violent city.
  • Dempster, Helen, Intemann, Zachary (2016). Escalera: stairway to better education, evidence from rural Mexico.
  • Den Haan, Wouter J., Ellison, Martin, Ilzetzki, Ethan, McMahon, Michael, Reis, Ricardo (2016). A vote to leave will increase financial market volatility.
  • Den Haan, Wouter J., Ilzetzki, Ethan, Ellison, Martin, McMahon, Michael (2016). Brexit and the economy: are economists out of touch with voters and politicians?
  • Den Haan, Wouter J., Ilzetzki, Ethan, Ellison, Martin, McMahon, Michael, Reis, Ricardo (2016). Is a loose monetary policy still appropriate for the Eurozone?
  • Deneulin, Séverine, Zampini-Davies, Augusto (2016). How the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) can engage with religion.
  • Deng, Xuefei (Nancy), Joshi, K.D., Galliers, Robert D. (2016). Microtask crowdsourcing can both empower and marginalise workers.
  • Denham, John (2016). John Denham’s reflections on the Employer Support for Higher Level Skills report.
  • Denick, Lina (2016). Predictive Policing and the Automated Suppression of Dissent.
  • Dennison, James (2016). A long time coming: Brexit and what happens next.
  • Dennison, James, Carl, Noah (2016). The ultimate causes of Brexit: history, culture, and geography.
  • Dennison, James, Draege, Jonas Bergan (2016). Unless the Yes campaign can shift tactics, Italy’s constitutional referendum is heading for a No vote.
  • Dennison, Suzi, Pardijs, Dina (2016). Now give us our own referendum: how Brexit could energise Europe’s insurgent parties.
  • Denny, Emily (2016). What does it mean for public policy to be ‘Made in Wales’?
  • Department of Government blog (2016). ‘Identity, integration & community’: looking back at our Cumberland Lodge Conference 2016.
  • Department of Government blog (2016). Professor Anthony Smith.
  • Derain, Agathe (2016). Agathe Derain – human rights and business: could performance measurement be premature?
  • Derounian, James (2016). This green and neglected land – how the National Planning Policy Framework fails to meet the needs of communities.
  • Desai, Ashwin (2016). Book review: All our welfare: towards participatory socialpolicy by Peter Beresford.
  • Deshpande, Ashwini (2016). “Even when class conditions are equalised, caste seems to have an independent effect on future life outcomes” – Ashwini Deshpande.
  • Deutschmann, Emanuel (2016). New analysis of WikiLeaks documents shows that intelligence-gathering at Guantánamo has been ineffective.
  • Devanny, Joe (2016). Book review: the al-Qaeda franchise: the expansion of al-Qaeda and its consequences by Barak Mendelsohn.
  • Devanny, Joe (2016). Long read review: politics: between the extremes by Nick Clegg.
  • Devanny, Joe (2016). Politics: Between the Extremes by Nick Clegg.
  • Devigne, David, Manigart, Sophie, Wright, Mike (2016). Cross-border venture capitalists are less patient with under-performers.
  • Dey, Payal (2016). Diwali: a smog-mare for the Indian capital.
  • Dhingra, Swati (2016). The EU referendum has already hit the UK economy – here’s how it could recover after a remain vote.
  • Dhingra, Swati (2016). India is getting a raw deal on the EU-India Trade Agreement.
  • Dhingra, Swati (2016). Minor relaxations of immigration policy will not make up for the economic impacts of a Brexit in the UK or India.
  • Dhingra, Swati (2016). Scenarios of a new UK-EU relationship: a ‘soft’ Brexit.
  • Dhingra, Swati (2016). The ‘leave’ campaigns are ignoring the last 40 years of economic data.
  • Dhingra, Swati, Menon, Amartya (2016). Demonetisation is not the way to tackle corruption.
  • Dhingra, Swati, Ottaviano, Gianmarco, Sampson, Thomas, Van Reenen, John (2016). The question is not whether Brexit will cost the UK in economic terms but how much.
  • Dhingra, Swati, Ottaviano, Gianmarco I. P., Sampson, Thomas, Reenen, John Van (2016). How Brexit will reduce foreign investment in the UK….and why it matters.
  • Dhingra, Swati, Ottaviano, Gianmarco I. P., Sampson, Thomas, Reenen, John Van (2016). Less trade and lower living standards in the UK: the price of Brexit.
  • Dhingra, Swati, Ottaviano, Gianmarco I. P., Sampson, Thomas, Van Reenen, John (2016). Did the Treasury get it right? Putting a figure on the cost of a Brexit.
  • Dhingra, Swati, Sampson, Thomas (2016). What kind of relationship with the EU is best for the UK economy post-Brexit?
  • Dhingra, Swati, Van Reenen, John, Sampson, Thomas, Ottaviano, Gianmarco I. P. (2016). The cost of Brexit to trade? At least £850 per household, per year.
  • Di Cataldo, Marco (2016). Poorer UK regions have benefited from EU Cohesion Policy and would lose out from Brexit.
  • Di Fiore, Alessandro (2016). What industry incumbents need to know about platform models before it’s too late.
  • DiPaolo, Joshua, Simpson, Robert (2016). The origin of belief.
  • Dickson, Jane (2016). $1 million for a drug used once.
  • Dickson, Jane (2016). Shining a light on Lumosity’s claims.
  • Dickson, Jane (2016). Testing & mental health apps.
  • Dickson, Jane (2016). Vita brevis ars longa: feeding Watson on dubious data.
  • Dijkstra, Hylke (2016). How can we avoid Britain being cut out of the EU’s foreign policy negotiations?
  • Dill, Janette (2016). Like women, men who are hands-on care workers alsoexperience a wage penalty.
  • Dimitrakopoulos, Dionyssis G. (2016). A vote to Leave is a vote to cut migration, no matter what liberal Brexiteers would like to think.
  • Dimitrova, Diana, Leuven, KU (2016). Data Protection at the Schengen borders after Paris.
  • Dinshaw, Freya (2016). A first timer’s perspective on the 4th UN forum on business and human rights.
  • Dinç, Pınar, Aydemir, Irem (2016). The EU-Turkey deal: Ambiguities and future scenarios.
  • Dinç, Pınar, Capoluongo, Francesca (2016). Will Turkey remember the Syrian citizenship debate?
  • Dionigi, Filippo (2016). Lebanon: new president, old politics.
  • Dix, Alan (2016). Evaluating research assessment: metrics-based analysis exposes implicit bias in REF2014 results.
  • Dixon, Ruth (2016). The focus on better communicating certain ‘truths’ is misplaced: academics must improve their emotional literacy.
  • Djankov, Simeon (2016). Is Europe spending too much?
  • Djankov, Simeon (2016). Is red tape a reason to quit the EU? Hardly.
  • Djankov, Simeon (2016). What Donald Trump could do to ‘make America great again’ without destroying free trade.
  • Doberman, Tim (2016). Transforming Myanmar’s energy sector.
  • Dobrescu, Madalina (2016). Brexit is likely to hinder Britain’s national security strategy.
  • Doctor, Austin, Monogan, Jamie (2016). Why taking an anti-immigration policy position is a poor long-term electoral strategy.
  • Doebler, Stefanie (2016). The relationship between religion and racism: the evidence.
  • Doherty, David, Huber, Gregory, Gerber, Alan, Dowling, Conor (2016). People vote because they’re worried others will think less of them if they don’t.
  • Doig, Alan (2016). The Committee on Standards in Public Life needs reform if it is to fulfil its important role properly in the future.
  • Doig, Alan (2016). Mission creep and the Committee on Standards in Public Life; why its time for a new approach to get back to basics.
  • Doig, Alan (2016). The UK needs to rethink its approach to the upholding of standards in public life.
  • Donadelli, Flavia, Queiroz Cunha, Bruno (2016). Rio 2016 Olympics: a rite of non-passage.
  • Donaubauer, Julian, Meyer, Birgit, Nunnenkamp, Peter (2016). Aid-financed infrastructure promotes foreign direct investments.
  • Donaubauer, Julian, Neumayer, Eric, Nunnenkamp, Peter (2016). Promoting FDI through financial market development in host and source countries.
  • Donnelly, Brendan (2016). Ever Closer Union — neither a goal nor an aspiration, but a process.
  • Donnelly, Brendan (2016). Troubles redux: Brexit would put the Good Friday Agreement in jeopardy.
  • Donnelly, Faye, Vlcek, William (2016). Monsters in the mist: The elusive quest for financial security in Scotland post-Brexit.
  • Donovan, Tod, Bowler, Shaun (2016). Strict voter ID laws make Republican voters more confidentabout elections.
  • Donovan, Todd (2016). Voters are not blindly cynical about money in politics.
  • Dooley, T Price (2016). To address generational poverty, dropout prevention programs must serve those most in need.
  • Dorey, Peter, Denham, Andrew (2016). Entirely as expected? What the voting data tells us about Corbyn’s re-election.
  • Dorling, Danny, Stuart, Ben, Stubbs, Joshua (2016). Don’t mention this around the Christmas table: Brexit, inequality and the demographic divide.
  • Dorman, Andrew M (2016). The UK Defence Review recognises the immediate risks yet provides solutions that are years away.
  • Doudonis, Panagiotis (2016). The Brexit paradox: direct democracy is a flawed route to reviving sovereignty.
  • Douglas, James W., Raudla, Ringa, Hartley, Roger E. (2016). How getting the right actors involved can help successful local policies spread across the country.
  • Douglas-Scott, Sionaidh (2016). What does ‘Brexit means Brexit’ actually mean?
  • Dowbiggin, Katie, Muthukrishna, Michael (2016). Innovations are rarely (if ever) the product of a single individual.
  • Downing, Joseph (2016). The role of freedom of movement in facilitating terrorism is far more complex than it may seem.
  • Drèze, Jean, Tiwari, Pragya (2016). “I am not aware that this has been thought through” – Jean Drèze speaks to Pragya Tiwari about the new Aadhaar Act.
  • Dsouza, Zahra, Weinstein, Adam (2016). When minorities are killed with impunity extremists are only emboldened to attack the society as a whole.
  • Dulong de Rosnay, Mélanie (2016). Algorithmic Transparency and Platform Loyalty or Fairness in the French Digital Republic Bill.
  • Duncombe, Constance (2016). How looking at language, not stockpiles, helps explain the latest dispute over Iran’s ballistic missile program.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). Brexit shows (again) why we must overhaul the way the Commons is elected.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). Epitaph for a political chancer: Cameron’s fate examplifies the inability of UK elites to resolve long-run crises.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). Epitaph for a political chancer: Cameron’s fate exemplifies the inability of UK elites to resolve long-run crises.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How democratic are the UK’s two proportional electoral systems?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How democratic are the reformed electoral systems used in mayoral and devolved elections?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How democratic is the UK’s ‘Westminster Plurality Rule’ electoral system?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How effective is Parliament in controlling UK government and representing citizens?
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How to write a blogpost from your journal article in eleven easy steps.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). In Scotland, Wales and the London Assembly elections every voter has TWO choices this Thursday. Here’s how to use both votes well.
  • Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). Submitting to a journal commits you to it for six weeks to six months (or longer) – so choose your journal carefully.
  • Dupré, Catherine (2016). Laws born out of trauma: in defence of the EU’s conception of human rights.
  • Durnev, Art, Li, Tiemei, Magnan, Michel (2016). Are firms with offshore headquarters worth more?
  • Dusso, Aaron (2016). Mike Pence won’t be a game changer for Donald Trump.
  • Dutta, Supradeep, Folta, Timothy B. (2016). Venture capital increases a startup’s chances of issuing stocks or finding a buyer.
  • Dwertmann, David, Boehm, Stephan (2016). If a supervisor or a subordinate has a disability, who fares worse?
  • Dye, Barnaby (2016). As India-Africa ties are boosted, a shift in this South-South relationship is taking place.
  • Dye, Barnaby (2016). Brazil’s new government could signal a new direction for its relationship with African countries.
  • Dyke, Heather (2016). Why is doping wrong anyway?
  • Dyson, Tim (2016). Demographic change and democratization – Professor Tim Dyson.
  • Ecker, Alejandro, Glinitzer, Konstantin, Meyer, Thomas M. (2016). Why voters do not (always) punish government parties for corruption.
  • Economides, Spyros, Himmrich, Julia (2016). What price autonomy? Brexit’s effect on Britain’s soft power, trade deals and European security.
  • Edgerton, Barton (2016). Book review: neoliberalism: the key concepts by Matthew Eagleton-Pierce.
  • Edwards, Brett, Cacciatori, Mattia (2016). Why Boris Johnson must support continued criminal investigations into the use of chemical weapons in Syria.
  • Edwards, Elizabeth (2016). #StandWithCongo.
  • Edwards, Frank (2016). States which have harsher incarceration and less generous welfare policies tend to place more children in foster care.
  • Eggert, Jennifer Philippa (2016). Book review: Handbook on Gender and War.
  • Eggert, Jennifer Philippa (2016). Why do women join IS? A critique of gendered assumptions about women’s motivations.
  • Egorova, Yulia (2016). Jewish-Muslim relations have been affected by European public and political discourse.
  • Ehsan, Rakib (2016). The Hillary coalition that never was.
  • Eichtinger, Martin (2016). Brexit Ambassador series: the view from Austria.
  • Eid, Joelle (2016). Telling the human story: a Polis film.
  • Eidlin, Barry (2016). Long read: Why Canada has a labor party and the US does not.
  • Eikhof, Doris Ruth (2016). Broadcasting gives women visibility but not equality.
  • Eikhof, Doris Ruth (2016). What Jeremy Corbyn should have said about the after-work pint.
  • Einstein, Katherine Levine, Glick, David (2016). New research finds little evidence of anti-black racial bias by public housing authorities.
  • El Atouabi, Mariam (2016). Could Lebanon’s new government bring stability to the country?
  • El Issawi, Fatima (2016). Moroccan media: between change and status quo – new research report.
  • El-Agraa, Ali M (2016). Alan Sked’s case for Brexit: a six-point rebuttal.
  • El-Geneidy, Ahmed, van Lierop, Dea, Wasfi, Rania (2016). Bike sharing schemes can have a positive impact on nearby house prices.
  • Elgawly, Marina (2016). Egypt’s Coptic minority continues to face violence post-Tahrir.
  • Elias, Anwen (2016). Spain’s general election: a country in search of a compromise.
  • Elias, Anwen (2016). While prospects for Catalan independence remain bleak, Spain’s territorial crisis is here to stay.
  • Eliot, Jake (2016). Book review: happiness explained: what human flourishing is and how we can promote it by Paul Anand.
  • Elisabeth, Staksrud, Livingstone, Sonia (2016). Please share (because we care): privacy issues in social networking.
  • Ellington, Michael, Milas, Costas (2016). Brexit and the Gordian knot of the UK productivity puzzle.
  • Elliot, Shane (2016). How workers interact with computers in an automated workspace.
  • Elman Vishkin, Dana (2016). Achieving my dream: bringing LSE MPA students to compete with MBA students on impact analysis for business.
  • Eloquin, Xavier (2016). The focus on exam grades is failing the next generation.
  • Elsden, Chris, Mellor, Sebastian, Comber, Rob (2016). Getting our hands dirty: why academics should design metrics and address the lack of transparency.
  • Engasser, Florence, Gabriel, Madeleine (2016). Fostering good incubation in India outside the urban centres.
  • Engenderings editorial team (2016). Justice for the LSE Cleaners!
  • Engin, Zeynep (2016). Book review: Smart citizens, smarter state: the technologies of expertise and the future of governing by Beth Simone Noveck.
  • English, Richard (2016). Does terrorism work? Why we need to answer the question – however difficult it is.
  • Eno, Dustin (2016). The psychology of communicating during a crisis.
  • Ephraim, Philip Effiom (2016). Book review: muted modernists: the struggle over divine politics in Saudi Arabia by Madawi Al-Rasheed.
  • Erel, Umut (2016). Modelling engagement: using theatre-based workshops toexplore citizenship and research participation.
  • Erens, Bob, Wistow, Gerald (2016). Early evaluation: hurdles in the road for Pioneer health and social care integration programme.
  • Erigha, Maryann (2016). Lucrative blockbuster films are rarely directed by African Americans, holding them back in Hollywood.
  • Ertug, Gokhan, Yogev, Tamar, Lee, Yonghoon, Hedström, Peter (2016). A good professional reputation is in the eye of the beholder.
  • Espinosa, Miguel (2016). How firms decide whether to use in-house or external lobbyists.
  • Essletzbichler, Jurgen (2016). Wage redistribution from the top 1 to the bottom 40 percent would benefit 80 percent of US cities.
  • Estrin, Saul (2016). Why is there so little foreign direct investment in the Western Balkans?
  • Estrin, Saul, Khavul, Susanna (2016). Can crowdfunding solve market failures?
  • Estrin, Saul, Khavul, Susanna (2016). Crowdfunding solves market failures in new venture financing.
  • Estrin, Saul, Nielsen, Bo B. (2016). Do state owners constrain or facilitate corporate strategies of internationalisation?
  • Evangelopoulos, Georgios (2016). The agent-structure issue in foreign policy analysis (FPA) – the “Macedonian” issue.
  • Evans, Alice (2016). Book review: The long read: the politics of inclusive development: two books, one title by Alice Evans.
  • Evans, Bonnie (2016). The creation of autism.
  • Evans, Daniel (2016). Wales, already impoverished, is set to get even poorer.
  • Evans, Heather, Brown, Kayla, Wimberly, Tiffany (2016). Campaign Twitter update: Trump ignores the issues as Clinton continues to out tweet him.
  • Evans, Heather, Brown, Kayla, Wimberly, Tiffany (2016). Clinton sends tweets about voting and registration while Trumpasks people to come out and “join him”.
  • Evans, Heather, Brown, Kayla, Wimberly, Tiffany (2016). Donald Trump’s election tweets point to the policy areas he may focus on as president.
  • Evans, Heather, Brown, Kayla, Wimberly, Tiffany (2016). Hillary Clinton is tweeting more than Donald Trump and attacks him more often than he does her.
  • Evans, Heather, Brown, Kayla, Wimberly, Tiffany (2016). On Twitter, Donald Trump has been paying little lip service to issues important to women.
  • Evans, Jocelyn, Ivaldi, Gilles (2016). With the centre-right ahead, is next year’s French presidential battle already over?
  • Evans, Lee (2016). LSE lit fest 2016 book review: the silk roads: a new history of the world by Peter Frankopan.
  • Evans, Steffan (2016). Adding £2.3bn of debt to the accounts – social housing deregulation as an early test for the minority Welsh Government.
  • Evans, Steffan (2016). The Welsh Assembly after the elections: housing policy could be an area upon which to build a coalition.
  • Evans, Tom (2016). Free to retransmit: time for a new model for PSB content?
  • Evans, Tom (2016). Why the BT-EE merger challenges Ofcom’s wholesale remedies.
  • Evans-Lacko, Sara (2016). Why campaigns that stigmatize smokers can make them want to quit even less.
  • Evans-Lacko, Sara, Knapp, Martin (2016). Cost of depression in the workplace across eight diverse countries – collectively US$250 billion.
  • Everri, Marina (2016). The psychology of children with same-sex parents.
  • Evriviades, Euripides L. (2016). High Commissioner for the Republic of Cyprus to the UK: “A Brexit would not be in the interests of the Commonwealth”.
  • Eyles, Andrew, Machin, Stephen (2016). Budget 2016: highly questionable whether the academisation of all schools is good policy.
  • Eyres, Tallulah (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 4.
  • Eyres, Tallulah, Mwale, Temi, Savage, Mike, Gamsu, Sol, Daniel, Ronda (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 7.
  • Fagerlund, Charlotte (2016). Are email newsletters the future for digital journalism?
  • Faguet, Jean-Paul (2016). The Democracy Bomb. picture_as_pdf
  • Faguet, Jean-Paul (2016). The democracy bomb: Brexit and the need for a written constitution.
  • Faircloth, Charlotte (2016). Book review: parenting out of control.
  • Falck, Oliver, Heimisch, Alexandra (2016). ICT skills are substantially rewarded in modern labour markets.
  • Falkiner, Daniel (2016). Book review: The cultural defense of nations: a liberal theory of majority rights by Liav Orgad.
  • Falkiner, Daniel (2016). Book review: enemy of the state by Tommy Robinson.
  • Falkiner, Daniel (2016). Book review: the battle for Syria: international rivalry in the new Middle East by Christopher Phillips.
  • Falkiner, Daniel (2016). A reply to Anne Jenichen on the link between immigration and sexual violence.
  • Farah, Asma Ali (2016). Book review: Players and arenas: the interactive dynamics ofprotest edited by James M. Jasper and Jan Willem Duyvendak.
  • Farah, Asma Ali (2016). Book review: blocking public participation: the use of strategic litigation to silence political expression by Byron Sheldrick.
  • Farmer, Harry (2016). The real reasons referendums have become so common – and so scary.
  • Farmer, Harry (2016). The tax credit row highlighted a fundamental imbalance in our political system: here’s one way to redress it.
  • Farías Pelcastre, Iván (2016). Book review: free speech after 9/11 by Katharine Gelber.
  • Farías Pelcastre, Iván (2016). Book review: the fence and the bridge: geopolitics and identity along the Canada-US border by Heather N. Nicol.
  • Fasan, Olu (2016). Brexit: Africa will lose a voice at the EU table but gain the best of both worlds.
  • Fasan, Olu (2016). Brexit: why Africa will lose a voice in Brussels but gain the best of both worlds.
  • Favell, Adrian (2016). Compared to its neighbours, open migration to Britain has been a success story.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2016). It’s all Greek to me: on the parallels with the UK referendum campaign.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2016). Waking up to a nightmare? A UK exit from the EU would be a ‘lose-lose’ for both sides.
  • Featherstone, Kevin (2016). What those calling for Brexit could learn from the Greek bailout referendum.
  • Fecher, Benedikt, Wagner, Gert G. (2016). Credit where credit is due: research parasites and tackling misconceptions about academic data sharing.
  • Felices, Guillermo (2016). Global implications of Trump’s fiscal stimulus.
  • Felle, Tom (2016). The Independent Commission on Freedom of Information shows that there is no going back to the “dark ages” of government opacity.
  • Fenwick, John (2016). The proposed merger of Newcastle and North Tyneside councils would diminish rather than enhance devolution.
  • Fenzl, Michele (2016). Book review: Uninformed: why people know so little about politics and what we can do about it by Arthur Lupia.
  • Fenzl, Michele (2016). Book review: social advantage and disadvantage edited by Hartley Dean and Lucinda Platt.
  • Ferland, Benjamin (2016). Citizen assessment of the political system is fostered by rational considerations rather than virtuousness.
  • Fernandez, Rodrigo, Hofman, Annelore, Aalbers, Manuel B. (2016). Despite Brexit and Trump, London and New York real estate will remain a safe deposit box for transnational wealth elites.
  • Fernández-Gutiérrez, Marcos, Jilke, Sebastian, James, Oliver (2016). Vulnerable consumers and public services: can competition and switching reduce inequalities?
  • Ferragina, Emanuele, Arrigoni, Alessandro (2016). From the third way to the big society: the rise and fall of social capital.
  • Fesenmyer, Leslie (2016). African-initiated Pentecostal churches are on the rise in the UK – what role do they seek to play in wider society?
  • Fetzer, Thiemo, Arezki, Rabah, Pisch, Frank (2016). Fracking has made US manufacturing more competitive.
  • Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, Elena (2016). Gender, religion and humanitarian responses to refugees.
  • Field, Bonnie N. (2016). Will the new Rajoy minority government in Spain work?
  • Finkelstein, Sydney (2016). Superbosses feel completely unthreatened.
  • Finlayson, Alan (2016). Too many facts and not enough theories: the rhetoric of the referendum campaign.
  • Finlayson, Lorna (2016). Don’t elect him, he’s unelectable!
  • Finn, Mike (2016). Post-war fantasies and Brexit: the delusional view of Britain’s place in the world.
  • Finnegan, Jared J. (2016). From adaptation to climate-resilient development: What are the implications for policymakers?
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). American companies kick the tires of Cuba’s new-old economy.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). Behavioural economics challenges traditional view of “homo economicus”.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). Can businesses police the behaviour of global suppliers?
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). Chinese leaders walk a tightrope on market reforms amid slowdown.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). Does flopping have an upside? Business rethinks the meaning of failure.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). Fintech’s greatest promise may be in the developing world.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). How to avoid a product recall? Test, test, and test some more.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). If you’d do anything to avoid meetings, you may be missing the point.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). In the skies, under the radar.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). Stagnant wages fuel revolt against globalization.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). The art, and the deal, go global.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). A globalised economy requires a globally savvy workforce.
  • Fireman, Ken (2016). The malling of America may be history.
  • Firsing, Scott (2016). How severe is Africa’s Brain Drain?
  • Fisk, Jonathan M. (2016). The biggest challenge to fracking is no longer technological – it’s community resistance.
  • Fitzgerald, Jim (2016). Moldova: The latest example of the power of the EU to promote equality law reform.
  • Fitzgerald, Joan (2016). Subsidizing solar power manufacturers is no guarantee of success.
  • Fitzgerald, Joan (2016). US city planners can learn lessons from the successes of Malmö‘s eco-districts.
  • Fitzpatrick, Danny, Richards, Dave (2016). ‘Back to the Future?’ Brexit, elitism, and the British Political Tradition.
  • Flassbeck, Heiner, Denayer, Will (2016). Euro zone crisis and climate change: Addressing two targets with one instrument.
  • Fletcher, Guy (2016). Knowing what's good for you.
  • Fleurbaey, Marc, Schwandt, Hannes (2016). How some people can maximize their happiness even though they are not actively pursuing it.
  • Flikschuh, Katrin, Romero, Paola (2016). ‘Thinking Across Borders’ course fosters exchange between African and Western political thought.
  • Foellmi, Reto, Legge, Stefan, Schmid, Lukas (2016). In sports, as in business, limited attention affects risk-taking behaviour.
  • Fogarty, Brian J. (2016). Local newspapers allow elites to drive coverage of voter fraud when little actually occurs.
  • Forestier, Marie (2016). Documenting a crime “worse than death”.
  • Forrester, Dean (2016). Crowdsourced journalism: a new democratic platform?
  • Fortier, Anne-Marie (2016). Why applying for citizenship is an anxiety filled process – and not just for applicants.
  • Fossen, Thomas, Van Der Brink, Bert (2016). When using voter advice applications, citizens should be aware that they reflect the political assumptions of their developers.
  • Fossi, Julia (2016). The need for parity of protection.
  • Foster, Helen (2016). The homelessness reduction bill is a piece of token legislation.
  • Foster, Russell G. (2016). ‘I want my country back’: the resurgence of English nationalism.
  • Fotaki, Marianna (2016). Management teaching promotes inequality.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). African politics, African peace: report submitted to the African Union by the World Peace Foundation.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). Book: making sense of the Central African Republic.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). Getting the balance right? Sexual violence response in the DRC: a comparison between 2011 and 2014.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). JSRP policy briefs.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). A tribute to Svetlana Djurdjevic-Lukic.
  • Foulds, Wendy (2016). The unmaking of public authority: a new article by Rebecca Tapscott.
  • Fox, Nick (2016). Practical Sociology: Sociology graduates are ideally placed to solve our practical problems.
  • Fox, Stuart, Pearce, Sioned (2016). Survey evidence: the EU referendum had a clear positive impact on young people’s political engagement.
  • Frandsen, Brigham, Rebitzer, James B. (2016). Accountable Care Organizations are too small and loosely affiliated for financial bonuses to be effective at improving performance.
  • Frangieh, Ghida (2016). Relations Between UNHCR and Arab Governments: Memoranda of understanding in Lebanon and Jordan.
  • Franklin, Simon, Caria, Stefano (2016). Curse of anonymity or tyranny of distance? The impacts of job-search support in urban Ethiopia.
  • Franz, Michael, Franklin Fowler, Erika, Ridout, Travis (2016). Fears that outside groups are hijacking election campaignagendas are unfounded.
  • Frazer, Garth (2016). The boring infrastructure that Rwanda needs.
  • Frazier, Erica (2016). Book review: the ways of the world by David Harvey.
  • Frech, Elena (2016). Jostling for position: what determines where candidates are placed on electoral lists during European elections?
  • Freedman, Des (2016). Public service broadcasting: when the status quo won’t do.
  • Freeman, Henry (2016). A view on Brexit from abroad.
  • Freer, Courtney (2016). Book Review – Alison Pargeter’s ‘Return to the Shadows’.
  • Freer, Courtney (2016). Is the UAE’s fear of the Muslim Brotherhood driving its Yemen strategy?
  • Freeze, Melanie, Montgomery, Jacob M. (2016). Why we should be more optimistic about the competency of American voters.
  • Friesen, Amanda (2016). Trump’s supporters share his idea of the American dream. And it’s all about Vegas, baby.
  • Frijters, Paul (2016). More public holidays would boost national wellbeing.
  • Fruntașu, Iulian (2016). Iulian Fruntașu: “Brexit would be like leaving the bridge of a ship for the lower decks”.
  • Fuchs, Christian (2016). Capitalism Today: The Austrian presidential election and the state of the right and the left in Europe.
  • Fumarola, Andrea (2016). Fidesz and electoral reform: how to safeguard Hungarian democracy.
  • Fumarola, Andrea, Marinov, Nikolay (2016). Bulgaria’s new voting reforms risk undermining the country’s electoral process.
  • Funk, Alexandra (2016). Drones in contemporary warfare: the implications for human rights.
  • Fägersten, Björn (2016). Sweden and the UK’s deal: For Swedes, the real drama is yet to come.
  • Férdeline, Ayden (2016). ICANN’s WHOIS System Must Follow Local Laws and Best Practices in Data Protection.
  • Fóti, Klára (2016). EU migrants and benefits: how does the UK compare to other member states?
  • Gabriel, Rachel (2016). Book review: the morning they came for us: dispatches from Syria by Janine di Giovanni.
  • Gad, Ulrik Pram (2016). Could a ‘reverse Greenland’ arrangement keep Scotland and Northern Ireland in the EU?
  • Gadd, Elizabeth, Troll Covey, Denise (2016). What it means to be Green: exploring publishers’ changing approaches to Green open access.
  • Gaffney, John (2016). Facing our Waterloo? The referendum was unnecessary, and its consequences ironic.
  • Gaffney, John (2016). François Fillon’s nomination was the worst case scenario for Marine Le Pen.
  • Gaffney, John (2016). Labour’s century-old problem: leadership performance.
  • Gahner Larsen, Erik, Levinsen, Klaus, Kjær, Ulrik (2016). Votes at 16: do mock elections make a difference to adults’ attitudes?
  • Gaisford, Tom (2016). On Brexit & Control.
  • Galambos, Nancy, Krahn, Harvey (2016). For people in their 20s, exploring education options can benefit their later careers, while job instability can be harmful.
  • Gall, Gregor (2016). The obstacles facing sex worker unionisation suggest occupational, rather than workplace unionism, could be a way forward.
  • Gallagher, Christine (2016). Why the next president should consider making offshore balancing their foreign policy default.
  • Gallagher, Jim (2016). Negotiations about the fiscal framework for the Scotland Bill are becoming high political drama.
  • Gallagher, Jim (2016). Scottish devolution will now have a bigger fiscal dimension.
  • Gallagher, Jim (2016). The UK can’t secure Brexit by March 2019 – it will need an EEA-style deal.
  • Gallagher, Jim (2016). What factors will motivate voters in the Scottish Parliamentary Elections?
  • Galpin, Charlotte (2016). Boris Johnson is damaging Germany’s goodwill towards the UK.
  • Galpin, Charlotte (2016). Project Fear: how the negativity of the referendum campaign undermines democracy.
  • Galster, George (2016). How good assisted housing policy can be good education policy.
  • Galsworthy, Michael J., Davidson, Rob (2016). Brexit is damaging UK science already. Here is a plan to fix it.
  • Gamanayake, Piumi (2016). The IMF funding pledge offers significant support to Sri Lanka’s economic reform agenda.
  • Gamanayake, Piumi (2016). The economic and technological cooperation agreement: full steam ahead for India and Sri Lanka?
  • Gamsu, Sol (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 6.
  • Gandhi, Amit, Iorio, Daniela, Urban, Carly (2016). Why a viable third party might lead to less negative political advertising in campaigns.
  • Gandolfo, Andreas (2016). Hinkley Point C nuclear station: an expensive solution to a cheap problem.
  • Gandrud, Christopher (2016). The return of the British Disease? The post-Brexit credible commitment conundrum.
  • Gandy, Ocar H. (2016). Big data analytics: Q&A with Professor Oscar H. Gandy, Jr.
  • Gangadharan, Seeta Peña (2016). Algorithmic Power and Accountability in Black Box Platforms.
  • Gangadharan, Seeta Peña (2016). Digital Exclusion and the Robot Revolution.
  • Gangadharan, Seeta Peña (2016). With Algorithmic Accountability, Different Remedies Bear Different Costs for Consumers.
  • Gani, Jasmine (2016). Obama’s inaction in Syria is nothing new – the US has been selective in its Middle Eastern interventions for a century.
  • Garand, James C., Xu, Ping, Davis, Belinda C. (2016). Positive views of immigration are linked to more favorable views about welfare among Americans.
  • Garapich, Michał P. (2016). Brexit will lead to more, not less immigration.
  • Gard-Murray, Alexander (2016). Labour must back freedom of movement – because the public want to stay in the single market.
  • Gardner, Joe, Woolley, John T. (2016). In Fed meetings, decision making is free – but not equal.
  • Garland, Ruth (2016). Book review: Biopolitical media: catastrophe, immunity and bare life by Allen Meek.
  • Garland, Ruth (2016). Book review: the communicative construction of Europe: cultures of political discourse, public sphere and the Euro crisis by Andreas Hepp et al.
  • Garland, Ruth (2016). From the tartan other to Cecil the lion: 2015 dissertation series.
  • Garrett, Paul Michael (2016). Words matter: deconstructing ‘welfare dependency’ in the UK.
  • Garrett, R. Kelly (2016). Facebook may be biased against conservative stories. But conservatives may also be biased against Facebook.
  • Garrity Sekerci, Kristin (2016). Pope Francis visits Poland at a tense time for relations between Europe’s Christians and Muslims.
  • Gashi, Ardiana, Adnett, Nick (2016). Kosovo’s biggest challenge: encouraging Kosovan migrants to move back to their home country.
  • Gaskell, Adi (2016). Open innovation is growing, but universities may be missing out on the action.
  • Gaskins, Ben, Clifford, Scott (2016). America is becoming more secular, but citizens still see political candidates’ religion as a mark of trustworthiness.
  • Gateva, Eli (2016). On different tracks: Bulgaria and Romania under the Cooperation and Verification Mechanism.
  • Gateva, Eli, Ozyurek, Esra, Mujanović, Jasmin, Prelec, Tena, Gashi, Krenar, Marković, Petar, Hoxhaj, Andi (2016). Experts react: EU Enlargement and EU progress reports 2016.
  • Gathercole-Lam, Nuala (2016). What role did the media play in the EU referendum?
  • Gau, Jacinta M. (2016). Selection procedures which favor whites mean that racial minorities are significantly underrepresented on juries.
  • Gavenda, Mario, Umit, Resul (2016). Austria’s presidential race is heading for a third round – here are the lessons from the first two.
  • Gazzola, Michele (2016). A ‘one-language’ EU policy would foster elitism and hit disproportionately the least advantaged.
  • Gazzola, Michele (2016). A ‘one-language’ EU policy would foster elitism and hit the least advantaged.
  • Gearty, Conor (2016). ‘Brexit’ and the MPA: reflections and opportunities.
  • Gearty, Conor (2016). Guerrilla lectures: innovative teaching at the LSE.
  • Gearty, Conor (2016). Potential removal of EU nationals from the UK is not incompatible with the Human Rights Act.
  • Gearty, Conor (2016). An overview of the IPA: why MPA students choose us.
  • Genovese, Federica, Schneider, Gerald, Wassmann, Pia (2016). In Draghi we trust: how unorthodox monetary policy weakened the anti-austerity movement in Europe.
  • Genovese, Taylor R. (2016). Book review: Kropotkin and the anarchist intellectual tradition by Jim Mac Laughlin.
  • Georgalakis, James (2016). Activism or research communication? research organisations could be muzzled by UK charity anti-advocacy clause.
  • Georgiou, Myria (2016). A view from Europe’s borderland: As Europe vows stricter border controls, what’s at stake at the border?
  • Gerber, Eddie, Macchiarelli, Corrado (2016). Quantitative easing: to deal with the root of the problem, the ECB should tackle non-performing loans.
  • Gerlitz, Carolin, Tkacz, Nathaniel (2016). The Challenges of Researching Algorithms.
  • Gerner-Beuerle, Carsten, Kirchmaier, Thomas (2016). Shareholders’ votes on CEO pay focus mostly on top-line figures.
  • Gerver, Mollie (2016). The EU’s Operation Sophia has failed to make conditions safer for refugees.
  • Gerver, Mollie (2016). The Ethics of refugee repatriation.
  • Gessler, Theresa (2016). Book review: what is populism? by Jan-Werner Müller.
  • Ghatak, Maitreesh (2016). No hope left? Interpreting the West Bengal election results.
  • Ghatak, Maitreesh (2016). Understanding why Hillary Clinton lost the election.
  • Gherman, Natalia, Prelec, Tena, Brown, Stuart A. (2016). Interview with Natalia Gherman, candidate for UN Secretary General: “Human rights transcend security, development, and humanitarian responses”.
  • Ghirmai, Eva, Logan, Sarah, Murray, Sally (2016). The incidence and impact of electronic billing machines for VAT in Rwanda.
  • Ghose, Katie (2016). ‘Citizens’ assemblies’ show that we can do politics differently in the UK.
  • Ghose, Katie (2016). Electoral Reform Society: other referendums can teach us a lot about the EU vote.
  • Ghose, Katie (2016). Learning the lessons: what other referendums can teach us about the EU vote.
  • Ghose, Katie (2016). ‘Super Thursday’ showed us that British politics has changed for good.
  • Ghose, Katie (2016). We need a root and branch review of referendums in the UK.
  • Giannoulopoulos, Dimitrios, Nice, Geoffrey, Chigara, Ben, Petley, Julian, de la Rasilla, Ignacio, Sarmiento-Mirwaldt, Katja (2016). The Article 50 ruling means Parliament must not merely rubber-stamp Brexit with a three-line bill.
  • Gibbons, Stephen, Heblich, Stephan, Lho, Esther, Timmins, Christopher (2016). Fear of fracking: house price reactions to fracking in Britain.
  • Gibson, Candy (2016). Academic opinion in 60 seconds? #LSEBrexitVote videos prove to be a powerful tool in a visual, time-poor world.
  • Gibson, Candy, Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Five minutes with Peter Trubowitz: “I wouldn’t hold my breath waiting for Trump 2.0”.
  • Gilbert, Paul (2016). Book review: the colonel who would not repent: the bangladesh war and its unquiet legacy by Salil Tripathi.
  • Gilchrist, Kate (2016). The ‘private’ life of US politics part one: affect, intimacy and Trump.
  • Gilchrist, Kate (2016). The ‘private’ life of US politics part two: affect, intimacy and public bathrooms.
  • Gillespie, Alex (2016). A new tool uses the observations of patients to assess the culture of hospitals.
  • Gillespie, Paul (2016). A British departure would have major consequences for Ireland, both North and South.
  • Gillespie, Paul (2016). A contested Brexit would be disruptive for Ireland, both North and South.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). Christie in trouble in New Jersey after endorsing Trump, Michigan’s broken government, and Idaho Senate backs online voter registration: US state blog roundup for 27 February – 4 March.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). Florida works to keep death penalty, Idaho’s minimum wagemeasure fails, and why are people sending mops to ChrisChristie?: US state blog roundup for 23 – 29 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). It’s now or never for Bernie Sanders, the US-Iran conflict that never happened, and is Trump Palin 2.0?: US national blog roundup for 16 – 22 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). Low ratings for Obama’s final State of the Union, Cruz and Trump finally fight it out, and have Millennials given up on the American Dream?: US national blog roundup for 9 – 15 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). New Jersey’s crazy political week, Delaware’s death penalty repeal bill, and is it time for Michigan Governor Rick Snyder to resign?: US state blog roundup for 15 – 22 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). New York’s Cuomo plans for “big things”, Florida’s death penalty system struck down, and minimum wage proposals in Oregon and Washington: US state blog roundup for 9 – 15 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). Obama pushes gun control as gun sales peak, Trumpism’s causes and characteristics and Cruz vs. Big Corn: US national blog roundup for 2 – 8 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). What to expect from state legislatures in 2016, the politics of Kentucky’s declining coal industry and a new healthcare proposal in Idaho: US state blog roundup for 2 – 8 January.
  • Gilson, Chris (2016). Why you didn’t get a raise in 2015, Clinton campaign pulls in $55m, and will Trump’s supporters show and vote? : US national blog roundup for 26 December – 1 January.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Christie’s ratings at their lowest, Iowa GOP defunds Planned Parenthood, and California’s ‘awesome’ ballot statements: US state blog roundup for 23 – 29 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Cruz and Clinton come out on top in Iowa, House conservativespush back on budget deal, and should Jeb! re-evaluate his run? US national blog roundup for 30 January – 5 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Cruz and Sanders win in Wisconsin, GOP convention scenarios, and is it time to rebalance US trade?: US national blog roundup for 2 – 8 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Dark money influencing Arkansas’ Supreme Court race, NorthDakota’s competing marijuana ballot measures, and NewMexico’s profitable prisons: US state blog roundup for 6 – 12February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Florida’s Senate race, Michigan’s school bailout, and Arizona’s pro-gun bills: US state blog roundup for 7 – 13 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Frontrunners win in New York, Harriet Tubman to go on the $20, and could Facebook tilt the election? US national blog roundup for 16 – 22 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Gary Johnson rising for the Libertarian Party, Trump backs out of Sanders debate, and the passive-aggressive Supreme Court: US national blog roundup for 21 – 27 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Hillary Clinton brings in Bill on the economy, Obama’s new overtime regs, and America’s obsession with oil: US national blog roundup for 14 – 20 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). New York and California raise the minimum wage, Georgia’s religious freedom bill vetoed, and Minnesota GOP’s plans to cut women’s health care: US state blog roundup for 26 March – 1 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). New York’s Cuomo won’t return Trump’s donations, Alabama gets out of the marriage business, and Montana’s mental health crisis: US state blog roundup for 12 – 18 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). North Carolina’s budget problems, Michigan’s corporate tax crater, and crony capitalism in Alaska: US state blog roundup for 14 – 20 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Obama’s historic Cuba visit, Obamacare turns six, and will Trump put the House in play for the Democrats?: US national blog roundup for 19 – 25 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Pennsylvania also has a lead crisis, South Dakota’s ‘bigoted’legislature, and do Alaskans secretly love socialism? US state blog roundup for 30 January – 5 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Rhode Island’s common sense gun laws, Arkansas expands drug tests for welfare recipients, and how California was broken to pieces: US state blog roundup for 19 – 25 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Romney takes on Trump after Super Tuesday, Sanders’ supporters go after Warren, and job growth continues: US national blog roundup for 27 February – 4 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Rubio’s robotic debate performance, John Kasich’s good week,and are Trump and Sanders’ New Hampshire wins a rebuke tothe political status quo? US national blog roundup for 6 – 12 February.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Sestak’s feud with Democrats in Pennsylvania, Florida Governor Scott’s video attack on angry constituent, and Indiana sued by ACLU over abortion law: US state blog roundup for 2 – 8 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Texas’ real bathroom crisis, Iowa’s poor bridges, and Oregon’s “baffling” GOP Senate primary: US state blog roundup for 20 – 27 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Trump and Clinton railroad through the ‘Acela Primary’, Cruz/Kasich alliance falters, and the GOP’s bathroom obsession: US national blog roundup for 23 – 29 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Trump fails in Colorado, the broken budget process, and the case for a new Works Progress Administration: US national blog roundup for 9 – 15 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Trump vs Ryan, Clinton’s Veep choices, and how Chinese imports are tearing US politics apart: US national blog roundup for 7 – 13 May.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Trump’s debate boycott, the Democrats’ Iowa dead heat, and threeeasy ways to dismantle Obamacare: US national blog roundup for 23 – 29 January.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Trump’s not Nixon (or Reagan), Kasich’s pyrrhic Ohio victory, and Obamacare’s $1 trillion Medicare savings: US national blog roundup for 12 – 18 March.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Trump’s worst week, the Justice Department brings back asset forfeiture, and should the US be the world’s ‘rent-a-cop’?: US national blog roundup for 26 March – 1 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher (2016). Virginia’s death penalty debate, Illinois’ progressive tax plan, and line-item vetoes abound: US state blog roundup for 9 – 15 April.
  • Gilson, Christopher, Donszelmann, Sophie, Baron, Denise (2016). The Ballpark podcast Episode 2: This is not a hot take.
  • Gilson, Christopher, Donszelmann, Sophie, Baron, Denise (2016). Introducing The Ballpark podcast and Episode 1: The Strongest Economy for Who?
  • Giorgi, Simona (2016). How investments analysts frame information matters to their careers.
  • Gippner, Olivia (2016). From climate change to mediation: should the EU be a strategic actor in Asia-Pacific?
  • Giragosian, Richard (2016). The Nagorno-Karabakh conflict: ceasing fire is not a ceasefire.
  • Girard, Mireille (2016). Syrian refugees in Lebanon: A turning point?
  • Gius, Mark (2016). President Obama’s latest executive actions on gun control are too little, too late.
  • Gjersø, Jonas Fossli (2016). Britain and the scramble for East Africa.
  • Gkliati, Mariana (2016). The potential of big data and new technologies in human rights research.
  • Gkoutzioulis, Athanasios (2016). The rise of populism could persist as western society and its academic Institutions fail to promote critical thought.
  • Glass, Christy, Cook, Alison (2016). Women are more likely than men to be appointed CEO of firms in crisis.
  • Gleeson, Simon (2016). EMU: how it works (and which parts don’t apply to us).
  • Gleibs, Ilka H. (2016). Collecting data using crowdsourcing marketplaces raises ethical questions for academic researchers.
  • Gleibs, Ilka H. (2016). Good leaders adapt their leadership style to the organisation’s social context.
  • Glendinning, Simon (2016). In the shadow of the EU referendum: "this is the worst".
  • Glendinning, Simon, Dunin-Wąsowicz, Roch (2016). Ever closer to different destinations: how the renegotiation changed the EU’s aims.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). Balancing risks and opportunities: what do we know from recent findings?
  • Global Kids Online (2016). Children worldwide gain benefits, face risks online.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). Children’s access to the internet: presenting recent findings.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). EU Kids Online.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). From research on children’s rights to national and international policy.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). Global Kids Online at World Summit on the Information Society.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). Global expert meeting on cyber-bullying.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). Latin America Kids Online.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). New research toolkit on children’s internet use.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). One in three: internet governance and children’s rights.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). Our conference on children’s rights in the digital age.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). Second Global Kids Online network meeting held in London.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). The latest findings from Kids Online Brazil on children and the internet.
  • Global Kids Online (2016). A meeting of Global Kids Online ahead of launch of global toolkit.
  • Glover, Danni (2016). Book review: Bisexuality: identities, politics and theories by Surya Monro.
  • Glover, Danni (2016). Book review: culture by Terry Eagleton.
  • Goes, Eunice (2016). It takes two: Corbyn’s re-election is not enough – more must be done to unite Labour.
  • Goes, Eunice (2016). The Labour Party is more than the shadow cabinet, and Corbyn must learn to engage with it.
  • Goes, Eunice (2016). The Leave campaign was toxic – but 43 years of embarrassed pro-Europeanism paved the way for Brexit.
  • Goes, Eunice (2016). A job-creating powerhouse? The way we measure unemployment can lead to misleading conclusions.
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2016). As the Baloch issue continues to be handled militarily rather than politically a peaceful resolution is unlikely.
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2016). As the Taliban increase the tempo of violence in Afghanistan they face new competition from the rising Wilayat Khorasan.
  • Gohel, Sajjan (2016). The nexus of local and international extremist networks in Bangladesh.
  • Gomez, Raul, Tonge, Jonathan (2016). How new party members are modernising the DUP.
  • Goncalo, Jack A., Chatman, Jennifer A., Duguid, Michelle M., Kennedy, Jessica A. (2016). Politically correct norms encourage creativity among mixed-sex work groups.
  • Gontmakher, Evgeny (2016). With a struggling economy and elections looming, why do so many Russians still back their government?
  • Gonzalez, Angelica, Sila, Vathunyoo, Hagendorff, Jens (2016). Boards with many female directors take as many risks as more male-dominated ones.
  • Good, Darren J., Lyddy, Christopher J., Glomb, Theresa M., Bono, Joyce E. (2016). Mindfulness has big impacts for performance, decision-making and career longevity.
  • Good, Laura, Cooper, Rae (2016). When it’s not your job to be friendly with clients.
  • Goode, Jackie (2016). Navigating household debt: the complicated human relationships behind the statistics.
  • Goodhart, Charles (2016). How demography influences monetary policy.
  • Goodin, Brett (2016). Coal today may be like the doomed ‘natural ice’ industry of the 19th century.
  • Goodman, Emma (2016). Press regulation post Leveson – where are we now?
  • Goodman, Helen (2016). Equality and the Left: A politician’s response to “Social Class in the 21st Century”.
  • Goodrich, Steve (2016). The government must stop the UK being used as a haven for illicit wealth if it wants to lead on tackling global corruption.
  • Goodwin, Mark, Bates, Stephen, McKay, Steve (2016). Elected chairs do not seem to have brought a new kind of parliamentarian to select committees.
  • Goodwin, Matthew (2016). Could Remain enjoy a late surge in support? The indications suggest not.
  • Goodwin, Matthew (2016). If Boris Johnson wants to win, he needs to talk less about sovereignty and more about the economy.
  • Goodwin, Matthew (2016). Matthew Goodwin examines five ways the Outers could win.
  • Goodwin, Matthew (2016). Matthew Goodwin’s round-up: Leave’s lead, the Boris effect and persuading the Undecideds.
  • Goodwin, Matthew (2016). Polls apart: why we need to treat all EU referendum polling with caution.
  • Goodwin, Matthew (2016). Still neck-and-neck – but both Leave and Remain have reasons to be cheerful.
  • Goodwin, Matthew, Heath, Oliver (2016). Brexit and the left behind: a tale of two countries.
  • Goodwin, Matthew, Heath, Oliver (2016). A tale of two countries: Brexit and the ‘left behind’ thesis.
  • Gordor, Samuel (2016). #GhanaDecides 2016 will be a Landmark Election for the West African Country.
  • Gormley, Lisa (2016). Rape myths and the rights of victims: why the UK needs to ratify the Istanbul Convention.
  • Gormley, Lisa (2016). States worldwide must address the sexism, harassment and violence being experienced by women parliamentarians.
  • Gostyńska-Jakubowska, Agata (2016). Why the Commission is treating Poland more harshly than Hungary in its rule of law review.
  • Gostyńska-Jakubowska, Agata, Korteweg, Rem (2016). The US won’t help Britain in its negotiations with the EU.
  • Gostyńska-Jakubowska, Agata, Lazowski, Adam (2016). The Brexiteers’ exit plan: legally dubious, unfeasible and likely to antagonise our neighbours.
  • Gough, Cat (2016). A conversation on race (part 3): ‘race, UK policy and the Chagos Islander’s case post-2000’.
  • Gourinchas, Pierre-Olivier, Philippon, Thomas, Vayanos, Dimitri (2016). The Greek crisis: an autopsy.
  • Gouseti, Ioanna (2016). Gender equality: #NotThereYet.
  • Government Blog (2016). Welcome to our new LSE Government students!
  • Gowda, Rajeev, Campion, Sonali (2016). “India is essentially in denial about the costs of democracy” – Rajeev Gowda.
  • Gowers, William Timothy (2016). Five minutes with Timothy Gowers: “academics can publish journals of the highest quality without a commercial entity”.
  • Graef, Inge, Van Alesenoy, Brendan (2016). Data protection through the lens of competition law: will Germany lead the way?
  • Graefe, Andreas (2016). Combining forecasts predicts a Democratic win in this year’s election.
  • Graefe, Andreas (2016). Political scientists predict Clinton will win 347 electoral votes in November.
  • Graham, Jack (2016). Why there’s more to the US Election than Trump and Clinton.
  • Grahl, John (2016). How we treat those who are excluded from the world of work.
  • Granbo, Kristin (2016). Children’s news: can it survive the digital era?
  • Grant, Wyn (2016). Book review: Political science in motion edited by RamonaComan and Jean-Frédéric Morin.
  • Gray, Jonathan (2016). It is time for institutions to ensure data infrastructures are more responsive to their publics.
  • Gray, Julia (2016). Despite their anti-trade rhetoric, Trump or Clinton would do little to threaten trans-Atlantic trade policy.
  • Grech, Phillip (2016). Why the EU still requires a fairer formula for distributing refugees.
  • Green, Duncan (2016). Academics and NGOs can work together in partnership but must do so earlier and with genuine knowledge exchange.
  • Green, Duncan (2016). Conference rage: how did something as truly awful as paneldiscussions become the default format?
  • Green, Duncan (2016). Duncan Green: Book Review – Alex de Waal, “The Real Politics of the Horn of Africa”.
  • Green, Duncan (2016). How academics and NGOs can work together to influence policy: insights from the InterAction report.
  • Green, Duncan, Kamal-Yanni, Mohga (2016). Deworming delusions in the search for scientific certainty.
  • Green, Elliott D. (2016). Commemorating Botswana’s 50 years since Independence #Botswanaat50.
  • Green, Elliott D. (2016). Dr Elliott Green examines Imagined Communities and nationalism in the colonial and post-colonial world.
  • Green, Elliott D. (2016). They did things differently there: how Brexiteers appealed to voters’ nostalgia.
  • Green, Elliott D. (2016). What are the most-cited publications in the social sciences (according to Google Scholar)?
  • Green, Heather (2016). Lawful residence rather than the possession of a particular passport should generate the right to vote.
  • Green, Lelia (2016). Do you ever grow out of digital parenting?
  • Greenbaum, Robert T., Brown, Lathania (2016). Economic diversity is a drag when times are good but a lift when times are bad.
  • Greene, Zac, O’Brien, Diana (2016). New women MPs shift their party leftwards – but female leaders don’t.
  • Greenstone, Michael, Burgess, Robin, Ryan, Nicholas, Sudarshan, Anant (2016). Let them buy light in rural Bihar.
  • Greer, Scott L (2016). The future of Obamacare.
  • Gregory, Jo (2016). More harm than good.
  • Greve, Henrich R., Man Zhang, Cyndi (2016). Chinese managers used to state control have a hard time acting as capitalists.
  • Greve, Henrich R., Zhang, Cyndi Man (2016). How Chinese firms reacted when told to change their share ownership structures.
  • Griffith-Dickson, Gwen (2016). #LSEreligion lecture: “The state should not hold citizens’ values to account” – Gwen Griffith-Dickson.
  • Griffiths, Mark (2016). The content and context of screen use is more important that the amount of screen time.
  • Groen-Xu, Moqi (2016). CEOs strategically time news releases for their own benefit.
  • Grohsjean, Thorsten (2016). When players change teams, they fight harder against their former employer.
  • Gromada, Anna, Budacz, Dorka, Kawalerowicz, Juta, Walewska, Anna (2016). Gender gap extremes: relational differences, rather than aspirational ones could be major factor in ‘leaky pipeline’.
  • Gromyko, Alexey (2016). Following Litvinenko, UK-Russia relations are now at their lowest point since the 1980s.
  • Grossman, Wendy (2016). Are the trolls winning?
  • Grossman, Wendy (2016). Book review: kids in the middle.
  • Grossman, Wendy (2016). Book review: reclaiming conversation – the power of talk in a digital age.
  • Grossman, Wendy (2016). How Brexit could affect media content for children and families.
  • Grossman, Wendy (2016). ​Mining data and the database state.
  • Groves, Antony (2016). Pop-up library makerspace: academic libraries provide flexible, supportive space to explore emerging technologies.
  • Groves, Trish (2016). 85% of health research is wasted: how to do great research, get it published, and improve health outcomes.
  • Grubb, Michael D. (2016). Firms write contracts to exploit consumer overconfidence.
  • Gruber, Lloyd (2016). How political scientists got Trump exactly wrong.
  • Gruber, Lloyd (2016). Studying for an MPA: the two year advantage.
  • Grunner, David (2016). Book review: the existentialist moment: the rise of Sartre as a public intellectual by Patrick Baert.
  • Grussendorf, Sonja, Kotecha, Meena (2016). Meena Kotecha: don’t forget your smiles!
  • Grönlund, Kimmo, Wass, Hanna (2016). The empathy gap: understanding why some people don’t vote.
  • Guerra, Simona (2016). The Polish Catholic Church has become intertwined with Euroscepticism and the promotion of conservative “national values”.
  • Guerrina, Roberta (2016). Gender and Brexit: moving beyond the EU’s focus on women’s employment rights.
  • Guerrina, Roberta (2016). What did ITV’s EU referendum debate say about the role of women in the campaign?
  • Guerrina, Roberta, Haastrup, Toni, Wright, Katharine (2016). Is it really that difficult to find women to talk about the EU Referendum?
  • Guibernau, Montserrat (2016). Understanding Euroscepticism: how British hostility to the EU contrasts with opposition elsewhere in Europe.
  • Guicheney, William (2016). Addressing questions of violence and security in Mexico.
  • Guicheney, William, Kyarisiima, Hope, Tomar, Louisa, Zimani, Tinashe (2016). Student experience: Big Data and the IDB.
  • Guidi, Mattia (2016). Why Italians should support Renzi’s constitutional reform.
  • Gulati, Saanya (2016). Modiplomacy and the dynamics of diaspora engagement: the mass-marketing of Brand India.
  • Gulati, Saanya (2016). Political rebranding in the Global South: of technology tales and the Modi factor.
  • Gulati, Saanya (2016). Why the JNU ordeal is about more than just intolerance.
  • Gumbus, Andra, Meglich, Patricia A (2016). The workplace bully is not always a lone wolf.
  • Guo, Hong, Bandyopadhyay, Subhajyoti (2016). Internet providers have an economic incentive to offer some content at faster speeds.
  • Gupta, Pranav (2016). The 2016 Assam Assembly elections: political manoeuvres behind the spotlight.
  • Gupta, Pratik, Shaparia, Alisha (2016). “Digital will cut through every aspect of a business and therefore companies need to adapt” – Pratik Gupta.
  • Gurini, Ferhat (2016). What the Bashiqa Dispute and Operation Euphrates Shield tell us about Turkey’s changing foreign policy.
  • Gurung, Tribeni (2016). Book review: precarious lives: forced labour, exploitation and asylum by Hannah Lewis, Peter Dwyer, Stuart Hodkinson and Louise Waite.
  • Gutbrod, Hans (2016). Find Policy: Quick access to research from leading Think Tanks set up by IRD alumn.
  • Guyan, Kevin (2016). UCL student engager project provides platform for PhD students to develop skills in public engagement.
  • Górecki, Maciej A. (2016). Studies of turnout as a ‘habit’ seem to overestimate the significance of self-perpetuation of electoral participation.
  • Göpffarth, Julian (2016). The eternal chancellor? Merkel’s biggest obstacle to reelection will be uniting her own party.
  • Gőbl, Gabi, Lassen, Christian Kvorning, Lovec, Marco, Nič, Milan, Schmidt, Paul (2016). Why Central Europe needs a unified strategy for tackling the migration crisis.
  • Haan, Wouter Den, Ilzetzki, Ethan, Ellison, Martin, McMahon, Michael (2016). Are academic economists out of touch with voters and politicians?
  • Haas, Astrid (2016). Proceed with caution: South Sudan and the East African Monetary Union.
  • Haas, Astrid, Wolf, Sebastian, Jellema, Jon, Lustig, Nora (2016). Impact of fiscal policy on inequality and poverty in Uganda.
  • Haas, Marita, Koeszegi, Sabine Theresia, Zedlacher, Eva (2016). Women scientists differ in how they see the role of gender in their careers.
  • Haastrup, Toni (2016). Reflections on the Africa-Europe Valletta Summit on migration and mobility.
  • Haastrup, Toni, Wright, Katharine, Guerrina, Roberta (2016). Women in the Brexit debate: still largely confined to ‘low’ politics.
  • Habel, Johannes, Schons, Laura Marie, Alavi, Sascha, Wieseke, Jan (2016). Customers often believe that suppliers who engage in CSR charge unfair prices.
  • Hackett, Ursula (2016). The appointment of Betsy DeVos as US Education Secretary is a green light for market forces in education.
  • Hackett, Ursula (2016). The submerged politics of Obamacare may make it harder to repeal than Trump and the GOP realize.
  • Haduong, Paulina (2016). Learning resilience online through Minecraft.
  • Hafermalz, Ella (2016). Book review: sweat equity: inside the new economy of mind and body by Jason Kelly.
  • Hafermalz, Ella (2016). Working from home: idea that workers who aren’t visible are slacking off is outdated.
  • Hagell, Ann, Coleman, John (2016). Parenting a moving target: understanding how young people’s lives are changing.
  • Hagemann, Sara (2016). Giving MPs more power over the UK’s EU representatives would do far more for parliamentary sovereignty than a ‘red card’.
  • Hagemann, Sara (2016). Parliament’s role in the Brexit negotiations: Article 50 and beyond.
  • Hagemann, Sara, Hanretty, Chris, Hix, Simon (2016). Red card, red herring: introducing Cameron’s EU ‘red card procedure’ will have limited impact.
  • Hagemann, Sara, Hobolt, Sara, Wratil, Christopher (2016). Appeasing Eurosceptics? What’s really going on when Britain votes No in the Council of the EU.
  • Hagemann, Sara, Hobolt, Sara, Wratil, Christopher (2016). Does the UK lose out in the Council? How opposition to EU proposals acts as a signal to domestic audiences.
  • Hagen, Jamie (2016). Did sexual orientation and gender identity play a role in the rejection of the Colombian peace deal?
  • Hager, Sandy (2016). To explain the continued dominance of the dollar in global finance, look to the infamous 1%.
  • Haggard, Dana, Mitchell, Marie, Tepper, Ben (2016). People feel much better when they get right back at an abusive boss.
  • Haigh, Georgia (2016). ‘We simply don’t have time’– LSE Sociology undergraduate trip to the British Museum.
  • Haines, Daniel (2016). The Indus Waters Treaty has always been controversial, but Modi is wise to resist calls to abrogate it.
  • Hale, Thomas, Koenig-Archibugi, Mathias (2016). Do Britons and other Europeans disagree on policy issues? The answer might surprise you.
  • Hamilton, Zoe, Munger, Anne (2016). Rhetoric vs reality: contraception in India and the DMPA debate.
  • Hammer, Jeffrey (2016). Is ‘big data’ over-hyped? The importance of good data for improving health policy in Punjab.
  • Hammersley, Martyn (2016). Is there any justification for academic social science?
  • Hamzić, Vanja (2016). Book review: the politics of Islamic law: local elites, colonial authority and the making of the Muslim state by Iza R. Hussin.
  • Han, Kyung Joon (2016). How position shifts regarding sociocultural issues may (or may not) hurt political parties.
  • Han, Yao (2016). Book review: China’s next strategic advantag: from imitation to innovation by George S. Yip and Bruce McKern.
  • Hancké, Bob (2016). Brexit, red lines and the EU: the two-level game revisited.
  • Hancké, Bob (2016). Fear and loathing in Namur: CETA will likely be rescued, but disaffection with globalisation can no longer be ignored.
  • Hancké, Bob (2016). What the new French labour law tells us about France and the euro.
  • Hand, James (2016). Gender diversity in the first May government – the ‘posh boys’ have gone, but the boys remain.
  • Hangartner, Dominik (2016). Redesigning integration: access to government records is necessary for researchers to identify policy effects.
  • Hanley, Patrick (2016). Giving evidence in Parliament: a how-to guide for academics.
  • Hanley, Patrick (2016). Giving evidence in Parliament: how to make yourself known to select committees.
  • Hanley, Patrick (2016). Giving evidence in Parliament: summing it up with ten top tips for academics.
  • Hanley, Patrick (2016). Giving evidence in Parliament: training and support to engage with select committees.
  • Hanlon, Joseph (2016). Bangladeshis have become activists in the fight against climate change.
  • Hanlon, Joseph, Ahlback, Johan (2016). Mozambique returns to war, as opposition claims electoral ‘fraud’.
  • Hannan, Md. Abdul, Campion, Sonali (2016). “Research from British institutions can offer valuable insights on how Bangladesh can achieve sustainable development” – H.E. Md. Abdul Hannan.
  • Hannscott, Lauren (2016). Diversity has no effect on community satisfaction rates but income and education does.
  • Hansen, Bjarke Mørkøre Stigel (2016). Book review: intoxication by Jean-Luc Nancy.
  • Hansen, Randall (2016). A two-way street: how to make immigration work.
  • Harcourt, Alison (2016). Citizen journalism and news blogs: why media councils don’t care (yet).
  • Harcourt, Alison (2016). How Brexit might affect EU audio-visual media services policy-making.
  • Harcourt, Alison (2016). How will Brexit affect copyright legislation?
  • Hardoon, Deborah (2016). Book Review: The economics of poverty by Martin Ravallion.
  • Harle, Jonathan (2016). High prices to access scholarly research could drive developing country researchers to use pirate sites like SciHub.
  • Harmer, Chris (2016). Book review: ISIS: a history by Fawaz A. Gerges.
  • Harmer, Chris (2016). Book review: called to account: how corporate bad behaviour and government waste combine to cost ss millions by Margaret Hodge.
  • Harmer, Chris (2016). Book review: the butcher’s trail: how the search for Balkan war criminals became the world’s most successful manhunt by Julian Borger.
  • Harms, Phillip, Schwab, Jakob (2016). Survey evidence: the low-skilled oppose globalisation in rich countries, while the high-skilled oppose it in poor ones.
  • Harms, Phillip, Schwab, Jakob (2016). Who are the discontents of globalisation?
  • Harper, Jim (2016). Book review: molecular red: theory for the anthropocene by McKenzie Wark.
  • Harries, Rhiannon, Bourne, Emily (2016). Are you a Civil Servant? Discover your colleague’s opinion on the LSE Executive Master of Public Policy.
  • Harriger, Katy (2016). Trump’s threat to appoint a special prosecutor is something he can do but should not do.
  • Harris, Gaby (2016). Brexit: what now?
  • Harris, Peter (2016). George W. Bush’s national security legacy is the ultimate sacred cow — that’s why Donald Trump is going after it.
  • Harris, Peter (2016). Jeremy Corbyn cannot fulfil his constitutional role as leader of the opposition.
  • Harris, Peter (2016). The plight of the Chagos Islanders shows the dark side of the US-UK special relationship.
  • Harrison, Peter (2016). Donald Trump is illiberal but he is not un-American.
  • Hartley, Sarah, Pearce, Warren (2016). Responsible research and innovation in the UK university: the politics of research governance.
  • Haruna, Zainab (2016). Nigeria can learn from China’s rural reform policies.
  • Hasan, Arif, Campion, Mukti Jain (2016). “If you look at Karachi and who plans it, the decisions are made by those who do not understand the problems of the ordinary people” – Arif Hasan.
  • Hasan, Mubashar (2016). Religious freedom with an Islamic twist: how the Medina Charter is used to frame secularism in Bangladesh.
  • Hassell, Hans J.G., Kernell, Sam (2016). Why President Trump may threaten vetoes on spending bills to promote his policy agenda.
  • Hathaway, Terry (2016). Despite Trump’s divisive rhetoric, the progressive cause is not a hopeless one.
  • Hawkins, Devan (2016). Book review: Islam and the future of tolerance: a dialogue by Sam Harris and Maajid Nawaz.
  • Hayes, Bernadette C., Nagle, John (2016). LGBT rights in Northern Ireland: a war by other means.
  • Hayes, Jarrod (2016). British political identity and Iraq: how we think of ourselves shapes where and when we fight.
  • Hayes, Thomas (2016). Economic inequality: still on the presidential agenda, still much more to be done.
  • Haynes, Jeffrey (2016). The United Nations Alliance of Civilizations’ ability to improve relations between Christians and Muslims has been limited.
  • Haynes, Suyin (2016). What links Kim Kardashian to the Victorians?
  • Hazelton, Morgan L.W., Hinkle, Rachael K., Jeon, Jee Seon (2016). How one circuit court judge can stop a higher court from establishing a legal precedent.
  • Heap, Vicky (2016). Anti-social behaviour policy is still not putting victims first.
  • Hearson, Martin (2016). The OECD and the lost battle to impose sanctions on tax havens.
  • Heasman, Brett (2016). 3 ways the EU referendum transformed our psychology.
  • Heath, Oliver (2016). The myth of a classless Britain: the political marginalisation of the working class.
  • Heawood, Jonathan (2016). That Feeling When You Are Held Accountable – IMPRESS CEO.
  • Hebbelstrup Rye Rasmussen, Stig (2016). The overlooked and important role of intelligence in ideological voting.
  • Hedegaard Heiselberg, Maj (2016). Parenting from a distance: the case of Danish soldiers on deployment.
  • Heersink, Boris, Peterson, Brenton (2016). How a swing state running mate could help Trump or Clinton win the White House.
  • Heims, Eva M. (2016). Why critics are wrong about the outcomes of TTIP but right to protest against it.
  • Heine, Sophie (2016). Yanis Varoufakis’ new DiEM25 movement should be welcomed by progressive pro-Europeans.
  • Helberger, Natali, Trilling, Damian (2016). Facebook is a news editor: the real issues to be concerned about.
  • Helberger, Natali, Trilling, Damian (2016). Is it possible to regulate broadcasting for ‘Distinctiveness’?
  • Helberger, Natalia (2016). Facebook is a new breed of editor: a social editor.
  • Heldman, Jan-Kees (2016). The appropriate limits placed upon what people can expect from health care.
  • Heller, Lambert (2016). Five minutes with Lambert Heller: “do we need an open operating system of science?”.
  • Hellwig, Timothy, Marinova, Dani M. (2016). When evaluating a president’s economic performance, voters look across their entire record – not just the recent short term.
  • Helsper, Ellen (2016). Digital Inequality: Disadvantaged Young People Experience Higher Barriers to Digital Engagement.
  • Hemming Pedersen, Leif, Boye Bjerregaard, Magnus (2016). “We are the Green ones”: How news on climate change make ‘Us’ European.
  • Hemmings, John (2016). Foreign investment in critical areas like nuclear power need a formal vetting process.
  • Henkel, Imke (2016). Support for Brexit is no longer a minority viewpoint on the British left.
  • Henson, Martha (2016). Stop wasting money on digital projects if you aren’t prepared to promote them properly.
  • Henwood, Melanie (2016). Robbing Peter to pay Paul? The government, the benefits system, and pensioners.
  • Herb, Ulrich (2016). Five minutes with Ulrich Herb on Open Science: “Open Science must be adapted to disciplinary specificities”.
  • Herbert, Nick (2016). A leap into the dark: the real choice facing the UK over Brexit, according to Conservatives for Reform in Europe.
  • Herman, Bill (2016). The FBI’s demands to hack Tashfeen Malik’s iphone are a threatto everyone’s online security.
  • Hertner, Isabelle (2016). ‘Seven, or seven and a half out of 10″: Jeremy Corbyn’s conspicuous absence from the referendum campaign.
  • Heslop, Luke (2016). Book review: roads: an anthropology of infrastructure and expertise by Penny Harvey and Hannah Knox.
  • Hewson, Sofia Ropek (2016). Book review: sex, needs and queer culture: from liberation to the post-gay by David Alderson.
  • Hewson, Sofia Ropek (2016). Book review: the trouble with pleasure: deleuze and psychoanalysis by Aaron Schuster.
  • Heydarian Pashakhanlou, Arash (2016). Thanks to the referendum, the tyranny of the majority has prevailed.
  • Heyvaert, Veerle (2016). Death of a citizen: Britain’s referendum and EU nationals living in the UK.
  • Hibbeln, Martin, Jenkins, Jeffrey, Schneider, Christoph, Valacich, Joe, Weinmann, Markus (2016). Negative emotions influence how we move the computer mouse.
  • Hibberd, Ralph (2016). Accelerating access to new drugs in Japan.
  • Hibberd, Ralph (2016). Combating falsified medicines in Africa through digital artefacts.
  • Hibberd, Ralph (2016). Hub and spoke dispensing: privacy and sociotechnical rigidity.
  • Hibberd, Ralph (2016). Hub and spoke dispensing: safety and sociotechnical pliability.
  • Hibberd, Ralph (2016). Nature reviews research into cybercrime.
  • Hickel, Jason (2016). Book review: Poverty and the millennium development goals: acritical look forward edited by Alberto Cimadamore, GabrieleKoehler and Thomas Pogge.
  • Hickel, Jason (2016). Book review: the crises of microcredit edited by Isabelle Guérin, Marc Labie and Jean-Michel Servet.
  • Hilber, Christian A. L., Cheshire, Paul, Koster, Hans R. A. (2016). You cannot regulate empty houses away.
  • Hilber, Christian A. L., Vermeulen, Wouter (2016). Why are house prices in London so high?
  • Hildebrandt, Mirwille (2016). New Animisms (A Provocation).
  • Hilhorst, Dorothea (2016). Dorothea Hilhorst provides expert briefing to the UN on sexual violence response in the DRC.
  • Hill, Steven (2016). Book review: the research impact handbook by Mark Reed.
  • Hill, Steven (2016). Making space for the academic book of the future.
  • Hill, Steven, Morrow, Elizabeth, Ross, Fiona (2016). Delivering research impact that is aligned to social priorities requires public participation throughout the process.
  • Himaz, Rozana, Tily, Geoff (2016). Austerity in retrospect: a response to Geoff Tily.
  • Himber, Lee (2016). Why the market model for the care of people with learning disabilities is inviable.
  • Himmrich, Julia (2016). How should academics interact with policy makers? Lessons onbuilding a long-term advocacy strategy.
  • Hinchliffe, Kelsey, Lee, Frances (2016). More party competitive states have more polarized legislatures.
  • Hinkle, Rachael K. (2016). How states learn from the success or failure of other states’ laws in federal courts.
  • Hinkley, Sara (2016). Post-recession urban politics aren’t helping cities to become financially stable.
  • Hinterleitner, Markus, Sager, Fritz, Thomann, Eva (2016). The long and winding road to fiscal adjustment: how the IMF judges austerity programmes.
  • Hiropoulos, Alexandra (2016). Foreign nationals’ prospects of a year without victimisation in 2016 South Africa.
  • Hirsch, Alexander V. (2016). Why political disagreements over how the world works may be easier to solve than those over goals.
  • Hix, Simon (2016). Choose freedom: 28 countries, 500m people and one of the most successful liberalising projects in history.
  • Hix, Simon (2016). Is the EU really run by unelected bureaucrats?
  • Hix, Simon (2016). No more denial: let’s accept the inevitable and fight for the best Brexit we can.
  • Hix, Simon (2016). UK influence in Europe series: the policy successes (and failures) of British MEPs.
  • Hix, Simon, Benedetto, Giacomo (2016). UK influence series: do British MEPs win key positions of power in the European Parliament?
  • Hix, Simon, Whitaker, Richard (2016). Do MEPs want to keep ‘schlepping’ to Strasbourg? How travel time influences views on the location of the European Parliament.
  • Ho, Yin (2016). Book review: adjusted margin: xerography, art and activism in the late Twentieth Century by Kate Eichhorn.
  • Hobolt, Sara (2016). Getting the timing right: Cameron weighs up the pros and cons of a June 2016 referendum.
  • Hobolt, Sara (2016). Voters have punished the ‘elite’ – and this is not just a British phenomenon.
  • Hobolt, Sara (2016). Why did voters choose Brexit?
  • Hobolt, Sara, Hagemann, Sara (2016). EU referendum: do campaigns actually change voters’ minds?
  • Hobolt, Sara, Hagemann, Sara (2016). Turn out or else: do referendum campaigns actually change voters’ minds?
  • Hobolt, Sara, Hagemann, Sara (2016). A vote to leave the EU may have a detrimental impact on Parliament.
  • Hobolt, Sara, Leeper, Thomas J., Tilley, James (2016). Voters might be fed up with politicians, but they will listen to people ‘like them’.
  • Hockley, Tony (2016). Clear red lines, flexibility and the public’s support: we’re on our way to a rational Brexit.
  • Hockley, Tony (2016). Social identity not social cash – why areas that received money from the EU voted against it.
  • Hockley, Tony (2016). The junior doctor contract: the BMA must pick up the pieces and move forward.
  • Hockley, Tony (2016). A second referendum will not fix the social division behind the Brexit vote – and it could make it worse.
  • Hoerner, Julian (2016). The rise of the AfD after Cologne poses a serious challenge for Merkel’s policy on refugees.
  • Hoffman, Lindsay (2016). Awkward and theatrical as they were, for the public the conventions will soon be a distant memory.
  • Hoffmann, Kasper, Vlassenroot, Koen, Büscher, Karen (2016). JSRP paper: multi-layered security governance as a quick fix? The challenges of donor-supported bottom-up security provision in Ituri (DR Congo).
  • Hogwood, Patricia (2016). Book review: food, families and work by Rebecca O’Connell and Julia Brannen.
  • Hogwood, Patricia (2016). Book review: the global chancellor: Helmut Schmidt and thereshaping of the international order by Kristina Spohr.
  • Hogwood, Patricia (2016). Book review: the sociology of consumption: a global approach by Joel Stillerman.
  • Hogwood, Patricia (2016). Book review: what is political sociology? by Elisabeth S. Clemens.
  • Hogwood, Patricia (2016). From devolution to revolution? Brexit threatens to stir up the UK’s regional politics.
  • Holbein, John B. (2016). How No Child Left Behind encourages more affluent parents to flee poorly performing schools.
  • Holden, Dan (2016). Working harder but not smarter: what employees think about the productivity puzzle.
  • Holder, Aisha M.B (2016). Black women often suffer microaggressions at work.
  • Hollis, Rosemary (2016). Shifting paradigms: how British politics has depicted Palestine.
  • Holmes, Corey (2016). Mobilising through social media: The case of South Africa.
  • Honeyball, Mary (2016). Taking the law into our own hands: the perils of a British Bill of Rights.
  • Hong, Yili (2016). Study shows that on-demand ride sharing mitigates traffic congestion.
  • Hong, Yili, Pavlou, Paul (2016). Online job auctions are more successful when bids are open for all to see.
  • Hong, Ying, Liao, Hui, Raub, Steffen, Hun Han, Joo (2016). If the HR department doesn’t encourage initiative, unit leaders can.
  • Hood III, M.V. (Trey), McKee, Seth C. (2016). Florida’s 2014 gubernatorial election shows how switchingparties can be the electoral kiss of death for candidates.
  • Hooghe, Marc, Marien, Sofie (2016). The wall with Mexico is a utopian project for Trump’s supporters.
  • Horten, Monica (2016). Book review: ctrl + z: the right to be forgotten by Meg Leta Jones.
  • Horten, Monica (2016). Book review: the rise of the right to know: politics and the culture of transparency, 1945-1975 by Michael Schudson.
  • Hotson, Louisa (2016). Social science at the crossroads: the history of political science in the USA and the evolution of social impact.
  • Hough, Daniel (2016). Anti-corruption after Brexit: what is left of David Cameron’s legacy?
  • Hough, Daniel (2016). Football across the continent has been revolutionised by the EU.
  • Hovil, Lucy (2016). Living on the margins: refugees and the search for belonging.
  • Howard, Jeff, Foss, Ann W. (2016). Although cities often are touted as climate change policy leaders, a close look at politically conservative Texas cities finds many lagging or faltering.
  • Howarth, Caroline, Ahmet, Akile (2016). ‘We need to speak about race’: examining the barriers to full and equal participation in university life.
  • Howell, Jude (2016). Can the Chinese Communist Party Survive? The limits of adaptation limits.
  • Howell, Taylor, Stout, Christopher, Kline, Reuben (2016). Internet polls are regularly underestimating support for Hillary Clinton.
  • Howell, William G. (2016). Donald Trump’s presidency will be a stress-test for American politics.
  • Hoyois, Arnaud (2016). A ‘soft Brexit’ is the only viable strategy in a post-liberal world.
  • Hoyos-Carrero, Maria (2016). Dismantling labels: Colombia’s long-term challenge towards peace.
  • Hudson, Bob (2016). Can technology save the NHS?
  • Hudson, Bob (2016). The unsuccessful privatisation of social care: why it matters and how to curb it.
  • Hudson, Pat (2016). GDP per capita: from measurement tool to ideological construct.
  • Huertas, Aaron (2016). Accuracy, transparency and improv! Best practices for building trust between scientists and communications staff.
  • Human Rights, LSE (2016). A conversation on race (part 1): ‘the geographies of racism’.
  • Hunt, Ruth (2016). Interview with Ruth Hunt: LGBT rights in Britain – culture, education, and religion.
  • Hunt, Stephen (2016). A history of Pentecostalism in Britain.
  • Hunt, Tristram (2016). “India has an extraordinary collection of cities which form a key part of the story of British colonialism” – Tristram Hunt MP.
  • Hunter, David (2016). The politics of health: taking the long view on the state of the NHS.
  • Hunter, Paul (2016). Recent changes to electoral registration could see as many as 10 million people slip off the electoral register.
  • Hurka, Steffen (2016). Britain’s exit from the EU will benefit the South and weaken Germany.
  • Hurrell, Scott (2016). Skills deficits in the labour market: Hard to establish but essential to know.
  • Hurrell, Scott A. (2016). When employees lack ‘soft skills’, whose fault is it?
  • Häge, Frank (2016). Data on political attention in the Council illustrates the EU’s failure to proactively address major crises.
  • Hänska, Max (2016). The EU, a fair-weather ship between Scylla and Charybdis.
  • Hänska, Max (2016). From hybrid peace to human security: Rethinking EU strategy towards conflict.
  • Hänska, Max (2016). The battle lines have been etched.
  • Hölsgens, Sander (2016). Book review: cultural turns: new orientations in the study of culture by Doris Bachmann-Medick.
  • Hölsgens, Sander (2016). Book review: slow cinema edited by Tiago de Luca and Nuno Barradas Jorge.
  • Ibenskas, Raimondas (2016). The number of party mergers is likely to increase in advanced democracies.
  • Ibenskas, Raimondas, Sikk, Allan (2016). Mergers and splits: how party systems have changed in Central and Eastern Europe since 1990.
  • Ibrahim, Monica (2016). From Cairo to Calais: a trip to the refugee camp at the dark heart of Europe.
  • Ibreck, Rachel, Bulla, Godfrey, de Waal, Alex, Ndula, Victor (2016). Seeking justice in South Sudan.
  • Ibreck, Rachel, Pendle, Naomi, de Waal, Alex (2016). South Sudan: for every corrupt general, there are thousands who wish only for peace.
  • Iemmi, Valentina, Bantjes, Jason (2016). Are suicide and poverty associated in low and middle income countries?
  • Iftikhar, Hamza (2016). The biggest leak: the Panama Papers.
  • Immerzeel, Tim, Pickup, Mark (2016). Do populist parties really boost turnout at elections?
  • Immerzeel, Tim, Pickup, Mark (2016). To speak of populist radical right parties as a ‘corrective to democracy’ is—in terms of turnout—a misunderstanding.
  • Inckle, Kay (2016). Child sexual abuse: private trouble or public issue?
  • Inckle, Kay, Daniel, Ronda (2016). Discussing PREVENT with Dr Kay Inckle (2 of 2).
  • Inckle, Kay, Daniel, Ronda (2016). Feminism, embodiment and self-harm: interview with Dr Kay Inckle (1 of 2).
  • Ingold, Jo, Monaghan, Mark (2016). Evidence-based policy and policy as ‘translation’: designing a model for policymaking.
  • Institute of Public Affairs, LSE (2016). 48 hours in Brazil: MPA students attend the GPPN Conference.
  • International Relations blog (2016). 2015-16 MSc Dissertation Prizewinners announced.
  • Inwood, Joshua, Alderman, Derek (2016). How grassroots truth and reconciliation commissions can help activists to reclaim their communities and advance social justice.
  • Iosifidis, Petros (2016). The Greek broadcaster ERT: a state or public service broadcaster?
  • Irrera, Daniela (2016). NGO-led rescue operations in the Mediterranean: saving people, alleviating EU responsibilities.
  • Irwin, Sarah (2016). ‘What type of society is Britain today?’: Lay perceptions of inequality.
  • Isani, Mujtaba, Silverman, Daniel (2016). How the use of language shapes which Islamic groupsWesterners support.
  • Islam, Mohammad Tarikul (2016). Despite constitutional guarantees, Bangladesh is failing to deliver adequate healthcare to rural citizens.
  • Ivanof, Bianca Elena, Addyman, Casper (2016). Open Research for Academics: how to be an academic in the twenty-first century.
  • Iveson, Mandie (2016). My research journey from MSc dissertation to published journal article.
  • Iván Farías, Pelcastre, Flor, González Correa (2016). Using Twitter as a teaching tool can boost engagement and enrich classroom debate and discourse.
  • Iván Farías, Pelcastre, Flor, González Correa (2016). The current system of knowledge dissemination isn’t working and Sci-Hub is merely a symptom of the problem.
  • Iwowo, Vanessa (2016). Leadership development: one size does not fit all.
  • Jaber, Nora (2016). Limiting sovereignty and legitimising intervention.
  • Jackson, Emily (2016). Egg freezing has little to do with inflexible workplaces.
  • Jackson, Kristoffer (2016). Why California is so expensive: It’s not just the weather, it’s the regulation.
  • Jackson, Paula Laurel (2016). Youth and digital technology in Jamaica.
  • Jackson-Preece, Jennifer (2016). Is nationalism to blame for the post Brexit vote divisions?
  • Jackson-Preece, Jennifer (2016). The Leave campaign won the final BBC referendum debate on Twitter.
  • Jackson-Preece, Jennifer (2016). Tusk’s Shakespearean tweet shows the gravity of the UK’s EU vote and its potential consequences for both parties.
  • Jackson-Preece, Jennifer (2016). An undiscover’d country: the Brexit debate on Twitter reveals widespread democratic discontent.
  • Jacobs, Michael, Mazzucato, Mariana (2016). The Brexit-Trump syndrome: it’s the economics, stupid.
  • Jacobsen, Grant, Parker, Dominic (2016). Resource booms leave regions worse off once they fade out.
  • Jacotine, keshia (2016). Labour and Labor: a tale of two identity crises.
  • Jaeger, Jillian (2016). Money, not ideology, incentivizes local authorities to help the federal government detain immigrants.
  • Jaeger, William P., Lyons, Jeffrey, Wolak, Jennifer (2016). More knowledgeable electorates secure more representative policy outcomes for everyone.
  • Jagodziński, Romuald (2016). European Works Councils: an experiment in workplace democracy which remains more relevant than ever.
  • Jagodziński, Romuald (2016). European works councils at a turning point.
  • Jain, Mahima A (2016). Tamil Jains: fluid histories in stone.
  • Jain, Pooja (2016). Rethinking the scope of South-South Co-operation in the wake of attacks on Africans in India.
  • Jain, Pooja (2016). The appropriation and commodification of cultural affinities in boosting contemporary economic relations between India and Senegal.
  • Jain, Tarun, Debnath, Sisir (2016). Aarogyasri programme: public health insurance and community networks.
  • Jaitman, Laura, Machin, Stephen (2016). Crime costs Latin America 3 percent of its annual GDP.
  • Jaiyesimi, Tobi (2016). Brexit was a wake up call for Africans in the Diaspora.
  • Jalil, Andrew (2016). The evidence suggests strong parallels between the banking panics of the pre-Depression era and the 2008 crisis.
  • James, Toby, Sidorczuk, Oliver (2016). There are effective ways of getting the ‘missing millions’ back on to the UK’s electoral register.
  • James, Toby S. (2016). Voter ID is a risky reform when 8m people are already missing from the electoral register.
  • Jang, Juyoung, Dworkin, Jodi, Hessel, Heather (2016). Where do US mothers go on the internet to get information?
  • Jarvis, Rebecca (2016). Book review: The oxford handbook of environmental political theory edited by Teena Gabrielson, Cheryl Hall, John M. Meyerand David Schlosberg.
  • Jayasuriya, Kanishka, Johnson, Carol (2016). Ideas boom or innovation bust? Could Australia’s ‘ideas agenda’ stifle real innovation?
  • Jeffreys, Branwen (2016). Going beyond Westminister, war and wealth: in defence of ‘bad’ news.
  • Jelen-Sanchez, Alenka, Dekavalla, Marina (2016). Who speaks in a referendum? Scotland’s Indyref TV news coverage.
  • Jenichen, Anne (2016). Cologne and the ‘sexism of the other’: why tougher migration policies won’t solve sexual abuse.
  • Jenkins, Tricia (2016). Book review: in secrecy’s shadow: the OSS and CIA in Hollywood cinema, 1941-1979 by Simon Willmetts.
  • Jennings, Jay T. (2016). When politicians use religious rhetoric it doesn’t appeal to everyone – even among the religious.
  • Jennings, Will, Stoker, Gerry (2016). Anti-politics after 23 June: how bad will the hangover be the morning after?
  • Jenny, Marcelo (2016). Alexander Van der Bellen’s victory: a vote for stability in Austria.
  • Jenny, Marcelo (2016). Austria’s presidential election: the next president will likely be an active one.
  • Jensen, Siv (2016). Siv Jensen: “The EEA agreement has served Norway well, but it’s not a free ride”.
  • Jeske, Debora, Shultz, Kenneth (2016). Screening job applicants on social media may hurt the firm.
  • Jewitt, Caitlin E., Goren, Paul N. (2016). In a more polarized era more and more citizens are structuringtheir beliefs along ideological lines, just as politicians do.
  • Jeynes, William (2016). Families hold the key to increasing African American achievement in schools.
  • Jha, Chandan, Sarangi, Sudipta (2016). Do women in power have an impact on corruption?
  • Jha, Mithilesh Kumar (2016). Book review: India and the Islamic heartlands: an Eighteenth-Century world of circulation and exchange by Gagan D.S. Sood.
  • Jian, Tina (2016). Why fact-checking should matter more in journalism.
  • Jin, Sirkwoo, Seo, Myeong-Gu, Shapiro, Debra L. (2016). Do happy people lead better?
  • Jin, Yutang (2016). The issue of gender equality in Confucian culture.
  • Jinhage, Amanda (2016). FDI can catalyse job creation and industrialisation in Africa.
  • Jinhage, Amanda (2016). Rural-to-urban migration: improving labour market prospects.
  • Jinhage, Amanda (2016). Tourism, trust and unequal pay: recapping the IGC-SCID conference on ‘firms, trade and development’.
  • Jinnah, Zaheera (2016). Between a rock and a hard place: Informal artisanal gold mining in Johannesburg.
  • Joanson, Ove (2016). A decade of disruption brings digital downsides and the hope of more honest journalism.
  • Jofre-Bonet, Mireia, Rossello-Roig, Melcior, Serra-Sastre, Victoria (2016). The blow of domestic violence on children’s health outcomes.
  • Johnes, Rebecca, Andrews, Jon (2016). Faith schools do better chiefly because of their pupils’ backgrounds.
  • Johns, Tracy L. (2016). Colorado’s implementation of legal marijuana policies has been a patchwork of regulation against a backdrop of diverse public opinion.
  • Johnsen, Sarah (2016). Contested territories: homelessness and faith-based services.
  • Johnson, Alan, Taylor, Ros (2016). Five minutes with Alan Johnson of Labour In for Britain: “There’s a battle here”.
  • Johnson, Alex (2016). Book review: governmentality and counter-hegemony in Bangladesh by S.M. Shamsul Alam.
  • Johnson, Byron, Pagano, Maria, Lee, Matthew, Post, Stephen (2016). How giving help to others can help young people deal with their own addiction.
  • Johnson, Jo, Campion, Sonali (2016). “India sees the UK as its gateway to Europe. We should not give Indian firms reason to doubt this is the right place to invest” – Jo Johnson MP.
  • Johnson, Michael (2016). Brexit, tariffs and trade, part two: no Single Market membership without compromise.
  • Johnson, Michael (2016). Brexit, trade and tariffs part three: how much freedom will Britain have to set its own tariffs?
  • Johnson, Michael (2016). They won’t like a bit of British butter on their bread: the problem of tariffs after Brexit.
  • Johnson, Richard (2016). Brexit could be an opportunity for the Labour Party, not a tragedy.
  • Johnson, Richard (2016). Downstate blues: how a black female Democrat won in the white Midwest.
  • Johnson, Richard (2016). Labour should embrace putting an end to EU free movement.
  • Johnson, Richard (2016). Labour should not be the champion of EU free movement.
  • Johnson, Richard (2016). Should we just leave the selection of the party leader to MPs?
  • Johnston, Alison (2016). Backlash against the status quo does not always lead to positive-sum gains.
  • Johnston, Ron (2016). The long read: how the polls and the media delivered Cameron’s unexpected victory by Ron Johnston.
  • Johnston, Ron, Jones, Kelvyn, Manley, David (2016). Can we really not predict who will vote for Brexit, and where?
  • Johnston, Ron, Jones, Kelvyn, Manley, David (2016). Predicting the Brexit vote: getting the geography right (more or less).
  • Johnston, Roy, Jones, Kelvyn, Manley, David (2016). The geography of the Brexit vote – what difference will turnout make?
  • Jolie, Angelina, Hague, William (2016). Conflict-related sexual violence is a preventable crime, and should be a priority for the new UN Secretary-General.
  • Jones, Jennifer J. (2016). Hillary Clinton talks more “like a man” the more powerful she becomes.
  • Jones, Lee (2016). The EU locked in neoliberalism and locked out its people. Brexit is the alternative.
  • Jones, Ruth E. (2016). In the absence of proper jobs, therapists turn to precarious work.
  • Jones, Steve (2016). It’s not easy to raise prior attainment, but universities could better contextualise applicants’ grades.
  • Joshi, Prateek (2016). The changing dynamics of the Iran-Pakistan-Afghanistan relationship.
  • Jovchelovitch, Sandra (2016). LSE Lit Fest 2016: 'Out of Our Bodies’ by Sandra Jovchelovitch.
  • Jubilut, Liliana Lyra, de Lima Madureira, André (2016). Durable solutions for refugees: principles and implementation strategy of a general framework.
  • Juma, Linet (2016). Chinese media in Africa: expansion, perceptions and receptions.
  • Jung, Alexander (2016). ECB money and credit data releases help markets improve rate expectations.
  • Kabeer, Naila, Campion, Sonali (2016). “If women’s productive activities were better understood, policy could be designed to support rather than invisiblise their contributions” – Naila Kabeer.
  • Kabir, Arafat (2016). Terrorism is global, but its causes are not: action points for Bangladesh following the Dhaka attack.
  • Kaca Sumarto, Amirah (2016). What can the Association of South East Asian Nations learn from the European Union?
  • Kaeding, Michael, Stack, Kevin M. (2016). A dearth of legislative vetoes: why the Council and Parliament have been reluctant to veto Commission legislation.
  • Kaiser, Boris, Siegenthaler, Michael (2016). Some workers win, others lose from currency depreciation.
  • Kaivanto, Kim (2016). Not being smart about Article 50: the strategic considerations of an early 2017 notification.
  • Kalleberg, Arne L., Gauchat, Gordon (2016). The politics of science funding: we need to think about science and knowledge production in a more practical light.
  • Kamara, Abou Bakarr (2016). Cross border trading: Sierra Leone and her neighbours.
  • Kannaiah, Venkatesh (2016). I paid a bribe: using technology to fight corruption in India.
  • Kanthak, Kristin (2016). The Electoral College isn’t perfect. But that’s not enough of a reason to end it.
  • Kao, M. Bob (2016). Book review: Taiwan’s democracy challenged: the Chen Shui-bian years edited by Yun-han Chu, Larry Diamond and Kharis Templeman.
  • Kao, M. Bob (2016). Book review: the ashgate research companion to Lesbian and Gay Activism edited by David Paternotte and Manon Tremblay.
  • Kao, M. Bob (2016). Book review: who is worthy of protection? Gender-based asylum and US immigration politics by Meghana Nayak.
  • Kappes, Heather Barry (2016). What I learned From the Reproducibility Project.
  • Kappes, Heather Barry (2016). What is Behavioural Science at the LSE?
  • Kappes, Heather Barry (2016). A new subject pool.
  • Kappes, Heather Barry, Barry, William (2016). Counselling is better than outright firing an underperforming employee.
  • Kar, Sohini (2016). LSE academics sign open letter to Vice-Chancellor of University of Hyderabad.
  • Karch, Andrew, Nicholson-Crotty, Sean, Woods, Neal, Bowman, Ann (2016). How looking only at policy diffusion "successes" between states may be misleading.
  • Karolyi, Andrew, Taboada, Alvaro (2016). In search of greater regulatory freedom, some banks resort to cross-border acquisitions.
  • Kasdin, Stuart, Iorio, Federica (2016). Ideology influences how Congress chooses whether to give grant aid to state governments or to run programs federally.
  • Kassimeris, George, Jackson, Leonie (2016). The ‘burkini’ ban illustrates the unequal cultural power that shapes the lives of Muslims in Europe.
  • Katsirea, Irini (2016). Press Regulation in an Era of Convergence.
  • Kattumuri, Ruth (2016). Top 10 economic and development challenges for India in 2016.
  • Katwala, Sunder, Ballinger, Steve, Mattinson, Deborah (2016). Don’t know (where the women are): why the EU referendum campaigns haven’t engaged female voters.
  • Katz, Vikki (2016). Opportunity for all? Digital equity in the lives of lower-income U.S. families.
  • Katz, Vikki (2016). When children are families’ digital links.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2016). Assimilation and the immigration debate: shifting people’s attitudes.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2016). Hard Brexit? Only if it’s free.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2016). It’s NOT the economy, stupid: Brexit as a story of personal values.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2016). It’s NOT the economy, stupid: Brexit as a story of personal values.
  • Kaufmann, Eric (2016). Trump and Brexit: why it’s again not the economy, stupid.
  • Kaul, Upaasna (2016). Cashless economics: the new wave of mobile money.
  • Kaul, Upaasna (2016). Epidemics, ethnicity, and empowerment: a cities recap.
  • Kaul, Upaasna (2016). New IGC annual report.
  • Kaul, Upaasna (2016). New era for aid: is community driven development the answer?
  • Kaul, Upaasna, Jinhage, Amanda (2016). Risky business: firms, trade and development.
  • Kaul, Upaasna, Jinhage, Amanda (2016). The new urban agenda (part 2): urban complementarities.
  • Kaul, Upaasna, Yam, Emilie (2016). The new urban agenda: cities of the future.
  • Kavanagh, Adrian (2016). The 2016 Irish general election: a final look at the parties and the polling.
  • Kay, Boyce (2016). Book review: presumed intimacy: para-social relationships in media, society and celebrity culture by Chris Rojek.
  • Kaya, Zeynep N. (2016). Book review: the politics of international intervention: the tyranny of peace.
  • Kazerounian, Alexandra (2016). A gentler way to show suffering.
  • Keatinge, Brenna (2016). How gentrifiers are fighting to reshape working class neighborhoods in their own image.
  • Keenan, Brendan (2016). A very brief history of interception.
  • Keli, Haje (2016). Book review: religion, gender and citizenship: women of faith, gender equality and feminism by Line Nyhagen and Beatrice Halsaa.
  • Kellard, Neil, Śliwa, Martyna (2016). The organisational contexts in which research with impact is produced: lessons from REF2014.
  • Kelly, Gavin (2016). Are the robots about to take all the jobs? Don’t hold your breath.
  • Kelly, Jason M. (2016). Reading list: the role of arts and literature in developing creative societies #LSELitFest.
  • Kelly, John (2016). Upbeat and in the margins: the British Trotskyist Left and their exceptionally poor election results.
  • Kelsey, Tom (2016). LSE Lit Fest 2016 book review: dreamstreets: a journey through Britain’s village utopias by Jacqueline Yallop.
  • Kenealy, Daniel (2016). The Scottish Government’s Brexit proposals are politically savvy and all-but-impossible.
  • Kennedy, Joshua (2016). Obama’s “executive orders” on guns are not executive orders at all, and their impact is likely to be limited.
  • Kennedy, Paul (2016). The resignation of Pedro Sánchez has left Spain’s PSOE in crisis.
  • Kennelly, Anthony (2016). Constitutional rights law and its limitations: topical examples.
  • Kenny, Michael (2016). The idea that English nationalism has powered support for Brexit is unduly simplistic and requires re-examination.
  • Ker-Lindsay, James (2016). Look ahead to 2017: a potential Cyprus settlement?
  • Kerim, Srgjan, Prelec, Tena (2016). Interview with Srgjan Kerim, Candidate for UN Secretary General: “I don’t want to be everybody’s darling and I don’t want to serve anybody’s cause. I want to serve the cause of the organisation.”.
  • Kershaw, David (2016). The British Constitution’s failure to manage existential risk: back to basics.
  • Kershaw, David (2016). How ‘the story’ subsumed ‘The Vote’: we have no meaningful direction about the terms of Brexit.
  • Kersley, Esther (2016). Reading list: 8 must-read books on religion and the public sphere.
  • Kersten, Mark (2016). There is no system of international justice against Africa because there is no system of international justice.
  • Kessler, Philip (2016). Racing for the exit? How the EU has influenced Britain’s competition policy.
  • Khan, Feisal (2016). How not to control corruption, Pakistani style.
  • Khan, Sadiq, Brown, Stuart A. (2016). Interview with Sadiq Khan: “London must have a seat at the table during the negotiations to leave the EU”.
  • Khan, Sarah (2016). The anti-Prevent lobby are dominating the discourse, not all Muslims oppose Prevent.
  • Khatib, Anan, Klaas, Brian (2016). Brian Klaas on the global crisis of democracy.
  • Khilji, Usama (2016). Abdul Sattar Edhi: the philanthropist who filled in for the state in Pakistan.
  • Khilji, Usama (2016). Book review: the frontier tribal belt: genesis and purpose under the Raj by Salman Bangash.
  • Khilji, Usama (2016). Will the execution of Governor Taseer’s assassin reopen the debate on Pakistan’s blasphemy law?
  • Khoja-Moolji, Shenila (2016). Representations matter: it is critical to deconstruct the narratives and visuals of development campaigns.
  • Khoury, Rana B. (2016). Refugees’ contentious politics and the case of Syrian activists in Jordan.
  • Kieran, Matthew (2016). Motivated creativity and character.
  • Kiewitz, Christian, Restubog, Simon Lloyd D., Shoss, Mindy, Raymund, Patrick, Garcia, James M., Tang, Robert L. (2016). Too many firms ignore their abusive boss problem.
  • Kilduff, Gavin J., Galinsky, Adam, Gallo, Edoardo (2016). Whatever it takes to win: Rivalry increases unethical behaviour.
  • Kilduff, Martin, Crossland, Craig, Tsai, Wenpin, Bowers, Matthew T. (2016). Why José Mourinho’s protégés failed when they became managers.
  • Killen, Kimberly (2016). Size Matters.
  • Kilroy, Peter (2016). Book review: remote avant-garde: aboriginal art under occupation by Jennifer Loureide Biddle.
  • Kim, Dae-Young, Phillips, Scott W., Wheeler, Andrew P. (2016). SWAT raids are more about symbolism than reducing crime in the long term.
  • Kim, Younsung, Darnell, Nicole (2016). Business-government collaboration may help solve complex social issues.
  • Kinane, Rory (2016). Why moderate Republicans should both fear and look forward to the 2020 election.
  • Kinchy, Abby (2016). Lack of action from state and federal government means thatcommunity organisations are picking up the slack of monitoringthe effects of fracking in the Northeast.
  • Kippin, Sean (2016). How democratically accountable are the UK’s security and intelligence services?
  • Kippin, Sean (2016). Why sticking with Labour is likely to be the Co-operative Party’s quickest route back to power.
  • Kippin, Sean, Dunleavy, Patrick (2016). How democratic are the UK’s political parties and party system?
  • Kippin, Sean, Photiadou, Artemis (2016). Limited worldviews and ideological cross-dressing: Theresa May and Gordon Brown’s premierships.
  • Kiranda, Yusuf (2016). Can the formidable youth vote swing the political tide in #UgandaDecides 2016.
  • Kirby, Paul, Shepherd, Laura (2016). The New Politics of Women, Peace and Security.
  • Kirchherr, Julian, Biswas, Asit (2016). The tough life of an academic entrepreneur: innovative commercial and non-commercial ventures must be encouraged.
  • Kirk, Thomas (2016). Between pragmatism and structural change: future security and justice programming in difficult places.
  • Kirk, Thomas (2016). The challenge of theorising security and justice provision in conflict-affected places.
  • Kirk, Thomas, Cuvelier, Jeroen, Vlassenroot, Koen (2016). Uncovering relationships between resource governance, public authority and (in)security.
  • Kirk, Thomas, Hoffmann, Kasper (2016). Forms of stateness in the JSRP’s research sites.
  • Kirk, Thomas, Luckham, Robin, Carayannis, Tatiana (2016). The contested meaning of ‘security’ and ‘conflict resolution’: research from the JSRP.
  • Kirk, Thomas, Macdonald, Anna (2016). Between norms, politics contests and social upheavals: justice in the JSRP’s research sites.
  • Kirk, Thomas, Stein, Danielle (2016). Local politics, conflict resolution and access to justice programming in the JSRP’s research sites.
  • Kirk, Thomas, Stein, Holly E.Danielle (2016). Cosmological and communal wellbeing in the JSRP’s research on justice provision.
  • Kirkland, Christopher, Wood, Matthew (2016). By focusing on voter turnout, the government fails to understand the democratic process.
  • Kitchen, Nicholas (2016). American voters’ choice is between Clinton’s liberal internationalism and Trump’s offensive realism. Who wins in November matters to the world.
  • Kitchen, Nicholas (2016). Behind Donald Trump’s questioning of America’s foreign policy consensus is a revitalized debate about US leadership in the world.
  • Kitchen, Nicholas (2016). Donald Trump wins the presidential election, but what does this mean for American foreign policy?
  • Kitchen, Nicholas (2016). What would a Trump win mean for Europe and the rest of the world?
  • Kitchen, Nicholas, Wichowski, Alexis, Khatib, Lina, Neumann, Iver B., Murabit, Alaa, Kelley, Robert (2016). Review roundtable: naked diplomacy: power and statecraft in the digital age by Tom Fletcher.
  • Klaas, Brian (2016). It’s distasteful – but giving a despot an easy way out can stop further bloodshed.
  • Klaas, Brian (2016). Trump’s economic platform is a bizarre and contradictory Frankenstein’s monster which would be a disaster for America.
  • Klaas, Brian (2016). What Trump and Clinton must do to win Monday’s firstpresidential debate.
  • Klaas, Brian (2016). The circus of the Republican convention masks an extremely divided party.
  • Kleine, Mareike (2016). Britain’s role in world affairs will be dwarfed post-Brexit.
  • Kleine, Mareike (2016). Utopian fantasies: the myths peddled by referendum campaigners.
  • Kleine, Mareike, Minaudier, Clement (2016). May’s decision to trigger Article 50 by March 2017 is unwise.
  • Kmezić, Marco (2016). Croatia’s blocking of Serbia’s EU integration: another case of bilateral conditionality in the Balkans.
  • Knechel, Robert, Vanstraelen, Anne, Zerni, Mikko (2016). The individual style of audit partners influences how firms are rated.
  • Knott, Eleanor (2016). Michael Gove is arguing the UK should be like states that want to join the EU.
  • Knott, Eleanor, Popșoi, Mihai (2016). Our man in Moldova.
  • Knott, Ellie (2016). Ukraine’s Eurovision victory brings the plight of Crimean Tatars to a European audience.
  • Knott, Judith (2016). Philip Hammond should shelve Osborne’s plan to cut corporation tax.
  • Knox, Claire (2016). Between the system and lifeworld: despite adopting social media tools, public administrators remain in a legitimacy dilemma.
  • Koch, Jeffrey (2016). American Indians are less likely to claim identification with major American political parties.
  • Koch, Pamela Tremain, Koch, Bradley James, Menon, Tanya, Shenkar, Oded (2016). In cross-national teams, cultural differences can be an advantage.
  • Koehler, Sebastian (2016). Why the UK must trigger Article 50 immediately.
  • Koffi, Kilian (2016). As the global economy struggles, economic diversification in Africa is necessary.
  • Kolpinskaya, Ekaterina (2016). Religion is irrelevant to how likely MPs are to represent minority groups’ interests.
  • Konkiel, Stacy (2016). Policy impact and online attention: tracking the path from research to public policy on the social web.
  • Konkiel, Stacy, Sugimoto, Cassidy R., Williams, Sierra (2016). What constitutes valuable scholarship? The use of altmetrics in promotion and tenure.
  • Koob, Marion (2016). Book review: Presence: bringing your boldest self to your biggest challenges by Amy Cuddy.
  • Koob, Marion (2016). #IWD2016 Book review: SPQR: a history of ancient Rome by Mary Beard.
  • Koopman, Joel, Lanaj, Klodiana, Scott, Brent A. (2016). Helping colleagues brings many benefits, but it may carry a cost.
  • Kooths, Stefan (2016). Punishing Britain with a tough Brexit will harm everyone.
  • Korstanje, Maximiliano (2016). Book review: working through the past: labor and authoritarian legacies in comparative perspective edited by Teri L. Caraway, Maria Lorena Cook and Stephen Crowley.
  • Korteling, Nonia Williams (2016). The materiality of research: ‘Creating a community of writing practice in the classroom’ by Nonia Williams Korteling.
  • Kostadinova, Petia (2016). Research from Bulgaria shows that in their coverage of elections, the media promote the views of the main contenders.
  • Kostovicova, Denisa (2016). Art and reconciliation: Looking at post-conflict reconstruction in a different light.
  • Kostovicova, Denisa (2016). Reaction to Brexit around Europe: how the result affects the Balkans.
  • Kostovicova, Denisa (2016). A personal take on methods.
  • Kostovicova, Denisa (2016). The question of ethics.
  • Koutras, Andreas (2016). Greece. The country with the half Drachma.
  • Kral, Daniel (2016). Slovakia’s election: a party system entering uncharted waters.
  • Kral, Daniel (2016). Slovakia’s general election: the impact of the refugee crisis is likely to push Robert Fico back to power.
  • Krause, Monika (2016). Trump and Brexit: beyond ‘why Trump won’.
  • Krause, Ryan, Filatotchev, Igor, Bruton, Garry D. (2016). Exporters to countries that value CEO power will have more powerful CEOs.
  • Krauss, Alexander, Kastning, Thomas (2016). Climate change, resource depletion and population growth: the elephant in the room.
  • Kreilinger, Valentin (2016). Economic surveillance and coordination mechanisms won’t work without proper scrutiny by national parliaments.
  • Kremakova, Milena (2016). Mathematicians against the clock: accelerated work and accelerated careers in the Neoliberal University.
  • Kroll, Stefan (2016). Humanitarian intervention: religion as a reason for intervention.
  • Krouwel, André, Kutiyski, Yordan, Beck II, Pat (2016). Supporters of Clinton and Trump have diametrically opposed preferences for how the United States should be governed.
  • Krouwel, André, Kutiyski, Yordanand, Beck II, Pat (2016). In the lead up to the 2016 election, we can clearly see significant polarization between Republican and Democratic candidates across a variety of issues.
  • Krupa, Joel (2016). Book review: renewable energy finance: powering the future edited by Charles W. Donovan.
  • Kuckertz, Andreas, Berger, Elisabeth S. C. (2016). Economic freedom: a silver bullet for Europe’s economic challenges?
  • Kuckertz, Andreas, Berger, Elisabeth S. C. (2016). Small government is not a cure-all for entrepreneurship.
  • Kuhlmann, Robynn (2016). In Missouri’s Senate race, Democrat Jason Kander’s positioning as an outsider has turned Roy Blunt’s incumbency into a disadvantage.
  • Kulik, Carol T., Perera, Sanjeewa (2016). You need to prepare for the tricky moment when someone resigns from your team.
  • Kulkarni, Sneha (2016). Manipulating the peer review process: why it happens and how it might be prevented.
  • Kullaa, Rina (2016). The trouble with unequal partnerships? How UK governments’ views on representation in the EU have changed over time.
  • Kumar, Ankit (2016). #IWD2016 Book review: the biopolitics of gender by Jemima Repo.
  • Kumar, Nagothu Naresh (2016). Book review: God in the tumult of the global square: religion in global civil society by Mark Juergensmeyer, Dinah Griego and John Soboslai.
  • Kumar, Neeraj, Campion, Sonali (2016). “The media will always have axes to grind but the police have the capacity to project their side of the story better” – Neeraj Kumar.
  • Kumar, Sumit (2016). India-Iran relations: a budding strategic friendship.
  • Kumar Jha, Mithilesh (2016). Book review: Benign violence: education in and beyond the age of reason by Ansgar Allen.
  • Kundnani, Hans (2016). Enough of the hegemony: why Germany really wants the UK to stay in the EU.
  • Kuntsman, Adi, Miyake, Esperanza (2016). A digital future for children?
  • Kuzemko, Caroline (2016). Depoliticising energy policy: transformative ideas won’t happen when technocrats are in charge.
  • Kwon, Soo Jung 'Kristy' (2016). Changing the culture of journalism inside-out.
  • Kyriakidou, Maria (2016). The UK is reaping what the British media have been sowing for a long time.
  • Kölln, Ann-Kristin, Polk, Jonathan (2016). How internal disagreements affect the success of political parties: evidence from Sweden.
  • LSE, Researching Sociology (2016). Welcome LSE Sociology freshers!
  • LSE Government Blog (2016). In memory of Adhil Bakeer Markar.
  • LSE Review of Books (2016). Africa at LSE blog 5th anniversary reading list: 10 must-read books on African politics, society and economics.
  • Laatikainen, Katie Verlin (2016). The selection of António Guterres as Secretary-General shows Security Council horse-trading still trumps transparency at the UN.
  • Laboure, Marion, Braunstein, Jürgen (2016). The great stagnation.
  • Labrianidis, Lois, Pratsinakis, Manolis (2016). Brain drain and the Greek crisis.
  • Lai, Yanqing, Saridakis, George, Blackburn, Robert, Johnstone, Stewart (2016). In a recession, large firms are more likely than SMEs to resort to personnel cuts.
  • Lancaster, Alex (2016). Given frustrations with academic structures, how can we build a more human-centered open science?
  • Landelius, Helena (2016). Our country our women: the gendered discourse on migration.
  • Lang, Matthew (2016). Why indifference is the best reaction to President Obama’s executive actions on guns.
  • Lang, Tim, Schoen, Victoria (2016). Food security and Brexit: how the CAP began.
  • Langella, Monica, Manning, Alan (2016). Who voted Leave: the characteristics of individuals mattered, but so did those of local areas.
  • Lannoo, Karel (2016). Leaving the EU will be detrimental for the future of the City.
  • Lansley, Stewart (2016). Attacking the roots of inequality: a sharing economy and how to achieve it.
  • Lara Otaola, Miguel Angel (2016). Brexit and the tragedy of Europe.
  • Larcinese, Valentino (2016). Italy’s referendum was a triumph of hope over fear.
  • Larcinese, Valentino (2016). There is no such thing as the ‘will of the people’ – Brexit needs the involvement of parliament.
  • Larcinese, Valentino (2016). Why Italians should reject Renzi’s constitutional reform.
  • Larin, Stephen J., Röggla, Marc (2016). South Tyrol’s Autonomy Convention is not a breakthrough for participatory democracy – but it shows how power-sharing can transform conflicts.
  • Larin, Stephen J., Röggla, Marc (2016). Time to invite the ‘others’ to the table: a proposal to make South Tyrol more inclusive.
  • Larin, Stephen J., Röggla, Marc (2016). Why Italy’s German-speakers overwhelmingly voted ‘Yes’.
  • Lauermann, John (2016). Failed Olympic bids can help drive urban (re)development.
  • Laulainen, Teemu (2016). Book review: Cold War ruins: transpacific critique of American justice and Japanese war crimes by Lisa Yoneyama.
  • Law, Stephen (2016). A new problem of evil.
  • Lazaro, Melissa (2016). The architecture of a human rights violation.
  • Lazowski, Adam (2016). Is Turkey going to join the EU in the next decade? Not likely, Mr Gove.
  • Lazowski, Adam (2016). One against 27: the pitfalls of Brexit negotiations with the EU.
  • Le Goix, Renaud, Vesselinov, Elena (2016). Gated communities entrench social segregation in suburban communities which are already racially similar.
  • LeRoux-Rutledge, Emily (2016). Two-way, not one-way communication: why dialogue should be included in health programs.
  • Lea, Ruth (2016). After Brexit, access to EFTA’s suite of trade agreements would be an economic boost.
  • Lea, Ruth (2016). After a Leave vote the UK would have a strong hand in any trade negotiations.
  • Leban, Marina, Voyer, Benjamin G. (2016). Luxury brand forums set the scene for status competition between consumers.
  • Ledger, Robert (2016). Book review: realpolitik: a history by John Bew.
  • Lee, Caroline W. (2016). The upsizing of public deliberation has downsized citizen expectations.
  • Lee, Charisma (2016). Book review: the language animal: the full shape of the human linguistic capacity by Charles Taylor.
  • Lee, Hyun-Jung (2016). Diversity at work matters in times of violent ethnic conflicts.
  • Lee, Jennifer (2016). For Asian Americans, racial mobility has not meant full incorporation or equal status in US society.
  • Lee, Jin, Lubienski, Christopher (2016). Children in disadvantaged neighborhoods are more likely to see their local schools close.
  • Lee, Lois (2016). The nonreligious are Britain’s hidden majority.
  • Lee, Neil (2016). Three challenges facing the Northern Powerhouse.
  • Lee, Neil (2016). The (new) northern powerhouse strategy.
  • Lee, Sohyun (2016). LSE-Waseda University PhD Exchange Programme 2016.
  • Leech, Dennis (2016). Would the UK gain or lose power if it leaves the EU? Voting power analysis suggests big losses.
  • Leemann, Lucas (2016). Is direct democracy effective? Yes, if it is citizens who start the process.
  • Leeper, Thomas J. (2016). Elsevier purchase SSRN: social scientists face questions over whether centralised repository is in their interests.
  • Leeper, Thomas J. (2016). For voters, the 2016 election campaign is a marathon with verylimited choices.
  • Leeper, Thomas J. (2016). Trump owes his victory to America’s unique Electoral College system.
  • Leeper, Thomas J. (2016). Vice Presidents are a heartbeat from the Oval Office, but matter very little.
  • Leeper, Thomas J. (2016). What can social scientists learn from convenience samples? More than you might think.
  • Lees, Charles (2016). Taking back control – but not just yet. The UK’s post-Brexit future is now in Germany’s hands.
  • Lehman, Karsten (2016). Public presence as loss of power: religious NGOs from Church diplomacy to civil society activism.
  • Leidig, Eviane (2016). Rewriting history: the ongoing controversy over textbooks in India.
  • Leidig, Eviane (2016). What does Modi’s personal popularity tell us about India’s political landscape?
  • Leigh, Dominic, Ramanauskas, Ben (2016). The £8bn question: would local councils be better off outside the EU?
  • Leith, Murray (2016). Scottish Parliament Election preview: Labour’s setting sun in the West.
  • Leith, Murray (2016). Scottish Parliament Election preview: the end of Labour’s fortress in Glasgow?
  • Lelieveldt, Herman (2016). Gastronationalism? How Europe’s food production is becoming entangled in nationalist politics.
  • Leonard, Jessica (2016). Reach new heights in your career with the EMPA.
  • Leruth, Benjamin (2016). Iceland’s election: the Pirates failed to live up to expectations, but this was still a landmark result.
  • Leruth, Benjamin (2016). The Panama Papers could bring down Iceland’s government and bring the Pirate Party to power.
  • Leruth, Benjamin (2016). The UK’s renegotiation proposal: a good compromise, but much needs to be done to convince voters.
  • Lessem, Rebecca, Urban, Carly (2016). How the presidential primary season boosts states’ economies.
  • Letta, Enrico, Taylor, Ros (2016). Italian ex-PM Enrico Letta: ‘We have to move towards a two-circle Europe’.
  • Lettieri, Antonio (2016). The EU’s flawed future after Brexit: the referendum result reflected Europe’s failures, not British exceptionalism.
  • Lever, John (2016). Religious animal slaughter, immigration and global trade in a post-Brexit Britain.
  • Levine, Jeremy (2016). In many poor urban neighborhoods, nonprofits are superseding elected politicians as neighborhood representatives.
  • Levy, Helton (2016). Book review: networked publics and digital contention: the politics of everyday life in Tunisia by Mohamed Zayani.
  • Levy, Helton (2016). Book review: networks of outrage and hope: social movements in the internet age by Manuel Castells.
  • Levy, Stephanie (2016). The economics of humanitarian aid: are we on a slippery slope?
  • Lewis, Bex (2016). From Pokémon go to hashtags: how digital and social media is changing the church.
  • Lewis-Pye, Andrew (2016). 5 minutes with Maura Paterson.
  • Lewthwaite, Sarah (2016). Book review: 100 activities for teaching research methods by Catherine Dawson.
  • Lezova, Katarina (2016). Slovakia’s 2016 general election: a look at the parties and the campaigns.
  • Leşanu, Alexandru (2016). Transnistria’s presidential election: A hard-fought contest with no punches pulled, as Russia diverts its attention from the unrecognised state.
  • Li, Winnie M. (2016). Women of the World Festival: celebrity, solidarity, and activism.
  • Li, Xinyu (2016). Book review: changing referents: learning across space and time in China and the west by Leigh Jenco.
  • Lichtner, Valentina (2016). ‘the little liar’ – patient information about medicines.
  • Lidén, Gustav (2016). Why do some local authorities have such poor websites? Insights from Sweden.
  • Lien, Hung-Ya (2016). The best bookshops in Mexico City, Mexico.
  • Lien, Hung-Ya (2016). The best bookshops in Tokyo, Japan.
  • Light, Michael T. (2016). The rise in the incarceration rate may help explain the falling gap in homicide rates between Blacks, Hispanics and Whites.
  • Lin, Yatang (2016). Better locations could lead to a 20-50% increase in wind farm profitability.
  • Lin, Zhijie, Goh, Khim-Yong, Heng, Cheng-Suang (2016). How people react to the ‘also recommended’ section of online stores.
  • Lindback, John, Stegmaier, Mary (2016). US voter registration data is poor. But election officials are working to address the weak spots.
  • Lindebaum, Dirk (2016). What neuroscience can(not) bring to the world of business.
  • Lindstad, Haakon-Elizabeth (2016). Shorter shipping routes through the Arctic are not necessarily more climate friendly.
  • Liogier, Raphaël (2016). Hypermodern religiosity: how young Muslims embrace traditional Islam and why it has little to do with terrorism.
  • Little, Laura M., Gooty, Janaki, Williams, Michele (2016). Leaders pay a price when they mismanage employees’ negative feelings.
  • Livermore, Michael A. (2016). If Donald Trump did win the presidency, as an outsider he would face huge challenges in pursuing a coherent policy agenda.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2016). Beyond digital immigrants? Rethinking the role of parents in a digital age.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2016). More online risks for parents to worry about, says new Safer Internet Day research.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2016). New ‘screen time’ rules from the American Academy of Pediatrics.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2016). Reading the runes to anticipate children’s digital futures.
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2016). What are pre-schoolers doing with tablets and is it good for them?
  • Livingstone, Sonia (2016). A digital Christmas?
  • Livingstone, Sonia, Sefton-Green, Julian (2016). Researching the class: a multi-sited ethnographic exploration.
  • Livingstone, Sonia, Sefton-Green, Julian (2016). Watch our new video about ‘the class’.
  • Livingstone, Sonia, Sefton-Green, Julian (2016). YouTube in the class.
  • Livingstone, Sonia, Sefton-Green, Julian (2016). The seemingly ‘closed world’ of the class.
  • Llaudes, Salvador (2016). The UK’s referendum and Spain: a Brexit is unlikely to be welcomed by Spanish citizens.
  • Lloyd, James (2016). Should academics be expected to change policy? Six reasons why it is unrealistic for research to drive policy change.
  • Lloyd, James (2016). So you want to change policy? Six steps for academics looking to achieve policy change.
  • Lloyd, Michael (2016). Nostalgia, xenophobia, anti-neoliberalism: the roots of Leave’s nationalism.
  • Lloyd, Michael (2016). The left must stop indulging anti-EU sentiment and get behind Remain.
  • Loach, Tamar, Szomszor, Martin (2016). What impact evidence was used in REF 2014? Disciplinary differences in how researchers demonstrate and assess impact.
  • Lobato, André (2016). Media wars in Brazil.
  • Lochrie, Karma (2016). LSE Lit Fest 2016: 'When Did We Start Dreaming?' by Karma Lochrie.
  • Locke, Connson C. (2016). Is flirtation an effective negotiation tactic?
  • Logan, Sarah (2016). Local revenue reform with the Kampala Capital City Authority.
  • Logan-Murray, Nic (2016). Book review: What works: gender equality by design by Iris Bohnet.
  • Lombana Bermudez, Andres (2016). Digital imaginaries and networked computers at home: working-class Latino/Hispanic immigrant parents in the US.
  • Lonardo, Luigi (2016). The EU’s new Global Strategy remains wedded to an old-fashioned conception of foreign policy.
  • Lonardo, Luigi (2016). The EU’s ‘diplomatic accident’ with Morocco shows the perils of judge-led foreign policy.
  • Long, Katy (2016). African perspectives on migration.
  • Long, Sophie (2016). Book review: contentious politics by Charles Tilly and Sidney Tarrow.
  • Long, Sophie (2016). The best bookshops in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
  • Longworth, Guy (2016). Trust in the dark.
  • Loprete, Giuseppe (2016). MIGRO ERGO SUM – I migrate, therefore I am – social pressure as a driver of economic migration from West Africa.
  • Lorenzo, Codogno (2016). Italy’s earthquake: estimating the economic and financial damage.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2016). The 2017 French presidential election: the race has started… and so far it has more candidates than voters.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2016). Blame it on the migrants and Schengen: far right and eurosceptic reactions to the Brussels attacks.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2016). Europe’s far right parties have also been toying with the idea of quitting the EU.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2016). Having won the French centre-right’s primary, does François Fillon have what it takes to beat Marine Le Pen?
  • Lorimer, Marta (2016). Les Républicains primary: the runners and riders as the French centre-right selects its presidential candidate.
  • Lorimer, Marta (2016). Sarko vs Juppé: will the French right select a candidate who can stop Le Pen?
  • Lorimer, Marta (2016). A cross-European platform to undermine the EU? Eurosceptic parties cooperate to create a vision for ‘another Europe’.
  • Lou, Dong (2016). When firms increase advertising spending, their stock prices climb in tandem.
  • Loughead, Jamie (2016). What are the odds? An insider perspective from the political betting market.
  • Lousada, Julian (2016). Alienated, under pressure and target driven: Why we need to make friends at work.
  • Louwerse, Tom, Otjes, Simon, Willumsen, David M., Öhberg, Patrik (2016). Research from Sweden and the Netherlands shows that ‘bloc’ politics leads to a greater degree of adversity in legislatures.
  • Low, Adrian (2016). Brexit is not the will of the British people – it never has been.
  • Lowe, David (2016). Imagining “a world beyond disorder”.
  • Loxton, James (2016). Cuba’s Communist Party would thrive under democracy, but only if it gives up power soon.
  • Lucio, Miguel Martínez (2016). The media and policymakers don’t realise that the role of trade unions has expanded.
  • Lucy, Lambe, Flanagan, Dimity (2016). International Open Access Week 2016: your library can help open up your research to the world.
  • Ludford, Sarah, Judah, Ben, Bickerton, Christopher, Smith, Julie, Travers, Tony (2016). Can London live without the EU? LSE BrexitVote Podcast.
  • Ludlow, N. Piers (2016). Britain’s liberal elite can’t wash their hands of Brexit.
  • Ludlow, N. Piers (2016). Don’t blame the worse-off for Brexit. Plenty of Britain’s ‘liberal elite’ backed it too.
  • Ludlow, N. Piers (2016). Michael Gove’s problem is that a single market is more than just a tariff-free zone.
  • Luksic, Igor, Prelec, Tena (2016). Interview with Igor Luksic, candidate for UN Secretary General: “Young people must be integrated into decision-making processes”.
  • Lumsdaine, Robin (2016). Ahead of decisions from the Federal Reserve, financial markets are more forward-looking than we thought.
  • Lwabukuna, Olivia (2016). 2016 could be a key year for women’s rights and development policy in Africa.
  • Lyamlahy, Khalid (2016). Souffles turns 50: Remembering the “Breath” of Moroccan Francophone literature.
  • Lyberaki, Antigone (2016). The Greek crisis is a crisis of production, not of public finance.
  • Lyberaki, Antigone, Tinios, Platon (2016). Gender and the Greek crisis: towards a risk assessment.
  • Lykketoft, Mogens, Brown, Stuart A., Prelec, Tena (2016). Mogens Lykketoft: “A Trump victory would be a nightmare for everything we have worked towards in the UN”.
  • Lynch, Tommy (2016). Beyond protest.
  • Lyons, Rebecca (2016). Feature: the academic book of the future: practice-as-research by Rebecca Lyons.
  • Lyyra, Antti K. (2016). Advances in robotics will only get you so far: context is crucial.
  • Lyyra, Antti K. (2016). The idea of robots as independent machines is science fiction.
  • Löhlein, Lukas (2016). Should auditors be reviewed by peers or should the state do it?
  • MacCarthaigh, Muiris, Elston, Thomas (2016). When separate organizations merge their back office functions.
  • MacFarland, Caroline, Owen, Katy (2016). Young people’s voices went unheard: the Brexit generational divide.
  • MacKenzie, Meredith (2016). “Speak to us, not about us”: social media and international development.
  • MacLean, Alair (2016). While veterans of World War II prospered, Vietnam veterans suffered economically after coming home.
  • MacWilliams, Matthew C. (2016). Donald Trump is attracting authoritarian primary voters, and it may help him to gain the nomination.
  • MacWilliams, Matthew C. (2016). Donald Trump’s victories show that authoritarian voters are now in control of the Republican nomination process.
  • Macdonald, Alison (2016). Book review: Rituparno Ghosh: cinema, gender and art edited by Sangeeta Datta, Kaustav Bakshi & Rohit K. Dasgupta.
  • Macdonald, Anna, Porter, Holly E. (2016). The trial of Thomas Kwoyelo: opportunity or spectre – a new paper by Anna Macdonald and Holly Porter.
  • Macnamara, Jim (2016). Everybody’s talking at me … is anyone listening?
  • Macnicol, John (2016). What do we mean by the ‘underclass’?
  • Macvarish, Jan (2016). The peculiar joylessness of neuroparenting.
  • Madar, Poonam (2016). “Being black”: what is it cool for?
  • Madar, Poonam (2016). The era of the ‘booty’ and the ‘burqa’.
  • Madariaga, Amuitz Garmendia, Ozen, H. Ege (2016). In election years, ballot box success for governors also helps presidential candidates, but not the other way around.
  • Maddocks, John, Myers, Jan (2016). Public service ethos: the blending values of public and mutual organisations.
  • Madonna, Anthony J., Monogan III, James E., Vining Jr, Richard L. (2016). If the next president wants to put an ideologue on the Supreme Court, they will have to sacrifice their initial domestic policy goals.
  • Maganza, Nicolò (2016). Can we predict a humanitarian emergency?
  • Maganza, Nicolò (2016). Seeking asylum in Europe.
  • Magioglou, Thalia (2016). To live or to survive?
  • Mahaseth, Harsh (2016). Nepal in conflict: the war for justice continues.
  • Mahboub, Samira, Catherine, Ania (2016). PHASE.
  • Maheshwari, Laya (2016). Does hostile campaigning work?
  • Mahmud Ali, S. (2016). 2015: Pakistan’s year of mixed fortunes.
  • Maier, George (2016). Class, dignity and self-esteem.
  • Main, Gill (2016). Measuring child poverty: proposed changes will push families into unacceptable hardship.
  • Majidi, Nassim (2016). A Natural Solution: Environmental solutions to displacement.
  • Majidi, Nassim, Nicolle, Hervé (2016). Youth, employment and migration in Puntland and Somaliland.
  • Makarem, Naji (2016). How friendships and networks matter for urban economic development.
  • Makri, Anita (2016). Book review: Ebola: how a people's science helped end an epidemic by Paul Richards.
  • Maldonado, John V. (2016). Book review: The class: living and learning in the digital ageby Sonia Livingstone and Julian Sefton-Green.
  • Mallinson, Dan (2016). States with larger populations of vulnerable groups and with more financial resources are more likely to adopt more comprehensive anti-bullying laws.
  • Malone, Chris (2016). Cabinet collective responsibility: how it works, and why it survives.
  • Manby, Josh (2016). The LSE Undergraduate political review.
  • Mancini, Paolo, Moss, Michael (2016). Paolo Mancini on the value of comparative research for studying new media and populist politics.
  • Mandel, Hadas, Semyonov, Moshe (2016). The growing racial pay gap is linked to rising income inequality and continued occupational segregation and discrimination.
  • Manger, Mark S. (2016). David Davis has demonstrated a decidedly muddled understanding of trade policy.
  • Manji, Ambreena, Cullen, Daniel (2016). Making UK aid work: why scrutiny is key – and how to achieve it.
  • Mann, Christopher B., Uscinski, Joseph E. (2016). Why holding a presidential nominating convention in a swing state matters.
  • Mann, Laura (2016). At the intersection of digital economy and industrial policy in Africa.
  • Mann, Laura (2016). #Technology – Looking back, going forward: LSE Academics reflect on 2015 and look ahead to 2016.
  • Mann, Laura, Meagher, Kate (2016). The needs of informal workers matter in digital innovation.
  • Manning, Chris (2016). Toxic workplaces impact health professionals.
  • Mano, Victorija (2016). Macedonian election preview: will the vote provide an answer to the country’s political crisis?
  • Mansoor, Ali, Issoufou, Salifou (2016). Senegal: Peer-learning to support reforms to become an emerging market economy.
  • Mantouvalou, Virginia (2016). Modern slavery? The UK visa system and the exploitation of migrant domestic workers.
  • Marangozov, Rachel, Williams, Matthew (2016). How will Brexit affect the NHS? The English trusts that depend most on EU nurses.
  • Marchegiani, Lucia, Reggiani, Tommaso, Rizzolli, Matteo (2016). Lenient performance evaluations cause less damage than severe ones.
  • Marcovici, Philip (2016). Can current offshore wealth management centres survive?
  • Marcovici, Philip (2016). Wealth managers shouldn’t avoid markets with complex regulations.
  • Marelli, Enrico, Signorelli, Marcello (2016). Closer fiscal integration is unavoidable if the Eurozone is to survive.
  • Marengo, Umberto (2016). Avoiding a Brexit will be crucial for the success of Europe’s Capital Markets Union.
  • Mares, Isabela, Queralt, Didac (2016). Income tax was not the result of democratisation, and governments should take note.
  • Margetts, Helen (2016). Denial, anger, and acceptance: moving to the next phase of the British far-right.
  • Margulies, Ben (2016). Book review: against elections: the case for democracy by David Van Reybrouck.
  • Margulies, Ben (2016). Debate: Why Blue Labour is a dead end.
  • Margulies, Ben (2016). How Trump’s populist ideology is stopping him from winning delegates.
  • Margulies, Ben (2016). Trump doesn’t really mean what he says. He’s just trying to change the subject.
  • Margulies, Ben (2016). UKIP on the up? The future looks set to play into their hands, it’s just a matter of grabbing it.
  • Margulies, Ben (2016). What do the German state elections tell us about the state of the country’s parties?
  • Margulies, Ben (2016). Why both camps in Labour’s internal struggle may be wrong about electability.
  • Marija, Babović, Danilo, Vuković (2016). Promoting social accountability in Cambodia.
  • Marini, Giulio, Reale, Emanuela (2016). Using ‘managerial’ approaches in universities is consistent with maintaining academic freedom.
  • Marino, Bruno, Diodati, Nicola Martocchia (2016). Whatever its outcome, the Brexit referendum is likely to strengthen anti-EU rhetoric in Italy.
  • Marino, Bruno, Martocchia, Nicola (2016). The great excuse: how Renzi could exploit the UK’s EU deal.
  • Marković, Petar (2016). Montenegro’s decade of independence: tracing a state back to its origins.
  • Markson, Tevye, Kiera, Brodie (2016). Afghanistan’s first citizen’s advice centres: a path to foreign aid success?
  • Marler, Sylvia, Porcaro, Giuseppe (2016). Changing our political culture: how to make politics great (again).
  • Marolov, Dejan (2016). A perfect storm: Macedonia’s political chaos and the refugee crisis.
  • Marshall, Adam (2016). The referendum is not the only thing that matters to British business.
  • Marshall, Chris (2016). Fair shares and degrees of inequality.
  • Martelli, Angelo (2016). In memory of Giulio Regeni – In memoria di Giulio Regeni.
  • Martin, Hal, Hanson, Andrew, Hawley, Zackary (2016). African Americans have a harder time getting mortgage information compared to whites.
  • Martin, Nicole (2016). Do ethnic minority candidates mobilise ethnic minority voters? Mostly not.
  • Martinez i Coma, Ferran (2016). Free and fair? 2016’s elections so far, ranked by integrity.
  • Martinez i Coma, Ferran (2016). Money is key for democratic politics but its abuse is often clearly perceived as a problem by citizens.
  • Martinez i Coma, Ferran, Lago, Ignacio (2016). Majoritarian electoral systems are more prone to gerrymandering than proportional systems.
  • Martins, Pedro (2016). Clicking towards Mozambique’s new jobs.
  • Martinsen, Øyvind L., Amundsen, Stein (2016). ‘Empowering leadership’ improves firm productivity.
  • Martín-Martín, Alberto, Orduna-Malea, Enrique, López-Cózar, Emilio Delgado (2016). The role of ego in academic profile services: comparing Google scholar, ResearchGate, Mendeley, and ResearcherID.
  • Marx, Paul, Schumacher, Gijs (2016). Welfare cuts – how framing influences support.
  • Marzinotto, Benedicta (2016). How income inequality affects euro area current account imbalances.
  • Marzinotto, Benedicta (2016). The euro area in 2016: unfinished business.
  • Mascheroni, Giovanna (2016). Going online in the Asia Pacific region: challenges for parents.
  • Masiero, Silvia (2016). Demonetisation and information poverty: insights from slum areas in Bangalore and Mumbai.
  • Masiero, Silvia (2016). Does computerisation reduce PDS leakage? Lessons from Karnataka.
  • Masiero, Silvia, Maiorano, Diego (2016). Empowering wageseekers? The computerisation of India’s NREGA in Andhra Pradesh.
  • Masselot, Annick, Guerrina, Roberta, McLellan, Bridgette (2016). What part did the EU play in raising women’s pensionable age?
  • Massie, Harriet (2016). Statelessness: a forgotten dimension of the Syrian refugee emergency.
  • Matakos, Konstantinos, Xefteris, Dimitrios (2016). When state elections have more racially diverse candidates, policies to tackle inequality are less likely to be seen as important.
  • Maths@LSE Blog (2016). 5 minutes with Hal Kierstead.
  • Maths@LSE Blog (2016). 5 minutes with Marc Renault.
  • Matringe, Nadia (2016). Commission trading allowed Italian merchant banks to flourish in the 16th century.
  • Mattalaer, Alexander (2016). Seven paradoxes of NATO’s revival as Europe’s primary security institution.
  • Matthews, Jodie (2016). Author response: critical condition: replacing critical thinking with creativity by Patrick Finn.
  • Matthews, Jodie (2016). Book review: Lines of flight: for another world of possibilities by Félix Guattari.
  • Matthews, Jodie (2016). Book review: critical condition: replacing critical thinking with creativity by Patrick Finn.
  • Matthews, Jodie (2016). The materiality of research: flows of thought: on canals, materiality and humanities research by Jodie Matthews.
  • Matthews, Kent (2016). The economic case for a Brexit.
  • Maugeri, Novella (2016). The story of José: 9 steps to turn the Mozambican construction boom into an engine for inclusive growth.
  • Maugeri, Novella, Oppewal, Jorrit (2016). Quer se tornar um empreendedor em Moçambique? 3 coisas que você precisa saber!
  • Maugeri, Novella, Oppewal, Jorrit (2016). Want to become an entrepreneur in Mozambique? 3 things you need to know!
  • Mavin, Sharon, Grandy, Gina (2016). Stop looking at her shoes!
  • May, Christopher (2016). Book review: The sharing economy: the end of employment and the rise of crowd-based capitalism by Arun Sundararajan.
  • May, Christopher (2016). Book review: after the crisis: anthropological thought, neoliberalism and the aftermath edited by James G. Carrier.
  • May, Christopher (2016). Book review: how industry analysts shape the digital future by Neil Pollock and Robin Williams.
  • May, Christopher (2016). Book review: taxing the rich: a history of fiscal fairness in the United States and Europe by Kenneth Scheve and David Stasavage.
  • May, Christopher (2016). Book review: the international politics of fashion: being fab in a dangerous world by Andreas Behnke.
  • May, Christopher (2016). The role of corporations in global governance remains a much overlooked area of study.
  • May, David C., Stives, Kristen L., Wells, Makeela J., Wood, Peter B. (2016). Military veterans in prison view their experience as being less punitive compared to non-veterans.
  • May, Oliver (2016). Improving the detection of corruption incidents in NGOs: four lessons learned from South Asia.
  • Maybin, Jo (2016). How proximity and trust are key factors in getting research to feed into policymaking.
  • Maybin, Jo (2016). How proximity and trust are key factors in getting research to feed into policymaking.
  • Mayer, Sophie (2016). #IWD2016 Book review: political animals: the new feminist cinema by Sophie Mayer.
  • Mayo, Ed (2016). A nation of members: civic participation through membership in the UK.
  • Mazzuca, Lucia, Yoshida, Keina (2016). The Inter-American Court must provide justice to the women of Atenco.
  • Mazzucato, Mariana, Littlewood, Mark, Elliot, Gary, Collyer, Kate, Overd, Alan (2016). Industrial policy: Past, present and future in post-Brexit Britain and beyond.
  • Mbaye, Linguère (2016). Remittances and credit markets: complementarities and evidence from Senegal.
  • McAndrew, Siobhan (2016). The EU referendum, religion and identity: analysing the British Election Study.
  • McAngus, Craig (2016). What does Brexit mean for those campaigning for Scottish independence?
  • McArthur, Dan (2016). Book review: Success and luck: good fortune and the myth of meritocracy by Robert H. Frank.
  • McArthur, Dan (2016). Book review: unequal Britain at work edited by Alan Felstead, Duncan Gallie and Francis Green.
  • McArthur, Dan (2016). Book review: why we can’t afford the Rich by Andrew Sayer.
  • McArthur, Jenny (2016). Book Review: Farah Al-Nakib’s ‘Kuwait Transformed’.
  • McArthur, Jenny (2016). Book review: a few hares to chase: the economic life and times of Bill Phillips by Alan Bollard.
  • McArthur, Jenny (2016). Book review: becoming Jane Jacobs by Peter L. Laurence.
  • McArthur, Jenny (2016). Book review: currency politics: the political economy of exchange rate policy by Jeffry A. Frieden.
  • McArthur, Jenny (2016). Book review: this is London: life and seath in the world city by Ben Judah.
  • McArthur, Jenny (2016). Book review: what is urban history? By Shane Ewen.
  • McBride, James (2016). The 2016 Irish general election: the parties and the polling.
  • McCarthy, Helen (2016). Political history in the digital age: the challenges of archiving and analysing born digital sources.
  • McCloskey, Alastair (2016). Today I Learned (TIL): using Reddit as a tool for public engagement, profile raising and scholarly dissemination.
  • McConalogue, Jim (2016). Book review: the coalition effect, 2010-2015 edited by Anthony Seldon & Mike Finn.
  • McCoole, Veena (2016). Digital verification: on the frontline.
  • McCracken, Andrew (2016). Book review: who is Charlie? Xenophobia and the new middle class by Emmanuel Todd.
  • McDonald, Paula (2016). Men are targets of sexual harassment at work far more commonly than we assume.
  • McDonald, Paula, O’Connor, Peter, Thompson, Paul (2016). Does profiling employees online overstep the boundaries?
  • McFadden, Erica, Wang, Jing (2016). Changes in the competition for city trash collection may mean efficiencies come at the expense of social equity.
  • McFeeters, Ashleigh (2016). Book review: social transformation in post-conflict Nepal: a gender perspective by Punam Yadav.
  • McGann, Anthony J., Smith, Charles Anthony, Latner, Michael, Keena, Alex (2016). Why the Republicans will retain the House in 2016...and 2018...and 2020.
  • McGlynn, Aidan (2016). Porn as propaganda.
  • McIvor, Méadhbh (2016). The rise of litigious religion: courts and the generation of religious publicity.
  • McKenzie, Lisa (2016). In out, in out, shake it all about.
  • McKenzie, Lisa (2016). It was 2016 that done it, guv.
  • McKenzie, Lisa (2016). The tangled chain of the social democrats: a gold necklace and the US election results.
  • McLachlan, Chris (2016). Book review: Social policy in a cold climate: policies and their consequences since the crisis edited by Ruth Lupton et al.
  • McLaughlin, Hugh (2016). How to increase your likelihood of publishing in peer reviewed journals.
  • McMahon, Simon (2016). The UK’s plans to prevent migration from Libya show a dangerous unwillingness to learn from the past.
  • McMillan, Margaret (2016). Five minutes with Margaret MacMillan: On historians, politicians, and their duty to history.
  • McQuarrie, Michael (2016). Blacks have more political power than ever. but they still face a racialized criminal justice system.
  • McQuarrie, Michael (2016). Sociology has a Trump problem.
  • McQuarrie, Michael (2016). Trump and the Revolt of the Rust Belt.
  • McQuarrie, Michael (2016). With unions in decline, Trump’s path to the presidency is unlikely to be through the Rust Belt.
  • McSharry, Patrick E., Swartz, Tom, Spray, John (2016). Can index based insurance reduce the vulnerability of farmers to weather?
  • McSherry, Madeline (2016). Book review: at home in two countries: the past and future of dual citizenship by Peter J. Spiro.
  • McSherry, Madeline (2016). Book review: lovecidal: walking with the disappeared by Trinh T. Minh-ha.
  • Mcdonnell, Anthony (2016). Could Corbyn win an election by mobilising non-voters? Not if he doesn’t win over Conservative supporters too.
  • Mears, Daniel P., Siennick, Sonja E. (2016). Children’s life chances are hurt when their parents are sent to prison.
  • Medda-Windischer, Roberta (2016). The contribution of the European Court of Human Rights to contemporary religious-related dilemmas.
  • Meehan, Elizabeth (2016). Is freedom of information a viable research tool? Step three: responses and conclusions.
  • Meehan, Elizabeth (2016). Is freedom of information a viable research tool? Step two: receiving a response to a request.
  • Meer, Nasar, Modood, Tariq (2016). A ‘Jeffersonian’ wall or an Anglican establishment: the US and UK’s contrasting approaches to incorporating Muslims.
  • Meersohn Schmidt, Cynthia (2016). Inadequacy may be useful in withstanding Brexit uncertainty.
  • Mehdiyeva, Nazrin (2016). The long read: Necessity vs ethics or necessary ethics? The West's moral dilemma in sourcing oil from the 1920s to the present day by Nazrin Mehdiyeva.
  • Mehiriz, Kaddour (2016). Delegating the distribution of intergovernmental grants to quasi-autonomous organizations does little to stop the influence of electoral politics.
  • Meibauer, Gustav (2016). How the 2011 Libyan intervention may have discredited the no-fly zone as a policy tool.
  • Meier, Ninna (2016). #IWD2016 Academic inspiration: ‘on connectivity or what reading Hannah Arendt taught me about the relatedness of things’ by Ninna Meier.
  • Meier, Ninna (2016). On the materiality of writing in academia or remembering where I put my thoughts.
  • Meier, Ninna (2016). Writing for impact: how can we write about our research in a way that leads to meaningful change?
  • Meier, Ninna (2016). The materiality of research: 'on the materiality of writing in academia or remembering where I put my thoughts’ by Ninna Meier.
  • Meier, Ninna (2016). The materiality of research: ‘thinking and writing in time and space’ by Ninna Meier.
  • Meier, Ninna, Wegener, Charlotte (2016). Engaging with the process of writing can connect researcher and reader and foster real innovation and impact.
  • Meierrieks, Daniel, Renner, Laura (2016). Why do 16% of the world’s adults dream of moving to another country permanently?
  • Melin, Hanne (2016). Internet platforms are transforming global trade.
  • Melissaris, Emmanuel (2016). Trying the dead.
  • Mellbye, Alex (2016). Love, space-time, and language: a taste of Norwegian culture.
  • Mellor, David (2016). Putting hypotheses to the test: We must hold ourselves accountable to decisions made before we see the data.
  • Melo, Patricia (2016). While we live in a globalised world, the concentration of activity in cities continues to drive economic growth.
  • Meltzer, Merrin (2016). Syria in crisis: the harrowing case of Aleppo.
  • Meltzer, Rachel (2016). Retail churn can bring both volatility and vitality to a neighborhood.
  • Menguc, Bulent, Katsikeas, Constantine, Auh, Seigyoung (2016). More customer orientation is not always better for frontline employees.
  • Mergel, Ines, Rethemeyer, Karl, Isett, Kimberley R (2016). What does Big Data mean to public affairs research? Understanding the methodological and analytical challenges.
  • Merkur, Sherry, Maresso, Anna, McDaid, David (2016). The changing role of nursing (New Eurohealth issue).
  • Merler, Silvia (2016). Italy’s constitutional referendum: a roundup of the political commentary.
  • Merricks, Walter (2016). IMPRESS and the Future of Press Regulation in the UK: Lecture by Walter Merricks CBE.
  • Mertia, Sandeep (2016). From computing clerks to androids: two bits on the material lives of social data in India.
  • Meseguer, Covadonga (2016). Remittances and walls by Covadonga Meseguer.
  • Message, Reuben (2016). Science on social media.
  • Messina, Julián, Carlsson, Mikael, Nordström Skans, Oskar (2016). When productivity goes up, firms raise salaries.
  • Messmer, Marion (2016). Book review: Neoclassical realist theory of international politics by Norrin M. Ripsman, Jeffrey W. Taliaferro and Steven E. Lobell.
  • Metcalf, David (2016). Analysis: why 361,000 nurses are not enough to maintain the health of NHS England.
  • Metcalf, David (2016). The UK suffers a shortage of nurses.
  • Metinsoy, Saliha (2016). Joining a terrorist organisation and committing violence – what drives individuals?
  • Metz, Neil, Burdina, Mariya (2016). How neighborhood inequality leads to higher crime rates.
  • Metzler, Kate (2016). “The Big Data rich and the Big Data poor”: the new digital divide raises questions about future academic research.
  • Mew, Heather (2016). Book review: hunger pains: life inside foodbank Britain by Kayleigh Garthwaite.
  • Meyer, Henning (2016). Five filters moderate the technological revolution.
  • Middaugh, Ellen (2016). Social media and online communities expose youth to political conversation, but also to incivility and conflict.
  • Mihai, Mihaela (2016). Monumental legacies and symbolic humiliation.
  • Mikulak, Magdalena (2016). Poland: a change so good, it makes you want to cry.
  • Mikulak, Magdalena (2016). The victory of abortion rights protesters in Poland is likely to be short lived.
  • Mila, Costas, Worrall, Tim, Zymek, Robert (2016). Stock returns after a Brexit vote: the winners and the losers.
  • Milas, Costas (2016). Let Mark Carney do his job – why this is not the time to replace the Governor of the Bank of England.
  • Miler, Kristina (2016). When House members become Senators their politics adapt tobe more acceptable to their new more diverse constituency.
  • Milic, Thomas, Serdült, Uwe (2016). Were the Brits Swiss, they would still have voted to leave.
  • Millar, Jane, Bennett, Fran (2016). Giving back control? A contradiction at the heart of Universal Credit.
  • Miller, Grant, Valente, Christine, Miller, Emily (2016). Insights from Nepal’s abortion legalisation.
  • Miller, Jennifer (2016). Book review: the American myth of markets in social policy: ideological roots of inequality by Debra Hevenstone.
  • Miller, Jennifer (2016). Book review: the future of the professions: how technology will transform the work of human experts by Richard Susskind and Daniel Susskind.
  • Miller, Joanne M., Saunders, Kyle L., Farhart, Christina E. (2016). Why Donald Trump’s election may mean we see more liberal conspiracy theories about the government.
  • Miller, Lisa (2016). Crime and punishment in Post-War Britain: “Mob rule” as democratic corrective?
  • Miller, Peter (2016). If we want more people with disabilities to vote, then we need to expand access to mail ballots.
  • Miller, Susan M. (2016). Federal agencies can ‘buy’ support in states, especially among citizens with whom they are ideologically aligned.
  • Milne, Claire (2016). Internet of Things, consumers and the public interest.
  • Minford, Patrick (2016). Being in the EU is like being ruled by a foreign power immune to the normal processes of political economy.
  • Ming, Vivienne (2016). An entrepreneur’s quest to build an EdTech product out of her invention.
  • Mintrom, Michael, Luetjens, Joannah (2016). Integrating design thinking into policymaking processes offers great value for citizens and government.
  • Misgar, Umar Lateef (2016). The UN needs to be salvaged.
  • Mishra, Saurabh, Modi, Sachin (2016). Does CSR create shareholder wealth?
  • Mishra, Vidisha (2016). Engendering India’s burgeoning cities.
  • Misra, Kartik (2016). Limited liability… But only for a limited few.
  • Mistry, Mark (2016). Kashmir has a new Chief Minister, but while the question of self-determination remains unresolved there is little hope of change.
  • Mistry, Mark (2016). Kashmir in crisis – before and after the killing of Burhan Wani.
  • Mitchell, James (2016). What does Brexit mean for Scottish politics?
  • Mitropolitski, Simeon (2016). Book review: Enver Hoxha: the iron fist of Albania by Blendi Fevziu.
  • Mitropolitski, Simeon (2016). Book review: between nationalism and Europeanisation: narratives of national identity in Bulgaria and Macedonia by Nevena Nancheva.
  • Mitropolitski, Simeon (2016). Book review: citizens in Europe: essays on democracy, constitutionalism and European integration by Claus Offe and Ulrich K. Preuss.
  • Mitropolitski, Simeon (2016). Book review: how Europeans view and evaluate democracy edited by Mónica Ferrín and Hanspeter Kriesi.
  • Mitropolitski, Simeon (2016). Book review: slippery slope: Europe’s troubled future by Giles Merritt.
  • Mitterle, Alexander, Würmann, Carsten, Bloch, Roland (2016). It’s time to teach — but which time is it? Tracing academic practices through more appropriate time metrics.
  • Mladovsky, Philipa, McKee, Martin, Ingelby, David, Rechel, Bernd (2016). Greater public investment is needed to fund the NHS at a level considered normal in other high income countries.
  • Modood, Tariq (2016). Interview: Tariq Modood – on being a public intellectual, a Muslim and a multiculturalist.
  • Modood, Tariq (2016). Multiculturalism can foster a new kind of post-Brexit Englishness.
  • Moiseienko, Anton (2016). Book review: crime by Robert Reiner.
  • Mollett, Amy (2016). Ten years on, how are universities using Twitter to engage with their communities? #LoveTwitter LSE Round-Up.
  • Mondshein, Rory P. (2016). The constitution trumps Mr. Trump’s presidential plans.
  • Monnet, Eric, Puy, Damien (2016). Why Bretton Woods nostalgia makes no sense.
  • Montague, Penny (2016). Book review: nightwalking: a nocturnal history of London by Matthew Beaumont.
  • Montague, Penny (2016). The best bookshops in Nottingham, UK.
  • Monti, Mara (2016). Italy cannot afford to allow political instability to affect its troubled banking system.
  • Moon, Darren (2016). Crowdsourcing for social sciences researchers: data gathering, teaching, learning and research dissemination from a single project.
  • Moono, Herryman (2016). Drivers for diversification: firm productivity and export growth.
  • Moore, Martin (2016). EU Commission Disrupts Google.
  • Moore, Tom (2016). Community-led housing: the evolution of partnerships between CLTs and housing associations.
  • Morais de Oliveira, Iago (2016). Using international human rights law to guarantee the right to health: a Brazilian experience.
  • Moral, Mert, Ozen, H. Ege, Tokdemir, Efe (2016). Incumbency advantage is not restricted to established majoritarian systems.
  • Moreh, Chris (2016). Book review: Karl Polanyi: a life on the left by Gareth Dale.
  • Moreh, Chris (2016). Book review: citizenship by Étienne Balibar.
  • Morel, Domingo (2016). Government takeovers of local authorities can mean that some communities are better represented at the expense of others.
  • Moreno, Gustavo Bonifaz (2016). Job market candidates 2016: Gustavo Bonifaz Moreno.
  • Morgan, David (2016). Psychoanalysis can help us make sense of Brexit.
  • Moriarty, Philip (2016). Addicted to the brand: the hypocrisy of a publishing academic.
  • Moriconi, Simone, Peri, Giovanni (2016). Do immigrants enjoy working more than British natives?
  • Morillas, Pol (2016). The elephant in the room: Brexit and the EU’s Global Strategy.
  • Morisi, Davide (2016). Brexit and Scottish independence: does campaign information actually change voters’ minds during a referendum?
  • Morley, Julia (2016). Measuring social impact is complicated and may create dysfunctional incentives.
  • Morricone, Corrado (2016). Criticism of Renzi’s constitutional reform is wide of the mark – it would make Italy’s institutions more efficient and responsive.
  • Morrison, Chris, Secker, Jane (2016). Nine things you need to know about copyright: a good practice guide for administrators, librarians and academics.
  • Mortimer, Josiah (2016). Whether Britain stays in the EU or not, there’s a democratic deficit that must be addressed.
  • Morton, Clive (2016). What gets measured gets distorted.
  • Morton, Clive (2016). The paradox of bullied and frightened workers delivering quality care.
  • Morys, Matthias (2016). History shows that Greece is able to implement meaningful reform.
  • Mossialos, Elias, Ge, Yanfeng, Hu, Jia, Wang, Liejun (2016). Building a strong pharmaceutical system for China.
  • Mossialos, Elias, Simpkin, Victoria L., Keown, Oliver, Darzi, Ara (2016). Staff, drugs, research, TTIP, patients: how would Brexit affect the NHS?
  • Mostafa, Tarek, Bose, Pablo (2016). The narrow focus on climate change in Bangladesh often reproduces exploitation and vulnerability rather than addressing it.
  • Motahar, Ghaidaa (2016). Gender should play a bigger role in humanitarian aid in Yemen.
  • Mougayar, William (2016). Working as a layer on top of the internet, blockchain is an instrument of change.
  • Moussa, Mario, Newberry, Derek (2016). What we can learn from Donald Trump’s campaign reboot.
  • Mudde, Cas (2016). How scholars turned their attention to the populist radical right.
  • Mugnai, Iacopo (2016). Renzi’s referendum defeat is part of the legitimacy crisis plaguing left wing parties in Europe.
  • Mujanović, Jasmin (2016). Republika Srpska’s referendum: a prelude to a nationalist landslide in the Bosnian elections.
  • Mukherjee, Sroyon (2016). Book review: a survival kit for doctoral students and their supervisors: traveling the landscape of research by Lene Tanggaard and Charlotte Wegener.
  • Mukherjee, Sroyon (2016). Book review: the business of bees: an integrated approach to bee decline and corporate responsibility edited by Jill Atkins and Barry Atkins.
  • Mukherjee, Sroyon (2016). The best bookshops in Copenhagen, Denmark.
  • Mukhopadhyay, Ankita (2016). Book review: an economist in the real world: the art of policymaking in India by Kaushik Basu.
  • MukimAnother, Megha (2016). Life after LSE: Megha Mukim on Asia’s most competitive cities.
  • Mulderrig, Jane (2016). Fat-shaming: Change4Life’s anti-obesity ‘nudge’ campaign glosses over social inequalities.
  • Mulhall, Daniel (2016). Daniel Mulhall, Irish Ambassador: why I hope the UK will remain in the European Union.
  • Mulhall, Joe (2016). The British Counter-Jihad Movement no longer really exists but its impact can still be felt.
  • Muller, Laura (2016). My reflections on the LSE-SIPA MPA dual degree.
  • Munakamwe, Janet (2016). Photo Blog: Artisanal gold mining in South Africa.
  • Mungan, Murat C. (2016). How criminalizing minor offenses can mean there is less of a deterrent for people to commit more serious crimes.
  • Munro, Gayle (2016). Book review: Living on the margins: undocumented migrants in a global city by Alice Bloch and Sonia McKay.
  • Munshey, Menaal (2016). The Punjab women’s protection act: an ideological battle.
  • Munshey, Menaal (2016). An incoherent push for peace in Afghanistan.
  • Munzaa, Aaron (2016). Scholars tackle the persistence of colonial legacy in the Academy and society at large.
  • Muraszkiewicz, Julia (2016). Modern slavery – but let us remember the trafficked.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2016). Brexit against the wishes of Scotland and Northern Ireland would violate the UK’s constitutional settlement.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2016). British sovereignty post-Brexit: why the Great ‘Repeal’ Act will actually weaken Parliament.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2016). The Great ‘Repeal’ Act will leave Parliament sidelined and disempowered.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2016). The High Court judgment on Article 50 is a proper drubbing for the government.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2016). The High Court ruling explained: an embarrassing lesson for Theresa May’s government.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal, Toubeau, Simon (2016). Sovereignty is an illusion: the UK should use its power-sharing experience to play a constructive role in the EU.
  • Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal, Trotter, Sarah (2016). Fundamental rights and fundamental fears.
  • Murphy, Fiona (2016). Publishing and sharing data papers can increase impact and benefits researchers, publishers, funders and libraries.
  • Murphy, Mahon (2016). Book Review: Lawrence of Arabia’s war: the Arabs, the Britishand the remaking of the Middle East in WWI by Neil Faulkner.
  • Murphy, Mahon (2016). Book review: The Crimean War in imperial context, 1854-1856 by Andrew C. Rath.
  • Murr, Andreas, Stegmaier, Mary, Lewis-Beck, Michael S. (2016). Using citizen forecasts we predict that with 362 electoral votes, Hillary Clinton will be the next president.
  • Murray, Andrew D. (2016). The LSE Law Department Contributes to the Surveillance Debate.
  • Musaro, Pierluigi (2016). The political ‘migration crisis’ and the military-humanitarian response.
  • Mutiso, Bryan (2016). Address African conflicts with a stronger African union.
  • Mwale, Temi (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 5.
  • Myant, Martin (2016). Why internal devaluation fails.
  • Myślińska, Dagmar Rita (2016). Incomplete Europeans: Polish migrants’ experience of discrimination in the UK is complicated by their whiteness.
  • Myślińska, Dagmar Rita (2016). Migration arguments supporting Brexit appear to be backed by animus.
  • Myślińska, Dagmar Rita (2016). Post-Brexit hate crimes against Poles are an expression of long-standing prejudices and contestation over white identity in the UK.
  • Müller, Mareike (2016). We should ensure women’s rights are safeguarded in the Brexit negotiations.
  • Müller, Ruth (2016). A culture of speed: anticipation, acceleration and individualization in academic science.
  • Nabi, Shehryar (2016). Four ideas changing how the Punjab government thinks about development.
  • Naeem, Farria (2016). Digital Bangladesh: assessing the impact of electronic government procurement.
  • Nafpliotis, Alexandros (2016). Book review: prime ministers in Greece: the paradox of power by Kevin Featherstone and Dimitri Papadimitrioul.
  • Nagy-Mohacsi, Piroska (2016). America’s real challenge is the defence of democratic institutions.
  • Naish, Stephen (2016). Book review and author interview: island story: journeys around unfamiliar Britain by J.D. Taylor.
  • Nalder, Kim L., Conroy, Meredith, Joesten Martin, Danielle (2016). The Two Hillary Clintons: how supporters and detractors describe the Democratic nominee.
  • Nandagiri, Rishita (2016). Book review: the country of first boys by Amartya Sen.
  • Naqvi, Fayeeza (2016). Aman Clinics Accelerator: health solutions for Pakistanis, by Pakistanis.
  • Naqvi, Fayeeza (2016). Delivering innovations in healthcare in Pakistan.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). Blogs, social media and building your network.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). EU referendum and the perils of #perception.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). Ethnicity and politics in Afghanistan: an analysis of the 2014 presidential election.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). “I feel a little bit like they don’t understand me”.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). Interviewers’ identity and reflexivity in qualitative research: lessons from a Master’s thesis.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). Juggling studying, work and volunteering – is it possible?
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). What matters more to children: cultural and social resources or material resources? Through the lens of Afghanistan.
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). Women’s rights in Afghanistan reaches stagnation. Could western notions of rights be the reason?
  • Nasimi, Rabia (2016). The refugee struggle: an insight into the lives of refugees from Afghanistan.
  • Nasimi, Rabia, Blades, Chloe (2016). Powering Afghanistan: ethnic rivalries over the TUTAP power line.
  • Nasr, Leila (2016). Are human rights really ‘universal, inalienable, and indivisible’?
  • Nasrat, Sayed, Tamim Karimi, Abdul (2016). Will WTO membership boost trade and investment in land-locked Afghanistan?
  • Navarro, Vicente (2016). Emphasizing class-based policies can help civil society to mobilize women, the elderly, and ethnic and minority groups in the US election.
  • Naydenov, Alexander (2016). PaperHive – a coworking hub for researchers that aims to makereading more collaborative.
  • Nazar, Raza (2016). How would you change Pakistan? Crowdsourcing ideas from LSE students.
  • Nazar, Raza (2016). Justice Khalil-ur-Rehman Ramday on law, the Constitution and minority rights in Pakistan.
  • Nazroo, Aimee (2016). Book review: pricing beauty: the making of a fashion model by Ashley Mears.
  • Neajai Pailey, Robtel (2016). They herded us into the aircraft like cattle.
  • Neff, Chris, Smyth, Paul, Craven, Luke (2016). “We should expect more, not less of our profession”: responsesto ‘Should academics be expected to change policy?’.
  • Nehushtan, Yossi (2016). Why there should not be a General Election ‘about the EU’ – and why the UK isn’t a democracy.
  • Neiheisel, Jacob (2016). Being labelled as a ‘liberal’ doesn’t hurt Democratic presidential candidates. But in Senate elections, it’s another story.
  • Nelson, Eva (2016). French intervention in Africa reflects its national politics.
  • Nelson, Kim (2016). The doctrine of humanitarian intervention: lessons from the Chilcot Report.
  • Nesbitt, Eleanor (2016). Interfaith in the public and the private sphere.
  • Neumann, Peter (2016). Book review: radicalized: new jihadists and the threat to the West by Peter R. Neumann.
  • Newburn, Tim (2016). Book review: Hillsborough voices: the real story told by the people themselves by Kevin Sampson (in association with the Hillsborough Justice Campaign).
  • Newburn, Tim (2016). A most extraordinary scandal: Hillsborough.
  • Newell, James (2016). Matteo Renzi’s election prospects: a work in progress.
  • Newell, James, Giovannini, Arianna (2016). The Five Star Movement’s victories in Italy’s mayoral elections: a major blow for Renzi and the PD.
  • Newell, James L. (2016). Italy’s referendum: don’t expect shockwaves after Sunday.
  • Newell, James L. (2016). Who’s afraid of the Five Star Movement? Why Italy leaving the euro remains unlikely regardless of what happens on Sunday.
  • Newton, Rebecca (2016). How to co-lead a team.
  • Neylon, Cameron (2016). Taking Culture Seriously: how can we build positive change and coherent practice within our research communities?
  • Neylon, Cameron, Roberts, David Michael, Wilson, Mark C (2016). What do mathematicians think about their journals? peer reviewquality tops list of stated issues.
  • Ngenda, Muna (2016). Student Experience: Settling into a life-changing year.
  • Nguyen, Kieu-Trang, Van Reenen, John (2016). Tax relief for Research and Development is a rare example of an innovation policy that actually works.
  • Niaz, Laraib (2016). Book review: partitioned histories: the other side of your story.
  • Nicholson, Cathy, Obradović, Sandra (2016). New publications on ‘conflict and memory’ from PhD researchers.
  • Nicola, Elena (2016). The Catch 22 of Psychiatry – what’s wrong with calling depression an illness, but the issue with treating it as if it isn’t.
  • Nicola, Elena (2016). I, Elena Nicola.
  • Nicolson, Donald (2016). Conference travel as a barrier to knowledge development.
  • Nicolson, Donald (2016). Plato and Aristotle plan a symposium: a surreal take on academic conferences.
  • Nicolson, Donald (2016). The last great unknown? The impact of academic conferences.
  • Nine, Cara (2016). Land and justice.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2016). Assessing the three main security threats facing Europe in the wake of the Ukraine crisis.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2016). Avoiding a new Cold War: The future of EU-Russia relations in the context of the Ukraine crisis.
  • Nitoiu, Cristian (2016). What does the Litvinenko ruling mean for relations between Russia and the West?
  • Nix, Justin (2016). Evidence suggests that US police understand citizens value procedural fairness, but may not recognize the long term benefits of its use.
  • Njue, Duncan (2016). Renewing Africa through globalisation and Intra-Continental trade.
  • Nkosi, Zama (2016). The African trade agenda should centre on industrialisation.
  • Nord, Roger (2016). African countries can regain the economic momentum of the past two decades.
  • Norman, Kelsey (2016). Host state responsibility and capacity in Egypt, Morocco and Turkey.
  • Norrander, Barbara (2016). In Arizona’s Senate race, a long-term incumbent faces a rising national tide.
  • Norris, Maria W. (2016). Book review: veiled threats: representing the Muslim woman in public policy discourses by Naaz Rashid.
  • Nowell-Smith, Geoffrey (2016). Book review: the rise and fall of the UK Film Council by Gillian Doyle, Philip Schlesinger, Raymond Boyle and Lisa W. Kelly.
  • Nugent, Mary, Krook, Mona Lena (2016). Gender quotas do not pose a threat to “merit” at any stage of the political process.
  • Nunes, Ana Raquel (2016). Book review: seven steps to a comprehensive literature review: a multimodal and cultural approach by Anthony J. Onwuegbuzie and Rebecca Frels.
  • Nyamunda, Tinashe (2016). Zimbabwe bond notes and their possible long-term legacy.
  • O'Connor, Cailin (2016). If evolution favours fairness, why does inequality persist?
  • O'Leary, Brendan (2016). Detoxifying the UK’s exit from the EU: a multi-national compromise is possible.
  • O'Leary, Brendan (2016). Exit plan: how Scotland and Northern Ireland can remain in the EU.
  • O'Neill, Brian (2016). Digital parenting in Ireland.
  • O'Regan, Philip, Killian, Sheila (2016). Community involvement lends legitimacy to firms’ social accounting.
  • O'Rourke, Kevin (2016). The lesson from Brexit is that too much market and too little state invites a backlash.
  • O'Sullivan, Aidan (2016). How transparency can be improved in the way EU laws are negotiated and agreed.
  • Obadare, Ebenezer (2016). Kids in need of desks; a continent in need of a moral overhaul.
  • Oberthür, Sebastian (2016). How would a Brexit affect the environment?
  • Obradović, Sandra, Reddy, Geetha, Gleibs, Ilka H., Howarth, Caroline (2016). New publication: the social psychology of everyday politics.
  • Odlyzko, Andrew (2016). What would surprise early Victorian market players if they came alive today?
  • Ogbonna, Nwamaka (2016). Women in Nigeria make up 49 per cent of the population, but only four per cent of lawmakers.
  • Oh, Do Young (2016). Book review: urban neighborhoods in a new era: revitalization politics in the postindustrial city edited by Clarence N. Stone and Robert P. Stoker.
  • Ohana, Marc (2016). Having a voice in team decisions may not be a good idea for neurotic employees.
  • Ojok, Donnas (2016). Social media Lockdown and elections in Uganda.
  • Okoroji, Celestine, Mazari, Haani, Reddy, Geetha, Dedios Sanguineti, Maria Cecilia, Nogueira, Mara (2016). Reflections on a research field trip to Brazil.
  • Olaleye, Yossie, Kyarisiima, Hope, Omollo, Camilla (2016). Decolonising education is reflexive, deliberate, and necessary.
  • Olczak, Kaya, Salcher, Maximillian, Naci, Huseyin (2016). What works best in congenital heart disease? Comparing two interventions for treatment of Aortic Coarctation.
  • Oliver, Adam (2016). Celebrating 10 years of “Health Economics, Policy and Law”.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). After a Brexit: the EU that falls apart, continues to muddle through, or integrates further.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Brexit: the many roads to a crisis?
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). A British exit from the EU is not casually overlooked in international relations.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). The European Parliament and the UK’s renegotiation III: President Schulz.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). European views on the Brexit negotiations.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Forget independence for London: but the capital now needs its own devolved government more than ever.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). How future UK European referendums might happen.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). How will the EU interpret the Brexit vote?
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Preparations for a Brexit VI: views from the EU’sinstitutions, France, and Germany.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Preparations for a Brexit: the EU will shape what happens after a vote to withdraw.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Scenarios of a new UK-EU relationship: a ‘harsh’ Brexit.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Shades of grey: is Brexit going to lead to European disintegration?
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). A Trump presidency would present an enormous challenge for the UK-US ‘special relationship’.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). Trump will present an enormous challenge for the UK-US ‘Special Relationship’.
  • Oliver, Tim (2016). The rise of English nationalism is something British politicians can no longer ignore.
  • Oliver, Tim, Kammel, Arnold, Bartovic, Vladimír, Jokela, Juha, Tzogopoulos, George, Pace, Roderick (2016). Preparations for a Brexit IV: views from Austria, the Czech Republic, Finland, Greece, and Malta.
  • Oliver, Tim, Larsen, Henrik, Poli, Eleonora, Korteweg, Rem, Lovec, Marco, Mestres, Laia (2016). Preparations for a Brexit: views from Denmark, Italy, the Netherlands, Slovenia and Spain.
  • Oliver, Tim, McGuinness, Mairead, McAllister, David, Hübner, Danuta (2016). The European Parliament and the UK’s renegotiation: what do MEPs think? Part II.
  • Oliver, Tim, Poli, Eleonora, Möller, Almut, Lovec, Marco, Mestres, Laia (2016). EU views on the British vote to leave: Italy, Germany, Slovenia and Spain.
  • Oliver, Tim, Primatarova, Antoinette, Pegasiou, Adonis, Huberty, Martine, Gostyńska-Jakubowska, Agata, Raimundo, António (2016). Preparations for a Brexit III: views from Bulgaria, Cyprus, Luxembourg, Poland, and Portugal.
  • Oliver, Tim, Willermain, Fabian, Gálik, Zoltán, Bruģe, Ilvija, Bilčík, Vladimír, Fägersten, Björn (2016). Preparations for a Brexit V: views from Belgium, Hungary, Latvia, Slovakia, and Sweden.
  • Oliver, Tim, de Jong, Dennis, Keller, Ska, Turmes, Claude (2016). The European Parliament and the UK’s renegotiation IV: what do MEPs think?
  • Oliver, Tim, Šelo Šabić, Senada, Bahovski, Erkki, Gilmore, Andrew, Vaicekauskaite, Živilė, Nicolescu, Agnes (2016). Preparations for a Brexit II: views from Croatia, Estonia, Ireland, Lithuania and Romania.
  • Ombelet, Pieter-Jan, Kuczerawy, Aleksandra (2016). Delfi revisited: the MTE-Index.hu v. Hungary case.
  • Onaciu, Vlad (2016). Book review: British clandestine activities in Romania during the Second World War by Dennis Deletant.
  • Onaciu, Vlad (2016). The long read: the writing and re-writing of Joseph Stalin and his Regime: a critical comparison of two biographies.
  • Ondraschek-Norris, Sandra (2016). Are the days of leadership as command and control by white men numbered?
  • Orgad, Shani (2016). Women who quit their careers: a group rarely investigated.
  • Ornelas, Emanuel (2016). Does special treatment in trade benefit developing countries?
  • Orr, Susan (2016). Deadlines, delegate divisions and demographics helped determine the New York presidential primary result.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2016). President Trump and the politics of tragedy.
  • Orsi, Roberto (2016). The great pushback: Western politics and dynamics of exclusion.
  • Orton, Michael (2016). Building consensus across the political spectrum: designing solutions to socio-economic insecurity.
  • Osbaldiston, Nick (2016). The materiality of research: sinking into the sand: explorations of the coast in sociology by Nick Osbaldiston.
  • Oshri, Odelia, Sheafer, Tamir, Shenhav, Shaul (2016). Still united in diversity? The longer a country is part of the EU, the stronger its citizens support liberal democratic values.
  • Ostermann, Michael, Caplan, Joel M. (2016). Some released prisoners cost municipalities millions by reoffending, but don’t have to.
  • Otjes, Simon (2016). Could the Netherlands’ referendum on Ukraine really create a ‘continental crisis’?
  • Otjes, Simon (2016). Is a Nexit now on the cards? What the UK’s referendum means for the Netherlands.
  • Ottovordemgentschenfelde, Svenja (2016). Beyond 140 characters: a Tow Center project about the forces that shape journalists’ strategic Twitter engagement.
  • Ottovordemgentschenfelde, Svenja (2016). Tweeting the election: journalistic voice, bias, and “knowing where the line is”.
  • Ottovordemgentschenfelde, Svenja (2016). “The next tweet could get you fired!” – or promoted?
  • Owens, Ann (2016). How the rich wanting the best for their kids is segregating our neighborhoods.
  • O’Brien, Mahon (2016). Misadventures in political philosophy.
  • O’Connor, Courteney J. (2016). Book review: predator empire: drone warfare and full spectrum dominance by Ian G. R. Shaw.
  • O’Connor, Courteney J. (2016). Book review: the closing of the net by Monica Horten.
  • Pabst, Adrian (2016). Blue-collar voters and the Left: Labour must reconnect with those it left behind.
  • Pabtist, Adrian (2016). Debate: Blue Labour is not a dead end, it’s part of the way forward – a response to Ben Margulies.
  • Pacheco-Vega, Raul (2016). Five strategies to get your academic writing “unstuck”.
  • Padhair, Janak N. (2016). Book review: how solidarity works for welfare: subnationalism and social development in India by Prerna Singh.
  • Pain, Rachel, Raynor, Ruth (2016). “A soup of different inspirations”: co-produced research and recognising impact as a process, not an outcome.
  • Paipais, Vassilios (2016). The international politics of the refugee crisis.
  • Palermo, Tommaso (2016). Why airplanes take off and land safely despite all the risks.
  • Palermo, Tommaso (2016). The risk culture in financial institutions needs fixing, but how?
  • Pallett, Helen (2016). Book review: Publics and their health systems: rethinking participation by Ellen Stewart.
  • Palmer, Geraldine (2016). Nonprofit housing dispersal strategies to help the homeless can increase quality of life when placed in diverse and more affluent communities.
  • Palmer, Jack (2016). Book review: Social theory for alternative societies by Matt Dawson.
  • Pamungkas, Diska Putri (2016). Global stories for a global audience?
  • Panagiotarea, Eleni (2016). The political economy of NPLs resolution: ownership and conditionality.
  • Panizza, Francisco (2016). Rousseff: A victim of circumstances or responsible for her own demise?
  • Pannini, Elisa (2016). Book review: the Oxford handbook of creative industries edited by Candace Jones, Mark Lorenzen and Jonathan Sapsed.
  • Pant, Harsh V. (2016). 2016: a year of dramatic changes in South Asia.
  • Papagaryfallou, Ioannis (2016). Book review: Unruly equality: US anarchism in the 20th century by Andrew Cornell.
  • Papazoglou, Alexis (2016). Isaiah Berlin and Brexit: how the Leave campaign misunderstands “freedom”.
  • Parenting for a Digital Future, LSE (2016). Parenting for a Digital Future: recent highlights of 2016.
  • Park, Chinhyong (2016). The big debate at Cumberland Lodge 2016.
  • Park, Dennis, Tzabbar, Daniel (2016). The power play between venture capitalists and CEOs shapes startup innovation.
  • Parker, Matt (2016). What is it like to write philosophy?
  • Parry, Samuel (2016). After the Brexit vote Plaid Cymru is finally becoming a radical alternative to Labour in Wales.
  • Pascoe, Polly (2016). Brexit makes it urgent to professionalise management in the NHS.
  • Pascoe, Polly (2016). How to foster collaborative leadership in the NHS target-driven culture.
  • Pascoe, Polly (2016). The NHS needs to ‘flip’ its leadership programme.
  • Pasek, Josh (2016). Many Americans’ racially and partisan motivated dislike forObama means they doubt his legitimacy as president.
  • Pasquale, Frank (2016). Bittersweet Mysteries of Machine Learning (A Provocation).
  • Pasquino, Gianfranco, Capussela, Andrea Lorenzo (2016). Italy’s constitutional reform is ill conceived and can safely be rejected.
  • Patel, Reema (2016). Citizens can and should be involved in the process of shaping economic policy.
  • Patrick, Megan, Schulenberg, John, O’Malley, Patrick (2016). Students who use drugs in high school are less likely to attend or complete college.
  • Paul, Newly (2016). North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory’s claims of voter fraud may further undermine public trust in elections and political institutions.
  • Paul, Newly (2016). Turnout could be key in North Carolina’s tight Senate race.
  • Paul, Newly, Cassino, Dan, Klaas, Brian (2016). The first presidential debate: USAPP expert reaction andcommentary.
  • Pautz, Hartwig, Heins, Elke (2016). Government and ‘independent expertise’: think tanks represent a blind spot for critical analysis.
  • Pautz, Hartwig, Stuart, Francis (2016). What does ‘decent work’ mean to low-paid workers? Working practices and how to improve them.
  • Pavlović, Srđa (2016). Montenegro’s ‘stabilitocracy’: The West’s support of Đukanović is damaging the prospects of democratic change.
  • Payne, Daniel (2016). From the LSE Library: rarely seen campaigning literature from the 1975 referendum.
  • Payne, Samuel (2016). Git for Data Analysis – why version control is essential for collaboration and for gaining public trust.
  • Pearce, Jone L., Huang, Laura (2016). Gut feeling plays an important role in early-stage investors’ decisions.
  • Pearce, Sioned (2016). Making your Marx in research: reflections on impact and theefficacy of case studies using the work of Karl Marx.
  • Pearson, Charlotte, Ridley, Julie (2016). The right policy at the wrong time? Austerity hampers the personalisation approach in social care.
  • Pedaliu, Effie G. H. (2016). Europe in the Age of Trump: a more uncertain and unstable continent.
  • Pedrick, Lucy (2016). The business impact of the Brexit vote: a view from housing associations.
  • Pedulla, David S. (2016). If you’re a man, working part-time can reduce your chances ofgetting a new job as much as unemployment does.
  • Peer, Limor (2016). A matter of integrity: can improved curation efforts prevent the next data sharing disaster?
  • Peers, Steve (2016). Reading the small print: will Cameron’s EU migration reforms pass legal muster?
  • Peled, Alon, Kippin, Sean (2016). Interview: Alon Peled on open data, incentives, and ‘traversing digital Babel’.
  • Peled, Alon, Kippin, Sean (2016). Interview: Alon Peled on the public sector information exchange, avoiding disasters, and big data.
  • Pendle, Naomi (2016). A South Sudanese peace?
  • Pennerstorfer, Astrid (2016). Volunteer work can sometimes threaten the jobs of paid employees in non-profits.
  • Pennill, Matthew (2016). Expectations, preferences, and voter turnout: An application of prospect theory to the calculus of voting.
  • Percy, Sally (2016). The Queen’s speech and the NHS: is secondary legislation the new primary legislation?
  • Perera, Dr Suda (2016). #DRCongo: where a decade of failed democracy has exposed the electoral fallacy.
  • Perez Villar, Lucia, Seric, Adnan, Krieger-Boden, Christiane (2016). Does South-South FDI Pay?
  • Perez-Leon-Acevedo, Juan Pablo (2016). Peruvian IDPs and the search for holistic transitional justice.
  • Perkes, Barnaby (2016). Opening hustings promises an engaging London Mayoral contest.
  • Persson, Jen (2016). School census changes add concerns to the richest education database in the world.
  • Pertwee, Ed (2016). Book review: Black wind, white snow: the rise of Russia’snew nationalism by Charles Clover.
  • Peteet, Bridgette (2016). How graduate school bridge programs can help increase diversity in STEM subject admission.
  • Peters, Yvette (2016). Political parties which operate in a direct democratic context tend to have a higher number of members.
  • Petersen, Marie Juul (2016). Islam and human rights: clash or compatibility?
  • Peterson, Timothy M. (2016). The US is more likely to impose sanctions on countries that have poor allies.
  • Pfannebecker, Mariele, Smith, J.A. (2016). The long read: What will we do in the post-work utopia? byMareile Pfannebecker and J.A. Smith.
  • Phalkey, Jahnavi (2016). How to write about China and India.
  • Philip, Shannon (2016). Book review: slums on screen: world cinema and the planet of slums by Igor Krstić.
  • Phillimor, Jenny, Cheung, Sin Yi (2016). Refugees and integration in the UK: the role of gender.
  • Phillips, Peter (2016). The statutory presence of the Church of England in prisons should give it a voice on issues of imprisonment, but it remains largely silent.
  • Philp, Chris (2016). How Shareholder Committees can control executive pay and restore responsible company ownership.
  • Phinnemore, David (2016). Northern Ireland and Brexit: struggling and divided over ‘what next’.
  • Photiadou, Artemis (2016). Book review: clausewitz on small war edited by Christopher Daase and James W. Davis.
  • Photiadou, Artemis, Kippin, Sean (2016). The “power vs. principles” conundrum – or why Labour can’t get a grip.
  • Piazza, Gabriele, Myant, Martin (2016). The results of Italy’s 2012 labour-market reforms – no solution to unemployment.
  • Piccoli, Lorenzo (2016). The Italian troublemaker: how Renzi’s European strategy is putting him at odds with Angela Merkel.
  • Piccoli, Lorenzo (2016). The outcome of Italy’s referendum may be decided in Castelnuovo di Porto.
  • Pickard, Victor (2016). After Net Neutrality.
  • Pickerden, Alex (2016). Budget 2016: the sociology of sugar.
  • Pickup, Francine, Uno, Tomoyuki (2016). Social finance: a new frontier for development in Indonesia.
  • Picton, John (2016). Book review: charity sucks by Iqbal Wahhab.
  • Picton, John (2016). Book review: the right to buy? Selling off public and social housing by Alan Murie.
  • Pinchbeck, Ted (2016). NHS walk-in centres are popular, but divert few patients from A&Es.
  • Pinchevsky, Gillian, Steiner, Benjamin (2016). Despite the idea that all are equal under the law, women are often treated more leniently in pretrial decisions.
  • Pinfield, Stephen (2016). Enabling authors to pay for open access: the gold open access market and the role of an institutional central fund.
  • Pinkowska, Patrycja (2016). Book review: enduring uncertainty: deportation, punishment and everyday life by Ines Hasselberg.
  • Pinna, Fabio, Seiler, Stephan (2016). How taking a bit longer to do your shopping might save you money.
  • Pisani-Ferry, Jean, Röttgen, Norbert, Sapir, André, Tucker, Paul, Wolff, Guntram B (2016). Europe after Brexit: a proposal for a new Continental Partnership.
  • Pissarides, Christopher (2016). An isolationist America will be bad for the world.
  • Pitroda, Sam (2016). Report on the LSE India Summit 2016.
  • Pitroda, Sam, Campion, Mukti Jain (2016). “We need a new world economic order. The old systems do not serve the needs of the information society” – Sam Pitroda.
  • Pitt, Edward (2016). Too much EU interference? A look at the areas where critics say the single market overreaches itself.
  • Pitt, Edward (2016). What the EU did for English law – and British lawyers.
  • Pizzi, Elise (2016). Flexibility in the field: Reflections on letting go of expectations and learning to work with unofficial research support.
  • Plantin, Jean-Christophe (2016). Algorithmic accountability in scholarship: what we can learn from #DeleteAcademiaEdu.
  • Plantinga, Carl (2016). Moving pictures.
  • Poletti, Monica, Bale, Tim, Webb, Paul (2016). Explaining the pro-Corbyn surge in Labour’s membership.
  • Poletti, Monica, Bale, Tim, Webb, Paul (2016). Explaining the pro-Corbyn surge in Labour’s membership.
  • Poletti, Monica, Dennison, James (2016). The Green Surge and how it changed the membership of the Party.
  • Polonski, Vyacheslav (2016). The next decade of data science: rethinking key challenges faced by big data researchers.
  • Pompper, Donnalyn (2016). Corporations need to avoid the ethical blindspots of volunteerism.
  • Pon, Bruce (2016). Blockchain will usher in the era of decentralised computing.
  • Pool, Veronika K., Yonker, Scott E., Stoffman, Noah (2016). Socially connected fund managers share investment ideas.
  • Popescu, Diana (2016). Divided we fall: musical performances show how Democrats and Republicans are talking past one another.
  • Popescu, Diana (2016). Omar Mateen’s participation in the LGBTQ+ community that he attacked challenges the simplistic US vs ISIL binary.
  • Popovik, Misha (2016). Choosing stability over reforms: why Macedonia’s elections should be delayed.
  • Popovikj, Misha (2016). Macedonia’s election has opened the door to finally tackling the country’s corruption problem.
  • Popovikj, Misha (2016). Macedonia’s political crisis: make or break for civil society.
  • Popović, Srdja, Yadav, Yogendra (2016). Srdja Popović in conversation with Yogendra Yadav: “Every non-violent struggle supports the same principle – it becomes efficient the moment people take it personally”.
  • Porcaro, Giuseppe (2016). How industry influences public opinion about the Internet of Things.
  • Porrot, Romance (2016). Heads or Tails? How leaving the selection of public offices to chance could revitalise democracy.
  • Portes, Jonathan (2016). Immigration and Brexit: myths and realities.
  • Portes, Jonathan (2016). One way or another, the UK’s referendum will settle whether British voters support free movement.
  • Postel-Vinay, Natacha (2016). Real estate bubbles leading to bank troubles — 2008? Not exactly.
  • Pour, Jalal M., Deller, Rosemary (2016). LSE 'Resist' festival reading list: 5 must-read books on resistance.
  • Powell, Alison (2016). Accountable machines: bureaucratic cybernetics?
  • Powell, Alison (2016). Algorithms, accountability, and political emotion: on the cultural assumptions underpinning sentiment analysis.
  • Powell, Alison (2016). Five Minutes with Alison Powell on what data means, how it is produced and what influence it has for decision-makers.
  • Powell, Alison (2016). LSE Data and Society delves into key social issues of algorithmic control.
  • Powell, Alison (2016). Making and measuring news: data and algorithms in journalism.
  • Powell, Jason, Taylor, Paul (2016). Ageing in an era of neoliberalism: the impact of extending working lives.
  • Power, Anne (2016). Open letter to Jeremy Corbyn: grassroots movements have a place, but they are not the key task of parliamentary opposition.
  • Power, Sam (2016). The London Anti-Corruption Summit: one good day is not enough.
  • Power, Sam (2016). Why a World Series win for Cleveland tonight could help tip a swing state to Hillary Clinton.
  • Prato, Carlo, Wolton, Stephane (2016). Higher campaign costs are not necessarily bad for voters.
  • Prelec, Tena (2016). Serbian parliamentary election 2016: a gamble that almost backfired.
  • Prelec, Tena (2016). Will the ICTY’s acquittal of Vojislav Šešelj heighten tensions in the Balkans?
  • Prentoulis, Marina (2016). Has the EU failed us, or have we failed to forge a European identity?
  • Prescott, Michael E. (2016). OK, you have collected a large amount of big data. Now what?
  • Preston, Oli (2016). Fundable, but not funded: how can research funders ensure ‘unlucky’ applications are handled more appropriately?
  • Prince, Rosa (2016). How did social media help Corbyn win the Labour leadership?
  • Profeta, Paola (2016). In Italy’s ‘male gerontocracy’, gender quotas induced the restructuring of company boards.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). The 2016 election is seeing the return of the ‘paranoid style’ in American politics.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). The 2016 election makes no sense. But this should not distract attention from the legitimate anger many Americans feel.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). Coming to grips with the Trump nightmare.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). Despite Trump’s falling fortunes, voters may yet decide not to grant the Democrats a third term.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). Finding the funny in presidential elections is an Americanpolitical tradition.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). In the face of Trump’s rhetoric of “fear and anger”, 2016 is not likely to be another “hope and vision” election.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). A Trump defeat would be a relief to many. But it should not cloud the need for serious action on serious problems.
  • Pruessen, Ron (2016). With a modern P.T. Barnum act, Donald Trump is tapping Americans’ anger to sell tickets to his own political circus.
  • Puljal, Abhilash (2016). Book review: half lion: how P.V. Narasimha Rao transformed India by Vinay Sitapati.
  • Punch, Maurice (2016). Prosecuting a scapegoat for the state will not lead to justice for the shootings on Bloody Sunday.
  • Pustovrh, Toni (2016). What makes research excellent? Digging into the measures aimed at quantifying and promoting research excellence.
  • Puutio, Teemu Alexander (2016). Without supportive measures the minimum wage increase will do little to reduce inequality in the UK.
  • Pym, Mike (2016). Book review: The coalition government and social policy:restructuring the welfare state edited by Hugh Bochel andMartin Powell.
  • Pym, Mike (2016). Book review: in search of the perfect health system by Mark Britnell.
  • Qermezi Huang, Juli (2016). The Bangladesh paradox: in what ways has social progress been achieved despite poor governance and high corruption?
  • Quah, Danny (2016). Is China’s Collapse Finally at Hand? Danny Quah.
  • Queisser, Monika, Adema, Willem, Clarke, Chris (2016). International Women’s Day: what fathers can do for gender equality.
  • Quinn, Tom (2016). The internal democracy dilemma: balancing MP and member preferences in leadership selection.
  • Quinney, Johanna (2016). Can we have an honest conversation about the migrant crisis?
  • Quiroga, Alejandro (2016). Book review: Iberian military politics: controlling the armedforces during dictatorship and democratisation by José JavierOlivas Osuna.
  • Qvotrup, Matt (2016). History suggests the UK will vote to stay in the EU… but only just.
  • Rachman, Gideon, Erlanger, Steven, Yu, Jie, Oliver, Tim, Cox, Michael (2016). The international consequences of the EU referendum — LSE Ideas Podcast.
  • Rackey, John (2016). Democrats’ only hope left after 2016 results: the filibuster? maybe not.
  • Raday, Frances (2016). Freedom from religion is fundamental to the human rights system but it is under threat.
  • Radhakrishnan, Lakshana, Mahaseth, Harsh (2016). The Colombian conundrum: transitional injustice and beyond.
  • Radice, Henry (2016). Defenestrations: (Un)Framing the EU Referendum Debate, Part I.
  • Radice, Henry (2016). Democracy Between compromise and control.
  • Radice, Henry (2016). Will the real project fear please stand up?
  • Radulović, Saša, Prelec, Tena (2016). Saša Radulović: My plan is to become Mayor of Belgrade and use that platform to win Serbia’s next parliamentary election.
  • Raff, Jennifer (2016). How to read and understand a scientific paper: a guide for non-scientists.
  • Ragnhild Scott, Millicent (2016). What is an ‘ever-closer union’?
  • Rahman, Md. Habibur, Alam, Khurshed (2016). How are indigenous forest-dependent communities in Bangladesh drawing on local knowledge to adapt to climate change?
  • Rahman, Md. Habibur, Alam, Khurshed (2016). The impact of natural disasters on women: a case study from Bangladesh.
  • Rahman, Tasmiah (2016). Coal power or protecting the Sundarbans: which is more valued by the government of Bangladesh?
  • Rahman, Tasmiah (2016). Tackling the ‘killing machines’: can NGOs help protect human rights in Bangladesh?
  • Rahman, Tasmiah (2016). ‘We Are Tonu’: why has the murder of a 19 year old student sparked mass protests in Bangladesh?
  • Raj, Prateek (2016). How to come up with a strategy under true uncertainty.
  • Ramaswamy, Sumathi, Campion, Sonali (2016). “We need to think beyond images as a reflection of history, and instead consider how they constitute it” – Sumathi Ramaswamy.
  • Ramella, Marcelo (2016). Untied to economic fluctuations, insurers are less likely to generate systemic risks.
  • Ramey, Adam J., Klingler, Jonathan D., Hollibaugh Jr., Gary E. (2016). What Trump and Clinton’s personality traits tell us about how they might govern as president.
  • Ramnarain, Smita (2016). The gender dilemmas of community-based peacebuilding: a case study from post-conflict Nepal.
  • Ramos, Donn David P. (2016). Book review: energy, capitalism and world order: toward a new agenda in international political economy edited by Tim Di Muzio and Jesse Salah Ovadia.
  • Ramos-Santiago, Luis Enrique, Brown, Jeffrey (2016). Streetcars and light rail services serve different rider markets in American cities.
  • Rand, Ian (2016). A CEO shows us how promoting diversity is not an exact science.
  • Randall, Margaret (2016). #IWD2016 book review: Haydée Santamaría, cuban revolutionary: she led by transgression by Margaret Randall.
  • Randall, Vicky (2016). Older women in local parties: marginalised or empowered?
  • Randles, Jennifer M. (2016). Government marriage education programs do little to address gender inequalities.
  • Ransbotham, Sam, Mitra, Sabyasachi (2016). Should people who discover a software vulnerability make the information public?
  • Ranzani, Marco, Molini, Vasco, Pavelesku, Dan (2016). Should I stay or should I go.
  • Rao Dhananka, Swetha, Campion, Sonali (2016). Of housing and politics: mapping political opportunities for mobilising in Bangalore.
  • Raos, Višeslav (2016). Croatia’s fallen Orešković government was a messy but healthy experiment in democracy.
  • Rappie, Charlie (2016). Hootsuite for academia? How to increase the visibility,downloads and impact of publications using Kudos.
  • Raskin, Max, Yermack, David (2016). Central banks of developing nations should issue digital currency.
  • Rauh, Christian (2016). No longer an ivory tower: how public debates influence European Commission policies.
  • Ravinder, Chattopadhyay, Deb, Bazilian, Morgan (2016). Power politics and energy trade.
  • Ray, Saon, Miglani, Smita (2016). Start your engines: automobile exports, comparing India and China.
  • Ray, Surette (2016). How social media is changing the way people commit crimes andpolice fight them.
  • Raymon, Ricky, Saint, Emma (2016). Cumberland Lodge Conference 2016.
  • Rayner, Tim (2016). Cut out: Brexit would put the EU’s efforts to reduce carbon emissions at risk.
  • Razin, Ronny (2016). Over-55s and men dominate online Brexit debate – and they’re persuasive, too.
  • Read, Rupert, Burnham, David (2016). Risky business.
  • Redert, Bas (2016). Big money buys influence in Brussels. Or does it?
  • Redlawsk, David P. (2016). Why Trump? he is the ultimate salesman, and the ultimate superman with a super will.
  • Reese, Laura A., Sands, Gary (2016). The Carrier deal: Trump has won a battle, but is losing the war.
  • Regan, Aidan (2016). Debunking myths: why austerity and structural reforms have had little to do with Ireland’s economic recovery.
  • Reich, Simon (2016). What will the US presidential election mean for Europe?
  • Reid, Andrew (2016). Book review: transparency and the open society: practical lessons for effective policy by Roger Taylor and Tim Kelsey.
  • Reid, Richard (2016). The House of Lords’ powers on statutory instruments survive.
  • Reilly, Paul (2016). Contested narratives: social media and policing in Northern Ireland.
  • Reinmoeller, Patrick, Ansari, Shaz (2016). Corporate use of competitive intelligence persists despite its high risks.
  • Reitano, Tuesday (2016). What incentives does Niger have for cracking down on migrant smuggling? Not many.
  • Remøy, Sebastian (2016). Having a voice in Brussels from outside the EU: the lessons of EEA-EFTA.
  • Renewick, Matthew, Simpkin, Victoria, Mossialos, Elias (2016). Targeting innovation in antibiotics.
  • Rennard, Chris, James, Toby, Sidorczuk, Oliver (2016). Let’s stop the last minute registration rush: it’s time for a complete and inclusive electoral register for Britain.
  • Renwick, Alan, Flinders, Matthew, Jennings, Will (2016). The UK’s referendum and post-fact politics: how can campaigners be held accountable for their claims?
  • Restad, Hilde (2016). Donald Trump’s calls to “Make America great again” show that American Exceptionalism is still a powerful idea.
  • Reybet-Degat, François (2016). Syrian refugee crisis: A global and regional perspective.
  • Rhodebeck, Laurie (2016). Framing same-sex marriage in terms of equality may help encourage more African-Americans to support it.
  • Rhoden, T. F. (2016). Without liberalism, democracy is dreadful. Fortunately we have both.
  • Rice, Thomas (2016). The future of the Affordable Care Act.
  • Rich, Peter (2016). School choice and new information about academic performance have not changed Chicago’s unequal system of educational access.
  • Richard, Dave, Smith, Martin (2016). Brexit, Whitehall, and the demise of Haldane: the need for a new minister-civil servant relationship?
  • Richards, Anthony (2016). Prevent: the shifting parameters of UK counter-terrorism.
  • Richards, Dave, Smith, Martin (2016). Grand Brexit Strategies – can Whitehall cope?
  • Richards, David (2016). British politics in the Age of Uncertainty: the link between old, new, and anti-politics.
  • Richey, Sean, Taylor, J. Benjamin, Glas, Jeffrey M., Zhu, Junyan (2016). Debunking the myth that poor whites vote against their interests for Republicans.
  • Rickard, Stephanie (2016). In the 2016 primary, Democrats are united on trade while Donald Trump’s protectionism means that the Republicans are unusually divided.
  • Ring, Jennifer (2016). A tightly contested Senate race has helped bring Nevada to the national stage in this election.
  • Ritter, Emily Hencken (2016). Only the strongest activist organizations may be able to withstand the likely increase in repression under President Trump.
  • Rivera, Mauricio, Zárate-Tenorio, Bárbara (2016). Evidence from Latin America: governments increase human capital investment in response to social violence.
  • Robbins-Wright, Laura (2016). Immigration and the EU Referendum: claims from both campaigns require deeper analysis.
  • Roberts, Carys (2016). London needs open workspaces for creativity and growth.
  • Rodgers, Ewan (2016). Decision theory with a human face: an interview with Richard Bradley.
  • Rodrigues, Maria (2016). Maria’s perspective on the MPA programme.
  • Rodriguez Perez, Sebastian (2016). Knocking on voters’ doors to increase participation in the 2016 London mayoral election.
  • Rodríguez-Castelán, Carlos, Martínez-Cruz, Adán (2016). High incidence of violent crime may drive geographic chronic poverty.
  • Rogers, Andrew (2016). How are black majority churches growing in the UK? A London Borough case study.
  • Rogers, Jonathan (2016). Why Trump supporters may think that their local economy is worsening even when it’s getting better.
  • Rogers, Martin (2016). Britain’s EU referendum uncovers a key group – those who feel they have nothing to lose.
  • Rogers, Martin (2016). Sheffield Brightside & Hillsborough: Can UKIP advance?
  • Rogers, Martin (2016). A mixed picture in the UK election results favours the Conservatives.
  • Rogers, Martin, Travers, Tony (2016). England’s 2016 local elections: an indicator of the national political picture?
  • Rogers, Martin, Travers, Tony (2016). London 2016: What factors will decide who becomes the new Mayor?
  • Rogers, Tim (2016). How does the EU actually work?
  • Rogers, Tim (2016). Labour’s new leader: what led to Corbyn’s ‘unlikely coup?’.
  • Rogowski, Jon C. (2016). Far from being mere ‘servants of Congress’, pre-20th century presidents were able to use federal resources to their partisan advantage.
  • Rohac, Dalibor (2016). Bratislava Summit: the future of the European project without the UK looks bleak.
  • Rohac, Dalibor (2016). For free-market Leavers the UK’s exit will be a disappointment.
  • Rohac, Dalibor (2016). How I stopped worrying and learned to love the EU.
  • Rohac, Dalibor (2016). The lesson from Bratislava is that the future of the European project looks bleak without the UK.
  • Rohrschneider, Robert, Whitefield, Stephen (2016). The representation gap: why ignoring Euroscepticism has opened the door for extremist parties.
  • Rolfe, Heather (2016). Flexible friends: why employers hire eastern European migrants in order to grow.
  • Rolfe, Heather (2016). How to cope with Brexit: an employers’ guide.
  • Rolls, Mark G. (2016). From the margins to the centre: the deepening of New Zealand’s relations with India.
  • Roman, Caterina G., Link, Nathan W. (2016). Providing assistance to incarcerated fathers who have child support obligations can help their post-release community reintegration.
  • Romana, Sophie, Spencer, Shelley (2016). Want to empower women? Digital Financial Services are the way to go!
  • Romano, Alessandro (2016). A proposal to help make credit ratings as accurate as possible.
  • Romdenh-Romluc, Komarine (2016). Force of habit.
  • Ropek Hewson, Sofia (2016). Book review: awkward politics: technologies of popfeminist activism by Carrie Smith-Prei and Maria Stehle.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2016). Book review: Jimmy Carter and the Middle East: the politics of presidential diplomacy by Daniel Strieff.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2016). Book review: Transnational neofascism in France and Italy by Andrea Mammone.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2016). Book review: memories of the Spanish Civil War: conflict and community in rural Spain by Ruth Sanz Sabido.
  • Roquen, Jeff (2016). Book review: new order and progress: development and democracy in Brazil edited by Ben Ross Schneider.
  • Rose, Mary (2016). How Latino immigration may be making the US less tolerant of violence.
  • Rose, Richard (2016). Delaying the countdown to Brexit: a cost-benefit analysis.
  • Rose, Richard (2016). Is ‘de-withdrawal’ an alternative to withdrawal? The problems with holding a second referendum on Brexit.
  • Rose, Richard (2016). Theresa May’s tightrope act on Brexit can only continue for so long.
  • Rose, Richard (2016). While the UK prepares for Brexit, the SNP are laying the groundwork for a new independence referendum.
  • Rose, Richard (2016). With elections looming in key EU states, Theresa May must focus on politics rather than personalities.
  • Rosenblat, Alex (2016). Uber’s ‘partner-bosses’.
  • Ross, Dave (2016). SAGE Open five years on: lessons learned and future thoughts on open access in humanities and social sciences.
  • Ross, Fiona, Morrow, Elizabeth (2016). Mining the REF impact case studies for lessons on leadership,governance and management in higher education.
  • Rothenberg, Alex, Bazzi, Samuel, Gaduh, Arya, Wong, Maisy (2016). Matching and migration: lessons from a resettlement programme in Indonesia.
  • Rothstein, Richard (2016). What Ben Carson needs to know about the long history of housing segregation in America.
  • Rothstein, Richard (2016). Woodrow Wilson’s legacy of racial segregation can be condemned even by the standards of his own time.
  • Rougas, Stavros (2016). What algorithms can teach journalists.
  • Round, Daniel W (2016). The CHP’s ineffective opposition to Erdoğan continues.
  • Rouse, Elizabeth (Bess) (2016). How founders psychologically disengage from their start-ups when it’s time to exit.
  • Rovny, Jan (2016). Hungary and Poland’s anti-democratic turn: a new era or more of the same?
  • Rowe, Tom (2016). Providing aid and foreseeing harm.
  • Rowell, Alex (2016). The best bookshops in Beirut, Lebanon.
  • Rowlingson, Karen, Appleyard, Lindsey, Gardner, Jodi (2016). Payday lending: regulation is a forward step, but there are lessons to learn from this industry.
  • Roy, Tirthankar, Shahid, Amal (2016). Economic history in South Asia: in conversation with Professor Tirthankar Roy.
  • Rozpedowski, Joanna (2016). Book review: today we drop bombs, tomorrow we build bridges: how foreign aid became a casualty of war by Peter Gill.
  • Rubinstein, Susana (2016). Volunteering in Uganda: another side of the story.
  • Ruiz-Soler, Javier (2016). Reactions to Juncker’s State of the Union speech show the difficulties in creating a European public sphere online.
  • Rupel, Tadej (2016). Brexit Ambassador series: the view from Slovenia.
  • Rush, Jessica (2016). Behind the numbers: the role of NGOs in the refugee crisis.
  • Rush, Jessica (2016). NGOs and refugees: the Afghanistan and Central Asian Association.
  • Rushforth, Alex, de Rijcke, Sarah (2016). Accounting for impact? How the impact factor is shaping research and what this means for knowledge production.
  • Russell, Bekka (2016). The paradox of caring for orphans versus caring for children.
  • Russo, Jill (2016). Drowning in social media: does real engagement happen offline?
  • Russo, Jill (2016). Racing towards destruction? Robert Colvile on the Great Acceleration.
  • Rutherford, Nat (2016). Justifications for the Investigatory Powers Bill are based on a very specific interpretation of freedom.
  • Ryan, Ben (2016). The EU’s existential aim was to create Europeans. In this, it has failed.
  • Ryan, Ben (2016). Europe’s early vision: how Christian Democratic morality shaped the EU.
  • Ryan, Bernard (2016). Vote Leave’s position on EU and Irish citizens post-Brexit raises more questions than it answers.
  • Ryan, John (2016). A British exit would harm the EU’s global credibility – and it could rip apart the Conservatives, too.
  • Ràfols, Ismael, Molas-Gallart, Jordi (2016). A call for inclusive indicators that explore research activities in “peripheral” topics and developing countries.
  • Räty, Tarmo, Riala, Maria (2016). How can the wood industry communicate its sustainability?
  • Saaid, Hayder Mustafa (2016). Syrian Refugees and the Kurdistan region of Iraq.
  • Sabherwal, Rajiv, Jeyaraj, Anand (2016). Measuring the business value of IT: simplify with caution.
  • Sabry, Tarik, Mansour, Nisrine (2016). Mediating ethnographies: parenting and screen media use of Arabic-speaking children in London.
  • Sager, Alex (2016). Book review: Politics against domination by Ian Shapiro.
  • Sager, Alex (2016). Book review: strangers in our midst: the political philosophy of immigration by David Miller.
  • Sager, Alex (2016). Book review: violent borders: refugees and the right to move by Reece Jones.
  • Saglie, Jo, Bock Segaard, Signe (2016). Governments should consider the consequences when they decide whether to adopt Internet voting.
  • Saguato, Paolo (2016). Repos: the missing piece in financial market reform.
  • Sahoo, R. L., Campion, Sonali (2016). “The RBI archives provide a valuable resource for research scholars and others interested in India’s financial history” – Dr R L Sahoo.
  • Salamone, Anthony (2016). Cameron’s unilateral approach could leave the UK isolated and resented.
  • Salamone, Anthony (2016). Why it matters if the European Commission ends up leading the Brexit negotiations.
  • Sampson, Chris (2016). Let’s bring an end to post-truth politics: The time has come for direct public engagement.
  • Sampson, Thomas (2016). Four principles for the UK’s Brexit trade negotiations.
  • Sampson, Thomas, Dhingra, Swati, Ottaviano, Gianmarco I. P., Reenen, John Van (2016). How do ‘Economists for Brexit’ manage to defy the laws of gravity?
  • Sanchez, Andrew (2016). Corruption is both a symptom of the basic structures of capitalism, and a technology that supports them.
  • Sandberg, Russell (2016). How do you solve a problem like Sharia? The real issues raised by the Sharia law debate.
  • Sandberg, Russell (2016). Scientology and the need for a clear definition of religion under English law.
  • Sandelind, Clara (2016). Book review: migration in political theory: the ethics of movement and membership edited by Sarah Fine and Lea Ypi.
  • Sander, Harald (2016). Renationalising fiscal policy would help rebuild support for the EU.
  • Sanni-Oba, Mahmoudat (2016). #LSEreligion lecture: “Saying that we have to live together is not enough” – Tariq Ramadan.
  • Santucci, Jack (2016). Past experience shows that proportional representation is possible in the US. But there are tradeoffs.
  • Sapir, André, Wolff, Guntram (2016). Leaving the EU may entail a loss of sovereignty for the UK.
  • Saramifar, Younes (2016). Book review: iMedia: the gendering of objects, environments and smart materials by Sarah Kember.
  • Saramifar, Younes (2016). Book review: in praise of forgetting: historical memory and its ironies by David Rieff.
  • Sarangi, Anjora (2016). Commercial surrogacy in India.
  • Sarmiento-Mirwaldt, Katja (2016). In defence of open borders: why Schengen remains valuable to European countries – including the UK.
  • Sary, Ghadi (2016). Rojava’s tortuous relationship to the Syrian regime.
  • Sasson, Isaac (2016). How having a college education can add a decade or more to your life expectancy.
  • Saunders, Natasha (2016). Europe’s human rights crisis.
  • Savage, Mike (2016). Are we seeing a new ‘inequality paradigm’ in social science?
  • Savage, Mike (2016). Is there a class issue at LSE?: Episode 2.
  • Savage, Mike (2016). Sociological dilemmas and the inequality agenda.
  • Savirimuthu, Joseph (2016). Book review: driverless: intelligent cars and the road ahead by Hod Lipson and Melba Kurman.
  • Savonick, Danica, Davidson, Cathy N. (2016). Gender bias in academe: an annotated bibliography of important recent studies.
  • Scalvini, Marco, Fabris, Monica (2016). The failure of the Italian constitutional reform signals a crisis of representation in politics.
  • Scalvini, Marco, Parkes, Chris (2016). Oral history as a method to analyse historical and cultural contexts and inform policymaking: the example of the early AIDS epidemic.
  • Scanlon, Kath (2016). Urban villages: Some observations from LSE London, by Kath Scanlon.
  • Scarpetta, Stefano (2016). How OECD countries can address the migration backlash.
  • Scattergood, Wendy (2016). In Wisconsin’s Senate race, Johnson vs. Feingold has gone from a sure-thing to a potential trend-buster.
  • Schachter, Ariela (2016). For undocumented immigrants, socioeconomic mobility cannot overcome racial and legal barriers to full social acceptance.
  • Schakel, Jan-Kees, Van Fenema, Paul C., Faraj, Samer (2016). Shots fired! Why is switching between organisational practices so difficult?
  • Schelkle, Waltraud (2016). Paul Krugman’s argument that the eurozone is not an optimum currency area could be just as easily applied to the US.
  • Schelkle, Waltraud (2016). The Political Quarterly: key issues in the negotiations about Britain’s membership of the EU.
  • Schelkle, Waltraud (2016). A double bind: Cameron urges non-discrimination in one policy area, while wanting to discriminate in another.
  • Scheller, Henrik (2016). The dream of ever-closer union is over. We need to rethink the EU’s model.
  • Schmalzried, Martin (2016). Digital parenting or ‘just’ parenting?
  • Schmalzried, Martin (2016). Follow the money.
  • Schmidt, Paul (2016). Austrian Euroscepticism has grown markedly, but voters still show little support for leaving the EU.
  • Schmieding, Holger (2016). Britain needs the EU much more than vice versa.
  • Schmieding, Holger (2016). The fact that the UK avoided an immediate crisis does not tell us much about the future.
  • Schneider, Nicolas (2016). Book review: strangers at our door by Zygmunt Bauman.
  • Schneider, Nicolas (2016). Book review: undoing ties: political philosophy at the waning of the state by Mariano Croce and Andrea Salvatore.
  • Schneider., Nicolas (2016). Book review: Syriza: inside the labyrinth by Kevin Ovenden.
  • Schrøter Joensen, Juanna, Nielsen, Skyt (2016). Why do women avoid maths, even if it boosts their careers?
  • Schudson, Michael (2016). Freedom of information: Q&A with Professor Michael Schudson.
  • Schuler, Paul (2016). How can we find out whether people are really turning against democracy?
  • Schuler, Paul (2016). Is the world turning against democracy?
  • Schulz, Martin (2016). Martin Schulz on Brexit: parting ways, but working together.
  • Schumacher, Gijs, van de Wardt, Marc, Vis, Barbara, Baggesen Klitgaard, Michael (2016). Why governing parties change their platforms more frequently than those in opposition.
  • Schwartz, Amanda (2016). Life after LSE: Diamond rings re-purposed for good.
  • Schäuble, Wolfgang (2016). Wolfgang Schäuble: “Europe will only work if the rules are the same for smaller and bigger member states”.
  • Schüler, Yves, Hiebert, Paul, Peltonen, Tuomas (2016). New evidence shows the characteristics of financial cycles.
  • Scipioni, Marco, Hoffmeyer-Zlotnik, Paula (2016). Quitting the EU wouldn’t give Britain more control over refugee and migrant flows.
  • Scott, Perry (2016). ‘Unleashing Demons: The inside story of Brexit’: event review.
  • Scully, Roger (2016). Is Labour’s dominance of Welsh politics under threat?
  • Seah, Kiat Ying, Fesselmeyer, Eric, Le, Kien T. (2016). Differences in household income and other socioeconomic factors have been more important than subprime lending in explaining the growing gap in homeownership between blacks and whites.
  • Searcy, Cory (2016). Without a definition of corporate sustainability, how to measure performance?
  • Searcy, Cory, Dixon, Shane, Neumann, Patrick (2016). Without uniform indicators, firms are unable to deal with work health issues.
  • Sebastio, Filippo (2016). Data-Jam: could data reduce road congestion in Dhaka?
  • Sekyere, Kwame (2016). War and peace: from London to Aleppo.
  • Selimi, Petrit, Prelec, Tena (2016). Petrit Selimi: “The sight of our athletes marching in Rio de Janeiro will be the pinnacle of state-building for Kosovo”.
  • Sembene, Daouda (2016). Economic emergence is the new target for African countries, but how can it be achieved?
  • Sennett, Richard (2016). Concentrating minds: how the Greeks designed spaces for public debate.
  • Seruyombya, Ronald (2016). Ugandans in the Diaspora deserve to have their voices heard in the 2016 Elections.
  • Seth, Suhel, Gulati, Saanya (2016). “The problem with politics in India today is we’re creating polarity where we should be creating unity” – Suhel Seth.
  • Shadlen, Kenneth C. (2016). Debating Patents and Drug Prices: Trade Agreements and the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
  • Shadlen, Kenneth C. (2016). Market Access and the EU Referendum.
  • Shafick, Hesham (2016). Book review: social media and everyday politics by Tim Highfield.
  • Shafick, Hesham (2016). Book review: unfinished revolutions: Yemen, Libya and Tunisia after the Arab Spring by Ibrahim Fraihat.
  • Shah, Atul K. (2016). Book review: neoliberalism and the moral economy of fraud edited by David Whyte and Jörg Wiegratz.
  • Shah, Krupa (2016). Child mortality in South Asia: preventable diseases and scaling up immunisation efforts.
  • Shah, Prakash (2016). What lies behind the inclusion of caste in the UK Equality Act?
  • Shahid, Amal (2016). Book review: marriage migration in Asia: emerging minorities at the frontiers of nation-states edited by Sari K. Ishii.
  • Shahid, Amal (2016). Book review: the ‘R’ word by Kurt Barling.
  • Shahid, Amal (2016). Caste and higher education: the Rohith Vemula case.
  • Shannon, Jerry (2016). To fix food deserts, we need to address transit options andsupermarket stigma.
  • Shantz, Amanda (2016). What employees see as the motivations of HR management affects their wellbeing.
  • Sharma, Jeevan R. (2016). The 2015 earthquakes highlight that Nepal is not a passive recipient of aid, nor should it be treated as such.
  • Sharma, Jeevan R. (2016). Looking beyond maternal mortality rates in maternal health interventions: lessons from Nepal.
  • Sharmina, Maria, Gilbert, Nigel, Gilbert, Paul (2016). Global challenges require cross-cutting solutions: bringing together water, energy, and food policy.
  • Shaw, Christopher (2016). Book Review: climate change, capitalism and corporations: processes of creative self-destruction by Christopher Wright and Daniel Nyberg.
  • Shaw, Eric (2016). Fractured and unmanageable? Labour Party Management under Blair and under Corbyn.
  • Shaw, Eric (2016). Labour’s great impasse: who should lead the Party?
  • Shen, Dennis (2016). Central banks are facing a crisis of confidence – it’s time to reinvent global monetary policy.
  • Shen, Dennis (2016). Europe’s recent attacks underline the need for a new strategy to combat terrorism.
  • Shen, Dennis (2016). Recap: why Brexit still faces extraordinary challenges.
  • Sheng, Lay (2016). A postcolonial approach to Social Science?
  • Sheng Yap, Lay (2016). The politics of Ai Weiwei.
  • Shephard, Nicole (2016). 5 reasons why surveillance is a feminist issue.
  • Shephard, Nicole (2016). Book review: of remixology: ethics and aesthetics after remix by David J. Gunkel.
  • Shepherd, Laura (2016). Promises to Keep: Reflections from the 2016 UN Security Council Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security.
  • Sherman, Nancy (2016). Donald Trump has proven that he does not know what any potential Commander-in-Chief should: that military families also serve.
  • Shiels, David (2016). How Enoch Powell helped to shape modern Tory Euroscepticism.
  • Shiels, David (2016). ‘What would Maggie do?’ Had she been given the chance, we probably wouldn’t be asking.
  • Shipp, Jonny (2016). Latin American countries join the US and UK amongst the highest performers in a new ‘Index on Digital Life’.
  • Shockey, Nick, McArthur, Joseph, Hartgerink, Chris (2016). Announcing OpenCon 2016: catalyzing collective action for a more open scholarly system.
  • Shoshan, Nitzan (2016). Angela Merkel faces a delicate balancing act on migration ahead of key state elections.
  • Shridhar, Varun (2016). Thinking beyond Delhi’s odd-even plan.
  • Shultz, Wolfgang, Grothe, Thorsten (2016). Caution, Loose Cornerstone: The Country of Origin Principle under Pressure.
  • Shultz, Wolfgang, Grothe, Thorsten (2016). The Economics of Privacy.
  • Siachiwena, Hangala, Wahman, Michael (2016). #ZambiaDecides 2016 will not necessarily be a rerun of the 2015 presidential by-election.
  • Siddi, Marco (2016). Germany: the EU’s new foreign policy engine.
  • Siderius, Christian (2016). Africa’s Nile basin countries should invest in rain, not big infrastructure projects.
  • Sidorczuk, Oliver, Rainsford, Emily, Dobson, Alex (2016). Politics should be something that everyone can get involved in, and Verto is proving that Voter Advice Applications play a vital role on this mission.
  • Sierra-Arevalo, Michael (2016). Broken windows is broken: study shows that a more focused approach to tackling street violence can be more effective.
  • Sigalas, Emmanuel (2016). Austria’s presidential election is set to be another vote dominated by the issue of immigration.
  • Sigona, Nando (2016). Why the jury is out on the Commission’s latest proposal for a ‘distribution key’ to help solve the refugee crisis.
  • Sihlobo, Wandile (2016). Increased investment in research could potentially save South Africa’s wheat sector.
  • Sihlobo, Wandile (2016). South African maize exports should access new markets.
  • Sihlobo, Wandile (2016). Youth is the key to unlock Africa’s agriculture potential.
  • Sijstermans, Judith (2016). Scottish Parliament election preview: the last beats of a Labour ‘heartland’ in Central Scotland?
  • Silverman, Jon (2016). Africa and the International Criminal Court: the road to divorce.
  • Simmons, Joel W., Hicken, Allen, Kollman, Ken, Nooruddin, Irfan (2016). Foreign Direct Investment flows to countries where the most prominent political parties are national, rather than regional.
  • Simoni, Marco (2016). Italians should back the constitutional reform – there is no guarantee this opportunity will arise again.
  • Simons, Tal, Vermeulen, Patrick, Knoben, Joris (2016). How small bars resist smoking bans in the Netherlands.
  • Simpkin, Victoria L. (2016). With 1 in 10 posts already vacant, the NHS can’t afford to lose EU-born doctors.
  • Simpson, Ian (2016). Managed care models are hurting the UK’s mental health system.
  • Singh, Satyajit, Kumar Jha, Pankaj (2016). “Institutional design for decentralisation needs to move away from a solely normative approach to appreciate the political” – Satyajit Singh.
  • Singh Chauhan, Megha (2016). The psychology of a more constructive journalism.
  • Singh Maini, Tridivesh (2016). India, China and Pakistan: the need for a nuanced approach to CPEC.
  • Singla, Nikita (2016). Confronting gender violence in India: is slum-free urban policy a solution?
  • Sinha, Aseema (2016). How global rules and markets are shaping India’s rise on the international stage.
  • Sippel, Daniel (2016). Alone in the jungle.
  • Sittner, Kelley J. (2016). Substance use and conduct disorders are common amongarrested North American Indigenous youth and increase theirlikelihood of arrest.
  • Sjåholm, Eirik, Lien, Lasse B. (2016). Faced with excess capacity, innovative firms retain staff, train and even hire.
  • Sked, Alan (2016). Alan Sked on the EU, part four: the myth that we rely upon the EU.
  • Sked, Alan (2016). Alan Sked on the EU, part three: how Germany came to dominate the EU.
  • Sked, Alan (2016). Alan Sked on the EU, part two: propaganda and pacifism from a toothless entity.
  • Sked, Alan (2016). Alan Sked on the EU: part one – a superstate in the making.
  • Sked, Alan (2016). L’état c’est nous: sovereignty is no illusion, and we should retain it.
  • Sked, Alan (2016). This is what life after Brexit will look like: a Europe of democratic, free-trading states.
  • Sked, Alan (2016). University leaders who lobby against Brexit are a disgrace. Research would thrive outside the EU.
  • Skey, Michael (2016). ‘We want our country back’ – stop sneering, start listening.
  • Skoutaris, Nikos (2016). Never letting go: why Scotland is at constitutional stalemate over Brexit.
  • Sladoje, Miljan (2016). Lights out: Zambia’s electricity crisis.
  • Sladoje, Miljan (2016). Zambia urbanising part 1: tackling bad contagion.
  • Sladoje, Miljan (2016). Zambia urbanising part 2: encouraging good contagion.
  • Sladoje, Miljan (2016). The new urban agenda: a solid foundation for concrete actions?
  • Sleat, Matt (2016). Assessing the Responsibility to Protect: moving from theory to practice.
  • Sloam, James (2016). The generation gap: how young voters view the UK’s referendum.
  • Sloane, Mona (2016). Book review: elements of architecture: assembling archaeology, atmosphere and the performance of building space edited by Mikkel Bille and Tim Flohr Sørensen.
  • Sloane, Mona (2016). Book review: the philosophy of design by Glenn Parsons.
  • Sloane, Mona (2016). Dialogue over dissemination: unlocking the potential ofknowledge exchange through creative collaboration.
  • Sloane, Mona (2016). Inequality by design? Why we need to start talking about aesthetics, design and politics.
  • Slootmaeckers, Koen (2016). Beyond symbolism? The EU enlargement and Gay politics.
  • Slupska, Julie (2016). Prickly power: liberal appeal as a liability.
  • Small, Andrew (2016). Dialling democracy: mobile phones and political participation in Ghana.
  • Smette, Ingrid, Stefansen, Kari, Gilje, Øystein (2016). Parents’ regulation of teenagers’ screen time in Norway.
  • Smiley, Kevin T., Rushing, Wanda, Scott, Michele (2016). Massive investments in bike infrastructure have got more people moving in Memphis, but they have also affected social inequality.
  • Smith, Angus (2016). Museum volunteers as researchers: Applied participatory ethnography.
  • Smith, Chris M., Papachristos, Andrew V. (2016). How network science unearthed the overlapping relationships of organized crime in Al Capone’s Chicago.
  • Smith, Emma (2016). Book review: improving criminal justice workplaces: translating theory and research into evidence-based practice by Paula Brough, Jennifer Brown and Amanda Biggs.
  • Smith, Glen (2016). How mainstream news can reduce partisan hostility.
  • Smith, Glen (2016). Why Fox News’ attacks on Hillary Clinton won’t work at this late stage of the campaign.
  • Smith, J.A. (2016). The long read: blue labour in the age of Corbyn by J.A. Smith.
  • Smith, James A. (2016). Jeremy Corbyn’s ‘new politics’: entryism or ‘folk politics’ coming of age?
  • Smith, Joel (2016). Experiencing time.
  • Smith, Jonathan D. (2016). Multi-faith spaces at UK universities display two very different visions of public religion.
  • Smith, Karen E. (2016). Left out in the cold: Brexit, the EU and the perils of Trump’s world.
  • Smith, Karen E., Laatikainen, Katie Verlin (2016). Without EU clout, how would the UK fare at the United Nations?
  • Smith, Kat, Stewart, Ellen (2016). The uneven impacts of research impact: adjustments needed to address the imbalance of the current impact framework.
  • Smith, Katherine (2016). Tobacco, alcohol and processed food industries – fitting them into the public health agenda.
  • Smith, Lucy (2016). The EU referendum: a social catalyst.
  • Smith, Melissa (2016). Book review: campaign finance and political polarization: when purists prevail by Raymond J. La Raja and Brian F. Schaffner.
  • Smith, Melissa (2016). GOP SuperPACs didn’t give Trump money, but they did help create his juggernaut campaign.
  • Smith, Melissa (2016). Trump, Brexit, and the West’s “Mad as hell” moment.
  • Smucker, Sierra (2016). How North Carolina’s controversial bathroom bill provides a window into the complexities of public policymaking in a federalist system.
  • Smucker, Sierra (2016). How the Orlando mass shooting may be the catalyst for a new coalition to overcome the power of the gun lobby.
  • Smucker, Sierra (2016). Obama’s executive orders on guns may be more suggestions than policy but we shouldn’t discount the power of executive pressure on state policy making.
  • Smucker, Sierra (2016). State initiatives on gun control and the minimum wage mean that a Trump presidency may not be as bad as some fear.
  • Snorradóttir, Ásta, Rafnsdóttir, Guðbjörg Linda, Tómasson, Kristinn, Vilhjalmsson, Runar (2016). Lay-offs hurt the well-being even of those who keep their jobs.
  • Snower, Dennis J. (2016). The US’ failure to provide vocational training is a massive policy failure which supports Donald Trump.
  • Snower, Dennis J. (2016). The social roots of Brexit: Europe’s economic integration has fostered social disintegration.
  • Sobieraj, Katarzyna (2016). Between presidential and parliamentary elections – which way in the EU-Belarus relations?
  • Sobieraj, Katarzyna (2016). A credible and independent media is the best way to counter Russia’s information strategy in the EU.
  • Soldatova, Galina, Shlyapnikov, Vladimir (2016). Digital parenting in Russia: from ignorance to awareness.
  • Soliman, Asmaa (2016). Muslims in Europe are using digital counterpublics to challenge mainstream discourses.
  • Solomon, Sam (2016). Polling one billion: measuring public opinion in the world’s largest democracy.
  • Somayajula, Dhruv (2016). Seeking refuge from humanitarian interventions.
  • Somer-Topcu, Zeynep (2016). Can a new leader change a party’s fortunes? How leadership changes affect voter perceptions about party policy.
  • Sonka, Steve (2016). Big data can foster the next wave of agricultural innovation.
  • Soo, Nikki (2016). Book review: social media in an English village by Daniel Miller.
  • Spamann, Holger (2016). Does US mass incarceration work? When you look at other countries, the numbers just don’t add up.
  • Spears, Steven (2016). Investing in light rail can reduce how much people drive – butonly for those close to stations.
  • Spence, David (2016). Cameron needs to convince both the member states and the EU institutions before his own side.
  • Spencer, Nick (2016). Is religion good for you? Analysing three decades worth of academic research on the relationship between religion and well-being.
  • Spencer, Nick (2016). ‘They shall reap the whirlwind’: how Churchill harnessed Christianity in the service of war.
  • Spiliotes, Dean (2016). In the Granite State’s Senate race, Donald Trump means that Kelly Ayotte now finds herself between a rock and a hard place.
  • Spina, Valerie (2016). Is innovation hurting “good” journalism? (Summer school guest blog).
  • Spina, Valerie (2016). A new age of art and journalism (summer school guest blog).
  • Spohr, Kristina (2016). A reminder of the road not taken: Hans-Dietrich Genscher and the holy grail of a united Europe.
  • Sprik, Lenneke (2016). Book review: the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s by Catherine Baker.
  • Sprouse, Ian (2016). The Gambia’s unsurprising renunciation of the ICC, or the so-called “International Caucasian Court”.
  • Spyth, Olivia (2016). Book review: Curationism: how curating took over the art world and everything else by David Balzer.
  • Spyth, Olivia (2016). LSE lit fest 2016 book review: dynamo island: the cultural history and geography of a utopia by David Scott.
  • Spyth, Olivia (2016). The best bookshops in Hamburg, Germany.
  • Squicciarini, Mara P., Swinnen, Johan (2016). Chocolate provides a unique sensory experience: uncovering the secret of the ‘chocolate craving’.
  • St Clair, William (2016). Are the ‘gatekeepers’ becoming censors? On editorial processes and the interests of the scholarly community.
  • St.Denny, Emily (2016). France criminalises clients of prostitution.
  • Stabile, Mark (2016). Migration in health care.
  • Stabile, Mark (2016). The proper role of public versus private health care financing.
  • Stan, Ciprian, Ahlstrom, David, Peng, Mike W., Kehan, Xu, Bruton, Garry D. (2016). State control can result in good performance for firms.
  • Stanbrook, Isabella (2016). Isabella Stanbrook – why is measurement an important theme for business and human rights in 2016?
  • Stanton, Richard, Lukes, Sue, Guentner, Simon, Wilding, Jo, Vollmer, Bastian (2016). Who’s next? Cuts to welfare often target immigrants first but then move to nationals.
  • Steckhan, Emily (2016). Reporting the Referendum and why you prefer this headline.
  • Stein, Jacqueline (2016). A conversation on race (part 2): ‘incarceration of black lives in America’.
  • Stelmaszak, Marta (2016). What the future holds for the self-employed?
  • Stensvold, Anne (2016). The United Nations – what has religion got to do with it?
  • Stephenson, Judy (2016). ‘Truth is our role’ – why cultivating relationships matters when itcomes to academic engagement with the media.
  • Stern, Tom (2016). How should we interpret dead philosophers?
  • Steven, Toft (2016). Counting the self employed as entrepreneurs is a meme that refuses to die.
  • Stevens, Andrew (2016). Taxes on bottled water are better at raising money than reducing litter.
  • Stevens, Lord, Brown, Jennifer (2016). Hillsborough and other police scandals: why we need to focus on ‘cop culture’.
  • Stewart, Bonnie (2016). Q+A with Bonnie Stewart: “we are part of a society and an academy where the personal/professional divide is blurring”.
  • Stewart, Neil, Secker, Jane, Morrison, Chris, Horton, Laurence (2016). Liberating data: how libraries and librarians can help researchers with text and data mining. https://doi.org/10.21953/lse.aqlm9dp59e3b
  • Stiglitz, Joseph E., Brown, Stuart A. (2016). Interview with Joseph Stiglitz: “The cost of keeping the Eurozone together probably exceeds the cost of breaking it up”.
  • Stirbu, Diana Silvia, McAllister, Laura (2016). If it’s broken, fix it! Time to rethink the AMS electoral system in Wales.
  • Stock, Kathleen (2016). Presence of mind.
  • Stoeckel, Florian (2016). Do Erasmus students develop a European identity? How social interactions change the way citizens think about Europe.
  • Stoica, Mihnea (2016). Romania’s election: in spite of the PSD’s comeback, anti-establishment sentiment is stronger than ever.
  • Stoica, Mihnea (2016). The rejection of Romania’s first female and Muslim PM leaves the Social Democrats in a difficult position.
  • Stokoe, Philip (2016). In business, as in government, direct democracy is not possible.
  • Stover, Eric, Peskin, Victor, Koenig, Alexa (2016). Book review: Hiding in plain sight: the pursuit of war criminals from Nuremberg to the war on terror by Eric Stover, Victor Peskin and Alexa Koenig.
  • Strong, James (2016). The Brexit debate is far from over: there will have to be a further vote.
  • Strong, James (2016). Britain’s bargaining stance post-Brexit.
  • Sugimoto, Cassidy R. (2016). “Tenure can withstand Twitter”: we need policies that promote science communication and protect those who engage.
  • Suhay, Liz (2016). Left-right disagreement over whether people are “born gay” isboth a cause and consequence of polarized gay rights attitudes.
  • Suk, Lauren (2016). Who to follow on Twitter in 2016.
  • Sukarieh, Rana (2016). Book review: Solidarity without borders: Gramscianperspectives on migration and civil society alliances edited by Óscar García Agustín and Martin Bak Jørgensen.
  • Sundström, Aksel (2016). The costs of being honest: what Serpico can teach us about reducing corruption.
  • Sundström, Aksel, Wängnerud, Lena (2016). In places where corruption is endemic, women struggle to become local councillors.
  • Surminski, Swenja (2016). Flood Re: a missed opportunity for sustainable flood risk management?
  • Surminski, Swenja (2016). When disaster strikes, who pays for the impacts of climate change?
  • Suttmann-Lea, Mara (2016). The 1980s Republican roots of Hillary Clinton’s early voting strategy.
  • Suttmann-Lea, Mara (2016). In Illinois, Tammy Duckworth’s better funded campaign puts Mark Kirk’s Senate seat in a precarious position.
  • Sutton, Tom, Palmer, Barbara (2016). Running a traditional ‘textbook’ campaign, Rob Portman has a commanding lead in Ohio’s Senate race, in spite of Donald Trump.
  • Svensson, Roger, Persson, Lars (2016). The advantage of selling an invention instead of turning it into a business.
  • Swain, Ashok (2016). India must remember that Balochistan is not Bangladesh.
  • Swan, Melanie (2016). Blockchains may replace the institutions that safeguard commercial activities.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). Brexit will not mean an end to Tory divisions on Europe.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). Desperate times and desperate measures: could the UK force the EU to negotiate before Article 50 is triggered?
  • Swan, Sean (2016). It is the negation of Scotland’s democratic will, not the EU question as such, that justifies an IndyRef2.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). Jean-Claude Juncker is wrong and dangerously out of touch to demand an immediate Brexit.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). Theresa May replaces David Cameron – but will there be an early general election?
  • Swan, Sean (2016). The concept of class is absent from political debate, even as inequality in Britain reaches new heights.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). The constitutional settlement of the UK has been thrown into flux – an overarching polity is urgently needed.
  • Swan, Sean (2016). A response to Chuka Umunna: the dominant equality issues of today need to be understood in terms of economics, interests and class.
  • Swann, Juliet (2016). Scottish Parliament Election preview: whatever happens in Lothians, we’re bound to see new faces.
  • Swann, Juliet (2016). Scottish Parliament election preview: continuity and change in the Highlands and Islands.
  • Sweeney, Christine (2016). Following the US elections from London: an expat’s view.
  • Sweeney, Christine (2016). A journey of disruption with Discovery Communications.
  • Swigger, Nathaniel (2016). How sex is portrayed on TV affects the way we think about abortion and contraception.
  • Swisher, Raymond, Dennison, Christopher (2016). Having more education than your parents makes it less likelythat you will commit a crime as an adult.
  • Sykes, Bryan L., Piquero, Alex R., Gioviano, Jason P. (2016). How government social programs can help reduce bullying.
  • Sykes, Georgina (2016). A southerner ventures north.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2016). How will the EU’s ‘rule of law’ investigation affect Polish politics?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2016). Is Poland’s Law and Justice government losing momentum?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2016). Poland’s rock star-politician: what happened to Paweł Kukiz?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2016). Poland’s ruling party blames EU elites for Brexit and calls for Donald Tusk’s resignation.
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks (2016). Will Poland’s Law and Justice government respond to international pressure?
  • Szczerbiak, Aleks, Taggart, Paul (2016). Hard choices and few soft options: the implications of Brexit for Euroscepticism across Europe.
  • Sztykowski, Zosia (2016). On post-Brexit London: difference doesn’t have to break us.
  • Sztykowski, Zosia (2016). What’s the role of sociology after Brexit?
  • Sághy Estélyi, Kristína, Nisar, Tahir M. (2016). Firms benefit when board directors have different nationalities.
  • Tabachnik, Alexander (2016). Two years on, what has been the lasting legacy of the Ukraine crisis?
  • Tago, Atsushi, Inamasu, Kazunori (2016). Obama’s visit to Hiroshima is viewed as “a sort of” apology by the people of Japan.
  • Tahbaz-Salehi, Alireza, Vedolin, Andrea, Muelle, Philippe (2016). Some currency trading positions yield increased returns aroundFed announcements.
  • Tahbaz-Salehi, Alireza, Vedolin, Andrea, Mueller, Philippe (2016). Some currency trading positions yield increased returns around Fed announcements.
  • Tai, Stephanie (2016). The case of the disappearing activists: the fight for freedom of speech in China.
  • Tambini, Damian (2016). The 21st Century Fox bid for Sky needs a thorough, thoughtful review.
  • Tambini, Damian (2016). Can the new Charter Protect BBC Independence?
  • Tambini, Damian (2016). The post-Brexit challenges for European media systems.
  • Tambini, Damian, Freedman, Des (2016). Home but not dry: reflections on the draft BBC Charter and Agreement.
  • Tandiono, Paulina (2016). The extraterritoriality of the principle of non-refoulement: a critique of the Sale case and Roma case.
  • Tandon, Ambika (2016). Rethinking radicalism.
  • Tang, Cheng Keat (2016). Do we value the London Congestion Charge?
  • Tatsak, Jenny (2016). Record turnout for anti-establishment candidates in the Michigan primary shows that many voters are looking for an alternative.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2016). 0 is the magic number: why small numbers matter just as much as large ones when we talk about altmetrics.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2016). Book review: social media for academics by Mark Carrigan.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2016). Working with the media can be beneficial but linking to and citing your research should be compulsory.
  • Tattersall, Andy (2016). The weird and wonderful world of academic twitter: accounts that mock, self-ridicule and bring a smile to academia.
  • Tavares, Michael (2016). Obama, Trump and the language of everyday nationalism.
  • Tavares, Michael (2016). With language studies in decline, we need a relevant and integrated approach to foreign languages in the classroom.
  • Tavares, Zoe, Ying Tan, Yi, Zhao, Xunrui (2016). Does raising the National Living Wage make economic sense?
  • Taylor, Andrew (2016). Blue-collar voters and the Right: the US experience shows how political vacuums get filled by a Trump.
  • Taylor, Charles, Campion, Sonali (2016). Five minutes with Charles Taylor: “in order to make ourselves safe we need to resist stigmatising sections of the population”.
  • Taylor, Charles, Campion, Sonali (2016). “A lot of the thinking about secularism that I’ve done has grown out of intensive discussions about the Indian situation” – Charles Taylor.
  • Taylor, Helen, Kaehne, Axel (2016). Public consultations do not currently enable all stakeholders to effectively contribute to the legislative process.
  • Taylor, Laura (2016). Cleaning up brownfield sites not only benefits the environment – it also increases nearby property values.
  • Taylor, Ros, Klaas, Brian (2016). ‘If something isn’t done we’ve hit democracy’s high water mark. That’s billions of people and their life chances’ – Brian Klaas.
  • Taylor, Sherese R. (2016). Book review: Paul Robeson: the artist as revolutionary by Gerald Horne.
  • Teixeira da Silva, Jaime A, Dobránszki, Judit, Bornemann-Cimenti, Helmar (2016). Citing retracted papers has a negative domino effect on science, education, and society.
  • Temple, Luke (2016). Book review: more sex, lies and the ballot box: another 50 things you need to know about elections edited by Philip Cowley and Robert Ford.
  • Temple, Luke (2016). In a divided Britain, the pro-EU movement will have to be clear about what it wants.
  • Temple, Luke (2016). In a divided Britain, the pro-EU movement will have to be clear about what it wants.
  • Tennant, Chris (2016). The ‘ripple effect’ of driving behaviour.
  • Tennant, Jon (2016). Breaking the traditional mould of peer review: why we need a more transparent process of research evaluation.
  • Tenzer, Helene, Pudelko, Markus (2016). New technology will make it easier to work in multilingual teams.
  • Thao, Huang Phuong (2016). The G20’s call for a New Industrial Revolution and what it means for more and better jobs.
  • Thebe Limbu, Sangita (2016). Nepal after the Constitution: an expert discussion.
  • Thebe Limbu, Sangita (2016). Women in disaster: gendered vulnerabilities and intersecting identities in the wake of the Nepali earthquakes.
  • Theil, Stefan (2016). Neither full independence, nor perfect union: Constitutionalism as a Third Way for the future of Scotland.
  • Thielemann, Eiko R., Schade, Daniel (2016). Emergency brakes on migration: neither novel nor effective.
  • Thielemann, Eiko R., Schade, Daniel (2016). Jobs are good ones: addressing the factors that attract EU migrants to the UK.
  • Thierse, Stefan (2016). Inside the voting behaviour of MEPs: why only some votes are recorded in the European Parliament.
  • Thistlethwaite, Polly (2016). Book review: being a scholar in the digital era: transforming scholarly rractice for the public good by Jessie Daniels and Polly Thistlethwaite.
  • Thom, Michael (2016). Why don’t state governments terminate failing programs? Theyspent too much.
  • Thoma, Johanna (2016). Negotiating with myself.
  • Thomas, Robert, Tomlinson, Joe (2016). Justice outsourced: why Concentrix’s tax credit mistakes matter.
  • Thompson, Beth (2016). Data protection: how medical researchers persuaded the European Parliament to compromise.
  • Thompson, Charis (2016). Gender and sexuality in the US election: three lessons.
  • Thompson, Marcelo (2016). Responsible Communication by Internet Intermediaries.
  • Thompson, Stephen, Ahmed, Wasim (2016). Twitter and crisis communication: an overview of tools forhandling social media in real time.
  • Thomson, Jeniffer (2016). IndyRef2? The thorny question of Scottish independence hasn’t gone away.
  • Thomson, Jennifer (2016). Book review: Windows of opportunity: how women seize peace negotiations for political change by Miriam J. Anderson.
  • Thomson, Jennifer (2016). IndyRef2? The thorny question of Scottish independence hasn’t gone away.
  • Thomson, Pat (2016). Writing the introduction to a journal article: say what the reader is going to encounter and why it is important.
  • Thornton, Judd R., Dunn, Kris (2016). How what you believe about democracy influences how you vote.
  • Thorpe, Rebecca (2016). How the American military economy promotes bipartisan support for large defense budgets.
  • Thébaud, Sarah (2016). In countries with little work-family support, many women opt for self-employment.
  • Thébaud, Sarah, Pedulla, David S. (2016). Men are more likely to take advantage of family friendly policies if they think that other men want to do that too.
  • Tien, Charles, Lewis-Beck, Michael S. (2016). In forecasting the 2016 election result, modelers had a good year. Pollsters did not.
  • Tijdink, Joeri, Vinkers, Christiaan, Otte, Wim (2016). Are scientific findings exaggerated? study finds steady increase of superlatives in PubMed abstracts.
  • Tily, Geoff (2016). Why historical perspectives on austerity can mislead if macroeconomic relations are ignored.
  • Tinios, Platon (2016). Grexit and Brexit, past and future: intertwined tales?
  • Tinios, Platon (2016). A quick guide to one more Greek pension reform.
  • Tinkler, Jane (2016). Announcing the Nine Dots Prize – tackling social issues through creative thinking.
  • Tiwari, Pragya (2016). The Cauvery water dispute is more than an escalated local issue, it is an urgent cautionary tale.
  • Tobia, Kevin (2016). Gauging personal identity.
  • Todd, Michael J. (2016). Five minutes with Professor Gary King: transformational power of big data lies, pure and simple, in its analytics.
  • Tomaney, John (2016). Beyond metro mayors and ‘secret deals’: rethinking devolution in England.
  • Tomaney, John (2016). Book review: the UK regional-national economic problem: geography, globalisation and governance by Philip McCann.
  • Tomaney, John (2016). Healing a broken heartland? An historical perspective on Labour’s gathering storm in the North East.
  • Tomlison, Hugh (2016). Implementing Leveson: how national newspaper groups use local press as “human shields”.
  • Tonkiss, Fran (2016). The undergraduate dissertation.
  • Torelli, Stefano M. (2016). The EU’s olive oil diplomacy: Italian fears and prospects for Tunisia.
  • Torrice, Josie (2016). If we want to improve young voter engagement, there are lessons that can be learned from the US Presidential campaigns.
  • Toubeau, Simon, Murkens, Jo Eric Khushal (2016). The illusion of sovereignty: the UK should embrace its experience of power-sharing at home to play a constructive role in the EU.
  • Trachtenberg, Marija (2016). Double whammy: transitioning from children’s to adult services and transitioning to adulthood.
  • Traill, Helen (2016). Food banks, community gardens and I, Daniel Blake.
  • Travers, Tony (2016). From promise to policy: what the manifestos tell us about the task facing London’s next Mayor.
  • Travers, Tony (2016). Local elections: How does National equivalent vote share help us to understand the results?
  • Travers, Tony (2016). The shock is visceral, the future uncertain. Deep-seated grievances lie behind this vote.
  • Travers, Tony, Rogers, Martin (2016). Introducing our ‘UK Elections 2016’ series.
  • Travers, Tony, Rogers, Martin (2016). An in depth look at England’s 2016 local elections: what are the key contests?
  • Traykov, Traycho, Marini, Adelina (2016). Interview with Bulgarian presidential candidate Traycho Traykov: “The EU needs to speak with one voice when dealing with Russia”.
  • Trench, Alan (2016). Not meeting the challenge: the failings of the draft Wales bill.
  • Treufel Dreyer, June (2016). Book review: middle kingdom and empire of the rising sun: Sino-Japanese relations, past and present by June Treufel Dreyer.
  • Triantaphyllou, Dimitrios (2016). Greek elites and Greek-Turkish relations: towards an impasse?
  • Tritter, Jonathon Q., Fredriksson, Mio (2016). The handling of the junior doctors’ strike reinforces a vision of the NHS where key voices are neither sought nor listened to.
  • Trotter, Sarah, Morgan, Nick (2016). Aberystwyth et son amour: talking to locals in the UK’s most Europhile town.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Clinton versus Trump promises to be an extremely negative presidential campaign.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Donald Trump’s success in South Carolina shows that for manyvoters, anti-establishment sentiment continues to run strong.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). How the “Trump factor” came to dominate the 2016 election.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). In his attacks on Jeb Bush, Donald Trump has stolen a pagefrom Karl Rove’s playbook.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Super Tuesday has shown that the 2016 election, unlike 2008, is going to be a battle between “hope” and “change.”.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Super Tuesday will show just how deep support for Trump andSanders really is.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Third Debate: As Trump blunders on accepting the election result, the contest is now Clinton’s to lose.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). This fall’s presidential campaign will focus on war, sex and work.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Today’s Michigan primary will show how well Trump’s economic message resonates with GOP voters.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Trump and Clinton won big last night, but the results point to some danger signs for the candidates.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Trump or not, Obama’s successor may seek to trim America’s sails internationally.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Trump wins: what’s next?
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Trump’s foreign policy speech was an attempt to woo independent voters for the general election, not placate foreign leaders.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). Trump’s victory will fuel the growing backlash against globalization in the West.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). What to look for in tonight’s presidential debate.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). What to look for tomorrow: minority turnout and will Republicans come home to Trump?
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). With five winners in Iowa, the race for the White House has justbecome much more interesting.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). With the conventions now over, we can look forward to a very closely fought presidential election.
  • Trubowitz, Peter (2016). The first debate: no knockout blows means that both campaignsstill have their work cut out.
  • Trubowitz, Peter, Smucker, Sierra (2016). Donald Trump accepts the presidential nomination for the Republican Party: LSE experts react.
  • Truedsson, Carl (2016). Book review: the Oxford handbook of Swedish politics edited by Jon Pierre.
  • Trumm, Siim, Sudulich, Laura (2016). When parties engage voters on the ground, they intensify public interest in elections and improve turnout.
  • Tse-Shang Tang, Denise (2016). Book review: queer/tongzhi China: new perspectives on research, activism and media cultures edited by Elisabeth L. Engebretsen and William F. Schroeder.
  • Tsekpo, Kafui, Afram, Alexander (2016). Democracy Takes Another Step Forward in #GhanaDecides 2016.
  • Tsertsvadze, Tinatin (2016). The EU’s mixed record: human rights and democracy promotion in the former Soviet Union.
  • Tulis, Jeffrey (2016). How the Electoral College could deny Donald Trump the presidency.
  • Turnbull, Nick, Atkins, Judy (2016). Jeremy Corbyn’s rhetorical dilemma: left-wing populism or mainstream convention?
  • Turner, Caroline (2016). To fight the slow pace of gender equality in the workplace, attack the root cause: invisible, unconscious bias.
  • Turner, Ed (2016). Germany’s state elections: the rise of the AfD and the vicious circle of grand coalition politics.
  • Turner, Ed (2016). Is this really the beginning of the end for Merkel? Why the CDU is still well placed to win in 2017.
  • Turner, Joseph (2016). Far from being a meritocratic and equalising device, the Family Migration Visa racialises certain migrant-citizen families.
  • Turow, Joseph (2016). Digital inequalities in the aisles: the quantified individual.
  • Tömmel, Till Florian (2016). Book Review: Finsternis in Deutschland. Was die Deutschen dachten. Interviews einer Engländerin, 1934-1938 [Darkness over Germany: what the Germans thought: interviews of an English woman, 1934-1938] by Ernestine Amy Buller.
  • Uher, Jana (2016). Looking to solve the replication crisis in psychology? Limitations of questionnaire methods must be considered.
  • Uher, Jana (2016). What is “personality”?
  • Ulsrud, Knut (2016). Why the MPA theoretical frameworks are invaluable for complex problem solving.
  • Umit, Resul (2016). MPs in safe seats are more likely to become ministers.
  • Umney, Charles (2016). Musicians are exploited on the London and Paris jazz scenes.
  • Umney, Charles (2016). New online live music agencies have oversized power over musicians.
  • Ungeheuer, Michael, Hillert, Alexander (2016). The business value of appearing on The New York Times.
  • Unikaitė-Jakuntavičienė, Ingrida (2016). Lithuania’s new parliament: tackling emigration will be a key priority for the country’s new MPs.
  • Uscinski, Joe (2016). The ballpark extra innings: conspiracy theories and DonaldTrump.
  • Uscinski, Joseph (2016). Balancing the presidential ticket may lead to unexpected – and unwanted – outcomes.
  • Uscinski, Joseph (2016). How 2016 has become the “conspiracy theory” election.
  • Uscinski, Joseph E. (2016). How playing on conspiracy theories can be key to electoral success.
  • Uscinski, Joseph E. (2016). If Trump’s rhetoric around conspiracy theories follows him to the White House, it could lead to the violation of rights on a massive scale.
  • Uscinski, Joseph E. (2016). It is surprisingly difficult to convince voters of partisan conspiracy theories.
  • Uscinski, Joseph E. (2016). What does Russia’s doping scandal tell us about the nature of political conspiracies?
  • Usherwood, Simon (2016). Is there still a point to UKIP? The future of British Euroscepticism post-Brexit.
  • Usherwood, Simon (2016). May’s foreign policy gambit: what could possibly go wrong? Plenty.
  • Usherwood, Simon (2016). Thursday’s European Council demonstrated the UK’s isolation in Brussels.
  • Usherwood, Simon (2016). What’s working with supporters of the leave and remain camps?
  • Vaishnav, Milan, Taylor, Ros (2016). Why do voters back corrupt and dishonest politicians? Interview with Milan Vaishnav.
  • Valcke, Peggy (2016). AVMS Review and Media Regulators’ Independence: the Dancing Procession of Echternach?
  • Valcore, Jace (2016). Hate crime laws don’t do enough to address bias or to improve the status of minority groups.
  • Valdur, Mari (2016). Book review: reset modernity! edited by Bruno Latour.
  • Valero, Anna (2016). Autumn Statement does little to dampen fears for the economic health of the UK.
  • Valero, Anna (2016). Investing in the future of the UK: LSE relaunches its Growth Commision.
  • Valero, Anna, Van Reenen, John (2016). The more universities in a country, the faster its economic growth.
  • Van Orden, Geoffrey (2016). Britain’s departure from “Ever Closer Union” is of great significance.
  • Van Reenen, John (2016). Budget 2016: Osborne rolls with the blows, but the politics tramples good economics.
  • Van Wijck, Peter, Niemeijer, Bert (2016). How to increase public support for policy: understanding citizens’ perspectives.
  • Van der Spuy, Anri (2016). Escaping walled gardens: is the grass greener on the other side?
  • Van der Spuy, Anri (2016). Who will be invited to the fourth industrial revolution?
  • Van der Stede, Wim A. (2016). Evidence suggests that firms set targets to avoid small losses.
  • Van der Stede, Wim A. (2016). Reducing budget slack may lead managers to focus on the short term.
  • Vandoninck, Sofie, Nouwen, Marije, Zaman, Bieke (2016). An example from Flanders on how to inform and support parents in media education.
  • Varadarajan, Siddharth (2016). “The corporatisation of the Indian media has had a negative impact on the quality of journalism over the last two decades” – Siddharth Varadarajan.
  • Varin, Caroline (2016). Book review: power shift: on the new global order by Richard Falk.
  • Varoufakis, Yannis, Brown, Stuart A. (2016). Yanis Varoufakis: “The UK should stay in the EU to fight tooth and nail against the EU’s anti-democratic institutions”.
  • Varshney, Ashutosh, Campion, Sonali (2016). “There are phases when India falls remarkably short of the standards you would expect democracies to follow” – Ashutosh Varshney.
  • Vasilev, George (2016). When should democracy be about consensus and when about conflict?
  • Vasilopoulou, Sofia, Wagner, Markus (2016). Emotions to shape debates and decisions in the upcoming referendum.
  • Vazquez Sampere, Juan Pablo (2016). Apple has a business strategy behind the iPhone 7.
  • Vazza, Lucilla (2016). In Italy primary care prescriptions all electronic from 1 March 2016.
  • Veale, Michael (2016). Book review: Service automation: robots and the future ofwork by Leslie P. Willcocks and Mary C. Lacity.
  • Velasco, Jesus (2016). To Mexicans, US democracy is important. Now, Trump’s rhetoric is calling that into question.
  • Velasco, Jesus, Holmes, Cody (2016). Trump’s Mexico visit was great for Trump, but backfired onPresident Peña Nieto.
  • Veletsianos, George (2016). The moral baseline of social media policies: institutions and scholars need to examine practices with a critical eye.
  • Venables, Keith (2016). When a psychologist’s true calling is social activism.
  • Venis, Sarah (2016). Evidence and innovation in humanitarian assistance: ‘Conference without Borders’ to address Syrian conflict #MSFSci.
  • Venizelos, Tessa (2016). Imagining ‘the other’ – can the media challenge our assumptions?
  • Venters, Will, Khanna, Ayesha (2016). Integrating digital systems to help city residents plan seamless journeys.
  • Verardo, Michela, Patton, Andrew J. (2016). Company news affects the way in which a stock’s returns co-move with those of other firms.
  • Verkhivker, Alex (2016). Book review: The truth about inflation by Paul Donovan.
  • Verleysen, Frederik (2016). Cluster analysis of individual authors shows the diversity of scholarly research both between and within disciplines.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Book review: Asia’s new battlefield: the US, China and thestruggle for the Western Pacific by Richard Javad Heydarian.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Book review: Chinese economic statecraft: commercial actors, grand strategy and state control by William J. Norris.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Book review: beyond South Asia: India’s strategic evolution and the reintegration of the subcontinent by Neil Padukone.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Book review: deadly impasse: Indo-Pakistani relations at the dawn of a new century by Sumit Ganguly.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Book review: heading east: security, trade and environment between India and Southeast Asia edited by Karen Stoll Farrell and Sumit Ganguly.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Book review: the Oxford handbook of Indian foreign policy edited by David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan and Srinath Raghavan.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). The Oxford Handbook of Indian Foreign Policy edited by David M. Malone, C. Raja Mohan and Srinath Raghavan.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). Top South Asian foreign policy challenges for 2016.
  • Verma, Raj (2016). The long read: 68 years of Indian foreign policy by Raj Verma.
  • Verweijen, Judith (2016). Between ‘justice’ and ‘injustice’: justice populaire in the Eastern DR Congo.
  • Vibert, Frank, Beck, Gunnar (2016). The seven days of Brexit: how a Leave government could bypass Article 50.
  • Vibert, Frank, Brexit, LSE (2016). Read our new ebook by the LSE’s Frank Vibert.
  • Vickers, Chris, Mokyr, Joel, Ziebarth, Nicolas R. (2016). Historical predictions that technology would bring calamity have largely failed.
  • Vickery, Jonathan (2016). Book review: culture, economy and politics: the case of New Labour by David Hesmondhalgh, Kate Oakley, David Lee and Melissa Nisbett.
  • Vickery, Jonathan (2016). Book review: curators of cultural enterprise: a critical analysis of a creative business intermediary by Philip Schlesinger, Melanie Selfe and Ealasaid Munro.
  • Vickery, Jonathan (2016). Book review: globalization, culture and development: the UNESCO convention on cultural diversity edited by Christiaan De Beukelaer, Miikka Pyykkönen and J. P. Singh.
  • Vidal, Matt, Ebenshade, Jill (2016). Private sector management practices don’t work in welfare services.
  • Vieira, Helena (2016). Sherry Coutu: ‘There’s no such thing as small and medium-sized firms’.
  • Vigran, Dana, Bell, Tara (2016). Promoting tech for good- the Womanity Award.
  • Villamil, Justin, Olaleye, Yossie (2016). In Pius Adesanmi’s speech and writing, there is hope for a Pan-African future.
  • Vincent, Jane (2016). Learning from children and young people about positive smartphone opportunities.
  • Vis, Farida (2016). Algorithmic Accountability, Trustworthiness and the Need to Develop new Frameworks.
  • Vis, Farida (2016). Research resilience: why academics and funders alike should care about #RIPTwitter.
  • Visconti, Amanda (2016). How the Digital Humanities are using Slack to support and build a geographically dispersed intellectual community.
  • Vlandas, Tim (2016). Xenophobia Britannica? Anti-immigrant attitudes in the UK are among the strongest in Europe.
  • Vogkli, Maria-Christina (2016). “The battle of bastards”: Game of Thrones, the EU referendum and Greece.
  • Vojnovic, Milan (2016). 5 minutes with Milan Vojnovic.
  • Volintiru, Clara, Stefan, George (2016). Social roots: How Romania’s Social Democrats won the 2016 election.
  • Vollard, Hans (2016). The 2017 Dutch parliamentary elections: a fragmented picture as Rutte and Wilders draw their battle lines.
  • Vollrath, Dietrich, Jedwab, Remi, Gollin, Douglas (2016). Urbanisation with and without industrialisation.
  • Vono de Vilhena, Daniela, Kilpi-Jakonen, Elina (2016). Adult education can substantially improve careers.
  • Vrangbæk, Karsten (2016). Health policy ideas fashionable in the Nordic countries.
  • Vukovic, Vuk (2016). How a small team of academics correctly predicted a Trump victory.
  • Vítores, David Fernández (2016). Does Brexit spell the end for English as the lingua franca of the EU?
  • Wade, Robert (2016). Neoliberalism and industrial policy in Georgia – Professor Robert Wade.
  • Wade, Robert (2016). ‘Scale-ups’ are the true engines of growth – Professor Robert Wade.
  • Wade, Robert Hunter (2016). Income distribution and the UK referendum – Professor Robert Wade.
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan (2016). Let's Talk about Immigration: Young people, jobs and training.
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan (2016). SWOB 10. EU-turn if you want to. Brexit & Immigration.
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan (2016). SWOB 7:International Women's Day: Reasons to be (a little bit) cheerful about women in the UK labour market, 1, 2, 3.
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan (2016). SWOB 8: Employment Performance: UK versus the USA. Jury Out.
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan (2016). SWOB 9. Is it Worth It? Are there too many graduates in the UK?
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan, Dhingra, Swati, Ottaviano, Gianmarco I. P., Van Reenen, John (2016). Immigration from the EU is not a ‘necessary evil’ and does not drag down wages.
  • Wadsworth, Jonathan, Dhingra, Swati, Ottaviano, Gianmarco I. P., Van Reenen, John (2016). Why immigration is no reason to leave the EU.
  • Waite, Sean, Denier, Nicole (2016). There’s a wage hierarchy based on sexual orientation.
  • Walker, Andrew (2016). The Budget will give clues as to how far English devolution marks a radical change for local government.
  • Walker, David (2016). British universities excel in the social sciences. How much of their success depends on the EU?
  • Walker, David, Abrams, Fran, Lammiman, Dinah (2016). Communicating impact: the role of news and media — reflections on reaching non-academic audiences.
  • Walker, Samuel, Rosenman, Emily (2016). The practice of demolishing abandoned houses in Cleveland,Ohio is limited in its capacity to address underlying causes ofhousing injustice.
  • Walker, Simon (2016). Brexit: prioritise getting a good deal from the EU over getting a speedy one.
  • Wallace, Sherri, Allen, Marcus (2016). College textbooks often present a biased interpretation of affirmative action policies.
  • Wallis, Diana (2016). European rights: there is no going backwards.
  • Walter, Stefanie (2016). Why austerity is easier to implement in some countries than others – and why this was not the case for Greece.
  • Walters, Hannah (2016). #IWD2016 Book review: unfinished business: women men work family by Anne-Marie Slaughter.
  • Walters, James (2016). Religion in the public sphere can provide opportunities for social capital.
  • Wang, Jian, Veugelers, Reinhilde, Stephen, Paula (2016). Bias against novelty in science: A cautionary tale for users of bibliometric indicators.
  • Ward, Bob (2016). Is there a link between climate change ‘sceptics’ and Brexit supporters?
  • Ward, Bob (2016). Miscommunicating science: the media and climate change.
  • Ward, Bob (2016). Misinformation on climate change policy will get us nowhere: a response to Bjorn Lomborg.
  • Ward, Bob (2016). The US and China’s ratification of the Paris climate agreement puts pressure on the EU to quickly do the same.
  • Ward, Bob (2016). What energy and climate change policies can we expect from President Trump?
  • Ward, Bob (2016). What next for the Greens? The Green Party after Natalie Bennett.
  • Ward, Bob (2016). Why the ratification of the Paris Climate Agreement is bad news for Donald Trump.
  • Warren, Michael (2016). Book review: Central Asia in art: from Soviet Orientalism to the new republics by Aliya Abykayeva-Tiesenhausen.
  • Warren, Michael (2016). Book review: The Polar regions: an environmental history by Adrian Howkins.
  • Warren, Michael (2016). Book review: farewell to the world: a history of suicide byMarzio Barbagli.
  • Warren, Michael (2016). The best bookshops in Bath, United Kingdom.
  • Warren, Michael (2016). The long read: beyond the beautiful game: football as a means for control and protest by Michael Warren.
  • Washington, Adolphus (2016). Can Senegal withstand the resource curse?
  • Wasim, Ahmed (2016). Amplified messages: how hashtag activism and Twitter diplomacy converged at #ThisIsACoup – and won.
  • Wass, Hanna, Pirkkalainen, Päivi, Weide, Marjukka (2016). The political potential of migrants is often overlooked in discussions around integration.
  • Watermeyer, Richard, Hedgecoe, Adam (2016). Selling impact: how is impact peer reviewed and what does this mean for the future of impact in universities?
  • Watson, Callum (2016). An honourable MENtion to being a man about International Women’s Day.
  • Wattal, Sunil, Greenwood, Brad N. (2016). Ride-sharing apps really reduce drunk driving fatalities.
  • Waymer, Damion (2016). Strategic manipulation of district boundaries dilutes the Black vote and threatens the existence of White Democrats in Southern politics.
  • Wdowiak, Laurie (2016). Nuit Debout: middle class protests in neoliberal France.
  • Weale, Albert (2016). Are health care resources in the developed country context really scarce?
  • Webb, Paul (2016). Book review: creative research communication: theory and practice by Clare Wilkinson and Emma Weitkamp.
  • Webb, Paul (2016). Book review: watching closely: a guide to ethnographic observation by Christena Nippert-Eng.
  • Webster, David (2016). Benefit sanctions have failed: a Comprehensive Review is needed.
  • Webster, Peter (2016). Book review: electronic dreams. how 1980s Britain learned to love the computer by Tom Lean.
  • Wegener, Charlotte (2016). The materiality of research: ‘the materiality of facts and fiction: recomposing myself from the sickbed’ by Charlotte Wegener.
  • Wegener, Charlotte, Meier, Ninna (2016). The materiality of research: ‘writing with resonance’ by Charlotte Wegener and Ninna Meier.
  • Weiler, Jonathan, MacWilliams, Matthew (2016). Authoritarianism, not social class, is the dividing line between supporting and opposing Donald Trump.
  • Weinstein, Adam (2016). Iraq, Afghanistan, and now Syria – America’s foreign policy has a dangerous and counterproductive love affair with exiles.
  • Weinstein, Adam (2016). Terror and instability: sanctions stifle Pakistani development.
  • Weinstein, Adam (2016). What Pakistan’s war in the north reveals about post-conflict landscapes and the future of Syria.
  • Weinstein, Adam (2016). When development threatens royal legitimacy.
  • Weinstein, Adam (2016). The new president will face a crescendo of voices in Washington DC urging a restart to American interventions abroad.
  • Weiser, Sonia J. (2016). Book review: blood, dreams and gold: the changing face ofBurma by Richard Cockett.
  • Weisfeld, Hannah (2016). The Labour anti-Semitism row has thrust British Jewish identity into the public domain, but its complexity is often lost.
  • Weiss Malkiel, Nancy (2016). Coeducation at university was – and is – no triumph of feminism.
  • Weisskircher, Manès (2016). World Animal Day: tracking the animal rights movement’s growing presence in European politics.
  • Weisskircher, Manès, Rone, Julia (2016). Unity makes strength? How the radical right could become kingmakers in Bulgaria.
  • Wellmann, Kim (2016). The refugee crisis offers an opportunity for Europe to promote sustainable, inclusive growth.
  • Wells, Anthony (2016). With the diagnosis confirmed pollsters can start working on their own solutions to the 2015 polling error.
  • Wells, Tamas (2016). Answers to the Western democratic malaise may come from unexpected places.
  • Welzel, Chris, Dalton, Russell (2016). The secret of better government? Citizens who complain.
  • Wenban-Smith, Hugh B. (2016). Food insecurity in urban Tanzania.
  • West, Francis (2016). Francis West – leadership and being first aren’t the same things: an assessment of the UK national action plan on business and human rights.
  • Westall, Andrea (2016). Widespread democratic change could trigger meaningful action on climate change.
  • Western, Mark (2016). We need more solution-oriented social science: on changing ourframes of reference and tackling big social problems.
  • Westlake, Martin (2016). How the Spitzenkandidaten process and Juncker’s reforms might shape the future of the European Commission.
  • Whalen, Ryan (2016). Context is everything: making the case for more nuanced citation impact measures.
  • Wheeler, Reyss (2016). Divided families: Brexit and the working class.
  • Whistler, Daniel, Hill, Daniel (2016). Seeing is believing?
  • White, Ben (2016). Silencing dissent: Palestine solidarity under attack.
  • White, Calum W. (2016). Book review: suburban urbanities: suburbs and the life of the high street edited by Laura Vaughan.
  • Whiteley, Paul, Clarke, Harold (2016). Representative samples are an issue for the pollsters – but so are respondents who lie.
  • Whiting, Matthew (2016). New routes to old goals: the strategic transformation of Sinn Féin and the IRA.
  • Whiting, Sophie, Braniff, Máire (2016). ‘There is no point having a token woman’: gender and representation in the ‘new’ Northern Ireland.
  • Whitley, Edgar A. (2016). The UK’s digital identity system explores business applications.
  • Whitman, Richard (2016). Building the Brexit machine: will the hardware match the software?
  • Whitney, Teresa (2016). Life inside the dungeon of the ivory tower: a PhD survivor’s guide.
  • Wiedenbrug, Anahi, Louette, Antoine, Ogunye, Temi (2016). How will capitalism end?
  • Wiemken, Anna (2016). Assam elections: “If I don’t vote, they think I am a foreigner”.
  • Wieser, Sonia (2016). Book review: an introduction to Antonio Gramsci: his life, thought and legacy by George Hoare and Nathan Sperber.
  • Wilhelmy, Annika (2016). Managers’ behaviour in job interviews impacts the firm’s image.
  • Wilkes, Giles (2016). Broadening the market is good. To believe otherwise is flat-earth delusional.
  • Wilkes, Giles (2016). The EU stops the UK government doing what it wants. Business should like that.
  • Wilkey, Danny (2016). A letter to MPA offer holders from the MPA careers consultant.
  • Wilkins, Andrew (2016). Should we be worried about controversial government plans to do away with parent governors in schools?
  • Wilkins-Laflamme, Sarah (2016). Is religion disappearing entirely from Great Britain? A fresh look at religiosity trends.
  • Wilkins-Laflamme, Sarah (2016). Is religion disappearing entirely from Great Britain? A fresh look at religiosity trends.
  • Wilkinson, Clare, Weitkamp, Emma (2016). Evidencing impact: the challenges of mapping impacts frompublic engagement and communication.
  • Will, Thomas (2016). Flock leadership helps teams achieve the firm’s innovation goals.
  • Willems, Wendy (2016). Beyond free basics: Facebook, data bundles and Zambia’s social media internet.
  • Willems, Wendy (2016). Beyond free basics: Facebook, data bundles and Zambia’ssocial media internet.
  • Willems, Wendy (2016). Facebook live-streaming, drones and swag selfies: youth culture and visual social media in #ZambiaDecides.
  • Willems, Wendy (2016). Social media, platform power and (mis)information in Zambia’s recent elections.
  • Williams, Katherine (2016). Book review: Reproductive states: global perspectives on the invention and implementation of population policy edited by Rickie Solinger and Mie Nakachi.
  • Williams, Katherine (2016). Book review: a fiery and furious people: a history of violence in England by James Sharpe.
  • Williams, Katherine (2016). Book review: les Parisiennes: how the women of Paris lived, loved and died in the 1940s by Anne Sebba.
  • Williams, Sierra (2016). Blogging platforms are not neutral: challenging the underlying assumptions of our technology.
  • Williams, Sierra (2016). Impact community insights: five things we learned from ourreader survey and Google analytics.
  • Williams, Sierra (2016). Why do university-managed blogs matter? On the importance of public, open and networked digital infrastructure.
  • Williams, Thomas Christie (2016). Book review: metric power by David Beer.
  • Williams, Thomas Christie (2016). Long read review: redesigning life: how genome editing will transform the world by John Parrington.
  • Williams, Val (2016). Choice and control: social care must not disable people with intellectual disabilities.
  • Williamson, Andy (2016). 2015 was not an ‘internet election’ but both data and social tools did matter.
  • Wills, Jane (2016). Book review: London’s boroughs at 50 by Tony Travers.
  • Wilson, Erin K., Mavelli, Luca (2016). ‘Good Muslim/ bad Muslim’ and ‘good refugee/bad refugee’ narratives are shaping European responses to the refugee crisis.
  • Wilson, Gary (2016). Book review: the Oxford handbook of United Nations peacekeeping operations edited by Joachim A. Koops et al.
  • Winckworth, Rebecca (2016). Life after LSE: From LSE development student to social entrepreneur.
  • Wingrove, Paul (2016). Book review: Frontline Ukraine: crisis in the borderlands by Richard Sakwa.
  • Winn, Hugo (2016). Businesses can no longer ignore social media sentiment analysis.
  • Winters, John, Li, Yu (2016). The bigger and denser the city you live in, the more unhappy you’re likely to be.
  • Winterton, Jack (2016). How do you write a Dissertation? Advice from a graduate.
  • Winzen, Thomas (2016). The EU doesn’t weaken UK parliamentary democracy as much as Leavers have you believe.
  • Wisniewski, Jaroslaw (2016). Russia’s communication strategy and the EU: why Moscow is winning the battle for soft power in Serbia.
  • Wiśniewski, Jarosław (2016). Geopolitical storytelling: how Russia’s Nord Stream 2 narrative is served to the public.
  • Woldemariam, Yohannes (2016). Special challenges Eritrean refugees face in Europe.
  • Wolfe, Scott E. (2016). When young people no longer see the police as procedurally fair, they are more likely to engage in risky behavior and be victimized.
  • Wolford, Miranda (2016). Beyond victimization: female perpetrators of genocide.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2016). Austria after the presidential election: a country divided.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2016). Austria’s presidential election: van der Bellen has won, but there is little reason for complacency.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2016). Norbert Hofer, the friendly face of Austria’s populist right.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio (2016). Norbert Hofer, the friendly face of the populist right.
  • Wolkenstein, Fabio, Rathgeb, Phillip (2016). A long goodbye to the grand coalition: Austria’s presidential election.
  • Wolton, Stephane (2016). Lobbying, inside out: How special interest groups influence policy choices.
  • Wong, Alfred (2016). The Governance deficit in Central Asia and the threat to China’s Central Asian energy strategy.
  • Wood, Lucy (2016). Hoardings around Hackney: sociology, art and barriers.
  • Woodhead, Linda (2016). The government’s changes to faith schools side with hardline religion.
  • Woods, Lorna (2016). What would be the impact of Brexit on UK media regulation?
  • Woods, Neal (2016). By empowering industry interests, better public access to environmental agencies can lead to less stringent environmental regulations.
  • Woodson, Benjamin (2016). Electing judges has mixed effects on whether or not people think they are legitimate.
  • Woolcock, Stephen (2016). Playing the game without a say in the rules: how Britain would trade outside the EU.
  • Worrall, John (2016). Homeopathy and evidence-based policy.
  • Worrall, John (2016). The placebo effect and evidence-based policy.
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). Boris Johnson’s influence over the outcome of the EU referendum is highly overstated.
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). David Cameron and the tax havens: transparency is only a partial answer to a much bigger question.
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). Going, going, gone: how safe is David Cameron?
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). History shows that the new president has a fairly good chance of winning re-election in 2020.
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). Open up or shut up? David Cameron’s three transparency problems.
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). Who will succeed David Cameron? A brief history of takeover Prime Ministers.
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). Why would anyone want to be Prime Minister?
  • Worthy, Ben (2016). The take-over: Prime Ministers without a popular mandate, 1916-2016.
  • Worthy, Ben, John, Peter, Vannoni, Matia (2016). Better than asking: an experiment on the effectiveness of FOI requests.
  • Wratil, Christopher (2016). Are UK citizens losing out in Brussels? Not really.
  • Wratil, Christopher, Pastorella, Guilia (2016). Will Italy’s post-Renzi government be led by a technocrat?
  • Wren-Lewis, Simon (2016). Should economics be democratised?
  • Wright, Emily (2016). Less social support for women in disadvantaged neighborhoods means that they are more likely to be the victims of intimate partner violence.
  • Wright, Martin (2016). Labour’s crisis is the latest manifestation of a tension that goes back to the party’s pre-history.
  • Wright, Matthew (2016). Multicultural policies do not lead to more supportive attitudes towards religious accommodation.
  • Wright, Nicholas (2016). Achieving a ‘good’ Brexit: what David Cameron needs to do now.
  • Wright, Nicholas (2016). Post-Brexit, would Whitehall be able to rise to the challenge of negotiating the best possible deal?
  • Wright, Nicholas (2016). Theresa Villiers wants Northern Ireland out of the EU. That stance may be untenable.
  • Wright, Nick (2016). ‘Brexit means Brexit’ – but is Whitehall up to the challenge?
  • Wu, Chia-Huei (2016). Everyone loses when the values of employees clash with those of the firm.
  • Wu, Chia-huei, Liu, Jun, Kwong Kwan, Ho, Lee, Cynthia (2016). When employees are ostracised, the whole organisation suffers.
  • Wyatt, Andrew, Manikandan, C. (2016). The AIADMK’s re-election conceals the nuances of a highly competitive campaign in Tamil Nadu.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2016). Corbyn’s reshuffle was unnecessary, protracted, and botched – but it may not make any difference.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2016). The EU referendum saw the return of class-prediction voting (with a vengeance).
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2016). Iain Duncan Smith’s resignation was the most confusing since Gladstone left the (Conservative) government of 1845.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2016). Predicting the 2020 election? We are not even sure if the results of 2015 are going to change.
  • Wyburn-Powell, Alun (2016). Theresa May – a well-prepared geographer’s uneventful climb to the top.
  • Xanthaki, Helen (2016). The Kessler case should be a starting point for reforming the EU’s anti-fraud office.
  • Xheza, Ermelinda (2016). Hair caught in the barbed wire: a young woman’s story of crossing borders and migration.
  • Xu, Guo (2016). Thank you for your patronage: how social connections impact bureaucratic efficiency.
  • Yagci, Alper (2016). How the Occupy movement may have facilitated political change.
  • Yam, Emilie, Kaul, Upaasna, Jinhage, Amanda (2016). Graduation: what’s next for ultra-poor programmes?
  • Yang, Di, Kastrouni, Eirini, Zhang, Lei (2016). An income-based vehicle mileage tax would be a fairer way to solve America’s road funding crisis.
  • Yassin, Nasser, Chamaa, Yassin (2016). The informal adaptive mechanisms among Syrian Refugees and marginalised host communities in Lebanon.
  • Yildirim, Tevfik Murat (2016). Turkey’s Imaginary need for Presidentialism: What would Erdogan’s latest project bring to the country?
  • Yip, Jaqueline, Misheva, Kristina (2016). Celebrating protest: International Women’s Day.
  • Ylijoki, Oili-Helena (2016). Organising logic: Project time versus process time in the accelerated academy.
  • You, Nanxi, Xuan, Ong Jing, Mahmood, Maimoonah, Krijestorac, Hana (2016). Brexit and its effect on the pound, the UK’s trading position and productivity.
  • Young, Gareth (2016). Class-based punishment? How legislation to evict social tenants involved in riots is unjust.
  • Young, Sarah (2016). How state entrepreneurial development strategies may make income inequality worse.
  • Young, William, Davis, Matthew (2016). Don’t try to convince your employees to become environmental advocates.
  • Youngs, Richard (2016). How we can reframe the debate about Europe’s populist threat.
  • Yu, Jie (2016). China is an unexpectedly strong supporter of the Remain camp.
  • Yu, Jie (2016). Don’t let the Hinkley C delay sour Sino-British relations post-Brexit.
  • Zaborowski, Rafal (2016). Hello from the other side of music video regulation.
  • Zaccaro, Heather (2016). Brexit reaction from across the pond.
  • Zaman, Bieke, Nouwen, Marije (2016). Helicopter apps and parental mediation: facts and myths about parental controls.
  • Zamurd-Butt, Henna (2016). The Trashies: talking back to the media.
  • Zamurd-Butt, Henna, Battini, Noémie (2016). Robot news: a new Polis report on data driven news production.
  • Zarsky, Tal (2016). Automation, Correlation and Causation: Launching a Policy Discussion.
  • Zaynel, Nadja (2016). Be independent, go online! How German children and adolescents with Down’s Syndrome use the internet.
  • Zeglovits, Eva, Sickinger, Hubert, Eberl, Jakob-Moritz (2016). Was Austria’s presidential election really a vote against populism?
  • Zemack-Rugar, Yael (2016). To sell more guilty pleasures, tie it to a cause. It works.
  • Zenghelis, Dimitri (2016). Brexit and the UK economy – when will we know the impact? Dates for the diary.
  • Zenghelis, Dimitri (2016). Fog in the Channel: reports of a Brexit boost are at best premature.
  • Zenghelis, Dimitri (2016). Negative interest rates are an opportunity for the UK to invest in sustainable infrastructure.
  • Zettelmeyer, Jeromin, Hix, Simon, Cable, Vince, van Geffen, Robert (2016). What’s Germany really thinking? Vince Cable, Simon Hix and Jeromin Zettelmeyer discuss Brexit.
  • Zhivitskaya, Maria (2016). Book review: why aren’t they shouting? A banker’s tale of change, computers and perpetual crisis by Kevin Rodgers.
  • Zhivitskaya, Maria (2016). LSE lit fest 2016 book review: you don’t have to live like this by Benjamin Markovits.
  • Zimmerer, Franziska (2016). German media on the refugee crisis: how the refugees-welcome campaign has backfired.
  • Zimmerman, Allyson (2016). To improve women’s representation in business leadership, bring men on board.
  • Zimmerman, Laura (2016). Does regular physical activity help us make better decisions?
  • Zimmermann, Allyson (2016). Are you ‘covering’ your identity at work?
  • Zimmermann, Allyson (2016). Women hold a mere 23% of board seats in Europe.
  • Zimmermann, Allyson (2016). The more men know about work gender inequality, the more they act as advocates.
  • Zuccotti, Carolina (2016). The ethnic concentration of a neighbourhood has varying effects on employment prospects for men and women across different ethnicities.
  • Zwi, Daniel (2016). Book review: writing for hire: unions, Hollywood and Madison Avenue by Catherine Fisk.
  • [Unknown], Nora (2016). If my rights were clothes….
  • auf dem Brinke, Anna (2016). Why the euro area needs new convergence goals and how to choose them.
  • chatty, Dawn (2016). Gendered vulnerability and forced conscription in the war in Syria.
  • da Conceição, Adelimar (2016). My curly hair / Meu cabelo crespo.
  • da Conceição-Heldt, Eugénia (2016). The European Commission experienced a ‘subtle disempowerment’ during the Eurozone crisis.
  • da Costa, Pedro Nicolaci (2016). After the US elections, how do we return to a constructive debate about trade?
  • de Abreu, Belinha (2016). Privacy and data in students’ lives: a cultural shift in the US.
  • de Beistegui, Miguel (2016). Desires we live by.
  • de Bruycker, Iskander (2016). David and Goliath in Brussels: lobbying strategies and success in the EU.
  • de Felice, Damiano (2016). Margaret Jungk resigns from UN Working Group and emphasises need for stronger measurement in business and human rights.
  • de Grauwe, Paul (2016). After Brexit, the EU must break with neo-liberalism and address the discontents of globalisation.
  • de Grauwe, Paul (2016). How far should we push globalisation?
  • de Grauwe, Paul (2016). How to prevent Brexit from damaging the EU.
  • de Grauwe, Paul (2016). The UK’s renegotiation: keeping up appearances.
  • de Lima Madureira, André (2016). International refugee law: definitions and limitations of the 1951 refugee convention.
  • de Rond, Mark, Rakita, Magda (2016). Why there is no PTSD in Afghanistan.
  • de Sousa, Luís (2016). Barroso and Goldman Sachs: has the EU regulatory state yielded to big business interests?
  • de Vaujany, François-Xavier (2016). Management transforms not only businesses, but everyday aspects of our lives.
  • de Vaujany, François-Xavier (2016). Why there will never be a robot-entrepreneur and why it’s important.
  • de Vries, Gerdien (2016). PR gone wrong: the backlash effect of window dressing.
  • de Vries, Gijs (2016). President Trump bringing back waterboarding would make both Europe and America less secure.
  • de Vries, Gijs (2016). Security: the UK should not relinquish power by voting for a Brexit.
  • de Waal, Alex, Ibreck, Rachel (2016). Chiefs’ courts: protecting civilians in South Sudan?
  • de Waal, Alex, Ndula, Victor (2016). South Sudan: the price of war, the price of peace.
  • de Witte, Floris (2016). Freedom of movement is not simply an economic good, but a bulwark against oppression.
  • sloman, Peter (2016). Tim Farron’s challenge: why Brexit creates risks for the Liberal Democrats, as well as opportunities.
  • van Basshuysen, Philippe (2016). Towards a fairer distribution of refugees.
  • van Geffen, Robert (2016). Would Brexit be the final straw for financial services in the UK?
  • van Wijck, Peter, Niemeijer, Bert (2016). How to increase public support for policy: understanding citizens’ perspectives.
  • van der Veer, Harmen, Otjes, Simon (2016). Can only Eurosceptics oppose austerity? How divisions over integration have replaced the left/right divide in the European Parliament.
  • von Berg, Maximilien (2016). Economic solutions are crucial to help solve Somalia’s political woes.
  • von Schiller, Ingrid (2016). Why did I participate in the MIINT competition?
  • Öney, Sezin (2016). Turkey’s academic petition affair: how Erdoğan’s attacks on critical academics are likely to bolster his support.
  • Ćwiakowski, Piotr, Giergiczny, Marek, Krawczyk, Michał (2016). Faster user interfaces could help decrease online piracy.
  • İriş, Doruk, Tavoni, Alessandro (2016). When enough countries lead by example, they create a tipping point for climate agreements.
  • Śliwiński, Krzysztof (2016). The European Commission’s rule of law review in Poland risks fuelling Euroscepticism.
  • عبدالله, غادة (2016). بين ترامب وكلينتون، دول مجلس التعاون الخليجي تفضل العمل كالمعتاد.