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original article |
Date |
Title |
Authors All Authors |
| 1 |
[GO] |
2026―Mar―11 |
Participating in a presidential nomination process during a pandemic |
Caitlin E. Jewitt, Gregory Shufeldt |
| 2 |
[GO] |
2026―Jan―07 |
COVID-19 and preferences for progressive taxation: evidence from a 2020 U.S. ballot proposal |
Mark Williamson |
| 3 |
[GO] |
2025―Oct―10 |
The impact of early COVID-19 lockdowns on perceptions of American democracy |
Nicholas Spina |
| 4 |
[GO] |
2025―Mar―29 |
The worse, the better? The daily incidence of the COVID-19 pandemic influenced the rally effects it fostered |
Michele Roccato, Pasquale Colloca, Silvia Russo |
| 5 |
[GO] |
2024―Dec―30 |
Public health threats and political participation: evidence from Israel in the early stages of COVID-19 |
Hadas Aron, Chiara Superti |
| 6 |
[GO] |
2024―Sep―11 |
The impact of the coronavirus pandemic on support for the SNP and Scottish independence |
Eilidh Macfarlane |
| 7 |
[GO] |
2024―May―08 |
The determinants of trump’s defeat: what if the COVID-19 pandemic did not matter? |
Lewis Luartz, Stefano Camatarri, Marta Gallina |
| 8 |
[GO] |
2023―May―26 |
Polarized perceptions: how time and vaccination status modify Republican and Democratic COVID-19 risk perceptions |
Evan W. Sandlin, Daniel J. Simmons |
| 9 |
[GO] |
2022―Sep―15 |
Benchmarking the pandemic: how do citizens react to domestic COVID-19 conditions compared to other countries’? |
Jungsub Shin, Brandon Beomseob Park |
| 10 |
[GO] |
2022―Sep―15 |
Who rallies around the flag? Evidence from panel data during the Covid-19 pandemic |
Sven Hegewald, Dominik Schraff |
| 11 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Risk perceptions, anxiety and the future of international trade: a cross-national study of public trade preferences in Asia under COVID-19 |
Nick H. K. Or, Edmund W. Cheng, Ricci P.H. Yue, Samson W. H. Yuen |
| 12 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Partisan endorsement experiments do not affect mass opinion on COVID-19 |
Shana Kushner Gadarian, Sara Wallace Goodman, Thomas Pepinsky |
| 13 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
From populism to the “plandemic”: why populists believe in COVID-19 conspiracies |
Jakob-Moritz Eberl, Robert A. Huber, Esther Greussing |
| 14 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
The path from distrusting Western actors to conspiracy beliefs and noncompliance with public health guidance during the COVID-19 crisis |
Vlad Achimescu, Dan Sultănescu, Dana C. Sultănescu |
| 15 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Attitudinal polarization towards the redistributive role of the state in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis |
Macarena Ares, Reto Bürgisser, Silja Häusermann |
| 16 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
The partisan cues and perceived risks: the effect of partisan social media frames during the COVID-19 crisis in Mexico |
Natalia Aruguete, Ernesto Calvo, Francisco Cantú, Sandra Ley, Carlos Scartascini, Tiago Ventura |
| 17 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Information disclosure and political trust during the COVID-19 crisis: experimental evidence from Ireland |
Michele Crepaz, Gizem Arikan |
| 18 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
What determines political trust during the COVID-19 crisis? The role of sociotropic and egotropic crisis impact |
Maike Rump, Nadine Zwiener-Collins |
| 19 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
COVID-19, economic anxiety, and support for international economic integration |
Nina Obermeier |
| 20 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Pandemic politics: COVID-19, health concerns, and vote choice in the 2020 General Election |
Enrijeta Shino, Daniel A. Smith |
| 21 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Consensus secured? Elite and public attitudes to “lockdown” measures to combat Covid-19 in England |
Sofia Collignon, Iakovos Makropoulos, Wolfgang Rüdig |
| 22 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
When does knowing better mean doing better? Trust in President Trump and in scientists moderates the relation between COVID-19 knowledge and social distancing |
Javier A. Granados Samayoa, Benjamin C. Ruisch, Courtney A. Moore, Shelby T. Boggs, Jesse T. Ladanyi, Russell H. Fazio |
| 23 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Predictable crises shape public opinion: evidence from the COVID-19 natural experiment |
Taka-aki Asano, Tomoki Kaneko, Shoko Omori, Shusuke Takamiya, Masaki Taniguchi |
| 24 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Public support for the judicial branches under the COVID-19 pandemic |
Sohei Shigemura, Tatsuya Iseki, Shun Ikeda, Hideo Ishima |
| 25 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
No effect of partisan framing on opinions about the COVID-19 pandemic |
C. Daniel Myers |
| 26 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Attenuating the crisis: the relationship between media use, prosocial political participation, and holding misinformation beliefs during the COVID-19 pandemic |
Jakob Ohme, Michael Hameleers, Anna Brosius, Toni Van der Meer |
| 27 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
When the rally-around-the-flag effect disappears, or: when the COVID-19 pandemic becomes “normalized” |
Bengt Johansson, David Nicolas Hopmann, Adam Shehata |
| 28 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Support for border security during the COVID-19 pandemic: evidence on levels and predictors from eight Western democracies in 2020 |
Marie Fly Lindholt, Frederik Jørgensen, Alexander Bor, Michael Bang Petersen |
| 29 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Moonshots or a cautious take-off? How the Big Five leadership traits predict Covid-19 policy response |
Lauren Brown, Laszlo Horvath, Daniel Stevens |
| 30 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Pandemic primary: the interactive effects of COVID-19 prevalence and age on voter turnout |
Daniel S. Scheller |
| 31 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Partisanship and public opinion of COVID-19: does emphasizing Trump and his administration’s response to the pandemic affect public opinion about the coronavirus? |
Anna Katharina Spälti, Benjamin Lyons, Vittorio Mérola, Jason Reifler, Christine Stedtnitz, Florian Stoeckel, Paula Szewach |
| 32 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Elections in the time of covid-19: the triple crises around Malawi’s 2020 presidential elections |
Boniface Dulani, Adam Harris, Ellen Lust, Karen Ferree, Kristen Kao, Cecilia Ahsan Jansson, Erica Ann Metheney |
| 33 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
Care to trust? Gender and trust in leaders during the Coronavirus pandemic |
Hannah Willis, Jessica C. Smith, Daniel Devine |
| 34 |
[GO] |
2021―Jun―15 |
It’s NOT the economy when people are dying: accountability for household economic and health outcomes during the pandemic |
Matthew Singer |