• Hungry for power? Regional elites and the architecture of government 

      Tatham, Michael Robert; Bauer, Michael W. (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)
      How can we better understand the architecture of government? Governmental structures are regularly altered by the dispersion of power upward and downward to supranational and subnational bodies. The preferences of citizens ...
    • Regions and immigration in advanced democracies 

      Tatham, Michael Robert (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2020)
      Immigration has become a cleaving issue in contemporary politics. Ranging from forced migration and climate-related population displacement to more mundane intra-European Union/European Free Trade Association (EU/EFTA) ...
    • Saved by hydrogen? The public acceptance of onshore wind in Norway 

      Jikiun, Sunniva Petersen; Tatham, Michael Robert; Oltedal, Velaug Myrseth (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2023)
      Achieving the green energy transition is not without difficulty. This is also the case for the deployment of renewable energy infrastructures. Among these, onshore wind has often been contested. Taking the case of Norway ...
    • The territorial architecture of government 

      Tatham, Michael Robert; Hooghe, Liesbet; Marks, Gary (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)
      This article sets the stage for a special issue that examines the interplay between subnational and supranational governance. It begins by discussing how the territorial architecture of government has become more multilevel ...
    • Thirty years of Regional and Federal Studies 

      Harbers, Imke; Tatham, Michael Robert; Tillin, Louise; Zuber, Christina Isabel (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2021)
      Regional and Federal Studies' 30th anniversary offers an opportunity to take stock of the state of the discipline and of the journal. We make four claims. First, the multi-level nature of the political world has intensified ...