The use of racially charged imagery and messages has a long history in US politics. But how do such racial cues affect how Americans participate politically beyond holding opinions? In new research, Hans Hassell and Neil Visalvanich find that whites are less likely to participate politically when prompted by minority advocacy. They argue because of race’s influence on political motivation, political elites or interest groups could use racial priming to motivate or demotivate public political action, not just change political opinions
This article attempts to shed some light on an unintended consequence of the term limit movement, it...
Building on models of electoral competition with reputational mechanisms, I show that term limits de...
Reelection-minded legislators look to participation to discern how potential voters might react to a...
The literature shows that term-limited state legislatures are more polarized than their non-term-lim...
A number of U.S. states currently impose some form of legislative term limits in order to ensure com...
With legislative gridlock at the national level, recent years have seen state legislatures take new ...
The movement to limit the number of terms served by legislators at both national and state levels ha...
While partisan gridlock has become a common occurrence in the US Congress, this is also often the ca...
The use of racially charged imagery and messages has a long history in US politics. But how do such ...
Why do some members of Congress vote more on the extremes of their party than others? I argue that l...
How does institutional differences across state legislatures representation and the political pathwa...
This study uses opinion data to assess the basis of public support for California\u27s term limit in...
In this article, I examine how term limits affect the amount of time that legislators focus on const...
Supporters of term limits argued that they would decrease interest group influence. Using data from ...
Do term limits make state legislatures more descriptively representative of their population? If the...
This article attempts to shed some light on an unintended consequence of the term limit movement, it...
Building on models of electoral competition with reputational mechanisms, I show that term limits de...
Reelection-minded legislators look to participation to discern how potential voters might react to a...
The literature shows that term-limited state legislatures are more polarized than their non-term-lim...
A number of U.S. states currently impose some form of legislative term limits in order to ensure com...
With legislative gridlock at the national level, recent years have seen state legislatures take new ...
The movement to limit the number of terms served by legislators at both national and state levels ha...
While partisan gridlock has become a common occurrence in the US Congress, this is also often the ca...
The use of racially charged imagery and messages has a long history in US politics. But how do such ...
Why do some members of Congress vote more on the extremes of their party than others? I argue that l...
How does institutional differences across state legislatures representation and the political pathwa...
This study uses opinion data to assess the basis of public support for California\u27s term limit in...
In this article, I examine how term limits affect the amount of time that legislators focus on const...
Supporters of term limits argued that they would decrease interest group influence. Using data from ...
Do term limits make state legislatures more descriptively representative of their population? If the...
This article attempts to shed some light on an unintended consequence of the term limit movement, it...
Building on models of electoral competition with reputational mechanisms, I show that term limits de...
Reelection-minded legislators look to participation to discern how potential voters might react to a...