View Current Issue: AJPS 69:4 – October 2025
Blogs:
The American Journal of Political Science is taking a brief hiatus from Friday, December 12th at 5:00 PM EDT to Tuesday, January 6th at 12:00 AM EDT. During this time, we won’t accept new or revised manuscripts and you will not be able to see the review status of manuscripts that you previously submitted. However, you’ll still be able to submit reviews and we will continue to make decisions during this short break.
Changes to AJPS Conflict of Interest Policy
From: Dan Reiter and Adam Berinsky, editors-in-chief
This post describes a policy change for Conflict of Interest (COI) policies pertaining to potential reviewers of manuscripts submitted to AJPS.
COI policies for AJPS are described on this webpage (https://ajps.org/conflict-of-interest-policy/), and currently include the following text:
“Nature of Conflicts Relevant to this Policy. Not all conflicts of interest are prohibited or harmful to the MPSA. The association recognizes that our association, disciplines, and scholarly communities are relatively small, with potentially complex (collegial or competitive) relationships. However, the following professional or personal relationships between authors and editors are conflicts of interest that are prohibited:
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- current or former dissertation committee chair or committee member (ever)
- current colleagues at the same institution
- current professional research, teaching or funding collaborators
- current or former spouses or partners”
Regarding former coauthors, AJPS declares coauthors from the last five years as having a COI.
This policy is beginning to generate difficulties for the review process. Scholars are beginning to write in ever-larger teams of coauthors. In a recent extreme case, a coauthor on a submitted manuscript is a coauthor on another paper with 161 coauthors. More commonly, we are now increasingly receiving manuscripts which list dozens of scholars who are ineligible to serve as reviewers because of current COI policies. This problem is exacerbated when a manuscript submitted to AJPS itself has multiple coauthors, because then all of those coauthors themselves have many past coauthors. All of these coauthors are currently listed as having COI, which then is narrowing the potential reviewer pool for a growing number of manuscripts.
The American Journal of Political Science is Now Accepting Manuscripts!
We’re excited to announce that AJPS is officially open following the successful transition to our new editorial team. We are now accepting new and revised manuscript submissions. Thank you for your patience during this transition period; we look forward to your contributions!
AJPS AI Policy
From: Dan Reiter and Adam Berinsky, editors-in-chief
We have been discussing amongst ourselves how AJPS should handle the issue of artificial intelligence (AI) in the creation and review of journal submissions. These are important issues we feel we must address. In creating these policies, we had several conversations with other Political Science journal editors. Though there is variance across policies and preferences of journal editors, a common thread is an emphasis on the importance of transparency, of requiring authors and reviewers to disclose if and how AI was used. There was concern over the lack of reliable tools to detect the use of AI by an author or reviewer, suggesting an emphasis on requiring author disclosure rather than attempting active policing.
With these concerns in mind, we have crafted the following policies regarding the use of AI at AJPS, for both authors and reviewers.
For Authors
“American Journal Political Science requires that manuscript authors must disclose the use of any artificial intelligence tools for work on any element of a submitted manuscript, or any research conducted by the authors to produce the manuscript, for tasks such as copyediting, drafting pre-analysis plans, writing software code, producing mathematical proofs, and others. This disclosure should be made in the text or footnotes of the manuscript. The text of this disclosure statement must be included in the Author questionnaire at the time of submission. It is the responsibility of the authors to ensure the validity of any elements that were produced by artificial intelligence. It is also the responsibility of the authors to ensure that any use of artificial intelligence does not violate ethical guidelines, such as treatment of human subjects. Authors should avoid using artificial intelligence to write the manuscript or substantial elements of the manuscript, such as the literature review. Authors must also comply with Wiley’s AI guidelines for researchers.
For Reviewers
“Reviewers may use AI as part of their normal workflow (e.g., finding related papers, copyediting), but reviewers cannot use AI to directly evaluate a paper or write any part of a reviewer report. Reviewers should also comply with Wiley’s AI guidelines for researchers.
Updates Regarding Supplemental Information on Manuscript Submissions
From: Dan Reiter and Adam Berinsky, editors-in-chief
AJPS announces a slightly revised policy for manuscript submissions. The page limit on supplemental materials has been increased to 25 pages, and we are also now permitting the submission of pre-registered analysis plans (PAPs). There is no page limit on PAP submissions, and PAP length does not count against the supplemental materials page limit, or the 10,000 word limit for the manuscript. We hope that this will help authors present their research more fully and transparently to reviewers.
Editorial Principles at AJPS
From: Dan Reiter and Adam Berinsky, editors-in-chief
General Statement of Principles
AJPS has for decades been recognized as one of the top two or three journals in all of political science. The central goal of the new editorial team is to maintain and, if possible, further strengthen this reputation.
AJPS endeavors to publish the most significant research in political science. The significance of a submitted manuscript is generally determined by three different factors:
- Importance of scholarly question for political science discipline
- Theoretical innovation and contribution
- Empirical contribution
We offer the following observations on how to think about these three criteria of significance, and other pertinent issues.
- Each article may excel more on one dimension, but we would expect most articles to hold high standards on multiple dimensions.
- The importance of the scholarly question is a gateway criterion. Manuscripts that tackle relatively minor scholarly questions should be redirected to more appropriate journals. Further, manuscripts addressing non-political questions, such as geographic determinants of economic growth, should also be redirected to other journals.
- Most manuscripts other than methodology manuscripts should have at least some theoretical content, in the sense of proposing, presenting or synthesizing broader theoretical assumptions to motivate hypotheses and empirical analysis. Though normative political theory manuscripts of course differ in structure and aspiration.
- Most manuscripts with empirical contributions, but without theoretical innovation, are less likely to find a home at AJPS. This is true even for manuscripts presenting new empirical data. Manuscripts that offer new empirical tests of standing theories and hypotheses are widely published in the growing set of subfield and specialty journals.
- A leading trend in recent years has been growing concern with causal inference, and constructing empirical tests that convincingly demonstrate causal processes outlined in theories. AJPS can and should continue to demand that authors do their best to address issues of causal inference, using the most advanced available methods. In addition, authors should in their manuscripts give an honest accounting of what findings can be interpreted causally and under what assumptions such findings hold when making such claims. At the same time, it is important to remember that an exclusive focus on causal inference risks narrowing the field, in the sense that inevitably some areas of great scholarly significance experience limits regarding the degree to which causal inference can be established within plausible empirical designs. Innovative and high-quality descriptive work can find a home at AJPS as well. Thus, AJPS welcomes work dealing with questions of great political significance, including papers that address causal questions and those providing new descriptive or predictive understandings.
- AJPS welcomes formal theory manuscripts that also contain careful empirical tests. However, inclusion of careful empirics alongside a formal model is not necessary or always possible, especially given word count constraints. That said, it is important for all formal theory papers to retain some connection to empirics, even if only the use of historical or policy illustrations, or discussion of how the theory provides new insight into existing empirical work.
- Continuing past policies, AJPS will decline manuscripts that are purely focused on historical cases or contemporary policy debates without connection to theory or method. AJPS also declines papers that are primarily pedagogical, surveys of existing results (meta-analyses notwithstanding) and manuscripts that are not building on contemporary political science scholarship (though recognizing that innovation outside of existing research paradigms is something to strive for).
- It is the burden of the author to make their manuscript clear to reviewers. If reviewers are unable to understand the central components of a manuscript’s claims, then that is the fault of the authors, not the reviewers. Manuscripts must strive to be clear to reviewers, all of whom have scholarly backgrounds.
- Pre-registration of an analysis plan is committing to analytic steps without advance knowledge of the research outcomes. Pre-registration is neither necessary nor sufficient for good research. But pre-analysis plans (PAPs) help conducting well-considered research in a transparent way. Pre-registration reminds us to carefully think through the research question, our expectations and all the minor and major decisions that may influence the research outcomes before our data is collected and our analyses are done. AJPS does not require authors to submit PAPs for any studies, but encourages authors to consider such plans, when appropriate. For instance, many reviewers of experimental work ask to see PAPs.
- Authors should describe in detail their sampling procedure. In the case of survey and experimental work, this description should include explicit statements of sample design and the treatment of non-response. The AJPS does not have any requirements for specific sampling procedures, but authors should be prepared to justify and defend their sampling choices. During the review process any criticism of samples must be based on a serious discussion of why the sample is not appropriate for the given analysis conducted by the author.
- For the first time, AJPS will publish shorter essays, called “Research Notes.” Research notes will have a 4,000 word limit. The title of each Research Note will start with the words, “Research Note,” as in, “Research Note: Populism and Violence Against Immigrants,” to help distinguish research notes from full-length articles. Research notes at AJPS will be confined to methodology papers (including methodology papers in normative political theory) and meta-analyses. Research notes will not be essays that primarily present new data, or that offer replications of previous studies without significant theoretical or research design innovations.
The MPSA Announces the Selection of the Incoming Editorial Team for the American Journal of Political Science
Read the announcement here.
