Journal of Experimental Political Science
2014 - 2024
From Cambridge University Press Cambridge University Press, UPH, Shaftesbury Road, Cambridge CB2 8BS UK. Bibliographic data for series maintained by Kirk Stebbing (). Access Statistics for this journal.
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Volume 11, issue 1, 2024
- The Politicization of COVID-19 and Anti-Asian Racism in the United States: An Experimental Approach pp. 1-11

- D.G. Kim
- Does Interacting with Women Encourage Civic and Prosocial Attitudes? Evidence from Simulated Contact Experiments in Saudi Arabia and Kuwait pp. 12-26

- Calvert W. Jones
- Null Effects of Pro-Democracy Speeches by U.S. Republicans in the Aftermath of January 6th pp. 27-41

- Alexander Wuttke, Florian Sichart and Florian Foos
- Using Citizen Voice to Evaluate Experiments on Politicians: A UK Survey Experiment pp. 42-51

- Peter John, Kristina Kim and Luis Soto-Tamayo
- Corruption and Political Support: The Case of Peru’s Vacuna-gate Scandal pp. 52-63

- Oscar Castorena, Noam Lupu, Adam D. Wolsky and Elizabeth J. Zechmeister
- The “Commitment Trap” Revisited: Experimental Evidence on Ambiguous Nuclear Threats pp. 64-77

- Michal Smetana, Marek Vranka and Ondrej Rosendorf
- The Limits of Lobbying: Null Effects from Four Field Experiments in Two State Legislatures pp. 78-89

- Matthew J. Camp, Michael Schwam-Baird and Adam Zelizer
- The Corrections Dilemma: Media Retractions Increase Belief Accuracy But Decrease Trust pp. 90-101

- Joshua Freitag, Madeline Gochee, Mitchell Ransden, Brendan Nyhan, Kristy Roschke and Dan Gillmor
- Does Stereotype Threat Contribute to the Political Knowledge Gender Gap? A Preregistered Replication Study of Ihme and Tausendpfund (2018) pp. 102-113

- Flavio Azevedo, Leticia Micheli and Deliah Sarah Bolesta
Volume 10, issue 3, 2023
- The effect of incentives on motivated numeracy amidst COVID-19 pp. 311-327

- Eunbin Chung, Pavitra Govindan and Anna O. Pechenkina
- When Do Sources Persuade? The Effect of Source Credibility on Opinion Change pp. 328-342

- Bernhard Clemm von Hohenberg and Andrew M. Guess
- Can Policy Responses to Pandemics Reduce Mass Fear? pp. 343-353

- Michael M. Bechtel, O’Brochta, William and Margit Tavits
- The Impact of Emotional versus Instrumental Reasons for Dual Citizenship on the Perceived Loyalty and Political Tolerance of Immigrant-Origin Minorities pp. 354-366

- Maykel Verkuyten, Jessica Gale, Kumar Yogeeswaran and Levi Adelman
- Taking the Cloth: Social Norms and Elite Cues Increase Support for Masks among White Evangelical Americans pp. 367-376

- Claire L. Adida, Christina Cottiero, Leonardo Falabella, Isabel Gotti, ShahBano Ijaz, Gregoire Phillips and Michael F. Seese
- Partisanship Unmasked? The Role of Politics and Social Norms in COVID-19 Mask-Wearing Behavior pp. 377-390

- John Carey, Brendan Nyhan, Joseph B. Phillips and Jason Reifler
- The Civic Option? Using Experiments to Estimate the Effects of Consuming Information in Local Elections pp. 391-402

- Cheryl Boudreau, Christopher S. Elmendorf and Scott A. MacKenzie
- Which Police Departments Want Reform? Barriers to Evidence-Based Policymaking pp. 403-412

- Samantha Goerger, Jonathan Mummolo and Sean J. Westwood
- Can Addressing Integrity Concerns about Mail Balloting Increase Turnout? Results from a Large-Scale Field Experiment in the 2020 Presidential Election pp. 413-425

- Daniel R. Biggers, Elizabeth Mitchell Elder, Seth J. Hill, Thad Kousser, Gabriel S. Lenz and Mackenzie Lockhart
- The Effect of Biased Peacekeepers on Building Trust pp. 426-437

- Jared Oestman and Rick K. Wilson
- Populism and Candidate Support in the US: The Effects of “Thin” and “Host” Ideology pp. 438-447

- Bruno Castanho Silva, Fabian Guy Neuner and Christopher Wratil
- Moderator Placement in Survey Experiments: Racial Resentment and the “Welfare” versus “Assistance to the Poor” Question Wording Experiment pp. 448-454

- Bethany Albertson and Stephen Jessee
- Basking in Their Glory? Expressive Partisanship among People of Color Before and After the 2020 US Election pp. 455-458

- Rahsaan Maxwell, Efrén Pérez and Stephanie Zonszein
- Political and Social Discussion Network Survey Items Are Not Interchangeable pp. 459-464

- Jack Lyons Reilly and Jack K. Belk
Volume 10, issue 2, 2023
- Childcare, Work, and Household Labor During a Pandemic: Evidence on Parents’ Preferences in the United States pp. 155-173

- Annabelle Hutchinson, Sarah Khan and Hilary Matfess
- Objectified and Dehumanized: Does Objectification Impact Perceptions of Women Political Candidates? pp. 174-187

- Claire M. Gothreau, Amanda Milena Alvarez and Amanda Friesen
- Large-Scale Evidence for the Effectiveness of Partisan GOTV Robo Calls pp. 188-200

- Daniel T. Kling and Thomas Stratmann
- Trust Nobody: How Voters React to Conspiracy Theories pp. 201-208

- Giovanna M. Invernizzi and Ahmed Ezzeldin Mohamed
- Ought It Audit? Information, Values, and Public Support for the Internal Revenue Service pp. 209-220

- Ian G. Anson and John V. Kane
- Let Me Be the Judge: Ideology, Identity, and Judicial Selection pp. 221-230

- Lina M. Eriksson and Kåre Vernby
- Do Survey Questions Spread Conspiracy Beliefs? pp. 231-241

- Scott Clifford and Brian W. Sullivan
- Did Ohio’s Vaccine Lottery Increase Vaccination Rates? A Pre-Registered, Synthetic Control Study pp. 242-260

- David Lang, Lief Esbenshade and Robb Willer
- Email Mobilization Messages Suppress Turnout Among Black and Latino Voters: Experimental Evidence From the 2016 General Election pp. 261-266

- Michael U. Rivera, D. Alex Hughes and Micah Gell-Redman
- The Big Lie: Expressive Responding and Misperceptions in the United States pp. 267-278

- James J. Fahey
- An Experimental Test of the Effects of Fear in a Coordination Game pp. 279-298

- Abraham Aldama, Deshawn Sambrano, Mateo Vásquez-Cortés and Lauren E. Young
- How Dropping Subjects Who Failed Manipulation Checks Can Bias Your Results: An Illustrative Case pp. 299-305

- Simon Varaine
- “The Generalizability of Online Experiments Conducted During The COVID-19 Pandemic” – CORRIGENDUM pp. 306-309

- Kyle Peyton, Gregory A. Huber and Alexander Coppock
- Email Mobilization Messages Suppress Turnout Among Black and Latino Voters: Experimental Evidence From the 2016 General Election – ADDENDUM pp. 310-310

- Michael U. Rivera, D. Alex Hughes and Micah Gell-Redman
Volume 10, issue 1, 2023
- Optimal Persuasion under Confirmation Bias: Theory and Evidence From a Registered Report pp. 4-20

- Love Christensen
- Complementary or Competing Frames? The Impact of Economic and Public Health Messages on COVID-19 Attitudes pp. 21-33

- Emma R. Knapp, Brianna A. Smith and Matthew P. Motta
- The Effects of Unsubstantiated Claims of Voter Fraud on Confidence in Elections pp. 34-49

- Nicolas Berlinski, Margaret Doyle, Andrew M. Guess, Gabrielle Levy, Benjamin Lyons, Jacob M. Montgomery, Brendan Nyhan and Jason Reifler
- Estimating the Persistence of Party Cue Influence in a Panel Survey Experiment pp. 50-61

- Ben M. Tappin and Luke B. Hewitt
- Can Warm Behavior Mitigate the Negative Effect of Unfavorable Governmental Decisions on Citizens’ Trust? pp. 62-75

- Frederik Godt Hansen
- Discriminatory Immigration Bans Elicit Anti-Americanism in Targeted Communities: Evidence from Nigerian Expatriates pp. 76-87

- Aaron Erlich, Thomas Soehl and Annie Y. Chen
- Why Join? How Civil Society Organizations’ Attributes Signal Congruence and Impact Community Engagement pp. 88-99

- Simon Hoellerbauer
- Analogic Perspective-Taking and Attitudes Toward Political Organizations: An Experiment with a Teachers’ Union pp. 100-111

- Alexander Hertel-Fernandez and Ethan Porter
- Do Identity Frames Impact Support for Multiracial Candidates? The Case of Kamala Harris pp. 112-123

- Katherine Clayton, Charles Crabtree and Yusaku Horiuchi
- Can Appeals for Peace Promote Tolerance and Mitigate Support for Extremism? Evidence from an Experiment with Adolescents in Burkina Faso pp. 124-136

- Allison N. Grossman, William G. Nomikos and Niloufer A. Siddiqui
- Daughters Do Not Affect Political Beliefs in a New Democracy pp. 137-147

- Amanda Clayton, Daniel de Kadt and Natasha Dumas
- Fraud in Online Surveys: Evidence from a Nonprobability, Subpopulation Sample pp. 148-153

- Andrew M. Bell and Thomas Gift
- Fraud in Online Surveys: Evidence from a Nonprobability, Subpopulation Sample – ADDENDUM pp. 154-154

- Andrew M. Bell and Thomas Gift
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