Curated category
Political science journals
- Perspectives on PoliticsPerspectives on Politics arrived in 2003 with a pointed question behind it: what should academic political science say to people who actually care about…
- Journal of Genocide ResearchThe Journal of Genocide Research arrived in 1999, staking out space for serious academic inquiry into one of humanity's darkest subjects.
- Review of International Political EconomyThe Review of International Political Economy has been asking one persistent question since 1994: what happens when the worlds of politics and economics stop…
- Public Opinion QuarterlyThe year 1937 marked the birth of Public Opinion Quarterly. Princeton University's Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs sponsored this…
- Critique: Journal of Socialist TheoryHillel H. Ticktin established the journal in May 1973 under the title Critique: Journal of Marxist Theory and Soviet Studies.
- International Journal of Political EconomyThe International Journal of Political Economy sits at the intersection of two disciplines that have long talked past each other: politics and economics.
- Political Science QuarterlyPolitical Science Quarterly has been publishing since 1886, making it one of the longest-running journals of its kind in the United States.
- Europe-Asia StudiesEurope-Asia Studies is a peer-reviewed academic journal that has been tracking political, economic, and social life across the former Soviet bloc for more…
- Journal of DemocracyThe Journal of Democracy opened its doors in 1990 as a quarterly academic publication. It emerged from the National Endowment for Democracy's International…
- Nationalities PapersNationalities Papers arrived in 1972, at a moment when the study of ethnic conflict, minority rights, and nationalism had no single academic home.
- Publius (journal)The year 1971 marked the birth of Publius: The Journal of Federalism. Daniel Elazar established this quarterly social science journal at Temple University…
- Bulletin of the Atomic ScientistsThe Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists first appeared in late 1945, only weeks after the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki turned two cities into rubble.