Bart Bonikowski

4.7k total citations · 6 hit papers
38 papers, 2.6k citations indexed

About

Bart Bonikowski is a scholar working on Sociology and Political Science, Political Science and International Relations and Economics and Econometrics. According to data from OpenAlex, Bart Bonikowski has authored 38 papers receiving a total of 2.6k indexed citations (citations by other indexed papers that have themselves been cited), including 24 papers in Sociology and Political Science, 19 papers in Political Science and International Relations and 6 papers in Economics and Econometrics. Recurrent topics in Bart Bonikowski's work include Populism, Right-Wing Movements (13 papers), Electoral Systems and Political Participation (9 papers) and Migration, Refugees, and Integration (6 papers). Bart Bonikowski is often cited by papers focused on Populism, Right-Wing Movements (13 papers), Electoral Systems and Political Participation (9 papers) and Migration, Refugees, and Integration (6 papers). Bart Bonikowski collaborates with scholars based in United States, Canada and Israel. Bart Bonikowski's co-authors include Bruce Western, Devah Pager, Paul DiMaggio, Noam Gidron, Kristina Bakkær Simonsen, Matthijs Rooduijn, Yuval Feinstein, Daphne Halikiopoulou, Eric Kaufmann and Laura K. Nelson and has published in prestigious journals such as American Sociological Review, American Journal of Sociology and American Political Science Review.

In The Last Decade

Bart Bonikowski

38 papers receiving 2.4k citations

Hit Papers

Discrimination in a Low-W... 2009 2026 2014 2020 2009 2017 2016 2013 2016 200 400 600

Author Peers

Peers are selected by citation overlap in the author's most active subfields. citations · hero ref

Author Last Decade Papers Cites
Bart Bonikowski 1.8k 1.1k 285 279 226 38 2.6k
Markus Freitag 1.7k 0.9× 977 0.9× 223 0.8× 281 1.0× 110 0.5× 129 2.6k
Tom van der Meer 2.0k 1.1× 1.4k 1.2× 180 0.6× 451 1.6× 138 0.6× 78 2.9k
Aina Gallego 897 0.5× 1.0k 0.9× 191 0.7× 427 1.5× 246 1.1× 40 1.7k
Delia Baldassarri 1.8k 1.0× 801 0.7× 172 0.6× 575 2.1× 136 0.6× 42 2.7k
Matthew Goodwin 1.7k 0.9× 2.4k 2.1× 132 0.5× 220 0.8× 209 0.9× 75 3.3k
Robert Ford 1.4k 0.8× 1.4k 1.3× 130 0.5× 162 0.6× 197 0.9× 60 2.3k
Brian D. Silver 1.5k 0.8× 1.1k 1.0× 179 0.6× 208 0.7× 234 1.0× 66 2.4k
Laura Stoker 2.1k 1.1× 1.6k 1.4× 286 1.0× 783 2.8× 346 1.5× 23 3.3k
Michael J. Shapiro 1.5k 0.8× 1.1k 0.9× 164 0.6× 104 0.4× 193 0.9× 124 2.6k
Christian Davenport 3.7k 2.0× 2.3k 2.0× 265 0.9× 173 0.6× 231 1.0× 72 4.3k

Countries citing papers authored by Bart Bonikowski

Since Specialization
Citations

This map shows the geographic impact of Bart Bonikowski's research. It shows the number of citations coming from papers published by authors working in each country. You can also color the map by specialization and compare the number of citations received by Bart Bonikowski with the expected number of citations based on a country's size and research output (numbers larger than one mean the country cites Bart Bonikowski more than expected).

Fields of papers citing papers by Bart Bonikowski

Since Specialization
Physical SciencesHealth SciencesLife SciencesSocial Sciences

This network shows the impact of papers produced by Bart Bonikowski. Nodes represent research fields, and links connect fields that are likely to share authors. Colored nodes show fields that tend to cite the papers produced by Bart Bonikowski. The network helps show where Bart Bonikowski may publish in the future.

Co-authorship network of co-authors of Bart Bonikowski

This figure shows the co-authorship network connecting the top 25 collaborators of Bart Bonikowski. A scholar is included among the top collaborators of Bart Bonikowski based on the total number of citations received by their joint publications. Widths of edges represent the number of papers authors have co-authored together. Node borders signify the number of papers an author published with Bart Bonikowski. Bart Bonikowski is excluded from the visualization to improve readability, since they are connected to all nodes in the network.

All Works

20 of 20 papers shown
1.
Magistro, Beatrice, et al.. (2025). Attitudes toward artificial intelligence (AI) and globalization: Common microfoundations and political implications. American Journal of Political Science. 70(1). 348–365. 2 indexed citations
2.
Wimmer, Andreas, et al.. (2024). Geo-Political Rivalry and Anti-Immigrant Sentiment: A Conjoint Experiment in 22 Countries. American Political Science Review. 119(2). 1018–1035. 3 indexed citations
3.
Bonikowski, Bart, et al.. (2024). Who Can Assert Ownership Over Automation? Workplace Technological Change, Populist and Ethno-nationalist Rhetoric, and Candidate Support. Political Behavior. 46(4). 2191–2214. 4 indexed citations
4.
Magistro, Beatrice, et al.. (2024). Attitudes toward automation and the demand for policies addressing job loss: the effects of information about trade-offs. Political Science Research and Methods. 12(4). 783–798. 5 indexed citations
5.
Magistro, Beatrice, et al.. (2024). The Common Microfoundations of Attitudes Toward Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Globalization. SSRN Electronic Journal. 2 indexed citations
6.
Magistro, Beatrice, et al.. (2023). The Gender Gap in Attitudes Toward Workplace Technological Change. SSRN Electronic Journal. 5 indexed citations
7.
Magistro, Beatrice, et al.. (2023). Attitudes toward Automation and the Demand for Policies Addressing Job Loss: the Effects of Information about Trade-Offs. SSRN Electronic Journal. 2 indexed citations
8.
Bonikowski, Bart, et al.. (2022). Populism as Dog-Whistle Politics: Anti-Elite Discourse and Sentiments Toward Minority Groups. Social Forces. 102(1). 180–201. 18 indexed citations
9.
Bonikowski, Bart, et al.. (2022). Reclaiming the Past to Transcend the Present: Nostalgic Appeals in U.S. Presidential Elections. Sociological Forum. 37(S1). 1263–1293. 12 indexed citations
10.
Bonikowski, Bart, et al.. (2022). Politics as Usual? Measuring Populism, Nationalism, and Authoritarianism in U.S. Presidential Campaigns (1952–2020) with Neural Language Models. Sociological Methods & Research. 51(4). 1721–1787. 35 indexed citations
11.
Bonikowski, Bart & Laura K. Nelson. (2022). From Ends to Means: The Promise of Computational Text Analysis for Theoretically Driven Sociological Research. Sociological Methods & Research. 51(4). 1469–1483. 18 indexed citations
12.
Simonsen, Kristina Bakkær & Bart Bonikowski. (2022). Moralizing Immigration: Political Framing, Moral Conviction, and Polarization in the United States and Denmark. Comparative Political Studies. 55(8). 1403–1436. 26 indexed citations
13.
Rooduijn, Matthijs, et al.. (2021). Populist and nativist attitudes: Does ingroup-outgroup thinking spill over across domains?. European Union Politics. 22(2). 248–265. 27 indexed citations
14.
Bonikowski, Bart, et al.. (2021). The Partisan Sorting of “America”: How Nationalist Cleavages Shaped the 2016 U.S. Presidential Election. American Journal of Sociology. 127(2). 492–561. 36 indexed citations
15.
Simonsen, Kristina Bakkær & Bart Bonikowski. (2019). Is civic nationalism necessarily inclusive? Conceptions of nationhood and anti‐Muslim attitudes in Europe. European Journal of Political Research. 59(1). 114–136. 62 indexed citations
16.
Feinstein, Yuval & Bart Bonikowski. (2019). Nationalist narratives and anti-Immigrant attitudes: exceptionalism and collective victimhood in contemporary Israel. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 47(3). 741–761. 29 indexed citations
17.
Bonikowski, Bart. (2015). The promise of Bourdieusian political sociology. Theory and Society. 44(4). 385–391. 6 indexed citations
18.
Bonikowski, Bart. (2009). Beyond National Identity: Collective Schemata of the Nation in Thirty Countries. SSRN Electronic Journal. 2 indexed citations
19.
Pager, Devah, Bruce Western, & Bart Bonikowski. (2009). Discrimination in a Low-Wage Labor Market: A Field Experiment. SSRN Electronic Journal. 46 indexed citations
20.
Bonikowski, Bart. (2005). Flying While Arab (Or Was It Muslim? Or Middle Eastern?): Racial Profiling After 9/11. 7. 3 indexed citations

Rankless uses publication and citation data sourced from OpenAlex, an open and comprehensive bibliographic database. While OpenAlex provides broad and valuable coverage of the global research landscape, it—like all bibliographic datasets—has inherent limitations. These include incomplete records, variations in author disambiguation, differences in journal indexing, and delays in data updates. As a result, some metrics and network relationships displayed in Rankless may not fully capture the entirety of a scholar's output or impact.

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