Self-Affirmation and Identity-Driven Political Behavior

Benjamin A. Lyons , Christina E. Farhart, Michael P. Hall, John Kotcher, Matthew Levendusky, Joanne M. Miller, Brendan Nyhan, Kaitlin T. Raimi, Jason Reifler, Kyle L. Saunders, Rasmus Skytte, and Xiaoquan Zhao Strong attachments to partisan identities can fuel a number outcomes troubling for democracy. These may range from affective polarisation — dislike for the … Read more

Refugees to the Rescue: Motivating Pro-Refugee Public Engagement during the COVID-19 Pandemic

Claire Leslie Adida, Adeline Lo, Lauren Prather, and Scott Williamson Refugees are often scapegoated during public health crises. How can refugee advocacy organizations push back effectively? During the COVID-19 pandemic, these organizations have advanced narratives that emphasize refugees’ contribution to fighting the virus. They highlight stories of doctors who first came to the United States … Read more

The Effects of Source Cues and Issue Frames During COVID-19

Chandler Case, Christopher Eddy, Rahul Hemrajani, Christopher Howell, Daniel Lyons, Yu-Hsien Sung, and Elizabeth C. Connors: The health and economic outcomes of the COVID-19 pandemic are largely dependent on individual behavior—behavior that can potentially be shaped by the information environment. The pandemic thus highlights the importance of communication: how individuals interpret recommendations from experts matters, … Read more

Prosociality in Majority Decisions: A Laboratory Experiment on the Robustness of the Uncovered Set

Jan Sauermann What is the will of the people? What is the meaning of democratic decisions? Social choice theory – the study of the aggregation of individual preferences into a collective choice – seeks answers to such fundamental questions. In the late 18th century, the Marquis de Condorcet applied social choice theory to describe a … Read more

Self-Efficacy and Citizen Engagement in Development: Experimental Evidence from Tanzania

Evan Lieberman and Yang-Yang Zhou Many deeply rooted economic and political factors contribute to the persistence of extreme inequalities around the world. Across the low- and middle-income countries, policies designed to promote human welfare often fail to translate into better development outcomes. For example, following the extension of universal free primary education across several East … Read more

Tribalism in America: Behavioral Experiments on Affective Polarization in the Trump Era

Sam Whitt, Alixandra B. Yanus, Brian McDonald, John Graeber, Mark Setzler, Gordon Ballingrud, and Martin Kifer  Over the past two decades, researchers have turned to behavioral experiments to examine “other regarding preferences” across varying social identity treatments (Fershtman and Gneezy 2001; Jacquemet and l’Haridon. 2018; Bardsley et al 2020). Increasingly, scholars have also found utility … Read more

How Bad Is It? Elite Influence and the Perceived Seriousness of the Coronavirus Pandemic

Philip Moniz Though the coronavirus pandemic has killed over 500,000 people in the United States and 2.5 million worldwide, some people take it more seriously than others. Some perceive the death toll as an outrage and a failure of government leadership; others regard the toll as unfortunate but unavoidable; still others see it as tolerable, … Read more

If We Build It, Only Some Will Come: An Experimental Study of Mobilization for Seattle’s Democracy Voucher Program

Geoffrey Henderson and Hahrie Han A decade on from the Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. FEC, the American campaign finance system remains deeply undemocratic. Fewer than one in four campaign dollars in the 2020 election came from people giving $200 or less, allowing wealthy Americans disproportionate influence over the outcome. Seattle, Washington’s innovative … Read more

Through Their Own Eyes: The Implications of COVID-19 for PhD Students

Nicholas Haas, Aida Gureghian, Cristel Jusino Díaz, and Abby Williams Has COVID-19 made doctoral students more receptive to non-academic careers? Economic fallout from the pandemic has exacerbated problems with an already-precarious job market, upending expectations for post-graduate employment – particularly among PhD students. News of university budget shortfalls, hiring freezes, and furloughs have in turn … Read more

The Effect of Geostrategic Competition on Public Attitudes to Aid

Terence Wood, Christopher Hoy, and Jonathan Pryke China’s rise as an aid power is changing the way political elites and policymakers in OECD countries think about aid. Responding to the perceived geostrategic leverage that China gains from its aid, decisionmakers have increasingly viewed their country’s aid as a means of advancing foreign policy goals overseas. … Read more