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World Affairs Online
Subnational government: the French experience
In: French politics, society and culture series
Lynn Staeheli, political geographer (1958–2020) - Introduction
In: Political geography: an interdisciplinary journal for all students of political studies with an interest in the geographical and spatial aspects, Band 92, S. 102555
ISSN: 0962-6298
More drilling, more transparency and less skipping: A reply to the commentators
In: Political geography: an interdisciplinary journal for all students of political studies with an interest in the geographical and spatial aspects, Band 65, S. 159-160
ISSN: 0962-6298
Thirty-five years of political geography and Political Geography : The good, the bad and the ugly
In: Political geography: an interdisciplinary journal for all students of political studies with an interest in the geographical and spatial aspects, Band 65, S. 143-151
ISSN: 0962-6298
The Perils of Self-Censorship in Academic Research in a WikiLeaks World
In: Journal of global security studies, Band 1, Heft 4, S. 337-345
ISSN: 2057-3189
The Political Geography of Conflict: Civil Wars in the Hegemonic Shadow
It is contended that, in the post-Cold War period, wars are disproportionately civil vs interstate in nature, last longer & are much more destructive than in the past, & invariably involve the US & an asymmetric use of force. The majority of civil wars take place in poor Third World countries (& leave them even more impoverished), but cannot be explained solely (or even primarily) in terms of ethnic conflicts. Statistical data on war in OECD vs non-OECD countries are used to map the geographic distribution of armed conflicts since 1946 & to correlate it with UN data on human development. Evidence is presented to demonstrate the unilateralist policy of the US to create a hegemonic new world order of its own design & its use of enormous military expenditures to accomplish this; the notion of "risk-transfer war" is explicated. Figures, References. K. Hyatt Stewart
Academic openness, boycotts and journal policy
In: Political geography: an interdisciplinary journal for all students of political studies with an interest in the geographical and spatial aspects, Band 23, Heft 6, S. 641-643
ISSN: 0962-6298
Academic openness, boycotts and journal policy
In: Political geography, Band 23, Heft 6, S. 641-644
ISSN: 0962-6298
The Electoral Geography of Weimar Germany: Exploratory Spatial Data Analyses (ESDA) of Protestant Support for the Nazi Party
In: Political analysis: official journal of the Society for Political Methodology, the Political Methodology Section of the American Political Science Association, Band 10, Heft 3, S. 217-243
ISSN: 1047-1987
The Electoral Geography of Weimar Germany: Exploratory Spatial Data Analyses (ESDA) of Protestant Support for the Nazi Party
In: Political analysis: PA ; the official journal of the Society for Political Methodology and the Political Methodology Section of the American Political Science Association, Band 10, Heft 3, S. 217-243
ISSN: 1476-4989
For more than half a century, social scientists have probed the aggregate correlates of the vote for the Nazi party (NSDAP) in Weimar Germany. Since individual-level data are not available for this time period, aggregate census data for small geographic units have been heavily used to infer the support of the Nazi party by various compositional groups. Many of these studies hint at a complex geographic patterning. Recent developments in geographic methodologies, based on Geographic Information Science (GIS) and spatial statistics, allow a deeper probing of these regional and local contextual elements. In this paper, a suite of geographic methods—global and local measures of spatial autocorrelation, variography, distance-based correlation, directional spatial correlograms, vector mapping, and barrier definition (wombling)—are used in an exploratory spatial data analysis of the NSDAP vote. The support for the NSDAP by Protestant voters (estimated using King's ecological inference procedure) is the key correlate examined. The results from the various methods are consistent in showing a voting surface of great complexity, with many local clusters that differ from the regional trend. The Weimar German electoral map does not show much evidence of a nationalized electorate, but is better characterized as a mosaic of support for "milieu parties," mixed across class and other social lines, and defined by a strong attachment to local traditions, beliefs, and practices.
Geopolitical fantasies, national strategies and ordinary Russians in the post‐communist Era
In: Geopolitics, Band 6, Heft 3, S. 17-48
ISSN: 1557-3028
Responses: Geography as space and geography as place: The divide between political science and political geography continues
In: Geopolitics, Band 5, Heft 3, S. 126-137
ISSN: 1557-3028