Efforts to educate citizens about the candidates and issues at stake in elections are widespread. These include distributing voter guides describing candidates’ policy views and interactive tools conveying similar information. Do these voter education tools help voters identify candidates who share their policy views? We address this question by conducting survey experiments that randomly assign a nonpartisan voter guide, political party endorsements, a spatial map showing voters their own and the candidates’ ideological positions, or both a spatial map and party endorsements. We find that each type of information strengthens the relationship between voters’ policy views and those of the candidates they choose. These effects are larges...
Voters are often highly dependent on partisanship to structure their preferences toward political ca...
We introduce experimental research design to the study of policy diffusion in order to better unders...
Cues and heuristics—like party, gender, and race/ethnicity—help voters choose among a set of candida...
Citizens in representative democracies receive party endorsements and policy information when choosi...
We develop and validate a novel experimental design that builds a bridge between experimental resear...
When voters learn about candidates' issue positions during election campaigns, does it affect how th...
We elicit citizens' preferences over hypothetical candidates by applying conjoint survey experiments...
Political campaigns spend months ahead of an election contacting voters. Through voter contact, poli...
Can voters learn meaningful information about candidates from their electoral campaigns? As with job...
I argue that citizens alter their views of candidates' ideological and issue positions in response t...
Electoral democracies are built on the idea of representation. The electorate selects politicians to...
A large class of theoretical models posits that voters choose candidates on the basis of issue congr...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
Contemporary efforts to evaluate representation often compare survey measures of how citizens say th...
Elite support for modifying electoral institutions and policies generally depends on whether a propo...
Voters are often highly dependent on partisanship to structure their preferences toward political ca...
We introduce experimental research design to the study of policy diffusion in order to better unders...
Cues and heuristics—like party, gender, and race/ethnicity—help voters choose among a set of candida...
Citizens in representative democracies receive party endorsements and policy information when choosi...
We develop and validate a novel experimental design that builds a bridge between experimental resear...
When voters learn about candidates' issue positions during election campaigns, does it affect how th...
We elicit citizens' preferences over hypothetical candidates by applying conjoint survey experiments...
Political campaigns spend months ahead of an election contacting voters. Through voter contact, poli...
Can voters learn meaningful information about candidates from their electoral campaigns? As with job...
I argue that citizens alter their views of candidates' ideological and issue positions in response t...
Electoral democracies are built on the idea of representation. The electorate selects politicians to...
A large class of theoretical models posits that voters choose candidates on the basis of issue congr...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
Contemporary efforts to evaluate representation often compare survey measures of how citizens say th...
Elite support for modifying electoral institutions and policies generally depends on whether a propo...
Voters are often highly dependent on partisanship to structure their preferences toward political ca...
We introduce experimental research design to the study of policy diffusion in order to better unders...
Cues and heuristics—like party, gender, and race/ethnicity—help voters choose among a set of candida...