Objective
This journal provides a forum for professionally informed commentary on issues affecting contemporary American politics. This includes but is not limited to issues engaging parties, elections, and political participation; the news media, interest groups, Congress, the Presidency, and the Courts; trends in public finance, presidential popularity, congressional productivity; in contemporary, historical, or comparative perspective.
The journal is motivated by the view that social scientists, historians, and legal scholars frequently have important insights into the concerns that arise in contemporary politics and government, drawing upon the disciplinary knowledge at their command. Yet they frequently lack a publishing outlet willing to print the analytic reasoning that gives weight to the resulting commentary. The Forum is designed to fill this gap.
We contemplate a journal free of fixed position and requiring no particular verdict with respect to policies, institutions, or processes. Well-reasoned discussion, disciplined by reference to established bodies of knowledge or aimed at stimulating the creation of such knowledge, is the goal of this journal.
What scholars are saying about The Forum
Over recent years I have seen the wealth of articles available through this electronic journal and consider it a valuable resource both for my own research and for keeping in touch with the field generally.
James F. Guyot, Professor, School of Public Affairs, Baruch College, CUNY
This is a major new initiative in electronic publishing, featuring contributions by some of the best U.S. and international scholars of political science and public policy.
Joe Atkinson, Senior Lecturer and Research Director, Political Science, University of Auckland
Its editors have succeeded in attracting knowledgeable and articulate scholars as authors of articles that deal with important issues in a manner that will appeal to a wide range of college educated readers.
Christian Soe, Professor Emeritus, California State University, Long Beach
This electronic journal consistently provides high level cutting edge research which is extremely timely and cogent with respect to the topics which are important to my research and teaching. Anyone in the field of American government and politics would benefit from the most current issue of The Forum for example.
John Jackson, Professor, Southern Illinois University Carbondale
This publication is increasingly becoming a "must have" for study of American government.
Melvin J. Dubnick, Professor, University of New Hampshire
Topics
- American politics
- Political parties
- Elections and political participation
- The news media
- Interest groups
- Congress and the Presidency
- Courts
- Trends in public finance
- American foreign policy
Article formats
Texts longer than newspaper columns but shorter than orthodox journal articles
Information on submission process