Miroslav Nemčok
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miroslavnemcok.bsky.social
Miroslav Nemčok
@miroslavnemcok.bsky.social

Researcher in political science at @UniOslo | Comparative politics, public opinion, and public policy. Coffee, food, aviation, and space exploration enthusiast.
www.miroslavnemcok.com

Political science 62%
Communication & Media Studies 10%

Made it to the 82nd spot on Khrono’s TOP500 list of Norway’s most productive researchers (2023–2024). Grateful for the great colleagues, collaborations, and research environment I found at @uio.no that made it possible.
🔗 www.khrono.no/disse-500-fo...
Disse 500 forskerne publiserer mest i Norge
— Antall artikler er ikke så viktig, sier Ole Andreassen, Norges mest publiserende forsker.
www.khrono.no

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

🛑 The EU’s Better Regulation agenda risks cutting rules that protect workers, consumers & the environment.
A policy brief by Brigitte Pircher @brigittepircher.bsky.social calls for stronger oversight, transparency & reclaiming regulation: library.fes.de/pdf-files/bu...

Reposted by Staffan Kumlin

Our introduction to to the special issue on the formation of public opinion in the welfare state is now out in the @jeppjournal.bsky.social!

📖 Freely available: doi.org/10.1080/1350...

A big thanks to Zhen Jie Im, Maria Grasso, and Franco Bonomi Bezzo for outstanding co-editorship.
We are hiring PhDs and postdocs to work on the ERC project GETGOV, where I am the PI.

We will investigate governing elites since 1789. I am sure that it will be a lot of fun and result in great research!

Postdocs: www.jobbnorge.no/en/available...

PhDs: www.jobbnorge.no/en/available...
Postdoctoral Fellow in Political Science (3-4 years) (288628) | University of Oslo
Job title: Postdoctoral Fellow in Political Science (3-4 years) (288628), Employer: University of Oslo, Deadline: Monday, November 17, 2025
www.jobbnorge.no

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

Congratulations to our consortium leader, Yves Steinebach, on his promotion to full professor! 🎉 Today he delivered his inaugural lecture, “The Balance Challenge: Navigating Policy Responsiveness and Effectiveness,” at the @statsvitenskap.bsky.social @uio.no

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

...in contrast to the study above, @miroslavnemcok.bsky.social @hannawass.bsky.social and Johanna Peltoniemi find that in Finland, the implementation of postal voting had a negligible effect on turnout across low-participation areas

www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

🌍 ANALYZING (CLIMATE) POLICY PORTFOLIOS
New paper in @jcpaicpa.bsky.social introduces an analytical approach to systematically map what governments do on (climate) policy along two dimensions:

🎯 Targets – goals governments address
🛠️ Instruments – how they pursue them

🔗 doi.org/10.1080/1387...

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

📜 One way governments try to cut regulatory burden is #offsetting: for every new rule, an old one (or more) must go.

🗺️ The map and table show which OECD countries have used these schemes.

👉 Can you spot your country?

(from Steinebach, Hinterleitner & Fernández-i-Marín doi.org/10.1111/puar...)
The SUPA project has a new webpage! 🌐
👉 www.supa.uio.no/english/inde...

There you’ll find:
🌍 project background & goals
👩‍🔬 team members & institutional partners
📢 news, events & publications (with more coming soon!)

Check it out — and let us know what you think!
SUPA.html - Sustaining Public Administration in Modern Democracies
Read this story on the University of Oslo's website.
www.supa.uio.no

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

🤔 What makes a law complex—and why does it matter?
In his talk, Steffen Hurka @steffenhurka.bsky.social (a close friend of SUPA) explains:
📏 how to measure legislative complexity
⚖️ why it varies across laws & policy areas
🏛️ how it shapes institutions & implementation
www.youtube.com/watch?v=gclb...
Policy complexity - Measurement, Origins and Consequences, Steffen Hurka,
YouTube video by Theories of Regulation & Governance
www.youtube.com

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

In the working paper (with @miroslavnemcok.bsky.social and others), which will soon be available, we show that such politicization can harm democratic norms and fuel affective polarization. However, we also find that it does not translate into greater support for political violence.

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

Policies, rules & regulations keep on growing. 📈🚨
Have you ever wondered how quick that growth is? 🤔

Hinterleitner, Knill @cknill.bsky.social & Steinebach in @reggovjournal.bsky.social empirically demonstrate the swelling complexity of legislative rulebooks!

📚 Read: doi.org/10.1111/rego...

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

💥 Publication ALERT 💥
Steinebach, Fernández-i-Marín, Hinterleitner & Knill examine #environmental policy in 21 democracies and find:
- 1/3 of measures could be streamlined
- Effectiveness preserved (sometimes improved!)

Not crude cost-cutting ➡️ Smarter rules > fewer rules.
🔗 doi.org/10.1080/1350...
Towards ‘better deregulation’: from crude cost-cutting to the targeted pruning of policy activities
Deregulation is a prominent theme, but difficult to implement. Current approaches either focus only on ‘new’ rules without considering already existing policies, or fail to differentiate between ef...
doi.org

Introduction of 🤟 #SUPA 👇🚨⬇️
[1/6] What is SUPA about? A thread 🧵👇

The #SUPA Project addresses rule growth - the rapid expansion of laws and regulations - and its implications for governance.

Through five research-focused Work Packages (WPs), we generate data, theory, and tools to help sustain an effective democracy.

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

[1/6] What is SUPA about? A thread 🧵👇

The #SUPA Project addresses rule growth - the rapid expansion of laws and regulations - and its implications for governance.

Through five research-focused Work Packages (WPs), we generate data, theory, and tools to help sustain an effective democracy.

SUPA's social media accounts are now active, and posting is about to begin. Follow us for thoughtful insights on administrative overburdening and science-based suggestions on how to address it!
📈 More laws, more policies, more regulations. But administrations aren’t growing at the same pace 🚨 This mismatch risks poor services, unequal treatment & frustration. That’s where #SUPA comes in: from 2025–2028, we’ll study how to improve rule design & strengthen modern democracies 🏛️✨
📈 More laws, more policies, more regulations. But administrations aren’t growing at the same pace 🚨 This mismatch risks poor services, unequal treatment & frustration. That’s where #SUPA comes in: from 2025–2028, we’ll study how to improve rule design & strengthen modern democracies 🏛️✨
📢 New article 🌟
👥 Miroslav Kreos-Nemcok @miroslavnemcok.bsky.social (ISV), Hanna Wass @hannawass.bsky.social & Juho Vesa
🔎 Partisan Influence on Policy Preferences in Retrenching the Welfare State
📖 Open access in Public Opinion Quarterly
doi.org/10.1093/poq/...

Reposted by Staffan Kumlin

As global population growth starts to hit the brakes, Rein Taagepera and I consider what this means for our future and look for lessons from the past.
🔽👇⬇️
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 As #PopulationGrowth slows, @miroslavnemcok.bsky.social & Rein Taagepera draw on a striking demographic stall 2,000 years ago that preceded political fragmentation and imperial collapse.
🌍 Can modern states withstand the pressures of a post-growth world?
👉 buff.ly/BQCQ8Vj

Reposted by Staffan Kumlin

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 As #PopulationGrowth slows, @miroslavnemcok.bsky.social & Rein Taagepera draw on a striking demographic stall 2,000 years ago that preceded political fragmentation and imperial collapse.
🌍 Can modern states withstand the pressures of a post-growth world?
👉 buff.ly/BQCQ8Vj

What’s the app. share of invitations you send to your network (i.e., scholars you know from somewhere) as opposed to total strangers?

Just thinking that acceptance rates may decline over time, as you might resist the temptation to keep reaching out to friends.

This is very interesting! Thank you, Gregorio, for your fine contribution to the special issue!

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

Rearmament challenges modern welfare states, pitting military vs. social spending.
In our new #OA article in @jeppjournal.bsky.social, Stefano Sacchi, Caroline de la Porte and I show that citizens prioritize the welfare state—though important divisions emerge
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
‘Guns versus butter’ in public opinion: the politicization of the warfare-welfare trade-off
The intensification of military conflict is leading to sharp increases in military spending across advanced democracies. As public budgets are constrained, the welfare state is a candidate for savi...
www.tandfonline.com

Special shout-out to @celytadeas.bsky.social, the driving force behind this work, its promotion, and outreach to journalists - just too humble to be the one interviewed.

Slovak society has become even more divided after the assassination attempt on PM Fico.
In this @denikn.cz interview [in Czech], I discuss findings from a study co-authored with @celytadeas.bsky.social (@au.dk), Peter Spáč, and Michal Tóth (@masarykuniversity.bsky.social).

denikn.cz/1783201/nesn...
Nesnášenlivost mezi Slováky po atentátu na Fica stoupla. Až polovina vládních voličů viní média a opozici, říká výzkumník
Od útoku na slovenského premiéra Roberta Fica uplynul více než rok. Politická rétorika ale zůstává stále vyostřená, říká výzkumník Miroslav Nemčok z Univerzity v Oslu. S kolegy z univerzity v dánském ...
denikn.cz
When parties cut welfare, voters don’t rebel, even if it goes against their ideology or interests. Instead, they update their preferences to stay aligned with the party.

Read our new paper in @poqjournal.bsky.social ⬇️⬇️⬇️
Why do people support policies that go against their interests?

Miroslav Nemčok and coauthors show that voters shift their views to match their party, even when that means supporting painful welfare cuts.

Out now in POQ: doi.org/10.1093/poq/...
@miroslavnemcok.bsky.social @hannawass.bsky.social
Why do people support policies that go against their interests?

Miroslav Nemčok and coauthors show that voters shift their views to match their party, even when that means supporting painful welfare cuts.

Out now in POQ: doi.org/10.1093/poq/...
@miroslavnemcok.bsky.social @hannawass.bsky.social

Reposted by Miroslav Nemčok

First?! You were so smooth I figured you'd been means-testing POQ submissions for years. Thanks a lot for all your work!

[3/3] What we found: Despite opposing the cuts initially, government voters became more supportive of the retrenchment reform after their party implemented it. Support grew even when the policy hurt them materially and contradicted their ideology.

So: voters adapt instead of rebelling.