| Government and Opposition 2003 |
| Title | Subject | Authors |
| Americans in the dark? -Recent Hollywood representations of the nation's history. | Government | King, Desmond |
| Being Canadian. | Government | Kymlicka, Will |
| Being Palestinian. | Government | Nabulsi, Karma |
| Curbing global warming the easy way: an alternative to the Kyoto Protocol. | Government | Verweij, Marco |
| Democratization studies: citizenship and governance. | Government | Grugel, Jean |
| 'Fight the power': The politics of music and the music of politics. | Government | Street, John |
| From 'Normal Incidents' to political crises: Understanding the selective politicization of policy failures. | Government | Brandstrom, Annika, Kuipers, Sanneke |
| Governing elites, external events and pro-democratic opposition in Hong Kong (1986-2002). | Government | Ming Sing |
| Japan's 'Un-Westminster' system: impediments to reform in a crisis economy. | Government | Mulgan, Aurelia George |
| Labour politics and democratic transition in South Korea and Taiwan. | Government | Buchanan, Paul G., Nicholls, Kate |
| Legislative institutionalization: a bent analytical arrow?. | Government | Judge, David |
| Local government reform in Britain 1997-2001: national forces and international trends. | Government | Cole, Michael |
| Rethinking postcommunist transition. | Government | White, Stephen |
| September 11, anti-terror laws and civil liberties: Britain, France and Germany compared. | Government | Haubrich, Dirk |
| South Africa's political futures. | Government | Butler, Anthony |
| 'Taken at the flood'? The German general election 2002. | Government | Roberts, Geoffrey K. |
| The International Criminal Court: reforming the politics of international justice. | Government | Economides, Spyros |
| The Slovak parliamentary election of September 2002: Its systemic importance. | Government | Pridham, Geoffrey |
| Unequal plurality: Towards an asymmetric power model of British politics. | Government | Richards, David, Marsh, David, Smith, Martin |
| Won't get fooled again: the paranoid style in the national security state. | Government | Ellington, Thomas C. |
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