On Monday, the Political Science Peer-Review Survey had 506 respondents. Between Tuesday and Friday, we sent out 1,100 new invitations. Five days and many contacts with helpful colleagues later the number stands at 626. Feel free to join them.
Technorati Tags: journals, peer-review, Political Science, survey, update
Tags: journals, peer-review, Political Science, survey, update
Category Data and Methods, My Stuff, Political Science|0 Comments »
The title says it all: yesterday, respondents 500-506 took the Political Science Peer-Review Survey, which is obviously great. A neat detail is that so far, more than 60 current or previous editors of political science journals have taken part in the survey. Tomorrow, we will resume or email campaign (aimed at those who have published in SSCI journals over the last eight years or so) to get even more people on board.
Technorati-Tags: political science, peer review, journals, survey, publications, research, ssci, social science citation index
Technorati Tags: journals, peer-review, Political Science, publications, research, social science citation index, ssci, survey
Tags: journals, peer-review, Political Science, publications, research, social science citation index, ssci, survey
Category Data and Methods, My Stuff, Political Science|0 Comments »
Archived; click post to view.
Excerpt: Does religion make you a better or worse human being? More specifically, does Christian religiosity reduce or increase the likelihood of a radical/extreme right vote in a West European context? This is the question Liz and I are trying to address in our latest paper on “Christian Religiosity and Voting for West European Radical Right Parties”. There are a number of reasons why good Christians could be more likely to vote for the Right than agnostics: American research starting in the 1940s has linked high levels of church attendance and a closed belief systems to support for rightism. More over, contemporary…
Technorati Tags: attitudes, extreme right, immigrants, immigration, Islam, radical right, religion, religiosity, structural equation modelling, western europe
Tags: attitudes, extreme right, immigrants, immigration, Islam, radical right, religion, religiosity, structural equation modelling, western europe
Category Article, My Stuff, Political Science|1 Comment »
Archived; click post to view.
Excerpt: On Monday, we started a new initiative to boost response to the Political Science Peer Review Survey. Thanks to some very industrious research students, we were able to identify about 21,000 individual authors who have published in Social Science Citation Index-covered Political Science Journals between 2000 and 2008. For about 8,000 of these, the SSCI lists their email addresses (that’s the EM field in the SSCI records), and so we started contacting them and asked them to participate in the survey. Obviously, some addresses are not longer valid because people have moved on to different places or have left academia…
Technorati Tags: journals, peer-review, Political Science, publication, survey
Tags: journals, peer-review, Political Science, publication, survey
Category Data and Methods, My Stuff, Political Science|0 Comments »
Archived; click post to view.
Excerpt: December 18 was the the day (or rather the night, as results were communicated at midnight) for UK academics: after years of preparation and second-guessing and months of waiting, the results of the 6th Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) were published. Every five years or so, the UK higher education funding councils examine the research output of the various “units of assessment” (i.e. departments) and publish a league table that is crucial for the allocation of “quality weighted research funding” (i.e. money) as well as for the reputation of a place. At the moment, the system is chiefly based on…
Technorati Tags: 2008, essex, government, Political Science, Politics, rae, research assessment exercise
Tags: 2008, essex, government, Political Science, Politics, rae, research assessment exercise
Category Political Science|1 Comment »