3,865 research outputs found
Replication Data for: Campaign Mailers and Intent to Turnout: Do Similar Field and Survey Experiments Yield the Same Conclusions?
We present findings from a survey experiment that mirrors a pair of eld experiments reported by Doherty and Adler (2014). Those field experiments found that both positive and negative partisan mailers increased reported intent to turnout among the unaffliated likely voters they targeted and surveyed by phone shortly after the mailers were sent. Results of our survey-based experiment, which used images of the mailers as stimuli, indicate that exposure to these messages depresses intent to turnout among likely Independent voters. The findings demonstrate that field and survey-based experiments that look remarkably similar on their face can yield divergent answers to a seemingly simple question: Does political advertising mobilize or demobilize independent voters
Replication Data for: Social Signals and Participation in the Tunisian Revolution
This archive includes replication materials for Doherty and Schraeder's "Social Signals and Participation in the Tunisian Revolution."
To conduct replication you should put the two data files and two DO files in a folder and nest an empty folder named "tables" in that folder. In the replication.do file, set the working directory to this "tables" folder.
FILES:
2012_survey.dta: Data from 2012 Survey
adbii_merged_data_file_english_final_0.dta: Data from second wave of Arab Barometer (also available here: http://www.arabbarometer.org/instruments-and-data-files)
replication.do: Stata DO file to set directory and conduct analysis of 2012 Survey. This file calls ab_replication.do.
ab_replication.do: Conduct recoding and analysis of Arab Barometer, Second Wave data
Replication Data for: Social Signals and Participation in the Tunisian Revolution
This archive includes replication materials for Doherty and Schraeder's "Social Signals and Participation in the Tunisian Revolution."
To conduct replication you should put the two data files and two DO files in a folder and nest an empty folder named "tables" in that folder. In the replication.do file, set the working directory to this "tables" folder.
FILES:
2012_survey.dta: Data from 2012 Survey
adbii_merged_data_file_english_final_0.dta: Data from second wave of Arab Barometer (also available here: http://www.arabbarometer.org/instruments-and-data-files)
replication.do: Stata DO file to set directory and conduct analysis of 2012 Survey. This file calls ab_replication.do.
ab_replication.do: Conduct recoding and analysis of Arab Barometer, Second Wave data
Recommended from our members
Through the Lens of Color: An Interview with Gareth Doherty, Author of Paradoxes of Green: Landscapes of a City-State
This interview by Mark Tirpak with Gareth Doherty of Harvard University Graduate School of Design, focuses on his Paradoxes of Green: Landscapes of a City-State (University of California Press, 2017). With Paradoxes of Green (2017) and via the interview, Doherty recounts some of the findings of his ethnographic fieldwork in the Kingdom of Bahrain and describes tensions arising from differing conceptions of what ‘green’ means or signifies within this growing and predominantly arid region. An argument that Doherty makes in Paradoxes of Green (2017) is that color and form are interlinked, and that color deserves deeper consideration by policy-makers and other formal shapers of cities. The interview draws from Paradoxes of Green (2017) to discuss some of Doherty’s findings as well as his latest work on the intersections between landscape architecture and anthropology.Version of Recor
Through the Lens of Color: An Interview with Gareth Doherty, Author of Paradoxes of Green: Landscapes of a City-State
This interview by Mark Tirpak with Gareth Doherty of Harvard University Graduate School of Design, focuses on his Paradoxes of Green: Landscapes of a City-State (University of California Press, 2017). With Paradoxes of Green (2017) and via the interview, Doherty recounts some of the findings of his ethnographic fieldwork in the Kingdom of Bahrain and describes tensions arising from differing conceptions of what ‘green’ means or signifies within this growing and predominantly arid region. An argument that Doherty makes in Paradoxes of Green (2017) is that color and form are interlinked, and that color deserves deeper consideration by policy-makers and other formal shapers of cities. The interview draws from Paradoxes of Green (2017) to discuss some of Doherty’s findings as well as his latest work on the intersections between landscape architecture and anthropology
sj-pdf-1-apr-10.1177_1532673X211053211 – Supplemental Material for What Can Conjoint Experiments Tell Us about Americans’ Abortion Attitudes?
Supplemental Material, sj-pdf-1-apr-10.1177_1532673X211053211 for What Can Conjoint Experiments Tell Us about Americans’ Abortion Attitudes? by David Doherty in American Politics Research</p
Replication Data for: Partisan Identities and Interpretations of Economic Data
Replication materials for Partisan Identities and Interpretations of Economic Data. Includes data files and Stata DO file
Replication Data for: Who is Interested in Participating in Participatory Budgeting?
Inequalities in terms of who participates in politics yield policy outcomes that fail to reflect the interests of the broader public. Because these processes fail to engage the full citizenry in political decision-making processes, they are also markers of an anemic civic culture. Advocates of participatory budgeting (PB)---a process implemented at the sub-national level in thousands of cities in the United States and beyond that invites residents to participate directly in the process of allocating public resources for local projects---argue that it can alleviate these inequalities. They argue that features of the PB process make it ripe for engaging new participants in the political process and weaving a more inclusive social fabric. We examine the correlates of interest in participating in PB using a survey of Cook County residents. We also consider the extent to which the policy priorities of those who are interested in participating diverge from those who are less interested. Although we find evidence that the process is particularly appealing to younger respondents and those who identify as Latine or Black (as opposed to White), we also find that interest is higher among those with higher socioeconomic status and those who perceive conditions in their neighborhood to already be good. Our evidence also suggests that inequalities in who is interested in participating may not radically affect policy outcomes. However, those who decline to participate cannot reap the broader social and political benefits advocates hope the PB process can foster
Replication Data for: "When Is Changing Policy Positions Costly for Politicians? Experimental Evidence"
Although changing policy positions is often thought of as costly for politicians, this may not always be the case. We present findings from two survey experiments designed to assess how people respond to politicians who change positions on an issue. We examine the direct effects of position changes on both summary evaluations of a candidate and ratings of a candidate’s character. We find that the effect of changing positions varies across issues and that the passage of time attenuates the negative effects of a change of position. We also find that although individual voters prefer a candidate who moves closer to their own preferred policy position to one who sticks to a disliked policy position, in the aggregate changing policy positions may be costly unless the prospective new position is supported by a supermajority of the public
- …
