The QoG Institute

The Quality of Government (QoG) Institute was founded in 2004 by Professor Bo Rothstein and Professor Sören Holmberg. It is an independent research institute within the Department of Political Science at the University of Gothenburg. We are about 30 researchers who conduct and promote research on the causes, consequences and nature of Good Governance and the Quality of Government (QoG) - that is, trustworthy, reliable, impartial, uncorrupted and competent government institutions.
While Quality of Government is our common intellectual focal point, we apply a variety of theoretical and methodological perspectives.
The main objective of our research is to address the theoretical and empirical problem of how political institutions of high quality can be created and maintained. A second objective is to study the effects of Quality of Government on a number of policy areas, such as health, the environment, social policy, and poverty. We approach these problems from a variety of different theoretical and methodological angles.
News
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Society and economyNew Research grants fromVR
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Society and economyThe FALCON project (Fight Against Large-scale Corruption and Organised CrimeNetworks)
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Society and economyTHE QOG BEST PAPER AWARD 2023: CALL FORPAPERS
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Society and economyERC grant for research into extreme weather and gender equality in Africanpolitics
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Society and economyQoG scholars granted money for part in a large EUproject
Read our latest peer-reviewed articles
- The Double Democratic Bind: Challenges to Enacting Mandates and Combating Misin… (External link)
- Making space: citizens, parties and interest groups in two ideological dimensio… (External link)
- Institutional Quality Causes Generalized Trust: Experimental Evidence on Trusti… (External link)
- No taxation without state-assigned property rights: formalization of individual… (External link)
- Search among all our peer-reviewed articles
Read our latest working papers
- Buying Quiescence: The Influence of Resource Reliance on Citizens’ Demand for D… (External link)
- Are different types of corruption tolerated differently? (External link)
- The Dynamics of Emotions in Protests (External link)
- Dimensions of State Capacity and Modes of Democratic Breakdown (PDF) (External link)
- Search among all our working papers (External link)