1,721,080 research outputs found
Replication Data for: "Republican Voters Prefer Candidates Who Have Conservative-Looking Faces: New Evidence From Exit Polls"
Christopher Y. Olivola, Dustin Tingley, Alexander Todorov, Forthcoming, Political Psycholog
Replication Data for: "Republican Voters Prefer Candidates Who Have Conservative-Looking Faces: New Evidence From Exit Polls"
Christopher Y. Olivola, Dustin Tingley, Alexander Todorov, Forthcoming, Political Psycholog
Replication Data for: The Political Economy of Inward FDI: Opposition to Chinese Mergers and Acquisitions
Replication data
2015, Chinese Journal of International Relations, 8(1):25-57, with Christopher Xu, Adam Chilton, and Helen Milne
Replication Data for: The Political Economy of Inward FDI: Opposition to Chinese Mergers and Acquisitions
Replication data
2015, Chinese Journal of International Relations, 8(1):25-57, with Christopher Xu, Adam Chilton, and Helen Milne
Sailing the Water's Edge: Domestic Politics and American Foreign Policy
Replication data for 2015 Princeton University Press boo
Sailing the Water's Edge: Domestic Politics and American Foreign Policy
Replication data for 2015 Princeton University Press boo
Reciprocity and Public Opposition to Foreign Direct Investment
Prior International Political Economy (IPE) public opinion research has primarily examined how economic and socio-cultural factors shape individuals’ views on the flows of goods, people, and capital. What has largely been ignored is whether individuals also care about rewarding or punishing foreign countries for their policies on these subjects. To test this possibility, we administered a series of conjoint and traditional survey experiments in the United States and China that examined how reciprocity influences opposition to foreign acquisitions of domestic companies. We find that reciprocity is an important determinant of public opinion on the regulation of foreign investments. This suggests the need to consider the policies that other countries adopt when trying to explain public attitudes towards global economic integration
Replication data for: Assortative Mating on Ideology Could Operate Through Olfactory Cues
Mates assort on political attitudes more than any other social, behavioral, or physical trait, besides religion. Yet the process by which ideologically similar mates end up together remains ambiguous. Mates do not appear to consciously select one another based on ideology, nor does similarity result from convergence. Recently, several lines of inquiry have converged on the finding that olfactory processes have an important role in both political ideology and mate selection. Here we integrate extant studies of attraction, ideology and olfaction, and explore the possibility that assortation on political attitudes may result, in part, from greater attraction to the scent of those with shared ideology. We conduct a study in which individuals evaluated the body odor of unknown others, observing that that individuals are more attracted to their ideological concomitants
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