Publications
Title | Author(s) | Discipline | Publication | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
Why So Little Sectionalism in the Contemporary United States? The Under-representation of Place-Based Economic Interests |
Jacob S. Hacker, Paul Pierson, and Sam Zacher |
Political Science | Book chapter | 2023 |
Assessing the Programmatic Equivalence Assumption in Question Wording Experiments: Understanding Why Americans Like Assistance to the Poor More Than Welfare |
Gregory A. Huber and Celia Paris |
Political Science | Public Opinion Quarterly | 2013 |
The Economic Origins of Authoritarian Values: Evidence From Local Trade Shocks in the United Kingdom |
Cameron Ballard-Rosa, Mashail A. Malik, Stephanie J. Rickard, and Kenneth Scheve |
Political Science | Comparative Political Studies | 2021 |
Identifying Legitimacy: Experimental Evidence on Compliance with Authority |
Eric S. Dickson, Sanford C. Gordon, and Gregory A. Huber |
Political Science | Science Advances | 2022 |
Should I Cast an Ill-Informed Ballot? Examining the Contours of the Normative Obligation to Vote |
David Doherty, Conor M. Dowling, Alan S. Gerber, and Gregory A. Huber |
Political Science | American Politics Research | 2019 |
The Persuasive Effects of Direct Mail: A Regression Discontinuity Based Approach |
Gerber, Alan S., Daniel P. Kessler and Marc Meredith |
Political Science | Journal of Politics | 2011 |
How Much Should We Trust Instrumental Variable Estimates in Political Science? Practical Advice Based on 67 Replicated Studies |
Apoorva Lal, Mackenzie Lockhart, Yiqing Xu, and Ziwen Zu |
Political Science | Political Analysis | 2024 |
Democracy, the Market, and the Logic of Social Choice |
Samuel DeCanio |
Political Science | American Journal of Political Science | 2014 |
The German Trade Shock and the Rise of the Neo-Welfare State in Early Twentieth-Century Britain |
Ken Scheve and Theo Serlin |
Political Science | American Political Science Review | 2022 |
Why People Vote: Estimating the Social Returns to Voting |
Alan S. Gerber, Gregory A. Huber, David Doherty and Conor M. Dowling |
Political Science | British Journal of Political Science | 2016 |
Randomness Reconsidered: Modeling Random Judicial Assignment in the U.S. Courts of Appeals |
Matthew Hall |
Political Science | Journal of Empirical Legal Studies | 2010 |
Why Vote with the Chief? Political Connections and Public Goods Provision in Zambia |
Kate Baldwin |
Political Science | American Journal of Political Science | 2014 |
Which Elections Can Be Lost? |
Susan D. Hyde and Nikolay Marinov |
Political Science | Political Analysis | 2012 |
The Generalizability of Social Pressure Effects on Turnout Across High-Salience Electoral Contexts |
Alan S. Gerber, Gregory A. Huber, Albert H. Fang, Andrew Gooch |
Political Science | American Politics Research | 2017 |
The Observer Effect in International Politics: Evidence from a Natural Experiment |
Susan D. Hyde |
Political Science | World Politics | 2007 |
Recent Advances in the Science of Voter Mobilization |
Donald P. Green, Alan S. Gerber |
Political Science | Annals of the American Academy for Political and Social Science | 2005 |
Big Five Personality Traits and Responses to Persuasive Appeals: Results from Voter Turnout Experiments |
Alan S., Gerber, Gregory A. Huber, David Doherty, Conor M. Dowling, Costas Panagopoulos |
Political Science | Political Behavior | 2012 |
How Partisanship Influences What Congress Says Online and How They Say It |
Richard T. Wang and Patrick D. Tucker |
Political Science | American Politics Research | 2020 |
Ripping Yarn: Experiments on Storytelling by Partisan Elites |
Andrew Gooch |
Political Science | Political Communication | 2017 |
Sticking with Your Vote: Cognitive Dissonance and Political Attitudes |
Sendhil Mullainathan, Ebonya Washington |
Political Science | American Economic Journal: Applied Economics | 2009 |