Crossref Citations
This Book has been
cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by Crossref.
Corbett, Jack
2020.
Territory, islandness, and the secessionist imaginary: Why do very small communities favour autonomy over integration?.
Nations and Nationalism,
Vol. 26,
Issue. 4,
p.
1087.
Ercan, Selen A.
Durnová, Anna
Loeber, Anne
and
Wagenaar, Hendrik
2020.
Symposium: revisiting the three pillars of Deliberative Policy Analysis.
Policy Studies,
Vol. 41,
Issue. 4,
p.
307.
Boswell, John
Corbett, Jack
and
Havercroft, Jonathan
2020.
Politics and Science as a Vocation: Can Academics Save us from Post-Truth Politics?.
Political Studies Review,
Vol. 18,
Issue. 4,
p.
575.
Owen, Catherine
2020.
Participatory authoritarianism: From bureaucratic transformation to civic participation in Russia and China.
Review of International Studies,
Vol. 46,
Issue. 4,
p.
415.
Bartels, Koen P.R.
Wagenaar, Hendrik
and
Li, Ya
2020.
Introduction: towards deliberative policy analysis 2.0.
Policy Studies,
Vol. 41,
Issue. 4,
p.
295.
Corbett, Jack
Christian Grube, Dennis
Caroline Lovell, Heather
and
James Scott, Rodney
2020.
Institutional Memory as Storytelling.
Rhodes, R. A. W.
and
Salomonsen, Heidi H.
2021.
Duopoly, court politics and the Danish core executive.
Public Administration,
Vol. 99,
Issue. 1,
p.
72.
Boswell, John
and
Corbett, Jack
2021.
Democracy, Interpretation, and the “Problem” of Conceptual Ambiguity: Reflections on the V-Dem Project’s Struggles with Operationalizing Deliberative Democracy.
Polity,
Vol. 53,
Issue. 2,
p.
239.
Boswell, John
2021.
Seeing Like a Citizen: How Being a Participant in a Citizens' Assembly Changed Everything I Thought I Knew about Deliberative Minipublics.
Journal of Deliberative Democracy,
Vol. 17,
Issue. 2,
Kefford, Glenn
2021.
Political Parties and Campaigning in Australia.
p.
197.
Rhodes, R. A. W.
2021.
What Political Science Can Learn from the Humanities.
p.
107.
Boswell, John
Corbett, Jack
Rhodes, R. A. W.
and
Salomonsen, Heidi Houlberg
2021.
The comparative ‘court politics’ of Covid-19: explaining government responses to the pandemic.
Journal of European Public Policy,
Vol. 28,
Issue. 8,
p.
1258.
Cetrà, Daniel
and
Swenden, Wilfried
2021.
State nationalism and territorial accommodation in Spain and India.
Regional & Federal Studies,
Vol. 31,
Issue. 1,
p.
115.
Rhodes, R. A. W.
and
Hodgett, Susan
2021.
What Political Science Can Learn from the Humanities.
p.
1.
Ball, Sarah
2022.
Translating behavioral public policy into practice: Interpretations and traditions.
Critical Policy Studies,
Vol. 16,
Issue. 3,
p.
315.
Sanches, Edalina Rodrigues
Cheeseman, Nic
Veenendaal, Wouter
and
Corbett, Jack
2022.
African exceptions: democratic development in small island states.
Journal of International Relations and Development,
Vol. 25,
Issue. 1,
p.
210.
Bevir, Mark
and
Rhodes, R. A. W.
2022.
All you need is … a network: The rise of interpretive public administration.
Public Administration,
Vol. 100,
Issue. 1,
p.
149.
Meakin, Alexandra
and
Geddes, Marc
2022.
Explaining Change in Legislatures: Dilemmas of Managerial Reform in the UK House of Commons.
Political Studies,
Vol. 70,
Issue. 1,
p.
216.
Flinders, Matthew
Judge, David
Rhodes, R.A.W.
and
Vatter, Adrian
2022.
‘Stretched But Not Snapped’: A Response to Russell and Serban on Retiring the ‘Westminster Model’.
Government and Opposition,
Vol. 57,
Issue. 2,
p.
353.
Boswell, John
Ercan, Selen A.
and
Hendriks, Carolyn M.
2022.
Mending Democracy: A response to our readers.
Critical Policy Studies,
Vol. 16,
Issue. 2,
p.
237.