Academic Papers
Academic papers are aimed at providing academic argumentation and discussion of theories and practices upon scientific matters, excluding the very practical policy issues. In view of that, academic papers are provided for the narrow scientific public of the respective field, meaning that they are intended to reach the academic profiled readers. As such, academic papers articulate only general scientific issues, whose concern does not embark in technicality. The Group for Legal and Political Studies Press is the common publisher of these papers.
FORTHCOMING ACADEMIC PAPERS:
(1) Political Science’s Role in Improving Policy-Making: An Empirical Assessment of the Policy-Making Environment
PUBLISHED ACADEMIC PAPERS:
(7) Is there any prevalence or conflict between models of legitimation: Developing the ‘optimum balance between models of legitimation’ hypothesis (Authored by: Fisnik Korenica & Dren Doli).
(6) Constitutional Rigidity: Where Does It Lead To? (Authored by: Dren Doli & Fisnik Korenica).
(5) Exploring the Preconditions of the Mobilization of Bias: Towards an organizational-based argument (Authored by: Fisnik Korenica & Dren Doli).
(4) Discourses on the Notion of Sovereignty: Towards an Inclusive Modern Definition (Authored by: Fisnik Korenica & Dren Doli).
(3) A Comparison Between Judicial-Constitutional Review Models: Towards a Hypothetical Approach on the Logic of Each Model
(Authored by: Dren Doli & Fisnik Korenica).
(2) A Critique To Raunio’s Why European Integration Increases Leadership Autonomy within Political Parties (Authored by: Dren Doli & Fisnik Korenica).
(1) Is there any rationality of autocratization of the regime of a country in political evolution. Developing the ‘irrational rationality of autocratization’ hypothesis (Authored by: Fisnik Korenica & Dren Doli).
