My new paper out in @SPPQJournal (open access!) finds that increases in retrospective messaging in judicial election TV ads actually leads to higher ballot rolloff 🗳️🧑⚖️📺https://t.co/VrpBD06b0G
My article "The Partisan Foundations of Attitudes Towards State Supreme Courts," co-authored with Eugenia Artabe and Lucia Lopez, is now available online at Political Research Quarterly (@PRQjournal).
https://t.co/SOakT1CWPL
In #FirstView by Eugenia Artabe, Alex Badas, and Lucia Lopez: "The Partisan Foundations of Attitudes Towards State Supreme Courts" https://t.co/cxvYl8SUjp
📰@matthibbing, @tarahwilliams01, @ProfPaulTesta, @karramccray & Kylee Britzman used an experimental design that allowed some participants to choose their message source, showing substantial messenger effects that would be missed by traditional experiment.
https://t.co/XrXyCPF5s4
Interested in UC Merced's Political Science Graduate Program? Connect with our Political Science faculty and learn about graduate study opportunities during one of the upcoming 1-hour webinar/Q&A sessions.
Register for a session here: https://t.co/ESLLBXp4XA
The Department of Political Science at UT Arlington is hiring a tenure track assistant professor in American Politics. Review begins 10/6. Link to apply: https://t.co/EIJKiHWBVd
🌟 Job Market Spotlight 🌟
Meet Justin Burnworth, a Ph.D. candidate at UMass Amherst. His research explores how Supreme Court justices craft and justify opinions, the politics of Court nominations, and the dynamics of constitutional change.
Learn more: https://t.co/cUC3a99sp2
The Department of Political Science at California State University, Long Beach is seeking applicants for a tenure-track Assistant Professor position in Law and/or Public Policy.
https://t.co/oTDBdJdpjj
#PAJobMarket
Now out: Analysis of judicial citations demonstrates that diversity in race, gender, *and* partisanship plays a critical role in the evolution of legal doctrine, with judges sharing all 3 salient traits experiencing a 25% increase in citation probability. https://t.co/bXH4Wv54q8
Now in First View @JLawAndCourts w/ @ChristineCBird and the twitterless Zachary McGee: The Influence of Federalist Society Affiliation on Senator Voting in Federal Judicial Nominations (open access!!!)
https://t.co/MchRObbxqg
New findings from Miles Armaly, Christopher Krewson & Elizabeth Lane shows that descriptive representation shapes not just views of judicial nominees, but trust in the Court itself. #SCOTUS#DescriptiveRepresentation#RaceandPolitics
Read more:
https://t.co/KF3zx0LAiF
Thrilled that this @CUP_Law book, with Driscoll and Krehbiel, is out this week. Its topic that become surprisingly relevant: under what conditions does the public punish presidents who ignore court decisions?
I know it may be shocking, but what if some of the Supreme Court justices were racist?!
I'm so excited this is out, working with my grad school BFF on this was a dream (and her dad is a great RA 😂).
Dr. Baker and her collaborators have been awarded a grant to study stress and politics. More information at the link below. Congrats to the group! https://t.co/n2RhhW8Yjv
Second, @courtenaymonroe, Nathan W Monroe & @ShengkuoHu question how #UNGA votes reveal state preferences. They find procedural context matters, with committee amendment votes yielding clearer insights, especially for states away from the policy centre.
https://t.co/bigleAc8xI
Disappointment. Grief. Loss. A set of emotions far less incendiary but just as damaging to democracy.
Read more about @ucmerced PoliSci professor Christopher Ojeda's new book “The Sad Citizen: How Politics is Depressing and Why It Matters” here ⤵️
https://t.co/N9z9M2WlGl