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#PublicationFriday is here!
Sit back, grab some coffee/tea, and find publications related to the dataset your working with here: www.icpsr.umich.edu/sites/nacda/...

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The image is a screenshot of a webpage displaying a list of academic publications in a table-like format. The columns are labeled “Pub. Type,” “Pub. Year,” and “Citation.” Each row represents a publication from the year 2026, with a small checkbox and a document icon on the left.

Three publications are visible:

First publication (2026):
Authors include Martha Abshire Saylor, Janiece L. Taylor, Yifan Liu, Wonkyung Jung, Erin M. Spaulding, and Katherine A. Ornstein.
The article title is “Caregiving activities and activity-limiting pain among African American caregivers.”
It was published in the Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, volume 71, issue 1, pages 119–126.
Below the citation are links labeled “DOI” and “Google Scholar,” followed by “Export Options” with links for “RIS” and “EndNote.”
A section labeled “Studies related to this publication” lists the National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS), United States (ICPSR 37107) as a clickable link.

Second publication (2026):
Authors include John R. Blosnich, Jessica N. Fish, Emily K. Miller, Stephen T. Russell, and Susan M. De Luca.
The article title is “Adolescence into adulthood: Religiosity factors influencing trajectories of suicide ideation and attempt among sexual minorities.”
It was published in the journal Mental Health, Religion and Culture.
The same set of links appears: “DOI,” “Google Scholar,” and export options for “RIS” and “EndNote.”
The related study listed is the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), 1994–2018 [Public Use] (ICPSR 21600).

Third publication (2026):
Authors include Xindi Chen, Louay Almidani, Seema Banerjee, Jonathan Thomas, Aleksandra Mihailovic, Fasika A. Woreta, and Pradeep Y. Ramulu.
The article title is “Associations between visual impairment and homebound status, home hazards, and support service utilization: The National Health and Aging Trends Study.”
It was published in the American Journal of Ophthalmology, volume 281, pages 52–62.
As with the others, links for “DOI,” “Google Scholar,” and export options are shown.
The related study listed is again the National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS), United States (ICPSR 37107).

Overall, the page presents recent research publications with clear links to full text, citation export options, and the underlying datasets used in each study.

The image is a screenshot of a webpage displaying a list of academic publications in a table-like format. The columns are labeled “Pub. Type,” “Pub. Year,” and “Citation.” Each row represents a publication from the year 2026, with a small checkbox and a document icon on the left. Three publications are visible: First publication (2026): Authors include Martha Abshire Saylor, Janiece L. Taylor, Yifan Liu, Wonkyung Jung, Erin M. Spaulding, and Katherine A. Ornstein. The article title is “Caregiving activities and activity-limiting pain among African American caregivers.” It was published in the Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, volume 71, issue 1, pages 119–126. Below the citation are links labeled “DOI” and “Google Scholar,” followed by “Export Options” with links for “RIS” and “EndNote.” A section labeled “Studies related to this publication” lists the National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS), United States (ICPSR 37107) as a clickable link. Second publication (2026): Authors include John R. Blosnich, Jessica N. Fish, Emily K. Miller, Stephen T. Russell, and Susan M. De Luca. The article title is “Adolescence into adulthood: Religiosity factors influencing trajectories of suicide ideation and attempt among sexual minorities.” It was published in the journal Mental Health, Religion and Culture. The same set of links appears: “DOI,” “Google Scholar,” and export options for “RIS” and “EndNote.” The related study listed is the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), 1994–2018 [Public Use] (ICPSR 21600). Third publication (2026): Authors include Xindi Chen, Louay Almidani, Seema Banerjee, Jonathan Thomas, Aleksandra Mihailovic, Fasika A. Woreta, and Pradeep Y. Ramulu. The article title is “Associations between visual impairment and homebound status, home hazards, and support service utilization: The National Health and Aging Trends Study.” It was published in the American Journal of Ophthalmology, volume 281, pages 52–62. As with the others, links for “DOI,” “Google Scholar,” and export options are shown. The related study listed is again the National Health and Aging Trends Study (NHATS), United States (ICPSR 37107). Overall, the page presents recent research publications with clear links to full text, citation export options, and the underlying datasets used in each study.

#PublicationFriday is here!
Check out the latest innovative research using our data. If you've published using our data, make sure to let us know so we can add your work for others to find as well!
www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/NACDA/se...

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Drafting the Gender Equality Script: African Women Between “Liberal” and “Liberatory” Gender Discourses in the 1980s

🔍 New SCRIPTS Working Paper by Karmen Tornius #PublicationFriday
African women were key architects of today’s gender equality agenda. A major UN women’s conference in 1985 connected women’s lives to inequality, debt and rural livelihoods—bringing violence against women to the forefront.
ogy.de/imdt

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Happy #PublicationFriday! 📚✨
Looking for high-quality data to power your next aging research article? NACDA offers 1,600+ curated datasets ready for secondary analysis. Dive in, get inspired, and turn data into discoveries! 🔍📊
Explore more: www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/NACDA/se...

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Discover the new SCRIPTS Working Paper by Tanja A. Börzel #PublicationFriday
It outlines the renewed 7-year research agenda of SCRIPTS and examines why the liberal script remains contested and how it endures crises.
📄 ogy.de/6b3e
📸credits: Marija Zaric

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How do digital platforms and weakened parties fuel democratic backsliding? #PublicationFriday

Bennett & Livingston show how digitally networked organizations mobilize extremists, reshape parties, and blur the line between online and offline politics.

📖 ogy.de/z1l9
📷 credits: Luke Heibert

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Ever thought Putin’s gender jokes are less about laughs and more about insecurity? An article by E. Donskih & S. Akopov argues they’re tied to Russia’s ontological insecurity—anxieties about identity, masculinity, and place in the world. #PublicationFriday
📖 ogy.de/p1lq
📷 credits: Pixabay, svklimkin

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📌 How is academic freedom understood worldwide? #PublicationFriday 📚

Kriszta Kovács & Janika Spannagel introduce a special issue offering a framework to map global variations, tensions between liberal and illiberal science scripts, and forms of contestation.

🔗Read here: ogy.de/l4e9

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🔍 New Article by @klatt.bsky.social & Sonja Blum #PublicationFriday
🚨 How scientific evidence is used in political narratives during COVID-19

Even in a pandemic with growing scientific certainty, political debates don’t necessarily use more evidence - they use it strategically.
🔗 ogy.de/sjlk

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🔍Explore a new Article by @kzippel.bsky.social #PublicationFriday 

🧠 The recent attacks on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in U.S. universities are part of a wider anti-gender, anti-science, and anti-democratic agenda that seeks to dismantle equality infrastructures.

🔗 ogy.de/iho2

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📘 #PublicationFriday
A team of SCRIPTS Researchers published a paper exploring how two politicized issues — migration and climate change — mobilize citizens across Europe.

🔍 What shapes cross-national differences in non-electoral participation, with a focus on petition signing?

🔗 buff.ly/OMxtiMC

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Displaced Russian Academics. Networks, Markets, and Survival Strategies loading...

What challenges do Russian émigré academics face when integrating into Western academia? #PublicationFriday

Alexander Kalgin and Sergei Mashukov explore this question in their recent SCRIPTS Working Paper, examining the concept of "academic survival" within the social sciences.

🔗 Free Access:

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📚 #PublicationFriday | "Russia’s Right and the Putin regime"

📌 Can there be a political right inside a regime often labeled fascist?

🔍 In their new article Katharina Bluhm & Mihai Varga argue that differences in Russia’s political landscape are still discernible and important.

buff.ly/37WvIJE

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📊 Findings from an online experiment show that:

– Explanations reduce credibility of persuasive misinformation
– They increase perceived usefulness of labels
– And they improve recall of fact-checking sources

#PublicationFriday #Misinformation #PolComm

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Vom Staat zur Marke. Die Geschichte des Nation Branding loading...

New book alert! 📚 #PublicationFriday

"Vom Staat zur Marke" by Jessica Gienow-Hecht explores how countries brand themselves—like products—with slogans, campaigns & image-building.
Nation branding isn’t new—it goes back to the 19th century! 🌍

📘 Read more here:

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#PublicationFriday is here!
What literature are you catching up on today?
Find recent pubs on your dataset or keyword here: buff.ly/3ksD3Tw

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Justifying the State, Individual Uptake, and Territorial Annexation loading...

It's #PublicationFriday! 📚

We would like to share with you the latest published SCRIPTS working paper:
📄"Actual Acceptance and the Justification of the State" by Teng Li.

🔍The central question is: What justifies the authority of the state?

🔗Read it now:

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The Coastal Route of Chilean Neoliberalism: Pedro Ibáñez Ojeda, the Mont Pelerin Society and the 1981 Regional Meeting loading...

It's #PublicationFriday 📚

📖Read the new article “The Coastal Route of Chilean Neoliberalism” by Maximiliano Jara-Barrera!

💡It traces Pedro Ibáñez Ojeda’s role in shaping an alternative path to neoliberalism. Focused on local actors using transnational networks to drive change.

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✨ The study argues that fostering connective democracy depends on platform architecture.
An important read for those thinking about platform governance and the future of political communication online.

#PublicationFriday #PolComm

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#PublicationFriday is here!
Check out the latest NACDA data-related publications. They may spark a new idea and you can see which dataset was used as well. Find them here: www.icpsr.umich.edu/web/NACDA/se...

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📌 Findings show that mainstream sources are often repurposed to legitimize misleading claims, revealing how citation can function ideologically in far-right media ecosystems.

#PublicationFriday #Polcomm #Disinformation

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This article offers valuable insights for scholars interested in international news, global media systems, and geopolitical communication.

#PublicationFriday #BRICS #PoliticalCommunication #GlobalMedia #ComparativeMedia

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Putting the Masculinity into Liberalism. Gender Essentialism and Catalan Self-Perception as a Progressive Liberal Democracy loading...

🏙The present-day attempt to frame Catalonia as feminist. What lies behind it?

Johannes Heß and Tobias Klee explore the tension between the historically masculine character of Catalan national symbols and contemporary efforts to recast Catalonia as feminist. #PublicationFriday

🔗📑

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Welcome to the Liberal State! Place Branding as a Historical Practice loading...

📣 #PublicationFriday: Check out the SCRIPTS Working Paper No. 48!
The authors examine three case studies exploring, why self-proclaimed liberal actors do struggle to market themselves effectively.

💡 Liberal image campaigns often face legitimacy gaps and audience-related challenges.
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Populism’s Many Faces. Understanding Its Role in Climate Scepticism Cross-Nationally loading...

Check out the latest SCRIPTS Working Paper by Yasemin Soysal, Jessica Kim, Elizabeth A. Henry & Jerrid Carter. #PublicationFriday

🌍 Using cross-national data, the authors find that right-wing populism is linked to greater scepticism and left-wing populism to lower scepticism.

🔗

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The globalization of academic freedom | Global Constitutionalism | Cambridge Core The globalization of academic freedom - Volume 14 Issue 1

Tanja Börzel and Janika Spannagel explore whether academic freedom has spread globally through diffusion or national modernization.This research highlights the crucial role of scholars, universities, and civil society in defending and advancing academic freedom #PublicationFriday
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Out of Home, Out of Time. Temporalities of Displacement and Urban Regeneration

#PublicationFriday Yara Sa’di-Ibraheem argues that research on urban regeneration should pay greater attention to time as a tool for analyzing contemporary neoliberal urban regeneration processes. Additionally, she highlights the importance of examining non-Eurocentric temporalities.

🔗📑 ogy.de/vl5x

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