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S.Rojon
S.Rojon
Verified email at ulb.ac.be
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Conceptualising international high-skilled migration
C Parsons, S Rojon, F Samanani, L Wettach
International Migration Institute, 2014
482014
A survey experiment on citizens’ preferences for ‘vote–centric’vs.‘talk–centric’democratic innovations with advisory vs. binding outcomes
S Rojon, AJ Rijken, B Klandermans
Politics and Governance 7 (2), 213-226, 2019
342019
A methodology for cross-national comparative focus group research: illustrations from discussions about political protest
MJ van Bezouw, A Garyfallou, IE Oană, S Rojon
Quality & quantity 53 (6), 2719-2739, 2019
242019
High skilled migration through the lens of policy
CR Parsons, S Rojon, L Rose, F Samanani
Migration Studies 8 (3), 279-306, 2020
232020
Referendums: increasingly unpopular among the ‘winners’ of modernization? Comparing public support for the use of referendums in Switzerland, the Netherlands, the UK, and Hungary
S Rojon, AJ Rijken
Comparative European Politics 19, 49-76, 2021
132021
Engaged, indifferent, skeptical or critical? Disentangling attitudes towards local deliberative mini-publics in four western European democracies
S Rojon, JB Pilet
Sustainability 13 (19), 10518, 2021
122021
Technocratic ministers in office in European countries (2000–2020): What’s new?
D Vittori, JB Pilet, S Rojon, E Paulis
Political Studies Review 21 (4), 867-886, 2023
92023
Immigration and Extreme-Right Voting in France: A contextual analysis of the 2012 presidential elections
S Rojon
International Migration Institute, 2013
92013
Are radical right and radical left voters direct democrats? Explaining differences in referendum support between radical and moderate voters in Europe
S Rojon, AJ Rijken
European Societies 22 (5), 581-609, 2020
72020
Who do Europeans want to govern? Exploring the multiple dimensions of citizens’ preferences for political actors in nine European countries
JB Pilet, D Vittori, S Rojon, E Paulis
Party Politics 30 (2), 367-378, 2024
42024
Do technocrats boost the acceptance of policy proposals among the citizenry? Evidence from a survey experiment in Italy
D Vittori, E Paulis, JB Pilet, S Rojon
Electoral Studies 81, 102566, 2023
42023
“My guitar is my rifle”: Mexican migrants mobilising unconventionally through arts
L Lara-Guerrero, S Rojon
Comparative Migration Studies 10 (1), 45, 2022
32022
Technocracy above partisanship? Comparing the appeal of non-partisan and partisan experts as ministers–A survey in 14 countries
D Vittori, S Rojon, JB Pilet, E Paulis
The British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 13691481231178244, 2023
22023
Methodological appendix
MJ van Bezouw, A Garyfallou, IE Oană, S Rojon, C Saunders
When citizens talk about politics, 230-242, 2019
22019
Which political outsiders do Europeans prefer as ministers?
S Rojon, JB Pilet, D Vittori, S Panel, E Paulis
European Political Science Review 15 (3), 444-464, 2023
12023
Who Wants Referendums?: A Cross-National Investigation of Citizens’ Attitudes Towards Participatory Decision-Making
SA Rojon
12020
Do populist parties promote direct democracy? An empirical assessment in 29 countries in the last two decades
D Angelucci, S Rojon, D Vittori
Contemporary Politics, 1-21, 2024
2024
The Lure of Technocrats: A Conjoint Experiment on Preferences for Technocratic Ministers in Six European Countries
S Panel, E Paulis, JB Pilet, S Rojon, D Vittori
Political Behavior, 1-24, 2023
2023
What model of government do citizens prefer?: Exploring the heterogeneity of citizens’ process preferences in nine European countries
S Rojon, PPK Pankowska, JB Pilet, D Vittori, E Paulis
2023
Has deliberation real spillover effects? Comparing the impact of the exposure to a citizens’ assembly for the participants (mini-public) and the non-participants (maxi-public)
E Paulis, JB Pilet, D Vittori, S Rojon
2022
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