1 to 10 of 610 Results
Jun 16, 2025
Jidong Chen; Yukun Wang; Ming-ang Zhang; Xingyu Zhou, 2025, "Replication Data for: Effective yet Limited: On the Political Consequences of Local Deliberative Governance in China", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/O15RGJ, Harvard Dataverse, V1
How can local governments in developing countries, constrained by limited resources, identify and respond to the most pressing public demands? This paper posits that public deliberative platforms, even those with controlled agendas, can be instrumental in this regard by facilitating communication between local elites and ordinary citizens, thereby... |
Jun 10, 2025
Ankori-Karlinsky, Lee-Or; Robert Blair; Gottlieb, Jessica; Moore-Berg, Samantha, 2025, "Replication Data for: Content that's as Good as Contact? Vicarious Intergroup Contact and the Promise of Depolarization at Scale", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HVSWTH, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:qmiwH3yz5CVNGkbJHeLMIQ== [fileUNF]
Can observing opposing partisans engage in dialogue depolarize Americans at scale? Partisan animosity poses a challenge to democracy in the United States. Direct intergroup contact interventions have shown promise in reducing partisan polarization, but are costly, time-consuming, and sensitive to subtle changes in implementation. Vicarious intergro... |
Jun 10, 2025
Engelhardt, Andrew; Kam, Cindy, 2025, "Replication Data for: A Racial Reckoning? Racial Attitudes in the Wake of the Murder of George Floyd", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/11KPQY, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:SGpyMSovTmpI2Cb/NXOhmw== [fileUNF]
Did George Floyd’s murder and its ensuing protests in the summer of 2020 produce a racial reckoning? Conventional social-science accounts, emphasizing the stability of racial attitudes, suggest such a reckoning is unlikely. In contrast, we theorize how these events may have altered Americans’ racial attitudes, in broadly progressive or in potential... |
Jun 9, 2025
Alcocer, Marco; Angie Torres-Beltran, 2025, "Replication Data for: Female Mayors and Violence Against Women: Evidence from Mexico", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/1KEFJ5, Harvard Dataverse, V1
This study examines whether women politicians address violence against women more effectively than their male counterparts at the local level in Mexico. Using a regression discontinuity design that leverages close mayoral elections, we find that women mayors reduce some of the most egregious violent crimes committed against women, with estimates su... |
Jun 9, 2025
Rojas, Daniel; Resmini, Fabio, 2025, "Replication Data for: Government Ideology and Support for Redistribution among the Wealthy", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/0TMLTI, Harvard Dataverse, V1
When and why do wealthy individuals support redistribution? Under standard political economy models, preferences for redistribution are a function of material conditions. The partisanship literature, on the contrary, argues that partisan identification determines redistributive preferences. We move beyond this dichotomy to argue that the ideology o... |
Jun 9, 2025
Sevi, Semra; Green, Donald, 2025, "Replication Data for Legislative Reciprocity: Using a Proposal Lottery to Identify Causal Effects", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/K143VW, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:Wafl3X8jjEhp0bukGyxEkQ== [fileUNF]
Although much has been written on legislative reciprocity, rarely have scholars had an opportunity to leverage a randomly-assigned asset to assess whether and how legislators reciprocate when their colleagues assist them. Using the lottery that allows Canadian Members of Parliament (MPs) to propose bills or motions, we examine whether MPs' priority... |
Jun 5, 2025
Nershi, Karen, 2025, "Replication Data for: How Strong Are International Standards in Practice? Evidence from Cryptocurrency Transactions", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/JMURRG, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:JlBISHHtAGgA4j6xsFcTNw== [fileUNF]
Despite widespread adoption of international anti-money laundering standards over the last thirty years, their effectiveness remains poorly understood due to persistent data limitations. I address this gap in the scholarship by leveraging cryptocurrency transaction data to assess how specific regulatory design features shape compliance. Using bunch... |
Jun 3, 2025
Scholten, Melle; Zhirkov, Kirill, 2025, "Replication Data for: Public and Expert Preferences in Survey Experiments on Foreign Policy: Evidence from Parallel Conjoint Analyses", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/F0TFGQ, Harvard Dataverse, V1
The boom in published survey experiments in the international relations literature has allowed researchers to make valid causal inferences on longstanding foreign policy debates such as democratic peace, audience costs, and signaling. However, most of these experiments rely on mass samples, whereas foreign policy is arguably more technocratically d... |
May 30, 2025
Amat, Francesc; Arenas, Andreu; Falcó-Gimeno, Albert; Muñoz, Jordi, 2025, "Replication Data for: Pandemics meet democracy: The footprint of COVID-19 on democratic attitudes", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/WO5QEX, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:Ed+unKODc4CURM+5B/DXYQ== [fileUNF]
How did the COVID-19 outbreak affect citizens' democratic preferences? Were the changes persistent or temporary? We track a representative sample of Spanish citizens before, during, and after the pandemic, with eight survey waves from January 2020 until January 2024. We compare democratic attitudes before and after the pandemic with individual fixe... |
May 30, 2025
Foellmi, Reto; Heim, Rino; Schmid, Lukas, 2025, "Replication Data for: Voter Turnout and Selective Abstention in Concurrent Votes", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/VTJQLK, Harvard Dataverse, V1
This paper studies voter turnout and selective abstention on voting days with more than one election or referendum. We extend the rational choice model to a setting with multiple concurrent votes. The model is based on a voter's net benefit, which includes a vote's salience and information costs. It explains how the net benefit of different concurr... |