197 Episodes

  1. What research on Black women candidates means for Kamala Harris

    Published: 07/08/2024
  2. Can American identity reduce partisan animosity?

    Published: 24/07/2024
  3. How think tanks drive polarization and policy

    Published: 10/07/2024
  4. White racial sympathy

    Published: 26/06/2024
  5. The impact of policy misinformation

    Published: 12/06/2024
  6. When third parties matter

    Published: 29/05/2024
  7. Why foreign policy is still bipartisan

    Published: 15/05/2024
  8. Does the Biden economy have bad election timing or an unfair fed?

    Published: 01/05/2024
  9. The Politics of Our Jobs

    Published: 17/04/2024
  10. How will TikTok change politics?

    Published: 03/04/2024
  11. How race makes us less punitive on opioid policy

    Published: 21/03/2024
  12. Do Voters Dislike Old Candidates

    Published: 06/03/2024
  13. Lessons from the COVID-era Welfare Expansion

    Published: 21/02/2024
  14. How Bureaucrats Deal with Political Chaos Above

    Published: 07/02/2024
  15. Elites Misperceive the Public

    Published: 24/01/2024
  16. The Deterioration of Congress

    Published: 10/01/2024
  17. The Two Sides of Immigration Backlash

    Published: 03/01/2024
  18. Previewing 2024: How Voters Judge Presidents

    Published: 13/12/2023
  19. Do presidents have the power to act alone?

    Published: 29/11/2023
  20. Why presidents still spend their time raising money.

    Published: 15/11/2023

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The Niskanen Center’s The Science of Politics podcast features up-and-coming researchers delivering fresh insights on the big trends driving American politics today. Get beyond punditry to data-driven understanding of today’s Washington with host and political scientist Matt Grossmann. Each 30-45-minute episode covers two new cutting-edge studies and interviews two researchers.

Visit the podcast's native language site