Abstract

Beginning in the spring of 2011, Political Analysis has published six virtual issues.1 Each of those virtual issues has focused on an important topic of political methodology: discrete choice, causal inference, Bayesian methods, election fraud, big data, and measurement. Appearing about every six months, these virtual issues have been edited by top scholars in each area. They contain important papers that have been previously published in Political Analysis, and thanks to Oxford University Press, the papers in the current virtual issue are available for free downloading. To celebrate the success of the Political Analysis virtual issue series, we take a different approach for this particular virtual issue. Instead of organizing this virtual issue around a particular methodological or substantive topic, the editors of Political Analysis have instead selected eight papers, published in the last two years, that we believe are making important contemporary contributions to political methodology. Like previous virtual issues, these papers will be available for free downloading for a limited period. The papers in this virtual issue are:

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