Studying political conflict in legislatures is necessary for understanding many issues related to governance, but changes in who serves and what is debated creates difficulties for characterizing that conflict over time. Focusing on the enduring issue of civil rights in the U.S. since Reconstruction, we show that current methods and measures used to characterize elite ideological disagreements are hard to interpret and/or reconcile with widely accepted historical accounts because of their failure to adequately account for the policies being voted upon and the consequences of the iterative lawmaking process. Incorporating information about the policies being voted provides a starkly different portrait of elite conflict -- not only are contem...
Conflict among legislators has been an ever-present component of the legislative process in the U.S....
Abstract Since the mid-twentieth century, elite political behavior in the United Stat...
Legislative parties respond to the changing preferences of the citizens they represent through the a...
This article offers a new perspective on the history of American democratization, tracing the evolut...
by focusing on two key concepts: party homogeneity and party polarization. With a few notable except...
Over the past few decades, there has been a considerable increase in the level of partisan conflict....
We investigate institutional explanations for Congress's choice to fragment statutory frameworks for...
Though we know much about majority party agenda control in the House of Representatives during the “...
Political polarization in America is often broken down for research into two key groups: mass polari...
American politics have become extremely polarized in recent decades. This deep po-litical divide has...
The ideological divide in contemporary American politics is at a historic high. In this regard, many...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship between the roll call voting behavior of Te...
The historical development of rules of debate in the UK House of Commons raises an important puzzle:...
This replication archive contains all data and code to replicate the results in "Measuring Political...
Conventional accounts of the Federal Convention of 1787 point to the many different compromises made...
Conflict among legislators has been an ever-present component of the legislative process in the U.S....
Abstract Since the mid-twentieth century, elite political behavior in the United Stat...
Legislative parties respond to the changing preferences of the citizens they represent through the a...
This article offers a new perspective on the history of American democratization, tracing the evolut...
by focusing on two key concepts: party homogeneity and party polarization. With a few notable except...
Over the past few decades, there has been a considerable increase in the level of partisan conflict....
We investigate institutional explanations for Congress's choice to fragment statutory frameworks for...
Though we know much about majority party agenda control in the House of Representatives during the “...
Political polarization in America is often broken down for research into two key groups: mass polari...
American politics have become extremely polarized in recent decades. This deep po-litical divide has...
The ideological divide in contemporary American politics is at a historic high. In this regard, many...
The purpose of this paper is to examine the relationship between the roll call voting behavior of Te...
The historical development of rules of debate in the UK House of Commons raises an important puzzle:...
This replication archive contains all data and code to replicate the results in "Measuring Political...
Conventional accounts of the Federal Convention of 1787 point to the many different compromises made...
Conflict among legislators has been an ever-present component of the legislative process in the U.S....
Abstract Since the mid-twentieth century, elite political behavior in the United Stat...
Legislative parties respond to the changing preferences of the citizens they represent through the a...