American Political Science Review
@apsrjournal.bsky.social
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The premier scholarly research journal in political science. Read here: http://bit.ly/3fJQsoQ
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apsrjournal.bsky.social
From our latest issue: Politicians’ Theories of Voting Behavior by Jack Lucas et al. www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
apsrjournal.bsky.social
From our latest issue: Colonial Genealogies of Pluralism: Consociation as Disavowal in
Contemporary Democratic Theory by Joy Wang www.cambridge.org/core/service...
apsrjournal.bsky.social
From our latest issue: "Climate Displacement and Territorial Justice" by Anna Stilz. www.cambridge.org/core/service...
www.cambridge.org
Reposted by American Political Science Review
casmudde.bsky.social
This is the kind of article APSR used to be famous for. The ones that make your brain explode, that challenge you, confuse you, test your patience, and make you smarter by making you realize your limitations. Well done Erica Simmons and @nickrushsmith.bsky.social‬ 👏
Reposted by American Political Science Review
annieheff.bsky.social
Coming soon to an open access APSR near you:

(all kidding aside, I'm so happy to see this piece out in the world)
Screen capture of the first bage of an article in American Political Science Review, reading as follows:
Title: "They Attend Strictly to Their Own Business": Disability and the Construction of the Worker-Citizen
Ann K. Heffernan, University of Michigan, United States

Contributing to a growing interest in disability in political science, this article makes the case for the central role of disability in upholding the belief in work as requisite for full citizenship. Turning to the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, it shows how disability and the figure of the disabled worker were used to fortify emergent understandings of work against the changes wrought by industrial capitalism. Focusing on three sites of disabled labor—the school-based workshop, custodial institution, and industrial factory—it reveals the crucial ideological work performed by disability in sustaining the myth of the independent worker-citizen. Where existing scholarship has focused on disability either as an identity category or as a target of rights and policy, this article models an alternative approach, arguing for the relevance of disability as a concept that is integral to, and productive of, the ways we understand citizenship and political belonging.
apsrjournal.bsky.social
Just Published in The Conversation: "How 1860s Mexico offered an alternative vision for a liberal international order" by Tom Long and Carsten-Andreas Schulz. theconversation.com/how-1860s-me... This essay is based on an APSR article "A Turn Against Empire" www.cambridge.org/core/journal...