Publications
About Our Publications
On this page you will find a list of publications by ISPS Affiliates, including peer-reviewed journal articles, policy briefs, and working papers.
When possible, Publications are linked to Projects and Data via the ISPS KnowledgeBase.
Title | Author(s) | Discipline | Publication | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|
What Have We Learned about Gender from Candidate Choice Experiments? A Meta-Analysis of Sixty-Seven Factorial Survey Experiments |
Susanne Schwarz and Alexander Coppock |
Political Science | Journal of Politics | 2022 |
The Politicization of Evidence-Based Medicine: The Limits of Pragmatic Problem Solving in an Era of Polarization |
Alan S. Gerber and Eric M. Patashnik |
Political Science | California Journal of Politics and Policy | 2011 |
When Do Governments Resort to Election Violence? |
Emilie M. Hafner-Burton, Susan D. Hyde and Ryan S. Jablonski |
Political Science | British Journal of Political Science | 2013 |
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 |
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 |
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 |
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 |
Cluster–Robust Variance Estimation for Dyadic Data |
Peter M. Aronow, Cyrus Samii, and Valentina A. Assenova |
Political Science | Political Analysis | 2015 |
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 |
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 |
Randomness Reconsidered: Modeling Random Judicial Assignment in the U.S. Courts of Appeals |
Matthew Hall |
Political Science | Journal of Empirical Legal Studies | 2010 |
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 |
Democracy, the Market, and the Logic of Social Choice |
Samuel DeCanio |
Political Science | American Journal of Political Science | 2014 |
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 |
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 |
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 |
Sticking with Your Vote: Cognitive Dissonance and Political Attitudes |
Sendhil Mullainathan, Ebonya Washington |
Political Science | American Economic Journal: Applied Economics | 2009 |
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 |
ISPS Working Paper Series
ISPS advances interdisciplinary research in the social sciences that aims to shape public policy and inform democratic deliberation. The ISPS network includes scholars and students from many departments in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and from Yale’s graduate and professional schools as well as select experts from other institutions. The ISPS Working Paper Series provides a platform for ISPS affiliates to make their work available for public consumption and discussion.
Featured Books by ISPS Faculty
ISPS Sponsored Publications
ISPS Politics & Policy Book Series: A series striving to place policy- and law-making in historical and comparative perspective, reflecting the broad, multidisciplinary character of ISPS.
ISPS Journal: A biannual publication that serves to highlight ISPS scholars’ publications and as a development piece for foundations and interested donors.
GOTV website: A website compiling results from a wide array of voter mobilization field experiments. Findings from these scientifically measured studies of various Get-Out-the-Vote methods offer valuable insight into which methods are most effective in mobilizing voter turnout (Note: the website indexes GOTV experiments published before 2006).
The Bulletin of Yale University includes several issues devoted to ISPS (PDF): 2000-2002, 2002-2004, 2004-2006, and 2006-2008.