In this study, we examine the extent to which legislators receive elec toral benefits from altering the geographic distribution of federal outlays. Although there are both theoretical and anecdotal reasons to believe in the existence of such benefits, previous empirical work has largely failed to verify the connection between pork barreling and reelection. We ex amine House incumbents during the 1980s, when budget deficits were allegedly forcing legislators to end the acquisition of distributive benefits, and we discover that legislators did in fact reap electoral benefits from pork barreling in the 1980s. We further discover that there is a sharp partisan difference in the marginal effects of federal outlays: additional federal monies stro...
Beginning with work by Robert Erickson in the early 1970's, there has been a substantial amount of r...
Oppenheimer, Stimson, and Waterman's exposure thesis of partisan change contends that shifts in the ...
Despite strong theoretical claims that politicians should target swing voters with distributive bene...
In this study, we examine the extent to which legislators receive elec toral benefits from altering ...
The literature on the organization of the United States Congress has been dominated by "distributive...
Distributive politics represents one of the most important and controversial aspects of legislative ...
Congress packages pork‐barrel spending in complicated proposals that belie theories of distributive ...
The literature on the organization of the United States Congress has been dominated by “distributive...
This paper examines several hypotheses that have been proposed to explain the existence and growth o...
In recent years, considerable scholarly attention has focused on earmarks, the quintessential exampl...
In recent years, considerable scholarly attention has focused on earmarks, the quintessential exampl...
In this dissertation I study the impacts of a few key features of the United State's majoritarian po...
It is an established truth that incumbents have a large advantage in congressional elections. Conven...
The use of money in congressional elections will be the principal issue of this thesis. The money de...
In this article, we use a regression discontinuity design to estimate the causal effect of incumbenc...
Beginning with work by Robert Erickson in the early 1970's, there has been a substantial amount of r...
Oppenheimer, Stimson, and Waterman's exposure thesis of partisan change contends that shifts in the ...
Despite strong theoretical claims that politicians should target swing voters with distributive bene...
In this study, we examine the extent to which legislators receive elec toral benefits from altering ...
The literature on the organization of the United States Congress has been dominated by "distributive...
Distributive politics represents one of the most important and controversial aspects of legislative ...
Congress packages pork‐barrel spending in complicated proposals that belie theories of distributive ...
The literature on the organization of the United States Congress has been dominated by “distributive...
This paper examines several hypotheses that have been proposed to explain the existence and growth o...
In recent years, considerable scholarly attention has focused on earmarks, the quintessential exampl...
In recent years, considerable scholarly attention has focused on earmarks, the quintessential exampl...
In this dissertation I study the impacts of a few key features of the United State's majoritarian po...
It is an established truth that incumbents have a large advantage in congressional elections. Conven...
The use of money in congressional elections will be the principal issue of this thesis. The money de...
In this article, we use a regression discontinuity design to estimate the causal effect of incumbenc...
Beginning with work by Robert Erickson in the early 1970's, there has been a substantial amount of r...
Oppenheimer, Stimson, and Waterman's exposure thesis of partisan change contends that shifts in the ...
Despite strong theoretical claims that politicians should target swing voters with distributive bene...