Studies of American politics, particularly legislative politics, rely heavily on measures of the partisanship of a district. We develop a measurement model for this concept, estimating partisanship in the absence of election-specific, short- term factors, such as national-level swings specific to particular elections, incumbency advantage, and home-state effects in presidential elections. We estimate the measurement model using electoral returns and district-level demographic characteristics spanning five decades (1952–2000), letting us assess how the distribution of district partisanship has changed over time, in response to population movements and redistricting, particularly via the creation of majority-minority districts. We valid...
The development and elaboration of the spatial theory of voting has contributed greatly to the study...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
This note extends Melissa P. Collie’s “Universalism and the Parties in the U.S. House of Representat...
Studies of American politics, particularly legislative politics, rely heavily on measures of the par...
We derive a unified statistical method with which one can produce substantially improved definitions...
Studies of American politics frequently rely onmeasures of a district’s long-run partisan or ideolog...
Every ten years, states set about redrawing the lines of their Congressional districts. Scholars in ...
Correctly measuring district preferences is crucial for empirical research on legislative responsive...
Correctly measuring district preferences is crucial for empirical research on legislative responsive...
Prior research on congressional elections is decidedly candidate centered. While candidates are impo...
We clarify the theoretical foundations of partisan fairness standards for district-based democratic ...
We propose a comprehensive statistical model for analyzing multiparty, district-level elections. Thi...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Can electoral reforms such as an independent redistricting commission and the top-two primary create...
Scholars studying the determinants of congressional voting behavior have always faced the problem of...
The development and elaboration of the spatial theory of voting has contributed greatly to the study...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
This note extends Melissa P. Collie’s “Universalism and the Parties in the U.S. House of Representat...
Studies of American politics, particularly legislative politics, rely heavily on measures of the par...
We derive a unified statistical method with which one can produce substantially improved definitions...
Studies of American politics frequently rely onmeasures of a district’s long-run partisan or ideolog...
Every ten years, states set about redrawing the lines of their Congressional districts. Scholars in ...
Correctly measuring district preferences is crucial for empirical research on legislative responsive...
Correctly measuring district preferences is crucial for empirical research on legislative responsive...
Prior research on congressional elections is decidedly candidate centered. While candidates are impo...
We clarify the theoretical foundations of partisan fairness standards for district-based democratic ...
We propose a comprehensive statistical model for analyzing multiparty, district-level elections. Thi...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
Can electoral reforms such as an independent redistricting commission and the top-two primary create...
Scholars studying the determinants of congressional voting behavior have always faced the problem of...
The development and elaboration of the spatial theory of voting has contributed greatly to the study...
Many theoretical and empirical accounts of representation argue that primary elections are a polariz...
This note extends Melissa P. Collie’s “Universalism and the Parties in the U.S. House of Representat...