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American Political Science Review
The Leading Journal of Political Science Research

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The American Political Science Review (APSR) presents peer-reviewed research articles by political scientists of all subfields. Areas covered include political theory, American politics, public policy, public administration, and international relations. 

APSR continues to be the foremost scholarly research journal of political science. It ranks number 1 out of 79 political science journals according to the latest ISI Journal Citation Report - Social Science Citation Index. 

February - Volume 102 - Issue 1 

From Notes from the Editors: 

“Disappointment [is] a basic spring of political change,”wrote historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. “As political eras run their course, they infallibly generate the desire for something different.” In the lead article for this issue, Samuel Merrill, III, Bernard Grofman, and Thomas L. Brunell look carefully at this claim and reach two conclusions. First, despite some research to the contrary, electoral cycles do exist.

Read the full "Notes from the Editors" in this issue.

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Members: to view all articles in the current APSR online, login to MyAPSA (using login boxes at top of all site pages) and click the APSR link in Access Areas.

APSR cover with a pre-revolutionary U.S. stump speech scene

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Featured Articles

"Cycles in American National Electoral Politics, 1854-2006: Statistical Evidence and an Explanatory Model"
Samuel Merrill III, Bernard Grofman, and Thomas L. Brunell

"Social Pressure and Voter Turnout: Evidence from a Large-scale Field Experiment"
Alan S. Gerber, Donald P. Green, and Christopher W. Larimer

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Contact the APSR

American Political Science Review
c/o Dept. of Political Science, UCLA
4289 Bunche Hall
Box 951472
Los Angeles, CA  90095-1472

Phone: (310) 794-1051
email: apsr@polisci.ucla.edu