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Legislative text, court decisions, regulatory filings, patents, government contracts, election data
9,577 datasets
2 May 2002 election results from the Greater London Authority, capturing numbers of votes by party. The data reflects a multi-vote electoral system where voters were able to make more than one vote. The dataset was last updated on 25 March 2026.
Ayesha Shahid compiled this online bibliographical source to address contemporary debates on the compatibility of Islamic law and international human rights law. It covers literature from the 1990s onward, examining themes like women's rights, child rights, and religious freedom. The resource is intended to support academic course development and interdisciplinary research.
Three dynamic basketball court scenes captured in Guangzhou, Dongguan, and Long360. Each scene contains 36 viewpoints with videos at 1080p or 4K resolution, and the Guangzhou and Dongguan sequences consist of approximately 250 frames each. The dataset was created by BestWJH and is intended for evaluating dynamic scene reconstruction methods.
Test scores for 200 U.S. Air Force basic trainees, including 100 black and 100 white airmen, collected by researcher David F. McGrevy. The data includes scores from the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS), the Armed Forces Qualification Test (AFQT), and the Airman Qualifying Examination (AQE). The study investigated relationships between these tests and general mental ability across racial groups.
Homer E. Socolofsky's interpretive study analyzes the administration of the 23rd U.S. President, Benjamin Harrison. The text focuses on his character, policies, and impact, particularly on landmark legislation like the Sherman Anti-Trust Act and his foreign policy toward the Pacific and Hawaii. The dataset is sourced from the paperswithcode platform.
David Skidmore's book examines the failure of foreign policy reform during the Carter administration, arguing domestic political pressure caused a reversal from a liberal agenda to traditional containment. The analysis is anchored in day-to-day political events, including the Vance/Brzezinski conflict, SALT II, and the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Skidmore applies a structural theoretical approach to explain policy change, with conclusions extending to subsequent administrations.
Big Boy Rules is a journalistic text by Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Steve Fainaru. The work details the experiences of US security contractors, or mercenaries, operating in Iraq, based on the author's travels with several groups. It provides a qualitative look at the motivations and lives of an estimated 100,000 armed contractors working outside the formal military structure.
Kathleen Christison's book analyzes U.S. perceptions of Palestine and their influence on Middle East policy throughout the twentieth century. The work examines historical narratives, media portrayals, and cultural attitudes that shaped American foreign policy. It likely contains textual analysis of historical sources, travelogues, and policy discourse.
Colonization after Emancipation: Lincoln and the Movement for Black Resettlement is a book by Phillip W. Magness and Sebastian N. Page. It presents research from archival materials across three continents, including British Colonial and Foreign Office documents. The work examines President Abraham Lincoln's continued pursuit of colonization schemes for African American freedmen for close to a year after the Emancipation Proclamation.
Lawrence Freedman's book analyzes U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East, focusing on three key events from 1978-79. The work examines the Camp David summit, the Iranian Islamic revolution, and the socialist revolution in Afghanistan. It argues these events established a foundation for U.S. involvement lasting approximately thirty years.
Japan's political and legal transformation following its 1945 surrender and US occupation is analyzed. The text, authored by Ray A. Moore, explores the partnership between Japan and the United States, represented by General Douglas MacArthur, in establishing a constitutional democracy. It focuses on the period of occupation and the subsequent half-century of democratic development.
Games Advisors Play is a study by author Jean A. Garrison analyzing foreign policy decision-making. The work examines case studies from the Nixon and Carter administrations, focusing on how advisors use structural, procedural, and interpersonal tactics to influence policy. It compares advisory systems and contributes to literature on foreign policy and political psychology.
Qualitative research based on interviews and focus groups conducted in 12 states. The study examines the challenges low-income parents face in obtaining and maintaining child care subsidies, including application, recertification, and reporting requirements. Gina Adams authored the research, which draws from interviews with administrators, experts, caseworkers, parents, and providers.
Douglas L. Kriner's research dataset examines U.S. interbranch relations during wartime. It marshalls quantitative and historical evidence to demonstrate how Congress shapes the initiation, scope, and duration of major military actions. The data supports the argument that legislators influence presidential strategic decisions through legislation, hearings, and public debate.
More than 200 interviews form the basis of Edward Tivnan's analysis of Jewish political influence on U.S. Middle East policy. The book focuses on the role of organizations like AIPAC and the Conference of Presidents of Major Jewish Organizations, tracing their evolution since 1948. It examines the relationship between American Jewish public and private stances on Israeli policy.
Robert E. May's 426-page book 'Manifest Destiny's Underworld: Filibustering in Antebellum America' examines private military expeditions in 19th-century America. The study, published in 2002 by the University of North Carolina Press, investigates the origins, motivations, logistics, and cultural impact of these illegal schemes. It argues filibustering was linked to slavery debates, damaged U.S. foreign policy, and ironically limited territorial expansion.
Conjoint survey experiment data from Israel's 2019-2021 election cycles measures voter preferences across security, redistribution, and nationalist policy axes. Created by Shingo Hamanaka, the study identifies how specific policy areas influence party support during periods of parliamentary instability.
James Roger Sharp's book disputes the conventional wisdom of a painless national birth, analyzing the intense partisanship between Federalists and Republicans that threatened national disintegration from 1789 to 1801. The work covers the presidencies of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, focusing on fears of insurrection, secession, and the nonviolent transfer of power in 1801. It is a closed-license historical and political science text sourced from paperswithcode.
Twenty-two essays and case studies analyze the domestic influences on U.S. foreign policy from the Vietnam War through the Obama administration. The collection, edited by James M. McCormick, features contributions from scholars, journalists, and public officials. It is organized into three thematic sections covering societal influences, political institutions, and decision-making case studies.
A 2008 historical analysis of the Cold War from the Soviet perspective, authored by Vladislav Zubok. The work uses recently declassified sources including Politburo records, ciphered telegrams, diaries, and taped conversations. It covers the entire Cold War period, from Stalin's era through Gorbachev's reforms.