In comparative social science, policy feedback has become a widely popular device with which to understand policy persistence and the impacts of state-making and political entrepreneurship on mass opinion. Although the existence of such effects is frequently taken for granted, recent work has challenged prevailing assumptions about the unproblematic nature of feedback from policy change to mass opinion. This is an opportune time to put policy feedback to further test. We do so by bringing to bear the two main theoretical perspectives that underlie established and recent scholarship, and applying for the first time survey experiments to evaluate key expectations. Focusing on the relatively novel domain of counter-terrorism policy, we analyze...
What affects global public opinion about U.S. foreign policy? The authors examine this question usin...
This dissertation identifies the determinants of public opinion in coercive terrorist crises and exp...
Most legislation neither affects nor interests citizens equally. But should this variation in intere...
This element explores early and more recent contributions of the policy feedback literature to clari...
Abstract This study extends the literature on policy feedback and explores the extent to which publi...
Opinion polls may inadvertently affect public opinion, as people may change their attitudes after le...
The policy feedback literature was initially concerned with explaining how positive feedback could l...
For the past ten years, feedback studies on mass publics have gained renewed scholarly attention. Ta...
This study examines how changes in perceptions of threat affect individuals’ policy views, as well a...
This paper focuses on the transferability of policy feedback and respon- siveness theories. These th...
The concept policy feedback is the idea that policies themselves may be political forces. Instead of...
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between level of violence in terrorist atta...
This paper considers the implications of construal level theory in the context of survey experiments...
This article asks how the most prominent recent changes in European welfare states are relevant for ...
This paper aims to include citizens in the analysis of policy change over time. By bringing together...
What affects global public opinion about U.S. foreign policy? The authors examine this question usin...
This dissertation identifies the determinants of public opinion in coercive terrorist crises and exp...
Most legislation neither affects nor interests citizens equally. But should this variation in intere...
This element explores early and more recent contributions of the policy feedback literature to clari...
Abstract This study extends the literature on policy feedback and explores the extent to which publi...
Opinion polls may inadvertently affect public opinion, as people may change their attitudes after le...
The policy feedback literature was initially concerned with explaining how positive feedback could l...
For the past ten years, feedback studies on mass publics have gained renewed scholarly attention. Ta...
This study examines how changes in perceptions of threat affect individuals’ policy views, as well a...
This paper focuses on the transferability of policy feedback and respon- siveness theories. These th...
The concept policy feedback is the idea that policies themselves may be political forces. Instead of...
The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between level of violence in terrorist atta...
This paper considers the implications of construal level theory in the context of survey experiments...
This article asks how the most prominent recent changes in European welfare states are relevant for ...
This paper aims to include citizens in the analysis of policy change over time. By bringing together...
What affects global public opinion about U.S. foreign policy? The authors examine this question usin...
This dissertation identifies the determinants of public opinion in coercive terrorist crises and exp...
Most legislation neither affects nor interests citizens equally. But should this variation in intere...