No. 22-4, November 2020
Index
- A postfunctionalist theory of multilevel governance
- Back of the queue: Brexit, status loss, and the politics of backlash
- Backlash against naming and shaming: The politics of status and emotion
- Backlash against the procedural consensus
- Backlash politics against European integration
- Conceptualising backlash movements: A (patch-worked) perspective from social movement studies
- Conceptualising backlash politics: Introduction to a special issue on backlash politics in comparison
- Demographic change and backlash: Identity politics in historical perspective
- Emotions and backlash in US society and politics
- Foreign direct investment screening and congressional backlash politics in the United States
- From ‘de jure’ to ‘de facto’ decentralised public policies: The multi-level governance approach
- Multi-level governance in a ‘Europe with the regions’
- Multilevel governance or multilevel government?
- Multilevel governance: Identity, political contestation, and policy
- The gay rights backlash: Contrasting views from the United States and Latin America
- The multi-level governance imperative
- The personal is global political: The antifeminist backlash in the United Nations
- The positive side of negative identity: Stigma and deviance in backlash movements
- Theorising backlash politics: Conclusion to a special issue on backlash politics in comparison
- Two-level politics and the backlash against international courts: Evidence from the politicisation of the European court of human rights
- Unravelling multi-level governance systems
- What’s in a name? Contestation and backlash against international norms and institutions
- ‘Breakthrough’ political science: Multi-level governance – Reconceptualising Europe’s modernised polity