Volume 139 - Number 1 - Spring 2024
							Introduction: Black Power and the Civil Rights Agendas of Charles V. Hamilton  
							
	Marylena Mantas  and Robert Y. Shapiro  present a virtual volume of Political Science Quarterly  honoring the preeminent political scientist Charles V. Hamilton (October 19, 1929 – November 18, 2023).
 
 
	Get acces to the virtual issue at: https://academic.oup.com/psq/pages/black-power-and-the-civil-rights-agendas-of-charles-v-hamilton  
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							 
							Volume 134 - Number 3 - Fall 2019
							Will the Outcome be “Democratic”?: Delegate Selection and the 2020 Primaries  
							
	Marianna Palumbo  and Robert Y. Shapiro  raise the question of whether the 2020 presidential candidate selection process will produce a "democratic" consensus choice.
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							 
							Volume 134 - Number 1 - Spring 2019
							On To the Convention, Again  
							
	Caroline Monahan  and Robert Y. Shapiro  examine the role of the presidential convention in the party nomination process and plausibly question whether 2020 will hold the first brokered convention since 1952.
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							 
							Volume 134 - Number 1 - Spring 2019
							Voter ID Laws: The Disenfranchisement of Minority Voters?  
							
	Ben Pryor , Rebekah Herrick  and James A. Davis  examine the effects of strict voter identification laws on minority voter suppression. They analyze United States Census data and find that strict identification laws do not appear to disproportionally suppress voter turnout among minority groups.
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							  
							Volume 133 - Number 3 - Fall 2018
							Bipolarity and the Future of U.S.-China Relations  
							
	RICHARD MAHER  discusses the prospect of returning to a bipolar international system characterized by U.S.-China bipolarity. He argues that the consequences and implications will diverge in several respects from those that prevailed under the U.S.-Soviet bipolarity of the Cold War era.
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							 
							Volume 133 - Number 2 - Summer 2018
							The South China Sea and U.S.-China Rivalry  
							
	Andrew Scobell  analyzes why the South China Sea has become a central matter in U.S.–China relations. He contends that geopolitics explains why this body of water has become such a contentious issue.
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							 
							Volume 133 - Number 1 - Spring 2018
							Understanding White Polarization in the 2016 Vote for President: The Sobering Role of Racism and Sexism  
							BRIAN F. SCHAFFNER, MATTHEW MACWILLIAMS, and Tatishe Nteta  examine the extent to which economic insecurity, racism, and sexism were important factors in determining vote choices in the 2016 American presidential election. They find that racism and sexism were particularly strong predictors of vote choice in 2016, while economic insecurity was much less important.
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							 
							Volume 132 - Number 3 - Fall 2017
							The Racial Gap in Wait Times: Why Minority Precincts Are Underserved by Local Election Officials  
							
	STEPHEN PETTIGREW  demonstrates that voters in mostly minority electoral precincts wait considerably longer than those in predominantly white precincts. He finds that a considerable amount of this racial gap can be attributed to logistical decisions made by local election officials.
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							 
							Volume 131 - Number 3 - Fall 2016
							The Impact of Voter Fraud Claims on Voter Registration Reform Legislation  
							
	MARGARET GROARKE  examines the impact that claims of voter fraud has had on three cases of voter registration reforms in the United States. She argues that the opposition that these legislative efforts faced is best understood as a partisan strategy to redistribute the electorate.
							
										 
							 
						 
					
					
						
							 
							 
							Volume 130 - Number 4 - Winter 2015-16
							Lame-Duck Presidents and Supreme Court Appointees  
							
	Demetrios James Caraley  explains that the lame-duck president John Adams appointed a chief justice in the last weeks of his term, after having been defeated for reelection.