Key Highlights
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Federal grants for university research do not lead states to invest more in their own colleges, but money for state agency projects does get matched with extra state funding. This shows that states are more willing to pay for research when the benefits are felt directly in their local communities, like with projects run by their own agencies.
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For every new dollar the federal government gives a state agency for research, the state itself spends an extra 35 cents. This demonstrates a clear “crowding-in” effect, where federal money encourages more state investment, but only for projects that are seen as having immediate local impact.
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The ideas from Alexis de Tocqueville about preventing democratic decline—through local self-governance and civic engagement—are still vital today, but need updating for modern challenges like national partisanship and social media. This means public administrators must lead efforts to strengthen local institutions and civic habits from the ground up to protect democracy.
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Rebel groups that come from nonviolent parent organizations are much more likely to use nonviolent tactics themselves, and they start using them earlier in a conflict. This reveals that a group’s origins and the “organizational DNA” it inherits are powerful predictors of its behavior, challenging the view that rebels are always primarily violent.
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The idea that mixed electoral systems automatically boost women’s representation through “compensatory effects” is a myth; the real driver is how political parties are organized. This finding shifts the focus from electoral system design to the crucial role of internal party rules and candidate selection processes in achieving gender parity.
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