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World Affairs Online
Muslim belonging in secular India: negotiating citizenship in postcolonial Hyderabad
Introduction -- Moral economies of communal violence and refugee rehabilitation -- Unwinding Hyderabad's pan-Islamic networks -- Majority rule versus Mulki rule: government service and the Hindu majority -- Secular Muslim politics in a democratic age -- From the language of the bazaar to a minority language: linguistic reorganisation in Hyderabad State and the fate of Urdu -- Conclusion
Biofuels: developments and issues
In: Energy science, engineering and technology
In: Biotechnology in agriculture, industry and medicine
State violence and punishment in India
In: Royal Asiatic Society books
Exploring violent confrontation between the state and the population in colonial and postcolonial India, this book presents a study of the ways in which governments in India used collective coercion and state violence against the population, and a cultural history of how acts of state violence were interpreted by the population.
Who Participates in Focus Groups? Diagnosing Self-Selection – CORRIGENDUM
In: PS - political science & politics, S. 1-1
ISSN: 1537-5935
Cuba's Digital Revolution: Citizen Innovation and State Policy , by Ted A. Henken & Sara Garcia Santamaria (eds.)
In: New West Indian guide: NWIG = Nieuwe west-indische gids, Band 96, Heft 3-4, S. 403-404
ISSN: 2213-4360
The seismic colony: earthquakes, empire and technology in Russian-ruled Turkestan, 1887–1911
In: Central Asian survey, Band 41, Heft 2, S. 322-346
ISSN: 1465-3354
Amy Erica Smith, Religion and Brazilian Democracy: Mobilizing the People of God. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2019. Figures, tables, appendixes, bibliography, index, 222 pp.; hardcover $99.99, ebook $80
In: Latin American politics and society, Band 62, Heft 2, S. 168-170
ISSN: 1548-2456
Just a Robot Keeping It Real
One of the surprising outcomes of the social media era of the Internet is its internal contradiction between the endless possibilities for fiction, identity play, performance, and lying, and the profile structure, with its insistence on a single, unified, and quantifiable self. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg insists "you have one identity" while the entire history of Internet culture suggests one, in fact, has many. As a result, the meaning of authenticity becomes a crucial point in determining the future of online life, and in this respect, it represents a contradiction that the world of performance is uniquely familiar with. This project reconsiders virtual performances of authenticity and realness as platform-specific social texts, using performance theory to complicate the idea of univocal self-construction in online life. I present the story of Miquela, a virtual Instagram influencer whose complex creation story and dramatic reveal prompts large and nebulous questions about the nature of authenticity, performance, and self-branding in social-media space. I develop three forms of authenticity that Miquela deploys throughout her career to perform as an influencer and Instagram microcelebrity, and update connections between authenticity, intimacy, and self-image to adapt to late-2010s ways of self-branding and personal storytelling online. Further, I argue these same tools are reflected by corporate brands to further compel audiences to entangle brand identity with their own selves. The tropes of Instagram self-performance are deployed across a spectrum of personal, political, social, and capitalist modes, with authenticity enabling this new height of context collapse.
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The Electoral Representation of Evangelicals in Latin America
In: Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Politics
"The Electoral Representation of Evangelicals in Latin America" published on by Oxford University Press.
Electoral Strategy and Intergovernmental Transfers in Postwar Japan
In: Asian survey, Band 58, Heft 5, S. 847-873
ISSN: 1533-838X
Japanese distributive politics draws scholarly attention as a partial but powerful explanation of the LDP's electoral dominance via the contention that the LDP rewarded its supporters and punished its opponents. But the empirical evidence disappears when intergovernmental transfers, which can be tracked to electoral constituencies, are examined. Using intergovernmental transfer data, this article tests four separate hypotheses.
Electoral strategy and intergovernmental transfers in postwar Japan: who sees the unseen pork?
In: Asian survey: a bimonthly review of contemporary Asian affairs, Band 58, Heft 5, S. 847-873
ISSN: 0004-4687
World Affairs Online
When Formulas Go Political: The Curious Case of Japan's Financial Index
In: Japanese journal of political science, Band 18, Heft 3, S. 407-425
ISSN: 1474-0060
AbstractScholars of distributive politics in Japan have shifted from large items in the general account budget to more geographically targeted spending known as intergovernmental transfers. However, a portion of the funds sent to prefectural governments are ostensibly determined by the apolitical 'financial index'. However, even though the financial index is included in most studies of intergovernmental transfers, only slight attention focuses on the financial index and its determination. Using prefectural level data on intergovernmental transfers, economic indicators and electoral support for the LDP, this research shows that the LDP possesses strong incentives to manipulate the index and that politics is a significant determinant of the financial index.
Potential mistakes, plausible options: establishing the legacy of hypothesized critical junctures
When I was studying at Berkeley with David and Ruth Collier in the first decade of the 2000s, a recurring question on our minds was whether the shift to neoliberalism constituted a "new critical juncture" for Latin American politics. In graduate seminars, we frequently debated the political consequences of neoliberal reforms and how to make sense of the ensuing transformations of party systems and political representation. Meanwhile, others outside of Berkeley were pursuing similar themes. Most prominently, Kenneth Roberts began developing the "new critical juncture" argument in detail, both in a 2002 article and also in the draft book manuscript—circulating samizdat-style among Berkeley graduate students at the time—that eventually became Changing Course in Latin America.
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Pastors for Pinochet: Authoritarian Stereotypes and Voting for Evangelicals in Chile
In: Journal of experimental political science: JEPS, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 197-205
ISSN: 2052-2649
AbstractHow does a candidate's religion affect voting behavior in societies without politically salient interdenominational cleavages? Communicating one's faith should win votes among fellow believers, but in the absence of intergroup competition, it should not directly affect the vote of out-group members. Yet a candidate's religion can also influence out-group voting behavior via stereotypes that are politically salient. This article uses a survey experiment, conducted prior to Chile's 2013 election, to examine how priming evangelicals' historical support for the government of General Augusto Pinochet affects vote intention for an evangelical candidate for Congress. Identifying a candidate as evangelical boosts vote intention among evangelical respondents but does not directly affect members of the out-group. Among right-wing non-evangelicals, the Pinochet prime increases vote intention for an evangelical candidate, but it has no effect for center-left voters. These results suggest that pinochetismo remains salient for a new generation of right-wing voters in Chile.