bit.ly/43vgW8b
bit.ly/43vgW8b
bit.ly/43vgW8b
bit.ly/43vgW8b
bit.ly/43vgW8b
The 3-wave ANES panel is now available. It merges data from 3 election studies (2016-2020-2024), the first time the ANES has collected interviews of the same respondents across 3 presidential elections.
The 3-wave ANES panel is now available. It merges data from 3 election studies (2016-2020-2024), the first time the ANES has collected interviews of the same respondents across 3 presidential elections.
@electionstudies.bsky.social).
1/n
@electionstudies.bsky.social).
1/n
1. The first tool is the ANES Guide to Public Opinion and Electoral Behavior, with >200 graphs displaying the ebbs and flows of public opinion, electoral behavior, and choice in American politics.
1. The first tool is the ANES Guide to Public Opinion and Electoral Behavior, with >200 graphs displaying the ebbs and flows of public opinion, electoral behavior, and choice in American politics.
(Thank you to @scholars.org for help with editing!)
thehill.com/opinion/5410...
(Thank you to @scholars.org for help with editing!)
thehill.com/opinion/5410...
@sociologylauren.bsky.social and I have a new paper out in SRE today!
In "Zero-sum or Coalition? A Dyadic Approach for Testing Discrimination’s Impact on Perceptions of Ethnoracial Outgroups" we use perceptions of discrimination to examine racial group relations. Here's a 🧵!
@sociologylauren.bsky.social and I have a new paper out in SRE today!
In "Zero-sum or Coalition? A Dyadic Approach for Testing Discrimination’s Impact on Perceptions of Ethnoracial Outgroups" we use perceptions of discrimination to examine racial group relations. Here's a 🧵!
Data from @electionstudies.bsky.social CDF and 2024ts
Data from @electionstudies.bsky.social CDF and 2024ts
cepr.org/voxeu/column...
cepr.org/voxeu/column...
electionstudies.org/about-us/ref...
electionstudies.org/about-us/ref...
Looking at some @electionstudies.bsky.social data, though, the relationship b/w parents' party and our own is striking.
Even allowing for some misreporting, I'm surprised how strong this has been, and over multiple generations.
Looking at some @electionstudies.bsky.social data, though, the relationship b/w parents' party and our own is striking.
Even allowing for some misreporting, I'm surprised how strong this has been, and over multiple generations.
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...
www.cambridge.org/core/journal...