1,721,114 research outputs found

    Replication Data for: Indigent Defense Caseloads in Texas

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    .do and .dta files for replication purposes. See README for further information related to this projec

    Replication Data for: Constructing Images of the Divine: Latent Heterogeneity in Americans’ Impressions of God

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    Data and replication files for: "Constructing Images of the Divine: Latent Heterogeneity in Americans’ Impressions of God.

    Replication Data for: "Perceptions of elites and (asymmetric) sorting"

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    Replication analyses (.do) and data files (.dta) for "Perceptions of elites and (asymmetric) sorting

    Replication Data for: "The psychometric properties of the Christian nationalism index"

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    Replication files for "The psychometric properties of the Christian nationalism index.

    Replication Data for: "Perceptions of elites and (asymmetric) sorting"

    No full text
    Replication analyses (.do) and data files (.dta) for "Perceptions of elites and (asymmetric) sorting

    Replication Data for: Indigent Defense Caseloads in Texas

    No full text
    .do and .dta files for replication purposes. See README for further information related to this projec

    Replication Data for: Constructing Images of the Divine: Latent Heterogeneity in Americans’ Impressions of God

    No full text
    Data and replication files for: "Constructing Images of the Divine: Latent Heterogeneity in Americans’ Impressions of God.

    Land Grant Application- Davis, Nicholas (Hollis)

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    Land grant application submitted to the Maine Land Office on behalf of Nicholas Davis for service in the Revolutionary War, by their widow Abigail.https://digitalmaine.com/revolutionary_war_me_land_office/1240/thumbnail.jp

    Replication Data for: Change We Can Believe In: Structural and Content Dynamics within Belief Networks

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    Scholars use network analysis as an analytical framework for exploring the structural properties of mass ideology. This manuscript incorporates two important, though ignored features in past research by investigating how time shapes the properties of belief networks for different populations of people—those who exhibit high and low levels of political knowledge. We find that (1) belief network density increases asymmetrically among people with high relative to low knowledge; (2) symbolic preferences are more central to belief networks irrespective of survey timing or population; in contrast, policy beliefs exhibit some increase in centrality over time among the politically knowledgeable; and, (3) a belief's centrality is unrelated to the amount of change it explains in other beliefs. Troublingly, this latter finding presents problems for describing belief networks using the vernacular of Conversian belief systems—a disconnect that seems grounded in the mismatch between Converse's individual-level theory and network analysis' population-based properties
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