Do presidents incorporate the preferences of the public into their foreign policy decisions? Previous scholarship has begun to sketch out the sources of variation in the policy–public opinion linkage, but we still lack a clear understanding of the factors that increase or decrease presidential responsiveness. To better explore the relationship, we conceptualize presidential foreign policy making as a five-stage process—problem representation, option generation, policy selection, implementation, and policy review—arguing that the degree to which presidents are responsive to public opinion varies with fluctuations in public attentiveness. At stages in which public interest is high, presidents are more likely to incorporate mass preferences in...
Studies of the role of foreign policy in American presidential elections go back to the 1950s. For a...
Scholarship on democratic responsiveness focuses on whether political outcomes reflect public opinio...
This paper explores mass attitudes toward unilateral presidential power. We argue that mass attitude...
This Independent Study tackles to question of, how do, or if, a president’s Leadership Traits show h...
Research on presidential agenda setting has rarely attempted to simultaneously assess the ability of...
To the degree that public opinion, as domestic variable, influences a leaders decision-making in the...
Few systematic studies of U.S. uses of force treat the inherent attributes of presidents as the key ...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 265-281) and index.Public expectations of the president and ...
The traditional model of agenda setting places the Presidency as the primary agenda setter in Americ...
Scholars traditionally frame presidential efforts to politicize the federal bureaucracy as the resul...
Vita.Three schools of thought have sought to explain the relationship between American foreign polic...
This research incorporates a decision-making theory which defines the linkage between the public, th...
In this dissertation, I examine the determinants of presidential responsiveness to public opinion, e...
This study utilizes Robert Putnam’s “Two Level Game Theory” to understand whether public opinion inf...
A long-standing curiosity in the presidency literature is whether the chief executive has the capaci...
Studies of the role of foreign policy in American presidential elections go back to the 1950s. For a...
Scholarship on democratic responsiveness focuses on whether political outcomes reflect public opinio...
This paper explores mass attitudes toward unilateral presidential power. We argue that mass attitude...
This Independent Study tackles to question of, how do, or if, a president’s Leadership Traits show h...
Research on presidential agenda setting has rarely attempted to simultaneously assess the ability of...
To the degree that public opinion, as domestic variable, influences a leaders decision-making in the...
Few systematic studies of U.S. uses of force treat the inherent attributes of presidents as the key ...
Includes bibliographical references (p. 265-281) and index.Public expectations of the president and ...
The traditional model of agenda setting places the Presidency as the primary agenda setter in Americ...
Scholars traditionally frame presidential efforts to politicize the federal bureaucracy as the resul...
Vita.Three schools of thought have sought to explain the relationship between American foreign polic...
This research incorporates a decision-making theory which defines the linkage between the public, th...
In this dissertation, I examine the determinants of presidential responsiveness to public opinion, e...
This study utilizes Robert Putnam’s “Two Level Game Theory” to understand whether public opinion inf...
A long-standing curiosity in the presidency literature is whether the chief executive has the capaci...
Studies of the role of foreign policy in American presidential elections go back to the 1950s. For a...
Scholarship on democratic responsiveness focuses on whether political outcomes reflect public opinio...
This paper explores mass attitudes toward unilateral presidential power. We argue that mass attitude...