Election day registration is among the solutions suggested for remedying low voter turnout in the United States. This analysis uses a quasi-experimental time-series design to test the hypothesis that states adopting election day registration increase voter turnout in comparison to states that do not reform their election procedures. The similarities in the time series of voter turnout in the experimental and control states suggest that observed changes in states adopting election day registration resulted from extraneous factors. Copyright 1995 by The Policy Studies Organization.
The number of states with election-day registration (EDR) of voters doubled in the early 1990s, prov...
R. Michael Alvarez of the California Institute of Technology and Jonathan Nagler of NYU analyze the ...
Many researchers blame voter registration requirements for inequalities in turnout rates across vari...
drop in turnout has inspired many reform proposals to increase turnout. One such proposal allows vot...
Voter registration is widely viewed as a barrier to voter participation in general, and especially s...
Voter registration is widely viewed as a barrier to voter participation in general, and especially s...
State governments have experimented with a variety of election laws to make voting more convenient a...
We exploit a natural experiment in Massachusetts in 2012 to estimate the causal effect of lowering v...
The United States has lower turnout than almost all other long-term democracies. Low turnout in the ...
Voter registration, it is widely argued, raises the costs of voting, thereby decreasing turnout. Stu...
This project focuses on the effects of recent electoral reforms on voter participation. The project ...
This research examines the effects of certain institutional mechanisms on voter turnout, in order to...
Many researchers blame voter registration requirements for inequalities in turnout rates across vari...
Thesis (M.P.P.A., Public Policy and Administration) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009...
R. Michael Alvarez of the California Institute of Technology and Jonathan Nagler of NYU analyze the ...
The number of states with election-day registration (EDR) of voters doubled in the early 1990s, prov...
R. Michael Alvarez of the California Institute of Technology and Jonathan Nagler of NYU analyze the ...
Many researchers blame voter registration requirements for inequalities in turnout rates across vari...
drop in turnout has inspired many reform proposals to increase turnout. One such proposal allows vot...
Voter registration is widely viewed as a barrier to voter participation in general, and especially s...
Voter registration is widely viewed as a barrier to voter participation in general, and especially s...
State governments have experimented with a variety of election laws to make voting more convenient a...
We exploit a natural experiment in Massachusetts in 2012 to estimate the causal effect of lowering v...
The United States has lower turnout than almost all other long-term democracies. Low turnout in the ...
Voter registration, it is widely argued, raises the costs of voting, thereby decreasing turnout. Stu...
This project focuses on the effects of recent electoral reforms on voter participation. The project ...
This research examines the effects of certain institutional mechanisms on voter turnout, in order to...
Many researchers blame voter registration requirements for inequalities in turnout rates across vari...
Thesis (M.P.P.A., Public Policy and Administration) -- California State University, Sacramento, 2009...
R. Michael Alvarez of the California Institute of Technology and Jonathan Nagler of NYU analyze the ...
The number of states with election-day registration (EDR) of voters doubled in the early 1990s, prov...
R. Michael Alvarez of the California Institute of Technology and Jonathan Nagler of NYU analyze the ...
Many researchers blame voter registration requirements for inequalities in turnout rates across vari...