Chicago studies in American politics
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Chicago studies in American politics
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Chicago studies in American politics
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- Has parts32
- Persuasion in parallel, how information changes minds about politics, Alexander Coppock
- Race to the bottom, how racial appeals work in American politics, LaFleur Stephens-Dougan
- Who governs?, presidents, public opinion, and manipulation, James N. Druckman and Lawrence R. Jacobs
- In time of war, understanding American public opinion from World War II to Iraq, Adam J. Berinsky
- Strategic party government, why winning trumps ideology, Gregory Koger, Matthew J. Lebo
- Neither liberal nor conservative, ideological innocence in the American public, Donald R. Kinder and Nathan P. Kalmoe
- Who wants to run?, how the devaluing of political office drives polarization, Andrew B. Hall
- A troubled birth, the 1930s and American public opinion, Susan Herbst
- Dynamic democracy, public opinion, elections, and policymaking in the American states, Devin Caughey and Christopher Warshaw
- The timeline of presidential elections, how campaigns do (and do not) matter, Robert S. Erikson and Christopher Wlezien
- The increasingly United States, how and why American political behavior nationalized, Daniel J. Hopkins
- The limits of party, Congress and lawmaking in a polarized era, James M. Curry and Frances E. Lee
- Democracy declined, the failed politics of consumer financial protection, Mallory E. SoRelle
- The private abuse of the public interest, market myths and policy muddles, Lawrence D. Brown and Lawrence R. Jacobs
- Selling fear, counterterrorism, the media, and public opinion, Brigitte L. Nacos, Yaeli Bloch-Elkon, and Robert Y. Shapiro
- Agendas and instability in American politics, Frank R. Baumgartner and Bryan D. Jones
- White-collar government, the hidden role of class in economic policy making, Nicholas Carnes
- How the states shaped the nation, American electoral institutions and voter turnout, 1920-2000, Melanie Jean Springer
- Follow the leader?, how voters respond to politicians' policies and performance, Gabriel S. Lenz
- Radical American partisanship, mapping violent hostility, its causes, and the consequences for democracy, Nathan P. Kalmoe and Lilliana Mason
- Power shifts, Congress and presidential representation, John A. Dearborn
- Changing minds or changing channels?, partisan news in an age of choice, Kevin Arceneaux and Martin Johnson
- Partisan news that matters, how cable media polarize politics, Matthew Levendusky
- Why parties?, a second look, John H. Aldrich
- The politics of resentment, rural consciousness in Wisconsin and the rise of Scott Walker, Katherine J. Cramer
- Democracy at risk, how terrorist threats affect the public, Jennifer L. Merolla and Elizabeth J. Zechmeister
- The obligation mosaic, race and social norms in US political participation, Allison P. Anoll
- America's inequality trap, Nathan J. Kelly
- The social citizen, peer networks and political behavior, Betsy Sinclair
- The politics of belonging, race, public opinion, and immigration, Natalie Masuoka and Jane Junn
- Why parties matter, political competition and democracy in the American South, John H. Aldrich, John D. Griffin
- The partisan sort, how liberals became Democrats and conservatives became Republicans, Matthew Levendusky