151 to 160 of 191 Results
Apr 30, 2014
Lu, Yang; Wu, Daniel; Yu, Kwok, 2014, "Replication data for: Re-Evaluation of the Low-Risk Anomaly in Finance via Matching", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/HJZIX8, Harvard Dataverse, V1
|
Apr 30, 2014
Kaufman, Aaron; Unal, Betul; McConney, Gregory, 2014, "Replication Data For: "Science Deserves Better'' Deserves Better: Replicating A Study on Replicating Studies", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/25634, Harvard Dataverse, V1
The reproducibility of published academic work is increasingly important across a wide array of fields from neuroscience to sociology to political science. If we as academics wish to create impactful research, we need to create faith in the larger research community that our work is valid, and a series of reproducibility scandals over the past deca... |
May 15, 2011
John Marshall; George Yin, 2011, "Replication data for: Dirty Competition: Do Export Patterns Influence Environmental Policy?", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/ESJ6JK, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Cao & Prakash (2009) argue that a country's environmental regulations are positively related to those of its structurally equivalent competitors because they engage in races in environmental regulations and their enforcement. We show that Cao & Prakash's results are not robust to some seemingly innocuous and theoretically-informed adjustments to th... |
May 9, 2011
James Conran, Jeremy Ferwerda, Yue Hou, 2011, "Replication data for: Mediated by Corporatism? The Effect of Left Partisanship on Wage Inequality", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/40GMC8, Harvard Dataverse, V2, UNF:5:sgm1IKRtzG+RTa2T57oYiw== [fileUNF]
David Rueda’s article, “Left Government, Policy, and Corporatism: Explaining the Influence of Partisanship on Inequality,” (World Politics, Winter 2008), suggests that the ability of left governments to affect wage inequality is conditional on the level of corporatism. This research note discusses specification and data errors present in the origin... |
May 9, 2011
Alexander Hertel-Fernandez; Konstantin Kashin, 2011, "Replication data for: Is Social Policy ‘Popularly Demanded’? Explaining Variation in American Unemployment Insurance Generosity", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/USRJR7, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Why is there so much variation in the generosity of social benefits across different governments? In this paper we evaluate explanations for variation in unemployment insurance (UI) generosity premised on the importance of interest groups as well as explanations premised on individual preferences and behavior. We do this by studying the sources of... |
May 9, 2011
Michael Gill; Ben Schneer; Ariel White, 2011, "Replication data for: Information Matters: Career Diversity and Expertise on 3-Judge Panels", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/Q9GR9E, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:5:II4oOhVbheTde3W/3mmBdw== [fileUNF]
|
May 9, 2011
Nils Hagerdal; Daniel Masterson, 2011, "Replication data for: Debating Media Freedom in the Arab World", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/PX85ZN, Harvard Dataverse, V1
Recent upheavals in the Arab world have sparked renewed interest in understanding its media environment. There is a common perception that Arab media has been tightly controlled and managed by autocratic leaders, particularly by using the issue of Palestine as a political tool to deflect popular attention from pressing domestic issues. We seek to u... |
May 9, 2011
2011, "Scrutinizing Lightened Scrutiny: The Divergence in Appellate Courts' Reactions to Larger Workloads", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/1H8AON, Harvard Dataverse, V1
|
May 8, 2011
Mark Bell and Nicholas Miller, 2011, "Replication data for: Questioning the Stability-Instability Paradox", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/FIJT3X, Harvard Dataverse, V1
|
May 8, 2011
Todd Kawakita; Colin Sulivan, 2011, "Replication data for: School Autonomy and Regression Discontinuity Imbalance", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/QO7VVS, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:5:0hmlpNlZEDo1ZBI56gWg4A== [fileUNF]
|