I. INTRODUCTION
PS: Political Science & Politics is in its 59th year of publication. PS occupies a unique niche among the APSA portfolio of publications as an outlet for peer-reviewed original research on a variety of topics that are relevant to political scientists and researchers in allied fields. PS publishes research on political events in the US and abroad, political science pedagogy, and research on the state of the discipline. PS welcomes work authored by and reflecting the research priorities of underrepresented groups, those working outside the academy, and scholars residing outside the United States.
The current editorial team started their tenure in 2022. Over the last three years of our editorship, we have sought to expand the readership of the journal by representing the journal at various workshops and conferences in Philadelphia, Montevideo (Uruguay), and Seoul (South Korea). This sort of exposure is raising the profile of the journal by bringing in more readers and potential authors. After introducing the Comment and Controversy section last year and observing how successful it has been so far, we have opted to discontinue the Spotlight section as it did not achieve the high-quality peer review process that we are committed to.
During this past year, the journal has published (or is in the process of publishing) symposia and special issues on cutting edge topics. For example, we published two forecasting special issues, on the 2024 US elections and the 2025 German Elections, respectively. We also published a number of symposia on a wide range of topics including Climate Change and Vulnerable Populations, and Populism and Democracy.
For 2024, PS’s Impact Factor is 1.8. These rankings reflect the number of citations in 2024 to articles published in 2022-23 divided by the number of articles published those years. We look forward to seeing how the Impact Factor changes next year, given the drop from 2023 to 2024, and we will further discuss this trend with you all at the board meeting.

While our team of editors has not changed, our undergraduate Editorial Assistants rotate on an annual basis and this past academic year, we onboarded three new members: Molly Linker, Catarina Laufer Salazar, and Yue (Emily) Wang. We are grateful for their support and for the continuing support of our managing editor and board members.
One of our team’s core objectives is to facilitate the engagement with and representation of all political scientists across the subfields at every type of institution across the world and we seek to accomplish this in numerous ways. This year, we added several political theorists to the editorial board to help improve the representation of political theory and hopefully attract more submissions by political theorists to the journal. We welcome ideas for political theory related calls for papers and/or for people to guest edit political theory symposia.
With the assistance of the Cambridge team and our managing editor, we have updated the APSA and Cambridge University Press websites so that they present more comprehensive information and are more user friendly. Comparable to other APSA journals, PS is now primarily an electronic journal and publishes a budding number of Open Access publications so as to expand accessibility. Our increasing reliance on social media to promote the latest publications and highlight Open Access journal articles assists us in expanding the knowledge of and access to our journal’s publications.
Another one of our core objectives is to ensure that published scholarly research is ethical, clear and transparent across disciplinary subfields and epistemological, methodological approaches. Submissions to PS are required to adhere to the APSA’s_Guide_to_Professional_Ethics_in_Political_Science and the APSA’s_Principles_and_Guidance_for_Human_Subjects_Research. Further, we require that every author of an empirical paper submit their data file(s) to the Harvard Dataverse for replication purposes prior to the publication of manuscripts. For more information, see https://dataverse.harvard.edu/dataverse/ps/. We believe that these requirements not only improve the quality of research publications but the discipline as a whole.
We sincerely welcome comments, suggestions, and ideas to be shared with us by emailing our team at ps@apsanet.org. PS is one of the primary outlets for research on the profession, and we’ve been proud to continue publishing important articles and symposia highlighting the challenges of broadening and diversifying our profession (and academia) and combating conscious and unconscious biases in hiring, promotion, and peer review. We feel an important sense of responsibility to provide an outlet for disciplinary debates.
Our team has also released various Calls for Papers and created upcoming Special Issues and accepted Symposia in our focused effort to welcome work authored by and reflecting the research priorities of underrepresented groups, those working outside the academy, and scholars residing outside the United States. We have relied upon our subfield networks and listservs in which we are a part of to ensure that our Calls are widely circulated. Examples of our Calls for Papers, Symposia, and upcoming Special Issues include research on:
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• Contemporary and Future LGBTQ+ Scholarship in Political Science
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• The 30th Publication Anniversary of Dr. Paula D. McClain’s: Can We All Get Along? Racial and Ethnic Minorities in American Politics
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• American Trade Policy in the 21st Century
DIVERSITY EFFORTS
PS supports the diversity efforts of APSA and our discipline. The editorial team is committed to attracting more submissions from international and underrepresented scholars, and the Calls for Papers have been crafted with this goal in mind. See Table 1 for the demographic breakdown of authors who submitted manuscripts to PS in 2022, 2023, and 2024 (Table1).
Table 1. Demographic Profile of Author Submissions 2022 - 2024

II. EDITORIAL HIGHLIGHTS
A. OVERVIEW
As shown in table 2, submissions in 2024 were 275, in part due to the special issue on Forecasting the 2024 US Elections which saw dozens of submissions. Submissions for 2025 are on par with 2024, reflecting the diligent work by the editorial team to release timely Calls for Papers.
Table 2. New Submissions to PS through Editorial Manager

Table 3. Turnaround Time from Acceptance to Publication on FirstView (Days)

**This is the turnaround time from acceptance within the given year to publication on FirstView.
Table 4. Turnaround Time from Submission to First Decision (Days)

Table 5. Submissions by Article Type, 2021-2024

Table 6. Final Disposition on Submissions, by date of final decision

Table 7. Symposia and Spotlights Published in PS

B. PUBLICATION HIGHLIGHTS OF THE PAST YEAR:
This past year we published a variety of interesting and engaging articles. Below are listed a few articles published in the past year in the pages of PS which provide a snapshot of the timeliness and diversity of issues addressed in the pages of PS.
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• Comment & Controversy
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• Politics Section
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○ Brás GR, Pereira S, Dowley KM. Local Transparency: Are Non-Partisan Mayors Making the Difference? PS: Political Science & Politics. 2024;57(4):449-455. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000295
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○ Enns PK, Colner J, Kumar A, Lagodny J. Understanding Biden’s Exit and the 2024 Election: The State Presidential Approval/State Economy Model. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2025;58(2):298-305. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000994
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○ Sanbonmatsu K. Understanding Black Women’s and Latinas’ Perspectives about Political Giving. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2025;58(1):31-36. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000477
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○ Archer AMN, Peterson E. The Fragility of the Local News Trust Advantage: Evidence from Republican Attacks on Local News. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2025;58(2):177-183. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000775
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• Profession Section
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○ Piscopo JM. Still Marginalized? Gender and LGBTQIA+ Scholarship in Top Political Science Journals. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2025;58(1):131-138. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000441
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○ Bisbee J, Munger K. The Vibes Are Off: Did Elon Musk Push Academics Off Twitter? PS: Political Science & Politics. 2025;58(1):139-146. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000416
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○ Edgell AB, Lachapelle J, Maerz SF. Achieving Transparency, Traceability, and Readability with Human-Coded Data. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2025;58(2):346-351. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000714
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• Teacher Section
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○ Rivetti P, Banerjee R, O’Mullane D. Testing ChatGPT in International Relations Classrooms: Potentialities, Limitations, and What’s Next. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2025;58(1):169-176. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000817
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○ Moulton JFG. Developing a Critical Understanding of Environmental Activism through Active Learning. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2024;57(4):578-582. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000143
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○ Cahill C, McCabe K. Context Matters: Understanding Student Usage, Skills, and Attitudes Toward AI to Inform Classroom Policies. PS: Political Science & Politics. 2024;57(4):594-601. doi:10.1017/S1049096524000155
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III. STAFFING AND EDITORIAL BOARD
The PS: Political Science & Politics staff consists of four co-editors’ full time, a full-time managing editor, and undergraduate editorial assistants at Wake Forest University. Co-editors Lina Benabdallah, Justin Esarey, Peter Siavelis, and Betina Wilkinson are based at Wake Forest University. Marah Schlingensiepen continues as the Managing Editor. She started this position in January 2022 after earning her PhD in political science from the University of Florida in 2021. Tia Gracey was Associate Editor of Political Science Today and served as a liaison between official APSA news and events and the journal. She was replaced by Adriana Natal in June 2025. We express our gratitude to Tia and Adriana for designing PS’s journal covers.
Our current editorial board includes scholars who represent a diverse set of universities and colleges, research interests, methodologies, and perspectives of the APSA membership. We would like to thank the members of our editorial board for their dedication and service to the journal and the profession, especially Michelle Taylor-Robinson (Texas A&M University)Kristina Mitchell (San Jose State University), Candis Watts Smith (Duke University), Lena Wängnerud (University of Gothenburg), Arthur Spirling (New York University), Jane Sumner (University of Minnesota), Nazita Lajevardi (Michigan State University), Andrew Szarejko (Wartburg University), Jennifer Cyr (Universidad Torcuato di Tella), Adam Levine (Johns Hopkins University), Bernard Fraga (Emory University), Andrea Benjamin (University of Oklahoma), Amy Niang (The Africa Institute), Murad Idris (University of Michigan), and Chris Sabatini (Chatham House) whose service to the Editorial Board has come to a close this year. Thank you for all you have done for PS: Political Science & Politics and the profession writ large.
We also extend our thanks to those continuing their term:
Karla Mundim, John Jay College
Peter Verovšek, University of Groningen
Sarah Polo, University of Essex
Scott de Marchi, Duke University
J. Cherie Strachan, Ray Bliss Institute
Austin Strange, University of Hong Kong
Zaynab El Bernoussi, International University of Rabat
Rebecca Reid, University of Texas at El Paso
Charles Crabtree, Dartmouth College
Cristobal Rovira Kaltwasser, Universidad Diego Portales (Santiago de Chile)
Julieta Suarez Cao, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
Oumar Ba, Cornell University
Zachariah Mamphilly, City University of New York
Rebecca Glazier, University of Arkansas, Little Rock
Kelly Bauer, Nebraska Wesleyan University
We further thank those newly joining the Editorial Board:
Jack Zhang, University of Kansas
Antje Wiener, University of Hamburg
Xiaoyu Pu, University of Nevada, Reno
Sara Newland, Smith College
Philippe Mongrain, University of Antwerp
Niambi Carter, University of Maryland
Jennifer Hadden, Brown University
Tao Dumas, The College of New Jersey
Ping Xu, University of Rhode Island
Juan Carlos Huerta, Texas A&M University-Corpus Christi
Victor Asal, Rockefeller College, University at Albany, SUNY
Mary Stegmaier, University of Missouri
Christopher Desante, University of Indiana
Paul Kellstedt, Texas A&M University
Michelle Dion, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Scott Morgenstern, University of Pittsburgh
Atsusaka Yuki, University of Houston
Sandra Ley, Tecnológico de Monterrey, Santa Fe, Mexico City
Danielle Clealand, University of Texas at Austin
Kaitlin Senk, University of Bath
Rob Franzese, University of Michigan
Jennifer Piscopo, Royal Holloway University of London
Courtenay Monroe, University of California, Merced
Antonio Vazquez-Arroyo, Rutgers University-Newark
Shawna Metzger, University at Buffalo
Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia
Manga Inacio, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
Ross Mittiga, SOAS University of London
Khristina Haddad, Moravian University
Bonnie Field, Bentley University
Emily Hauptmann, Western Michigan University
Thank you for all you have done, continue to do, and will do, for the journal.
IV. PRODUCTION AND DELIVERY
PS has a good working relationship with our publisher, Cambridge University Press. Lucie Taylor is our current production manager. We are grateful for their dedicated work with PS. Below, you can see the Turnaround Time from Acceptance to Publication. 2024’s number is impacted by the special issue on Democratic Backsliding which was published in January 2024 and had a few manuscripts with turnaround times over 100 days.
As part of our effort to raise the profile of the journal, we were committed to reducing the time it took to invite reviewers to manuscripts, as well as reducing the time between an author’s submission to PS and receiving a first decision. As you can see in the table below, these efforts result in a significant reduction in time on both fronts.
V. SUBMISSIONS BY ARTICLE TYPE
This year, PS discontinued Spotlights. PS will continue to accept symposium proposals for symposia to be published in the journal.
VI. PUBLICITY AND OUTREACH
PS is growing its presence on BlueSky. At the 2024 annual meeting, the journal had roughly 700 followers. Now, PS has more than 10,200 followers. Our handle is @pspolisci.bsky.social, and we welcome your follow! A typical post involves an image with the newly published article’s title and author names, a featured quote from the article or a blurb written by the author that highlights their study’s contribution, and a link to the FirstView publication. We try to tag (@) authors to increase exposure and encourage authors to repost our content. We also share important information regarding calls for papers and other PS-related content. The managing editor runs the PS BlueSky account, in consultation with the undergraduate editorial assistants.
The APSA-run Political Science Now blog (www.politicalsciencenow.com) continues to feature PS content. PS articles have been featured in news media and other publications including Inside Higher Ed, Newsweek, The Washington Post’s “Monkey Cage,” and National Public Radio, among others.





