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Posts by Anthony Kevins

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👍Very excited to see that my solo-authored article:

"Surveying Minoritized Citizens:
A Quantitative Study of Identification versus Categorization"

has been published in Survey Research Methods✨

I hope survey researchers to reconsider how they survey group membership💪

doi.org/10.18148/srm...

1 week ago 33 9 0 0
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Mark Carney scores major election victory in Canada The prime minister's party has gained a majority after three federal by-elections on Monday.

Dr Anthony Kevins (@avkevins.bsky.social) from our International Relations dept (@irph.bsky.social) and Communication and Culture research group (@lborocrcc.bsky.social) talks North American politics with @newsweek.com.

Read more: 👇

bit.ly/41xGtMK

1 week ago 2 2 0 0
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Research Associate in Political Theory at Loughborough University Explore an exciting academic career as a Research Associate in Political Theory. Don't miss out on other academic jobs. Click to apply and explore more opportunities.

Job alert! Loughborough University is advertising a three-year Research Associate position in Political Theory as part of the Leverhulme Trust-funded project, ‘The Right to Liveability: An Ethical Assessment’ (managed by Dr. Guy Aitchison).
Details here: www.jobs.ac.uk/job/DQW886/r...

3 weeks ago 20 15 0 2

Interested in doing a PhD? See below for an upcoming opportunity in my department!

2 months ago 2 1 0 0
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Stronger together ✊

Hear from #LboroUCU members on why union membership matters and how we support each other.

Be part of it: ucu.lboro.ac.uk/join/

@ucu.org.uk #UCU #JoinAUnion

2 months ago 14 13 1 4

Love it!

2 months ago 2 0 0 0
BJPolS abstract summarizing a research study about the influence of politicians' prioritization on democratic engagement. Discusses how voters' values impact their preferences for representatives, with a focus on study results from Denmark, Germany, UK, and US.

BJPolS abstract summarizing a research study about the influence of politicians' prioritization on democratic engagement. Discusses how voters' values impact their preferences for representatives, with a focus on study results from Denmark, Germany, UK, and US.

NEW -

Legislator or Representative? Politicians’ Tasks According to Voters - https://cup.org/49LV0Ia

"Politicians’ need for prioritizing time and energy is acute and consequential for democracy"

- Helene Helboe Pedersen

#OpenAccess

3 months ago 9 4 0 0
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We’re organizing a workshop at Aarhus University. Please share and consider submitting!

🗓️ 13–14 April 2026 | 📝 Deadline: Mon, 16 Feb 2026 (extended abstract) — junior scholars prioritized

🎤 Keynotes: @stefwalter.bsky.social (Univ. of Zurich) & @hhuang.bsky.social (Ohio State)

3 months ago 42 30 0 3
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What the graduate unemployment story gets wrong People with a degree are faring better, not worse than their non-graduate counterparts

"if anything employment outcomes are worsening more rapidly for those with fewer skills looking for blue-collar jobs than the highly skilled seeking knowledge work"

on.ft.com/43eYeRZ

@jburnmurdoch.ft.com as ever doing the essential work.

It's not just AI. And education still matters

6 months ago 112 39 1 0
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How we think about the political stances of others: evidence on projection from Canada, Germany, and the UK What leads people to assume that others are more or less similar to them ideologically? To answer this question, this article uses original data from three multi-party democracies to analyse respon...

🚨New Open-Access Research Alert 🚨

Why do we assume that certain people we meet are more or less similar to us politically?

Using data from the UK, Canada, and Germany, @seonghuilee.bsky.social and I explore this question in our new article in @wepsocial.bsky.social.

Check it out online now below.

7 months ago 8 3 0 0
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Do the origins of climate assemblies shape public reactions? Examining the impact of partisanship ANTHONY KEVINS, JOSHUA ROBISON

🌅📙 64.3

Governments implement public input with deliberative #MiniPublics

@avkevins.bsky.social & J.Robison investigate whether people see these groups as legitimate using surveys in 🇬🇧 to understand public support for #ClimareAssemblies

🔗https://buff.ly/iggUFJM

8 months ago 3 2 0 0
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When caring comes at a cost: Psychological wellbeing of unpaid and paid carers and the role of social expenditure - Naomi Lightman, Anthony Kevins, 2025 This study examines whether, and under what conditions, unpaid and paid care work are associated with reduced psychological wellbeing. The article begins by lay...

🚨New Open-Access Publication!🚨

In "When Caring Comes at a Cost", @naomilightman.bsky.social and I explore the effects of paid and unpaid caring on wellbeing and examine whether social expenditure plays a role in shaping those effects.

Check it out paywall-free in JESP: tinyurl.com/2yptx6kj

9 months ago 7 5 0 1
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🚨Now officially in print!🚨

Do the (partisan) origins of climate assemblies affect public support for these assemblies?

Using original UK survey data, Joshua Robison and I explore this question in a new EJPR article.

Check it out open access here: doi.org/10.1111/1475...

9 months ago 4 2 0 1

Many thanks to our guests and to everyone who attended and contributed to such a thoughtful discussion!

11 months ago 0 0 0 0

We were joined by elected representatives from three different levels of government:

• Cllr. Margaret Smidowicz – Charnwood Borough Councillor
• Dr. Jeevun Sandher – MP for Loughborough
• Cllr. Naomi Bottomley – Charnwood Borough Councillor and Leicestershire County Councillor

11 months ago 0 0 1 0
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On Friday, I had the pleasure of hosting an event on “Life in Politics,” sponsored by the @lborocrcc.bsky.social and the @lborouniversity.bsky.social Department of International Relations, Politics and History.

11 months ago 1 0 1 0
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Is there a ‘Youthquake’? The Structure of Party Competition and Age Differences in Voting - Ruth Dassonneville, Ian McAllister, 2025 Why do age differences matter for voting in some countries and not in others? Despite the prevailing narrative that a ‘youthquake’ in voting is occurring across...

New paper out at @cpsjournal.bsky.social! With Ian McAllister, we examine how party competition and party positions condition the presence and size of an age gap in voting for the left. A short 🧵 below!

journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10....

1 year ago 111 42 1 2
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🚨New #OpenAccess study 🚨

What types of people are more or less satisfied with social care in the UK - and how might age and ideology interact to shape satisfaction levels?

Naomi Lightman and I explore these questions in a new, open-access IJSW article: doi.org/10.1111/ijsw...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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Are poor people poorly heard? A growing body of literature shows that the preferences of poorer groups in society are less well represented than the preferences of the rich. This paper scrutinises one possible explanation of ineq...

Whenever there is a significant preference gap between lower-and higher-income groups–politicians’ perceptions of what citizens want are skewed towards the preferences of higher-income voters on socio-economic issues ejpr.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/...

1 year ago 51 22 2 4
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The super election year is ending, with many winners and losers.

Our new @thejop.bsky.social paper, (@henrikseeberg.bsky.social, @martinbaekgaard.bsky.social ) asks: How do winning and losing candidates see elections?

Spoiler: Losers are more concerned about fairness.
Link: doi.org/10.1086/734240

1 year ago 42 18 3 1
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🚨New Tool: paper-picnic.com The latest published political science research (and research in adjacent fields) every Friday. No alert chaos, no registration, no clutter. Powered by @crossref.bsky.social

1 year ago 68 33 1 2
Governments around the world are experimenting with deliberative mini-publics as a means of integrating public input into policymaking processes, including as a method for directly creating policy. This raises the important question of when ordinary people will judge the outputs of mini-publics to be legitimate and support their use. We investigate how public support for mini-publics is shaped by: (1) whether the mini-public is held in response to calls from politicians or from the general public; (2) which political party sets up the mini-public; and (3) whether there is partisan conflict surrounding the mini-public’s creation. To do so, we use two pre-registered survey experiments fielded in the United Kingdom that focus on climate assemblies, a prominent form of deliberative mini-public. Results are three-fold. First, we find some evidence that assemblies are more positively evaluated when they stem from the demands of local residents rather than partisan actors, but this effect is relatively modest and does not emerge consistently across our analyses. Similar findings are noted with regard to partisanship. Partisan conflict, by contrast, has a more robust effect – leading respondents to adopt more ideologically stereotypical views of the assembly, with left-wing (right-wing) respondents being more supportive of Labour-sponsored (Conservative-sponsored) assemblies.

Governments around the world are experimenting with deliberative mini-publics as a means of integrating public input into policymaking processes, including as a method for directly creating policy. This raises the important question of when ordinary people will judge the outputs of mini-publics to be legitimate and support their use. We investigate how public support for mini-publics is shaped by: (1) whether the mini-public is held in response to calls from politicians or from the general public; (2) which political party sets up the mini-public; and (3) whether there is partisan conflict surrounding the mini-public’s creation. To do so, we use two pre-registered survey experiments fielded in the United Kingdom that focus on climate assemblies, a prominent form of deliberative mini-public. Results are three-fold. First, we find some evidence that assemblies are more positively evaluated when they stem from the demands of local residents rather than partisan actors, but this effect is relatively modest and does not emerge consistently across our analyses. Similar findings are noted with regard to partisanship. Partisan conflict, by contrast, has a more robust effect – leading respondents to adopt more ideologically stereotypical views of the assembly, with left-wing (right-wing) respondents being more supportive of Labour-sponsored (Conservative-sponsored) assemblies.

🚨New #OpenAccess study🚨

Do the (partisan) origins of climate assemblies affect public support for these assemblies?

Using original UK survey data, Joshua Robison and I explore this question in a new EJPR article.

Check it out open access here: doi.org/10.1111/1475...

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
Workfare and Attitudes toward the Unemployed: New Evidence on Policy Feedback from 1990 to 2018 - Alexander Horn, Anthony Kevins, Kees Van Kersbergen, 2024 To what extent, and under what conditions, have workfare reforms shaped public opinion towards the unemployed? This article unpacks the punitive and enabling di...

Our latest #OpenAccess workfare study now has full citation details in Comparative Political Studies!

Click below to see @alexanderhorn.bsky.social, Kees van Kersbergen, and I examine how the shift from "welfare" to "workfare" may have shaped related policy attitudes.

tinyurl.com/579zzz67

2 years ago 3 1 0 0
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free book in honor of Kees van Kersbergen! For the Festschrift (eds. Green Pedersen/Jensen/Vis) @avkevins.bsky.social & I wrote "Ever the committed egalitarians – or the end of Scandinavian exceptionalism? Equality and welfare state preferences among voters and parties" @ politica.dk/boeger/no-no...

2 years ago 8 3 0 1
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