This research investigates whether increasing female political representation affects labour market participation and education outcomes. Using electoral reforms in Italy as a natural experiment, the study finds that greater female representation increased workforce participation among working-age women while encouraging younger women to remain in education, demonstrating broader economic and social effects of political representation.

This research introduces the “signaling gap,” showing how states use controlled media to communicate positions they cannot express formally. Analyzing 174,000 articles, it finds that Russia-aligned countries signalled disapproval of the Ukraine invasion through negative coverage. The study bridges political science and intelligence practice, highlighting informal communication under constraint.

This research examines why small powers shift foreign policy alignment. It argues that disappointment in inherited partners, combined with domestic instability and security pressures, drives realignment. Case studies of Georgia and Armenia illustrate these dynamics, offering a clearer framework for understanding alliance changes in a global context where small states play critical roles.