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Working paper
Polarization without Parties: Term Limits and Legislative Partisanship in Nebraska's Unicameral Legislature
In: State Politics & Policy Quarterly (Forthcoming)
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Party Power and the Causal Effect of Endorsements
In: APSA 2013 Annual Meeting Paper
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Working paper
Primary Electorates vs. Party Elites: Who are the Polarizers?
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Working paper
Does Public Election Funding Create More Extreme Legislators? Evidence from Arizona and Maine
In: State politics & policy quarterly: the official journal of the State Politics and Policy section of the American Political Science Association, Band 15, Heft 1, S. 24-40
ISSN: 1946-1607
AbstractWe investigate whether Maine and Arizona's Clean Elections laws, which provide public funding for state legislative candidates, are responsible for producing a new cadre of legislators who are unusually ideologically extreme. We find that there is essentially no important difference in the legislative voting behavior of "clean" funded legislators and traditionally funded ones in either Arizona or Maine: those who are financed by private donors are no more or less ideologically extreme than those who are supported by the state. This finding calls into question some concerns about the effects on polarization of money generally and public funding in particular.
Mobilizing Marginalized Groups among Party Elites
In: The Forum: a journal of applied research in contemporary politics, Band 12, Heft 2
ISSN: 1540-8884
A Primary Cause of Partisanship? Nomination Systems and Legislator Ideology
In: American Journal of Political Science, v58, n2, April 2014, pp. 337-351
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