Your search returned 7 results. Subscribe to this search

|
1. Crime creation? some question of fairness and efficacy in covert operation

by Roberts, Andrew.

Material type: article Article Publisher: 2000Barcode no: AR47267.Availability: Items available for loan: (1).

2. The quality of democracy (a review article)

by Roberts, Andrew.

Material type: article Article Publisher: 2005Barcode no: AR67789.Availability: Items available for loan: (1).

3. Policy responsiveness in post-communist Europe: Public preferences and economic reforms

by Roberts, Andrew | Kim, Byung-Yeon.

Material type: article Article Publisher: 2011Barcode no: AR93959.Availability: Items available for loan: (1).

4. Do electoral law affect-women's representation

by Roberts, Andrew | Cyr, Jennifer | Seawright, Jason.

Material type: article Article Publisher: 2013Barcode no: AR103587.Availability: Items available for loan: (1).

5. Consensus and dissensus in comparative politics: Do comparativists agree on the goals, methods, and results of the field?

by Roberts, Andrew.

Material type: book Book; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction Publisher: International Political Science Review Barcode no: AR124458.Availability: Items available for loan: (1).

6. Gender gaps have been documented in numerous areas of American politics, but one area that has not yet been fully explored is responsiveness, the link between citizen preferences and public policies. Equal responsiveness to the preferences of citizens is a central aspect of democratic representation. This article extends work on income gaps in responsiveness to gender gaps. Specifically, it considers whether women’s preferences are less likely than men’s preferences to be adopted as policy in the US. It uses data on preferences and policy adoptions from 1981 to 2002 created by Gilens. The main finding is a large gender gap in responsiveness. The gap is similar in size to the one between rich and poor, it is particularly large in policies related to the use of force, and it did not narrow over the two decades studied. These results show that inequalities beyond social class deserve significant attention in the study of democratic responsiveness and that aspects of bias against women in politics remain underexplored. – Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/10659129221136476

by Kopkin, Nolan and Roberts, Andrew.

Material type: book Book; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction Publisher: Political Research Quarterly Availability: No items available

7. Gender gaps have been documented in numerous areas of American politics, but one area that has not yet been fully explored is responsiveness, the link between citizen preferences and public policies. Equal responsiveness to the preferences of citizens is a central aspect of democratic representation. This article extends work on income gaps in responsiveness to gender gaps. Specifically, it considers whether women’s preferences are less likely than men’s preferences to be adopted as policy in the US. It uses data on preferences and policy adoptions from 1981 to 2002 created by Gilens. The main finding is a large gender gap in responsiveness. The gap is similar in size to the one between rich and poor, it is particularly large in policies related to the use of force, and it did not narrow over the two decades studied. These results show that inequalities beyond social class deserve significant attention in the study of democratic responsiveness and that aspects of bias against women in politics remain underexplored. – Reproduced https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/10659129221136476

by Kopkin, Nolan and Roberts, Andrew.

Material type: book Book; Format: print ; Literary form: Not fiction Publisher: Political Research Quarterly Availability: No items available

Powered by Koha