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DPIR Research

Principal researchers: Dr David Levy and Dr Rasmus Kleis Nielsen Other researchers: Nic Newman and Dr Richard Fletcher Funders: The Digital News Report is supported by 12 different sponsors across foundations, news organisations, media regulators and universities, including a large grant from Google’s Digital News Initiative. ‘The News’ has historically been the most important source of information about politics and public affairs. However, the ways in which people get their news are changing. The rise of digital media has had profound effects both for the ways in which people understand the world, as well as posing profound challenges for the industry built around providing news. The Digital News Report started with 5 countries in 2012 and has since grown to …

Researcher: Dr Ezequiel Gonzalez-Ocantos Until the 1980s and 1990s, judges in Latin America were inconsequential bureaucrats, playing a minor role in a legal system which left little room for interpretation. The arrival of a rights-centred legal worldview from Europe and the United States changed that. Courts in Latin America have become increasingly assertive, with their rulings effecting policy across a wide range of areas, including health care, immigration and the environment. How and why did this shift take place? This project aims to investigate this, and in particular the role of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, which over the previous two decades has become increasingly influential in setting standards of state behaviour, and in setting the tone for domestic …

Researchers: Dr Elizabeth Frazer with Professor Kimberly Hutchings (Queen Mary University of London) Funder: John Fell OUP Research Fund What kinds of justifications do we have for deciding whether to act violently or non-violently? Where do we draw the line between political action and violent action? How do activists justify various forms of action? And does acting politically need a different kind of justification than acting violently? In the pursuit of social order, governments and states seek to justify, and to control, the use of force.  Meanwhile, claims for justice, rights, or social change frequently lead to conflict with forces of ‘order’, and violent confrontation often results. The frontier between politics and violence is one of the most pressing political …

Researchers: Dr David Doyle, with Professor Catherine De Vries, Professor Kim Plunkett (Department of Experimental Psychology) and Janette Chow (Department of Experimental Psychology) Funder: John Fell Fund What is the relationship between parents’ political beliefs and their children’s attitudes? How do we develop our political attitudes, and how are our moral beliefs about the world formed? These questions are central to our understanding of politics, but we still don’t understand the development of the cognitive processes which shape our political attitudes and allegiances. This project takes methods and theory from experimental psychology and behavioural economics to shed light on a question which is central to our understanding of politics. Using specially created cartoons, which show two characters (“Timmy the Turtle” …

Researcher: Dr Angela Cummine Funder: British Academy In Greece, national assets are up for sale. Everything from Athens’ water infrastructure, to the Olympic stadium, to the country’s main ports at Piraeus and Thessaloniki. As part of the bailout deal struck in July 2015, the proceeds of these sales must go into an independent fund to repay Greece’s international creditors. For many Greeks, this feels like selling off the family silver, only to hand the proceeds back to those demanding its sale. The programme was controversial, and only went ahead after major concessions, including that the privatisation fund be run from Athens and that part of its proceeds must be spent locally in Greece. Ultimately, the demand for local control and …

Researchers: Dr Nicholas Cheeseman and Dr Susan Dodsworth Funder: Westminster Foundation for Democracy Are efforts to promote democracy working? How can we improve the prospects for democracy across the world? Since the Cold War, there have been a proliferation of attempts to promote democracy across the world, whether in new democracies or countries that have returned to democracy after a period of authoritarian rule. However, we still have a relatively limited understanding of what does and doesn’t work in democracy promotion. Furthermore, the last few years have not been good for democracy.  According to US think-tank Freedom House, 2015 was the 10th year in a row that an overall drop in global freedom has been recorded. It is essential that …

Researchers: Dr Paul Chaisty and Professor Stephen Whitefield Funder: The John Fell OUP Research Fund The current political crisis involving Russia, Ukraine and the West is rooted in complex historical understandings of state, national and regional identities. How do these national identities mobilise political support and how are they changing? Previous research suggests that the nature and strength of the political regimes in Russia and Ukraine will depend a great deal on the ways in which citizens and elites imagine their future – and how they attempt to bring that future into being. By conducting surveys in Russia and Ukraine, using representative samples of the populations of both countries, this project seeks to unpick the elements which make up the …

Researcher: Professor Richard Caplan Funders: British Academy; UK Department for International Development Between 1945 and 2013, 105 countries suffered a civil war. Of these, more than half experienced a relapse into violent conflict after peace had supposedly been achieved. How do we recognise a stable peace in countries emerging from violent conflict? And how can those tasked with building peace and ending war measure their progress? This project looks at the ways in which peacebuilding organisations (such as the United Nations, NATO, the World Bank, and others) understand the elements of a stable peace and what it requires. What are the factors that contribute to post-conflict peace stabilisation? The project will also examine how peacebuilding organisations have assessed their progress. …