1 to 10 of 12 Results
Jul 23, 2020
Ura, Joseph, 2020, "Replication Data for "Ideology and Specific Support for the Supreme Court"", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/AXJHHQ, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:6cNZ8GGo7ij0E4UyTZcewQ== [fileUNF]
We develop and assess an account of ideological asymmetries in public support for the Supreme Court. We find that specific support for the Supreme Court is more strongly negatively related to perceptions that the Court is overly liberal than perceptions that the Court is overly conservative. Our findings provide a more complete theoretical account... |
Mar 18, 2016 - Research & Politics Dataverse
Ura, Joseph Daniel; Flink, Carla M., 2016, "Replication Data for: "Experience Counts: The Chief Justice, Management Tenure, and Strategic Behavior on the U.S. Supreme Court"", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/BSSEDQ, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:Z3YH3frlSBxn5c9HMAy+sw== [fileUNF]
Data and Stata code for replicating reported analysis. Abstract We develop and test a theoretical account of the effect of management tenure on the strategic behavior of the Chief Justice of the United States. Substantial evidence from a variety of learning models and the public management literature indicates that tenure (length of service) is pos... |
Mar 10, 2016 - Harvard Dataverse
Ura, Joseph, 2016, "Replication Data for: Managing the Supreme Court: The Chief Justice, Management, and Consensus", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/BMZRRC, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:i7cJ+a3qpah9Di503m4Jug== [fileUNF]
Ura, Joseph Daniel. and Carla M. Flink. 2016. "Managing the Supreme Court: The Chief Justice, Management, and Consensus." Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory 26(2): 185-196. |
Jun 4, 2015
Hall, Matthew E. K.; Ura, Joseph Daniel, 2015, "Replication Data for: Judicial Majoritarianism (2015) Journal of Politics", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/P4UOQ2, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:IQ1IL2yu+nK/IgW6BYzoQw== [fileUNF]
For decades, constitutional theorists have confronted the normative problems associated with judicial review by an unelected judiciary; yet some political scientists contend that judicial review actually tends to promote majoritarian interests. We evaluate the majoritarian nature of judicial review and test the political foundations that shape this... |
Feb 19, 2014
Ura, Joseph Daniel, 2014, "Replication data for: Backlash and Legitimation: Macro Political Responses to Supreme Court Decisions", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/24765, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:5:6FO0LUdDdLyPUqRr0R3aJw== [fileUNF]
Data and (Stata) code for replicating results reported in Backlash and Legitimation: Macro Political Responses to Supreme Court Decisions (Ura 2014) and its online appendix. |
Apr 2, 2013
Joseph Daniel Ura; Christopher R. Ellis, 2012, "Replication Data for Partisan Moods: Polarization and Party Preference Dynamics", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/LKRSXE, Harvard Dataverse, V3, UNF:5:UA5srKn7Nyjs0JiFVNUVLA== [fileUNF]
Inquiry into the origins of partisan polarization has generally treated polarization as a simple, symmetric phenomenon—the degree to which the worldviews of the mass Democratic and Republican parties have or have not diverged from one another. In this article, we disaggregate polarization into its constituent parts, the dynamic preferences of the m... |
Dec 8, 2011
Sylvia Manzano; Joseph Daniel Ura, 2011, "Replication data for: Desperately Seeking Sonia?: Latino Heterogeneity and Geographic Variation in Web Searches for Judge Sonia Sotomayor", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/VTF4B4, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:5:aH/ihRj5lwpI9Ei0UEYBgg== [fileUNF]
Linguistic heritage, cultural similarities, and experiences as ethnic minorities link Latinos in the United States, but distinctions on national origin, nativity, and geographic distribution may yield political differences. Previous investigations of Latino heterogeneity as a catalyst for unity or division are limited to narrow issue domains and th... |
Jul 14, 2011
Joseph Daniel Ura; Erica M. Socker, 2011, "Replication data for: The Behavioral Political Economy of Budget Deficits: How Starve the Beast Policies Feed the Machine", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/QJOJKV, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:5:zQa/pZR2HVXrywD/meHwQA== [fileUNF]
The notion of “starving the beast” has been an important justification for fiscal programs emphasizing revenue reductions since the mid-1970s. While the idea of restraining government spending by limiting government revenues has an intuitive appeal, there is convincing evidence the reducing federal tax rates without coordinated reductions in federa... |
Jul 11, 2011
Kaitlyn L. Sill; Joseph Daniel Ura; Stacia L. Haynie, 2011, "Replication data for: Strategic Passing and Opinion Assignemnt on the Burger Court", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/SR3ZJX, Harvard Dataverse, V2, UNF:5:axHkc0J0eQPQ4/DiyUSQag== [fileUNF]
Previous research indicates that U.S. Supreme Court justices who are likely to control opinion assignments may withhold votes in an initial round of conference voting in circumstances that suggest that this behavior has strategic origins. Specifically, scholars have suggested that justices may pass in conference voting to gain control over the opin... |
Feb 4, 2010
Joseph Daniel Ura, 2010, "Replication data for: The Supreme Court and Issue Attention: The Case of Homosexuality", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/8YMGKR, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:5:sGpi0Xn9JTTnl9Rf3lWCEg== [fileUNF]
Previous studies have shown that a small number of Supreme Court decisions that “rearrange[d] the . . . distribution of political benefits” have drawn the media’s attention to the underlying issues involved in those cases. This article provides an additional test of that empirical claim, examining the effects of the Supreme Court’s gay rights cases... |