| |
original article |
Date |
Title |
Authors Max. 6 Authors |
| 1 |
[GO] |
2025―Nov―09 |
Māori Covid-19 responses as practices of indigenous sovereignty: the political significance of grassroots responses to the pandemic |
Valentin Clavé-Mercier |
| 2 |
[GO] |
2025―Aug―29 |
Democratic backsliding in the shadow of crises. How pandemics, war and democratic regression impact attitudes towards democracy in Georgia |
Ángel Torres-Adán, Aron Buzogány |
| 3 |
[GO] |
2025―May―15 |
A series of unfortunate events: the Covid-19 crisis and Tunisia’s democratic backsliding |
Ragnar Weilandt |
| 4 |
[GO] |
2024―Aug―27 |
Territorial dynamics and deepening autocratization: exploring the role of gated communities in Shanghai's COVID-19 response |
Virginie Arantes |
| 5 |
[GO] |
2023―Feb―13 |
Contagious politics and COVID-19: does the infectious disease hit populist supporters harder? |
Aline Burni, Daniel Stockemer, Christine Hackenesch |
| 6 |
[GO] |
2023―Jan―11 |
COVID-19 and ‘the public’: U.K. government, discourse and the British Political Tradition |
Alan Finlayson, Lee Jarvis, Michael Lister |
| 7 |
[GO] |
2022―Sep―02 |
‘We are at war’: securitisation, legitimation and COVID-19 pandemic politics in France |
Hai Yang |
| 8 |
[GO] |
2022―Jun―30 |
‘The cure cannot be worse than the problem’: securitising the securitisation of COVID-19 in the USA |
Jessica Kirk |
| 9 |
[GO] |
2022―Feb―02 |
The state in global capitalism before and after the Covid-19 crisis |
Bastiaan van Apeldoorn, Naná de Graaff |
| 10 |
[GO] |
2021―Oct―28 |
Equally at risk? Perceived financial differences, risk assessment and containment measures in the COVID-19 pandemic |
Daniel Stockemer, Arne Niemann, Doris Unger, Friedrich Plank |