Jump to Content
Oxford Research Encyclopedias
  • Personal Profile: Sign in
  • or Create
  • About
  • Recently Published
  • Guided Tour
  • Subscriber Services
  • Help
  • Contact Us
Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
Publications Pages
  • Publications
  • Pages
Help
Select ...

Select your specializations: Select All / Clear Selections

  • Browse by Subfield   
  • My Content (0)
  • My Searches (0)
Contentious Politics and Political Violence
Governance/Political Change
Groups and Identities
History and Politics
International Political Economy
Policy, Administration, and Bureaucracy
Political Anthropology
Political Behavior
Political Communication
Political Economy
Political Institutions
Political Philosophy
Political Psychology
Political Sociology
Political Values, Beliefs, and Ideologies
Politics, Law, Judiciary
Post Modern/Critical Politics
Public Opinion
Qualitative Political Methodology
Quantitative Political Methodology
World Politics
Browse All
Close
Subscriber sign in
Forgot password?
Don't have an account?
Sign in via your Institution

From the Editor in Chief

mark-sm

William R. Thompson

of Indiana University, Bloomington welcomes you to the new Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics.
Read more ›

 

Editorial Board Members

Tereza Capelos

University of Surrey

 

Russell Dalton

University of California, Irvine

 

Niilo Kauppi

French National Center for Scientific Research

 

Finn Laursen

University of Southern Denmark

 

Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen

Aarhus University

 

B. Guy Peters

University of Pittsburgh

 

Karen Rasler

Indiana University

 

Lydia Tiede

University of Houston

 
  • + Expand List
  • Meet the Board ›

DISCOVER FORTHCOMING ARTICLES

INFORMATION FOR AUTHORS

SPECIAL PROJECTS

Featured Article: E-Participation

Featured Article: The Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics now features full-length articles, such as "E-Participation" by Marta Cantijoch and Rachel Gibson. Image: Public Domain via Unsplash.

New and Featured

  • Oct 2017

    Empires Versus States

    "The classical analytical category of 'empire,' as opposed to 'state,' 'city,' 'federation,' and other political forms, can account for a large number of historical and current experiences, including the past United States of America, the European Union, Russia, and China..." -By Josep M. Colomer

  • Oct 2017

    Population Aging and International Conflict

    “Most of the world has experienced a revolutionary and unprecedented development over the course of the last century and especially since the end of the Second World War: significant population aging...” –By Mark L. Haas

  • See recently published articles | All freely available articles

Connect with Oxford

We want to hear from you! Engage with OUP’s social media or contact the ORE of Politics editors.

  • Find us on Facebook
  • Tweet, post & Share
  • Give us Feedback

Browse Articles

View the growing collection of articles, overviews and key subject works.

Author Information

Guidelines for current and potential contributors now available.

  • New & Noteworthy
  • Oxford University Press
Copyright © 2019. All rights reserved.

PRINTED FROM the OXFORD RESEARCH ENCYCLOPEDIA, POLITICS (oxfordre.com/politics). (c) Oxford University Press USA, 2019. All Rights Reserved. Personal use only; commercial use is strictly prohibited. Please see applicable Privacy Policy and Legal Notice (for details see Privacy Policy and Legal Notice).

date: 16 February 2019

  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Legal Notice
  • Credits
QR code
  • [54.146.227.92]
  • 54.146.227.92