01612nam a22001577a 4500999001900000008004100019100004800060245007900108260004100187300003300228520102200261773004101283906001501324942000701339952010801346 c518019d518019210810b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aJacobs, Nicholas F. and Munis, B.K. 928410 aStaying in place: Federalism and the political economy of place attachment aPublius: The Journal of Federalism  a50(4), Fall, 2020: p.544-565 aA growing number of scholars have documented how social identities defined by an attachment to place influence individuals’ understandings about political power and representation. Drawing on this theoretical framework, we explore how place-based identities matter for American federalism by documenting how attachments to the American states alter individuals’ decisions to leave, or exit, as well as to welcome newcomers into their local communities. Using a set of conjoint experiments designed to measure individual attitudes about place, politics, and America’s federal polity, we find evidence that Americans hold deep and consequential attitudes about the places in which they live. Our evidence confirms that state identities are still highly relevant in shaping American federalism and the competitive pressures between intergovernmental jurisdictions. While federalism may encourage individuals to leave, federalism also nourishes place-specific attachments, motivating people to stay. – Reproduced  aPublius: The Journal of Federalism  aFEDERALISM cAR 00102ddc40709392078aIIPAbIIPAd2021-08-10h50(4), Fall, 2020: p.544-565pAR125224r2021-08-10yAR