The Monkey Cage (blog) explained

The Monkey Cage was a political science blog. Established in 2007, it was published by The Washington Post from 2013 through 2022. In 2023 it relaunched as the website Good Authority.

History

The blog was created in 2007 by a small group of academics, in a quest to get people interested in their political science research. It soon attracted writers, gained readers, and won awards[1]

In 2013, it entered into a three-year publishing deal with The Washington Post, which was renewed several times over the years.[1] [2] [3] [4]

After leaving The Washington Post in 2022, the blog planned to relaunch as an independent site in 2023.[5] It has since relaunched as the website Good Authority.[6]

Purpose and contents

The blog was created in part to push back on political media coverage and policy discourse that ignored political science research.[1] [7] The blog's contents have been described as a form of explainer-journalism, as the blog primarily published short editorials by academic political scientists who summarized their political-science research or apply political science to current events. The blog also occasionally published pieces by scholars in related academic disciplines.[8] [9]

Political scientist Erik Voeten was an editor on The Monkey Cage for some time.[10]

Recognition

In 2011, the blog won "Blog of the Year" by The Week magazine.[11]

The blog's content has been cited in numerous newspapers.[9] According to John M. Sides, the blog was visited by 719,000 people and viewed over 2 million times from November 2007 and December 2010.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: How academic blog 'Monkey Cage' became part of the mainstream media. Inside Higher Ed.. 18 Jan 2018. 2020-03-13.
  2. News: Kafka. Alexander C.. How the Monkey Cage Went Ape. 2016-01-10. The Chronicle of Higher Education. 2020-03-13. en-US. 0009-5982.
  3. Web site: Monkey Cage to Washington Post. Gold. Hadas. POLITICO. 26 August 2013 . en. 2020-03-13.
  4. Web site: The Monkey Cage joins The Washington Post in a Wonkbloggy, 538ish deal. Nieman Lab. 2020-03-13.
  5. News: TMC Editorial Team . 5 December 2022 . A transition for TMC (The Monkey Cage): Moving on from The Washington Post . Washington Post . 30 May 2023.
  6. Web site: About . Good Authority . 2023-09-21 . 2023-11-26.
  7. Web site: Nexon. Dan. 2021-07-11. The Vision Thing: More on the New Duck. 2021-07-14. The Duck of Minerva. en-US.
  8. News: About The Monkey Cage. 2019. The Washington Post. 30 May 2023.
  9. John M. Sides. Sides. John. 2011. The Political Scientist as a Blogger. PS: Political Science & Politics. en. 44. 2. 267–271. 10.1017/S1049096511000060. 154727650 . 1537-5935.
  10. News: Erik Voeten . 27 Feb 2024 . Georgetown University.
  11. Farley. Robert. 2013. Complicating the Political Scientist as Blogger. PS: Political Science & Politics. en. 46. 2. 383–386. 10.1017/S1049096513000061. 1049-0965. free.