Henry E. Hale
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View article: The Value of Values for Autocrats: Traditional Morality and Putin’s 2020 Term-Limit Contravention
The Value of Values for Autocrats: Traditional Morality and Putin’s 2020 Term-Limit Contravention Open
Autocrats frequently appeal to socially conservative values, but little is known about how or even whether such strategies are actually paying political dividends. To address important issues of causality, this study exploits Russian presi…
View article: Do Autocrats Need a Foreign Enemy? Evidence from Fortress Russia
Do Autocrats Need a Foreign Enemy? Evidence from Fortress Russia Open
Conventional thinking suggests that autocrats need enemies and thus have incentives to create them. Russia's Vladimir Putin is often thought to reap domestic legitimacy from belligerence. We examine multiple public opinion datasets collect…
View article: State Institutions, Civic Associations, and Identity Demands
State Institutions, Civic Associations, and Identity Demands Open
In a project of this ambition-covering almost twenty regions in eight countries-the thanks spread far and wide.We first want to thank the incountry experts and informants who made each of the individual chapters possible.As a community of …
View article: PSC volume 55 issue 2 Cover and Front matter
PSC volume 55 issue 2 Cover and Front matter Open
An abstract is not available for this content so a preview has been provided. As you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.
View article: A “Terrific Symbol”: Physical Personalization of Pandemic Relief Enhances Presidential Support
A “Terrific Symbol”: Physical Personalization of Pandemic Relief Enhances Presidential Support Open
The COVID-19 pandemic has forced governments worldwide—many that previously prioritized austerity—to approve large relief packages. Political economy tells us that politicians will try to profit from this electorally, but much remains unkn…
View article: Authoritarian Rallying as Reputational Cascade? Evidence from Putin’s Popularity Surge after Crimea
Authoritarian Rallying as Reputational Cascade? Evidence from Putin’s Popularity Surge after Crimea Open
When international conflict causes an authoritarian leader’s popularity to soar, extant theories lead us to treat such “rallying” as sincere preference change, the product of surging patriotism or cowed media. This study advances a theory …
View article: Replication Data for: A “Terrific Symbol”: Physical Personalization of Pandemic Relief Enhances Presidential Support
Replication Data for: A “Terrific Symbol”: Physical Personalization of Pandemic Relief Enhances Presidential Support Open
COVID-19 has forced governments worldwide—many previously prioritizing austerity—to approve large relief packages. Political economy tells us politicians will try to profit electorally, but much remains unknown about precisely how pandemic…
View article: Replication Data for: Authoritarian Rallying as Reputational Cascade? Evidence from Putin's Popularity Surge after Crimea
Replication Data for: Authoritarian Rallying as Reputational Cascade? Evidence from Putin's Popularity Surge after Crimea Open
Merged data (including a panel) from the 2012 and 2015 Russian Election Studies (RES) surveys and other replication materials for "Authoritarian Rallying as Reputational Cascade?"
View article: A New Wave of Research on Civilizational Politics: What Civilizations Are, What Explains Them, and Why They Matter – CORRIGENDUM
A New Wave of Research on Civilizational Politics: What Civilizations Are, What Explains Them, and Why They Matter – CORRIGENDUM Open
An abstract is not available for this content. As you have access to this content, full HTML content is provided on this page. A PDF of this content is also available in through the 'Save PDF' action button.
View article: Pandemic Politics in Eurasia: Roadmap for a New Research Subfield
Pandemic Politics in Eurasia: Roadmap for a New Research Subfield Open
© 2020 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. The sudden onset of COVID-19 has challenged many social scientists to proceed without a robust theoretical and empirical foundation upon which to build. Addressing this challenge, particularly as it pert…
View article: Believing Facts in the Fog of War: Identity, Media and Hot Cognition in Ukraine’s 2014 Odesa Tragedy
Believing Facts in the Fog of War: Identity, Media and Hot Cognition in Ukraine’s 2014 Odesa Tragedy Open
How do people form beliefs about the factual content of major events when established geopolitical orders are violently challenged? Here, we address the tragic events of 2 May 2014, in Odesa, Ukraine. There, Euromaidan protest movement sup…
View article: Capturing ethnicity: the case of Ukraine
Capturing ethnicity: the case of Ukraine Open
Building on past survey-based studies of ethnic identity, we employ the caseof Ukraine to demonstrate the importance of taking seriously themultidimensionality of ethnicity, even in a country that is regarded asdeeply divided. Drawing on r…
View article: Studying identity in Ukraine
Studying identity in Ukraine Open
While it is common wisdom that "identity matters" in Ukrainian politics, we still lack a robust understanding of precisely when and how it matters.Reflecting challenges facing the broader interdisciplinary field of comparative identity pol…
View article: Agenda and Challenges for Putin's New Term
Agenda and Challenges for Putin's New Term Open
ISSN:1863-0421
View article: Replication Data and Online Appendix for Olga Onuch and Henry E. Hale, "Capturing Ethnicity: The Case of Ukraine," Post-Soviet Affairs, 2018
Replication Data and Online Appendix for Olga Onuch and Henry E. Hale, "Capturing Ethnicity: The Case of Ukraine," Post-Soviet Affairs, 2018 Open
Online appendix, replication dataset, and Stata do-file for results presented in Olga Onuch and Henry E. Hale, "Capturing Ethnicity: The Case of Ukraine," Post-Soviet Affairs, 2018.
View article: Replication Data and Online Appendix for Hale, Shevel, and Onuch, "Believing Facts in the Fog of War: Identity, Media, and Hot Cognition in Ukraine’s 2014 Odesa Tragedy," Geopolitics, 2018
Replication Data and Online Appendix for Hale, Shevel, and Onuch, "Believing Facts in the Fog of War: Identity, Media, and Hot Cognition in Ukraine’s 2014 Odesa Tragedy," Geopolitics, 2018 Open
Online appendix, replication data, and do-files for Hale, Shevel, and Onuch, "Believing Facts in the Fog of War: Identity, Media, and Hot Cognition in Ukraine’s 2014 Odesa Tragedy," Geopolitics, 2018.
View article: Russian Patronal Politics Beyond Putin
Russian Patronal Politics Beyond Putin Open
Russian politics from the tsars through Vladimir Putin has been shaped by patronalism, a social equilibrium in which personal connections dominate, collective action happens primarily through individualized punishments and rewards, and tre…
View article: Replication Data for: Who Defects? Unpacking a Defection Cascade from Russia’s Dominant Party 2008–12
Replication Data for: Who Defects? Unpacking a Defection Cascade from Russia’s Dominant Party 2008–12 Open
Under what conditions do individuals withdraw support from dominant parties in nondemocratic regimes? Employing an original panel survey, we measure the same individuals’ support for Russia’s dominant party first at the peak of its dominan…
View article: Strategies for engaging with future radiation protection professionals: a public outreach case study
Strategies for engaging with future radiation protection professionals: a public outreach case study Open
It is evident that there is a nuclear skills shortage within the UK, and logically it can be assumed that the shortfall extends to the radiation protection arena. Plans for nuclear new-build and the decommissioning of existing nuclear site…