This article presents new evidence on the efforts of states to collect and process information about themselves, their territories, and their populations. We compile data on five institutions and policies: the regular implementation of a reliable census, the regular release of statistical yearbooks, the introduction of civil and population registers, and the establishment of a government agency tasked with processing statistical information. Using item response theory methods, we generate an index of “information capacity” for 85 states from 1789 to the present. We then ask how political regime changes have influenced the development of information capacity over time. In contrast with the literature on democracy and fiscal capacity, we find...
Information is a critically important, yet hard to measure, component on policy innovation across st...
States are expected to raise revenue through taxation, provide security, enforce rights, deliver pub...
This dissertation involves three essays on state capacity. The first essay presents a formal model o...
This paper contributes to the literature on state capacity by creating a measure with far more compr...
The state has been “brought back in” and today state capacity is one of the most important research ...
This paper reviews the growing literature on “state capacity” in political science and related disci...
In this article we probe the effect of democratization on the state's administrative capacity. Using...
The literature on state capacity is often at odds with what constitutes state capacity, how to opera...
Economists generally assume the existence of sufficient institutions to sustain a market economy and...
This article analyses exposure to different sources of campaign information, and their effects on ci...
We present new evidence about the long-run relationship between state capacity -- the fiscal and adm...
Scholars of state and local politics have long faced the problem of data availability. The crux of t...
http://www.economist.com/specialreports/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15557477 The state has long been t...
This article is devoted to the study of the influence of government data performance on knowledge ca...
Political scientists have long suspected that differences in the degree to which governments are abl...
Information is a critically important, yet hard to measure, component on policy innovation across st...
States are expected to raise revenue through taxation, provide security, enforce rights, deliver pub...
This dissertation involves three essays on state capacity. The first essay presents a formal model o...
This paper contributes to the literature on state capacity by creating a measure with far more compr...
The state has been “brought back in” and today state capacity is one of the most important research ...
This paper reviews the growing literature on “state capacity” in political science and related disci...
In this article we probe the effect of democratization on the state's administrative capacity. Using...
The literature on state capacity is often at odds with what constitutes state capacity, how to opera...
Economists generally assume the existence of sufficient institutions to sustain a market economy and...
This article analyses exposure to different sources of campaign information, and their effects on ci...
We present new evidence about the long-run relationship between state capacity -- the fiscal and adm...
Scholars of state and local politics have long faced the problem of data availability. The crux of t...
http://www.economist.com/specialreports/displaystory.cfm?story_id=15557477 The state has long been t...
This article is devoted to the study of the influence of government data performance on knowledge ca...
Political scientists have long suspected that differences in the degree to which governments are abl...
Information is a critically important, yet hard to measure, component on policy innovation across st...
States are expected to raise revenue through taxation, provide security, enforce rights, deliver pub...
This dissertation involves three essays on state capacity. The first essay presents a formal model o...