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Political Science Matters

Political Science Matters

By ECPR

Listen to topical podcasts from the European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) tackling pressing matters in political science and beyond.
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Political science at risk in Europe: Frailness and the study of power

Political Science MattersApr 09, 2021

00:00
57:21
The 2024 early election in Portugal: The Rise of Right-Wing Populists and the Change of the Party System
Mar 18, 202429:06
Resisting Backsliding: Opposition Strategies against the Erosion of Democracy⁠
Mar 14, 202435:29
2023 Dutch General Election: Earthquake or Tremor?
Oct 31, 202334:16
Voters Under Pressure: What Drives Electoral Volatility?
Oct 23, 202329:51
Polish 2023 Parliamentary Elections: A Vote Against the Government?

Polish 2023 Parliamentary Elections: A Vote Against the Government?

On October 15 2023, Polish citizens went to the polls to the renew the Parliament, producing the highest turnout ever in post-Communist Poland. The main result has been the defeat of the ruling PiS led by Jarosław Kaczyński and the victory of the opposition coalition, led by Donald Tusk. What were the main points of contentions between and withing the two political camps? Why did many Polish citizens go to vote for the opposition parties? What can one expect with regard to government formation and future policies? Michelangelo Vercesi, co-editor of the Political Data Yearbook, discusses these issues with Krzysztof Jasiewicz (Washington and Lee University of Lexington) in this episode, recorded three days after the elections.

Oct 23, 202326:49
Slovakia 2023: What next after Fico's (weak) comeback?

Slovakia 2023: What next after Fico's (weak) comeback?

The recent victory of the populist party Smer (Direction) in the 2023 Slovak parliamentary election has sparked concerns about Slovakia’s return to national populism. Are these fears warranted? Is Slovakia sliding into illiberalism and drifting away from the West? Or is the excessive focus on populism preventing analysts from seeing underlying opposing changes in Slovakia’s political landscape? In this episode, recorded two days after the election, Raul Gomez, co-editor of the Political Data Yearbook, discusses these issues with Kevin Deegan-Krause (Wayne State University), Erika Harris (University of Liverpool), and Erik Láštic (Comenius University).

Oct 11, 202341:09
Spain at a crossroads: the July 2023 general election
Jul 07, 202334:13
The conditions of planetary citizenship
Jun 15, 202337:39
Fariba Adelkhah, the Embodiment of Scientific Freedom
May 22, 202301:14:33
The Digital turn to public service provision to migrants and asylum seekers during Covid-19
May 09, 202301:15:38
Online Seminar - Immigration & Federalism
May 04, 202334:29
Online Seminar - Migration, political socialization and the emigrant vote
May 04, 202330:54
Survey research on the integration of EMMs across Europe – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity
May 04, 202336:33
Why Do Migration and Diversity Policies so Often Derail? – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity
May 04, 202335:11
What 2020 Revealed about Overseas American – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity

What 2020 Revealed about Overseas American – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity

What 2020 revealed about overseas Americans: Elections in a pandemic year Speaker – Amanda Klekowski von Koppenfels, University of Kent’s Brussels School of International Studies The pandemic and election year of 2020 revealed both the vulnerability and the potential power of overseas Americans (US citizen migrants), once again emphasising their differential inclusion in the United States. Providing votes that put President Biden over the top in both Georgia and Arizona, and forcing the run-off election for Senator Ossoff in Georgia, overseas votes have never been more powerful. Yet at the same time, lack of universal healthcare in the US was the key reason that US citizens residing overseas did not respond to the US Government’s injunction to ‘Return Home NOW’ in March 2020 (data from small opt-in survey). The differential inclusion of overseas Americans with respect to political engagement is known: voting in federal elections as individuals in one of 50 states, they form a diasporic block in one election only: the Democrats Abroad Presidential Primary. While they do not constitute, in the eyes of the United States population or government, a diaspora, they lobby and advocate on common issues of concern, including the requirement to file federal tax returns. Structurally, the American federal political system does not allow overseas Americans to constitute a single constituency, but even so, they have been able to make their impact. In this unusual year of 2020 where so much campaigning and GOTV (get out the vote) activities moved online, diasporic voters were thus on equal virtual footing with those based in the United States, even as waves of the pandemic moved around the world. More on Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity: https://ecpr.eu/Events/165

May 04, 202328:50
Anti-Racist Mobilisations in Europe – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity
May 04, 202334:02
The curious case of Austria’s citizenship policy – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity

The curious case of Austria’s citizenship policy – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity

Blocked democratic inclusion in an immigration society: the curious case of Austria’s citizenship policy Speaker – Rainer Bauböck, European University Institute Austria has been an outlier in terms of adapting its citizenship policies to international migration. With 24% of its population having a “migration background” (i.e. two parents born abroad), Austria is among Europe’s foremost immigration societies. Yet it has repeatedly tightened its citizenship law for immigrants, has been steadfastly refusing to join the international trend of dual citizenship toleration and has failed to introduce conditional jus soli for the second or third generation. Naturalisation is officially regarded as a reward for individual integration achievements. Income barriers to naturalisation are among the highest in Europe. The Austrian Constitutional Court has struck down weak attempts to extend local voting rights for EU citizens under EU law to third country nationals. In this seminar, Rainer Bauböck, suggests that the puzzle of Austria’s restrictive citizenship policies cannot be fully explained by the electoral strength of the far-right nativist Freedom Party. Explaining the persistence of this attitude over fifty years of massive immigration and changing government coalitions requires also a historical account of Austria’s construction of national identity since World War Two and the replacing of the discredited German nationalism of the past with an increasingly culturalist interpretation of Austrian national identity. More on Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity: https://ecpr.eu/Events/Event/PanelDet...

May 04, 202336:47
Temporary Migration – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity

Temporary Migration – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity

Temporary Migration: Category of Analysis and Category of Practice Speaker – Anna Triandafyllidou, Ryerson University, Toronto In seminar, our speaker, Anna Triandafyllidou, builds on the line of research that focuses specifically on temporary migration, on one hand, and on the interplay between drivers and agency on the other. She presents a paper which develops an analytical framework that seeks to make sense of the role of policies on one hand, and of migrant agency, on the other, in the increasing prevalence of different forms of temporary migration. The paper looks therefore at temporariness as a policy category, and as a category of practice. As a policy category, the paper examines the role of the state or of international conventions that regulate migration and distinguishes among forced temporariness (refugees, people seeking temporary international protection); regulated temporariness: people who come as seasonal or temporary migrants for a limited period of time; and flexible temporariness: people who can circulate relatively freely within a given world region – within what is called ‘an enhanced mobility regime’ (such as the EU, or NAFTA, MERCOSUR or also ECOWAS). Looking at temporary migration as a category of practice, the paper explores the relationship between temporary migration and migrant agency: - Is temporariness intentional, planned or befallen upon the migrant? - How do migrants react to the opportunities and limitations forced upon them by policies and other structural factors (labour markets) - How do they work around them? - Does it make sense to distinguish between planned temporariness and unplanned/unforeseen or open-ended temporariness, where the initial intention is not fully thought through? The paper aims at building an analytical framework for better understanding temporary migration and uses examples from different countries and programs to illustrate the theoretical arguments. More on Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity: https://ecpr.eu/Events/165

May 04, 202329:53
Is there a ‘Latin American’ approach to migration governance? – Seminar Series Migration & Ethnicity

Is there a ‘Latin American’ approach to migration governance? – Seminar Series Migration & Ethnicity

Is there a ‘Latin American’ approach to migration governance? How much do national policies converge/differ across the region today? Latin America has developed new mechanisms of migration governance since the turn of the century. For some, these represented a distinctive approach as, in contrast to trends in the Global North, the region put an emphasis on migrant rights, relatively open border control measures, multilateral efforts to facilitate mobility and coordinate policies, and non-criminalization of irregular migration. As migration dynamics have rapidly evolved and become increasingly complex in the last two decades (including a dramatic refugee crisis triggered by massive intra-regional displacement of Venezuelans since 2015), such approach has lately appeared less distinct from other regions and acquired new components and variants across Latin American countries. This presentation tackles such evolution, with an eye on the factors that induce or preclude policy convergence across the region. The analysis touches on several areas of migration governance, such as irregular immigration, border control, diaspora engagement policies, multilateral management of intra-regional mobility, and forced migration. Selected cases studies from Central and South America will be used to illustrate the main points. Speakers: Ana Margheritis, University of Southampton, and Luicy Pedroza, El Colegio de México

May 04, 202346:42
Repertoires of migration governance in the EU – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity
May 04, 202336:07
The linkages between migration and corruption – Seminar Series in Migration and Ethnicity
May 04, 202335:16
The politics of the European Minimum Wage
May 04, 202301:26:37
EU mobilization and party support: An analysis of EU issue voting in the European elections
May 04, 202301:12:15
Online Seminar - Ultrasociality & the idea of European federalism
May 04, 202301:22:58
Online Seminar - Simpler, clearer, and less transparent
May 04, 202301:13:05
The EU’s attitude towards Afghan refugees

The EU’s attitude towards Afghan refugees

The EU’s attitude towards Afghan refugees: an analytical framework to account for EU immigration and policy 0:00:12 Welcome: Jonathan Zeitlin 0:04:25 Presentation: Virginie Guiraudon 0:35:10 Commentary: Florian Trauner 0:43:00 Discussion 0:56:17 Audience Q&A 1:34:11 Closing This seminar proposes an analytical framework to account for the enduring features of EU immigration and asylum policy, including its efforts to delegate immigration control to third countries. From the initial venue shopping of security bureaucracies to the increased polarisation within and between member states that comfort certain narratives over others, EU immigration is a case of 'policy drift', inertia or deadlock despite ineffectiveness or in the face of new developments. Speaker – Virginie Guiraudon, Sciences Po Paris Discussant – Florian Trauner, Vrije Universiteit Brussel Chair – Jonathan Zeitlin, University of Amsterdam Find out more about the Online Seminar Series on the European Union: https://ecpr.eu/Events/184

May 04, 202301:35:10
Explaining the discourse-vote choice gap in the European Parliament

Explaining the discourse-vote choice gap in the European Parliament

Polarisation or accommodation? Explaining the discourse-vote choice gap in the European Parliament 0:00:12 Welcome – Nathalie Brack 0:02:02 Presentation – Natasha Wunsch 0:11:53 Presentation – Marie-Eve Bélanger 0:27:40 Commentary – Maurits Meijers 0:37:23 Discussion and Q&A 1:22:22 Closing The strengthening of Eurosceptic voices in its ranks has put pressure on the European Parliament (EP), increasing the salience of the pro-/anti-EU cleavage. Taking EU enlargement as a test case, this seminar examines how the changed composition of the EP has affected the structure of political conflict in the EP. Speakers Natasha Wunsch, Sciences Po Paris / ETH Zurich Marie-Eve Bélanger, ETH Zurich Discussant Maurits Meijers, Radboud University Nijmegen Chair Nathalie Brack, Université Libre de Bruxelles Find out more about the Online Seminar Series on the European Union: https://ecpr.eu/Events/184

May 04, 202301:23:04
EU regulation between uniformity, differentiation, and experimentalism

EU regulation between uniformity, differentiation, and experimentalism

In this seminar, our speakers examine how far and under what conditions experimentalist governance (XG), defined as a recursive process of provisional goal setting and revision, based on comparative review of implementation in different local contexts, may be an effective and legitimate means of responding to diversity among EU member states, in comparison both to conventional uniform regulation (UR) and to differentiated integration (DI). 0:00:14 Welcome – Nathalie Brack 0:02:02 Presentation – Jonathan Zeitlin 0:15:52 Presentation – Bernardo Rangoni 0:25:36 Presentation – Jonathan Zeitlin 0:39:20 Commentary – Sandra Eckert 0:50:38 Discussion and Q&A Speakers Jonathan Zeitlin, University of Amsterdam Bernardo Rangoni, University of York Discussant Sandra Eckert, Aarhus Institute of Advanced Studies and Goethe University Frankfurt More on the Seminar Series on the European Union: https://ecpr.eu/Events/184

May 04, 202301:33:59
Do reforms in public administration increase trust in government in transitional settings?
May 04, 202301:28:56
Democratic backsliding in the European Parliament
May 04, 202301:27:60
Parties between nations? Introducing the multilevel party field
May 04, 202301:22:56
National governments and the enforcement of rule of law
May 04, 202301:22:35
Inaugural ECPR House Series – The resurgence of nationalism by David Miller

Inaugural ECPR House Series – The resurgence of nationalism by David Miller

Inspired by Harbour House, our HQ in the UK, which provides both a literal and metaphorical ‘home’ for the ECPR community, we developed The House Series, launching this December to round off our 50th Anniversary celebrations. Our first lecture focused on the resurgence of nationalism, delivered virtually by David Miller, winner of the ECPR’s Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. There is a widely held view that liberal democracies have experienced an upsurge in nationalism in recent years, and that this is best explained as a form of backlash against social and cultural change. In this lecture, David Miller challenged the underlying Enlightenment narrative used to support this explanation, which foresees the progressive disappearance of nationalism as a political force.

May 04, 202301:25:04
ECPR House Series – Declining standards of democracy in Central and Eastern Europe

ECPR House Series – Declining standards of democracy in Central and Eastern Europe

Inspired by Harbour House, our HQ in the UK, which provides both a literal and metaphorical ‘home’ for the ECPR community, we developed The House Series, which launched in December 2020, rounding off our 50th Anniversary celebrations. In the second instalment of the series, the 2020 recipient of our Rising Star Award, Veronica Anghel, considers threats to democracy in Central and Eastern Europe. During this talk, Veronica addresses some of Central Eastern Europe's most pressing structural, elite and societal challenges for the democratisation process, as well as the institutional incentives and constraints that support its endurance. Veronica pays particular attention to the negative effects of informal institutions on democratisation outcomes and make the case for an extended research agenda on how informal norms may structure citizen and elite behaviour.

May 04, 202301:11:31
ECPR House Series – Political science at risk in Europe: Frailness and the study of power
May 04, 202357:38
ECPR House Series – The Stein Rokkan Edition – Bridging the East-West Divide

ECPR House Series – The Stein Rokkan Edition – Bridging the East-West Divide

Organised by Charles University as part of our 2021 Joint Sessions of Workshops, this lecture assembles scholars whose work transcends the East-West divide to discuss the extent to which both the East and the West are artificial constructs and shortcuts attempting to simplify the complex reality of contemporary democracy and how to move beyond this outdated paradigm – bridging the East-West divide. The speakers, eminent scholars of political parties, social movements, and democracy, touch on these issues in their work and discuss routes to balancing out general trends and unique features of the Central European region. Speakers: Lenka Bustikova, Arizona State University Ondrej Cisar, Charles University Fernando Casal Bertoa, University of Nottingham Zsolt Enyedi, Central European University/Oxford University Milada Vachudova, UNC Chapel Hill Chair: Petra Guasti, Charles University

May 04, 202301:37:11
ECPR House Series – Methods Edition: Replication and Political Methodology
May 03, 202301:26:45
The House Series: Stein Rokkan Edition (Edinburgh, 2022)

The House Series: Stein Rokkan Edition (Edinburgh, 2022)

Watch Robbie Shilliam (John Hopkins University) deliver the Stein Rokkan Lecture from the University of Edinburgh. Titled 'The Academic Legacies of British Empire: Social Anthropology and International Relations', his talk addresses the contemporary moral panic over 'wokeness', its supposed infiltration into academic spaces and its purported degeneration of the ethos of higher education.

May 03, 202301:28:29
The Rise of Illiberalism: An International Roundtable

The Rise of Illiberalism: An International Roundtable

Delivered as part of our House Series in collaboration with our blogsite, The Loop, this roundtable takes stock of the Loop's popular 🌊 Illiberalism essay series and brings the discussion forward with a group of international experts. 0:00:12 Introduction by Luca Manucci, University of Lisbon 0:06:12 Marlene Laruelle, George Washington University 0:18:34 Yuko Sato, University of Gothenburg 0:32:37 Andrea Pető, Central European University 0:44:18 Laura Gamboa, University of Utah 1:00:46 Discussion and Q&A 1:28:16 Contribute to The Loop Find out more: https://ecpr.eu/Events/212

May 03, 202301:28:26
Symbolic Objects in Contentious Politics: Why Objects Matter in Protest, Revolution and Resistance
May 03, 202301:23:33
Challenges to Euro-Mediterranean cooperation via mobility partnerships
May 03, 202301:15:51
Communicating migration research to academic and non-academic audiences
May 02, 202301:08:29
Migrants, Refugees, and Displacement Crises
May 02, 202336:37
The ethics of migration policy dilemmas
Apr 27, 202336:19
Debating immigrants and refugees in Central Europe
Apr 27, 202332:01
How to Research Climate Change: A Debate on Methods and Perspectives from Political Science
Apr 27, 202301:21:49
Lifetime Achievement Award 2022: Celebrating Jean Blondel's career

Lifetime Achievement Award 2022: Celebrating Jean Blondel's career

Our event celebrating 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award joint winner Jean Blondel, and reflecting on the development of political science during his career. Full news story on our website.

Recorded at Harbour House in August 2022. Speakers, in order of appearance:

  • David Farrell
  • Jean Blondel
  • Maurizio Cotta
  • Ian Budge
  • Ivor Crewe
  • Dominique Blondel
  • Jean-Louis Thiébault
  • David Styan

See also our parallel podcast celebrating the career of Beate Kohler!

Nov 03, 202249:06
Lifetime Achievement Award 2022: Celebrating Beate Kohler's career

Lifetime Achievement Award 2022: Celebrating Beate Kohler's career

Our event celebrating 2022 Lifetime Achievement Award joint winner Beate Kohler, and reflecting on the development of political science during her career. Full news story on our website.

Recorded at Harbour House in September 2022. Speakers, in order of appearance:

  • David Farrell
  • Beate Kohler
  • Diana Panke
  • Helen Wallace
  • Florian Koch

See also our parallel podcast celebrating the career of Jean Blondel!

Nov 03, 202247:38
The EU and the pandemic: analytical perspectives and research agendas

The EU and the pandemic: analytical perspectives and research agendas

In this roundtable, leading scholars of the EU engage in a reflexive and prospective dialogue on EU policy developments since the start of the pandemic. We ask them whether the handling of the pandemic challenges existing scholarly understandings of the EU, the heuristics of their own work and could thus influence the research agendas of EU studies.

Jun 16, 202101:43:37
The discursive construction of discontent: Varieties of populist anti-system ideas and discursive networks in Europe

The discursive construction of discontent: Varieties of populist anti-system ideas and discursive networks in Europe

In our first-ever hybrid lecture, live streamed from Luiss University, Vivien Schmidt presents a Paper that, using discursive institutionalist analysis, theorises and investigates the varieties of populist anti-system ideas and discursive networks in Europe – with illustrative examples from EU and national level. This lecture was sponsored by the Journal of European Integration.

Jun 16, 202101:25:04