1,721,022 research outputs found
Replication Data for: Can Policy Responses to Pandemics Reduce Mass Fear?
Replication Data for:
Bechtel, Michael M./O'Brochta, William/Tavits, Margit
"Can Policy Responses to Pandemics Reduce Mass Fear?
Replication Data for: "Policy Design and Domestic Support for International Bailouts"
Bechtel, Michael M./Hainmueller, Jens/Margalit, Yotam.
"Policy Design and Domestic Support for International Bailouts"
European Journal of Political Research (2017) 56 (4): 864–886.
First posted: October 2012, https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=216359
Replication Data for: "Policy Design and Domestic Support for International Bailouts"
Bechtel, Michael M./Hainmueller, Jens/Margalit, Yotam.
"Policy Design and Domestic Support for International Bailouts"
European Journal of Political Research (2017) 56 (4): 864–886.
First posted: October 2012, https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=216359
Replication data for: What Is Litigation in the World Trade Organization Worth?
Replication archive for Bechtel, Michael M. and Thomas Sattler: "What Is Litigation in the World Trade Organization Worth?" in: International Organization (forthcoming)
Replication Data for: Retrospection, Fairness, and Economic Shocks: How Do Voters Judge Policy Responses to Natural Disasters?
Which factors explain voters' evaluations of policy responses to economic shocks? We explore this question in the context of mass preferences over the distribution of disaster relief and evaluate three theoretical arguments related to fairness norms that highlight affectedness, need, and political ties. We analyze experimental data from an original survey conducted among American citizens and find that affectedness and need are important drivers of voters' preferred disaster responses. We then compare these patterns with observed disaster relief distributions (1993-2008). The results suggest that observed relief allocations largely mirror the structure of voter preferences with respect to affectedness and need, but not political ties. These findings have implications for an ongoing debate over the electoral effects of natural disasters, voters' retrospective evaluations of incumbent performance, and the extent to which divide-the-dollar politics decisions align with mass preferences
Replication Data for: Reforms and Redistribution: Disentangling the Egoistic and Sociotropic Origins of Voter Preferences
Replication Data for: Reforms and Redistribution: Disentangling the Egoistic and Sociotropic Origins of Voter Preference
Replication Data for: Ready When the Big One Comes? Natural Disasters and Mass Support for Preparedness Investment
Societies can address collective threats such as natural disasters or pandemics by investing in preparedness (ex ante) or by offering compensation after an adverse event has occurred (ex post). What explains which of these options voters prefer? We study how personal exposure and policy knowledge affect mass support for long-term disaster preparedness, a type of long-term investment meant to cope with an increasingly destructive and frequent class of events. We first assess whether support for preparedness reflects personal experience and find that neither subjective nor geo-coded measures of disaster exposure predict policy preferences. Second, we explore whether this finding can be explained by misperceptions about the features of the available policy options. We find that revealing the damage reductions associated with preparedness strongly reduces opposition to long-term investment. These results suggest that opposition to preparing for collective threats may depend more on informational deficiencies than on personal experience with realized risks
Replication Data for: Reforms and Redistribution: Disentangling the Egoistic and Sociotropic Origins of Voter Preferences
Replication Data for: Reforms and Redistribution: Disentangling the Egoistic and Sociotropic Origins of Voter Preference
Replication Data for Bechtel/Scheve: "Who Cooperates? Reciprocity and the Causal Effect of Expected Cooperation in Representative Samples"
Replication Data for "Who Cooperates? Reciprocity and the Causal Effect of Expected Cooperation in Representative Samples
Replication Data for Bechtel/Scheve: "Who Cooperates? Reciprocity and the Causal Effect of Expected Cooperation in Representative Samples"
Replication Data for "Who Cooperates? Reciprocity and the Causal Effect of Expected Cooperation in Representative Samples
- …
