Political Behavior publishes original research in the general fields of political behavior, institutions, processes, and policies. Coverage focuses on conventional and unconventional political behavior of individuals or small groups, and of large organizations that participate in the political process such as parties, interest groups, political action committees, governmental agencies, and mass media.
Featured Dataverses

In order to use this feature you must have at least one published or linked dataverse.

Publish Dataverse

Are you sure you want to publish your dataverse? Once you do so it must remain published.

Publish Dataverse

This dataverse cannot be published because the dataverse it is in has not been published.

Delete Dataverse

Are you sure you want to delete your dataverse? You cannot undelete this dataverse.

Advanced Search

431 to 437 of 437 Results
Dec 18, 2015
Perez, Efren, 2015, "Rolling Off the Tongue Into the Top-of-the-Head: Explaining Language Effects on Public Opinion", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/2B9T2H, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:xl8sKiY9zOgQQlzePnZ58w== [fileUNF]
These data and batch files replicate the results reported in the article "Rolling Off the Tongue Into the Top-of-the-Head: Explaining Language Effects on Public Opinion."
Oct 26, 2015
Filindra, Alexandra, 2015, "Replication Data for: Racial Resentment and Whites’ Gun Policy Preferences in Contemporary America", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/MFJMQN, Harvard Dataverse, V1
STATA datafile and dofile for experimental results.
Oct 12, 2015 - Replication data for: "Intra-Party Politics and Public Opinion: How Candidate Selection Processes affect Citizens' Satisfaction with Democracy" Dataverse
Shomer, Yael; Put, Gert-Jan; Gedalya-Lavy, Einat, 2015, "Replication Data for: Intra-Party Politics and Public Opinion: How Candidate Selection Processes affect Citizens' Satisfaction with Democracy", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/4B5AD1, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:mZpMff35Hg/xDBxvKtcDUw== [fileUNF]
[Abstract]: Scholars often mention the centrality of parties for the democratic political system. Indeed political parties are indispensable institutions for the linkage between state and society, and should not remain absent in any comparative analysis of citizens' political attitudes. Yet, only rarely do scholars study how parties shape people's...
Oct 12, 2015
[Abstract]: Scholars often mention the centrality of parties for the democratic political system. Indeed political parties are indispensable institutions for the linkage between state and society, and should not remain absent in any comparative analysis of citizens' political attitudes. Yet, only rarely do scholars study how parties shape people's...
Oct 8, 2015
Sønderskov, Kim Mannemar; Dinesen, Peter Thisted, 2015, "Replication Data for: "Trusting the state, trusting each other? The effect of institutional trust on social trust"", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/12SK8B, Harvard Dataverse, V1
[Abstract:] Trust in state institutions is a prominent explanation of social trust. However, previous—mainly cross-sectional—analyses provide limited causal evidence regarding the relationship between institutional trust and social trust and it is thus essentially unknown whether an observed relationship reflects reverse causality (social trust for...
Oct 7, 2015
Rogowski, Jon; Sutherland, Joseph, 2015, "Replication Data for: How Ideology Fuels Affective Polarization", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/B9OYRP, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:s6G7e+XDtltrO2Z0aqf30A== [fileUNF]
Scholars have reached mixed conclusions about the implications of increased political polarization for citizen decision-making. In this paper, we argue that citizens respond to ideological divergence with heightened affective polarization. Using a survey experiment conducted with a nationally representative sample of U.S. citizens, we find that inc...
Sep 22, 2015
Doherty, David, 2015, "Replication Data for: "When Is Changing Policy Positions Costly for Politicians? Experimental Evidence"", https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/MCMKKT, Harvard Dataverse, V1, UNF:6:4pupZikTHIeuMue7QY479A== [fileUNF]
Although changing policy positions is often thought of as costly for politicians, this may not always be the case. We present findings from two survey experiments designed to assess how people respond to politicians who change positions on an issue. We examine the direct effects of position changes on both summary evaluations of a candidate and rat...
Add Data

Sign up or log in to create a dataverse or add a dataset.

Share Dataverse

Share this dataverse on your favorite social media networks.

Link Dataverse
Reset Modifications

Are you sure you want to reset the selected metadata fields? If you do this, any customizations (hidden, required, optional) you have done will no longer appear.