Leading theories of race and participation posit that minority voters are mobilized by co-ethnic candidates. However, past studies are unable to disentangle candidate effects from factors associated with the places from which candidates emerge. I reevaluate the links between candidate race, district composition, and turnout by leveraging a nationwide database of over 185 million individual registration records, including estimates for the race of every voter. Combining these records with detailed information about 3,000 recent congressional primary and general election candidates, I find that minority turnout is not higher in districts with minority candidates, after accounting for the relative size of the ethnic group within a district. In...
Abstract We demonstrate that the use of self-reported turnout data often results in misleading infer...
Every ten years, states set about redrawing the lines of their Congressional districts. Scholars in ...
Turnout in municipal elections is even lower than that in presidential elections. Yet the problem ha...
Recent work challenges traditional understandings of the link between race and voter turnout, sugges...
The following study is comprised of three essays, each examining a different manner by which race an...
Do minority voters respond to co-racial or co-ethnic candidates? That is does the increased chance ...
This study explores whether black and/or Latino respondents are more likely to over-report voting in...
This is the replication file for 'Cause or Effect', containing code to replicate all figures and tab...
Replication materials for Fairdosi, Amir Shawn, and Jon C. Rogowski. 2015. "Candidate Race, Partisan...
How do marginal voters differ from regular voters? I develop a method for comparing the partisan pre...
There is a widespread concern that imbalances in voter turnout across race and class have led to bia...
We examine the success of California's black, Latino, and Asian voters in ballot proposition electio...
The 2008 election marked an end to the longstanding gap in the level of black and white voter turnou...
In The Paradox of Representation David Lublin offers an unprecedented analysis of a vast range of ri...
Why does the relationship between income and partisanship vary across U.S. regions? Some answers ha...
Abstract We demonstrate that the use of self-reported turnout data often results in misleading infer...
Every ten years, states set about redrawing the lines of their Congressional districts. Scholars in ...
Turnout in municipal elections is even lower than that in presidential elections. Yet the problem ha...
Recent work challenges traditional understandings of the link between race and voter turnout, sugges...
The following study is comprised of three essays, each examining a different manner by which race an...
Do minority voters respond to co-racial or co-ethnic candidates? That is does the increased chance ...
This study explores whether black and/or Latino respondents are more likely to over-report voting in...
This is the replication file for 'Cause or Effect', containing code to replicate all figures and tab...
Replication materials for Fairdosi, Amir Shawn, and Jon C. Rogowski. 2015. "Candidate Race, Partisan...
How do marginal voters differ from regular voters? I develop a method for comparing the partisan pre...
There is a widespread concern that imbalances in voter turnout across race and class have led to bia...
We examine the success of California's black, Latino, and Asian voters in ballot proposition electio...
The 2008 election marked an end to the longstanding gap in the level of black and white voter turnou...
In The Paradox of Representation David Lublin offers an unprecedented analysis of a vast range of ri...
Why does the relationship between income and partisanship vary across U.S. regions? Some answers ha...
Abstract We demonstrate that the use of self-reported turnout data often results in misleading infer...
Every ten years, states set about redrawing the lines of their Congressional districts. Scholars in ...
Turnout in municipal elections is even lower than that in presidential elections. Yet the problem ha...