Shortly before leaving the white house, the now former president Obama published one article on Science, arguing for clean energy.
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Weather affects people's daily lives. Political scientists are interested in how much weather disruptions can affect voter turnout. Some scholars found evidence to support that weather disruption surpress voter turnout by using aggregate data. A new paper however points out that this seemingly straightforward relationship between weather disruption and voter turnout is more nuanced. The resilience vulnerable groups have developed under certain institutional conditions can overcome the barrier of disruptive physical condition.
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