Nationhood Lab recently mapped the regional cultures across Canada, Greenland, Northern Mexico and parts of the Caribbean, allowing the American Nations analytical model to be used for cross-country comparisons.| Nationhood Lab
Nationhood Lab's director unpacked the implications of the project's recent analysis of the 2025 Canadian federal election for the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, showing why Trumpist-style politics are a tough sell there.| Nationhood Lab
One of the Boston-based public radio superstation’s opinion section editors saw the American Nations model reflected in Europe| Nationhood Lab
Nationhood Lab’s director was the guest on the 400th episode of the award-winning public television series, co-produced by the Pell Center and Rhode Island PBS| Nationhood Lab
In Washington Monthly, Nationhood Lab's director outlines the findings of Nationhood Lab’s recent analysis of the interlocking geographies of intergenerational mobility, household debt and creditworthiness.| Nationhood Lab
North America's regional cultures rarely respect current boundaries, and the ones separating the U.S. and Canadian federations are no exception| Nationhood Lab
Nationhood Lab’s director shares the project’s findings on a rebooted U.S. national narrative for the American Enterprise Institute’s Center on Opportunity and Social Mobility| Nationhood Lab
Every Canadian regional culture voted for the Liberals, except Far West, in an election mirroring trends in the United States| Nationhood Lab
In a series of recent peer-reviewed journal articles, Nationhood Lab and its research collaborators presented the American Nations model and its utility for understanding U.S. health patterns| Nationhood Lab
The democracy advocate and former chess grandmaster praised Nationhood Lab's work in an introduction to project director Colin Woodard's guest essay| Nationhood Lab
America’s regional cultures followed their usual pattern, but there with big shifts in El Norte and Spanish Caribbean and in rural parts of other regions.| Nationhood Lab
More in Common’s Threads of Texas project found seven distinct groups of Texans; we explored how they’re distributed geographically and within the state’s Latino community| Nationhood Lab