David Glick
YOU?
Author Swipe
View article: Is the Supreme Court’s Legitimacy Vulnerable to Intense Appointment Politics? Democrats’ Changed Views Around Justice Ginsburg’s Death – CORRIGENDUM
Is the Supreme Court’s Legitimacy Vulnerable to Intense Appointment Politics? Democrats’ Changed Views Around Justice Ginsburg’s Death – CORRIGENDUM Open
An abstract is not available for this content. As you have access to this content, full HTML content is provided on this page. A PDF of this content is also available in through the ‘Save PDF’ action button.
View article: Is the Supreme Court’s Legitimacy Vulnerable to Intense Appointment Politics? Democrats’ Changed Views Around Justice Ginsburg’s Death
Is the Supreme Court’s Legitimacy Vulnerable to Intense Appointment Politics? Democrats’ Changed Views Around Justice Ginsburg’s Death Open
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s death near the end of the Trump presidency set off a fight in which Republicans moved to rapidly replace her over Democrats’ objections. I use a survey that was in the field at the time to assess whether this …
View article: The influence of social norms varies with “others” groups: Evidence from COVID-19 vaccination intentions
The influence of social norms varies with “others” groups: Evidence from COVID-19 vaccination intentions Open
The theory that health behaviors spread through social groups implies that efforts to control COVID-19 through vaccination will succeed if people believe that others in their groups are getting vaccinated. But “others” can refer to many gr…
View article: Is the Supreme Court's Legitimacy Vulnerable to Intense Appointment Politics? Democrats' Changed Views Around Justice Ginsburg's Death
Is the Supreme Court's Legitimacy Vulnerable to Intense Appointment Politics? Democrats' Changed Views Around Justice Ginsburg's Death Open
Replication data for a forthcoming JLC Paper focused on views about the Supreme Court on both sides of Justice Ginsburg's death
View article: Replication Data for: {Is the Supreme Court's Legitimacy Vulnerable to Intense Appointment Politics? Democrats' Changed Views Around Justice Ginsburg's Death
Replication Data for: {Is the Supreme Court's Legitimacy Vulnerable to Intense Appointment Politics? Democrats' Changed Views Around Justice Ginsburg's Death Open
These are the replication data for a forthcoming JLC Paper focused on views about the Supreme Court on both sides of Justice Ginsburg's death.
View article: Replication Data for: County Over Party: How Governors Prioritized Geography Not Particularism in the Distribution of Opportunity Zones
Replication Data for: County Over Party: How Governors Prioritized Geography Not Particularism in the Distribution of Opportunity Zones Open
Allocating resources is a central function of government, and the distributive politics literature provides considerable evidence of leaders across the world directing resources to co-partisan voters and officials. In the U.S., studies of …
View article: No evidence that collective-good appeals best promote COVID-related health behaviors
No evidence that collective-good appeals best promote COVID-related health behaviors Open
Micro-nano plastics originating from the prevalent usage of plastics have raised increasingly alarming concerns worldwide. However, there remains a fundamental knowledge gap in nanoplastics because of the lack of effective analytical ...Pl…
View article: 2020 Menino Survey of Mayors: policing and protests
2020 Menino Survey of Mayors: policing and protests Open
The 2020 Menino Survey of Mayors represents the seventh nationally representative survey of American mayors and is based on interviews with 130 sitting mayors from 38 states. The 2020 Survey explores mayoral views on COVID-19 recovery, pol…
View article: 2020 Menino Survey of Mayors: COVID-19 recovery and the future of cities
2020 Menino Survey of Mayors: COVID-19 recovery and the future of cities Open
The 2020 Menino Survey of Mayors details insights and perspectives shared by a representative sample of 130 mayors leading U.S. cities with populations of more than 75,000 residents. This year’s Survey explores mayoral views on COVID-19 re…
View article: Perceptions of Public Health Priorities and Accountability Among US Mayors
Perceptions of Public Health Priorities and Accountability Among US Mayors Open
Objective Mayors have considerable and often direct influence over health policy in their cities, yet little is known about mayors’ general perceptions of current public health challenges. The objective of this study was to assess percepti…
View article: Counting the city: mayoral views on the 2020 Census
Counting the city: mayoral views on the 2020 Census Open
The 2020 Menino Survey of Mayors represents the seventh nationally representative survey of American mayors and is based on interviews with 130 sitting mayors from 38 states. The 2020 Survey explores mayoral views on COVID-19 recovery, pol…
View article: Divide-the-Quarter: Testing Distributive Politics Theories in the States Using Federal Opportunity Zones
Divide-the-Quarter: Testing Distributive Politics Theories in the States Using Federal Opportunity Zones Open
In this short paper we use case in which all 50 governors simultaneously faced similar decisions about allocating a constrained set of valuable resources---tax advantaged status for economic development--- to test political alignment theor…
View article: readme.txt
readme.txt Open
:unav
View article: reasons_codes.tab
reasons_codes.tab Open
:unav
View article: town_40b_support_comments.tab
town_40b_support_comments.tab Open
:unav
View article: reasons_by_comment.tab
reasons_by_comment.tab Open
:unav
View article: zoning_participation_main_analysis.do
zoning_participation_main_analysis.do Open
:unav
View article: zoning_participation_graphs.R
zoning_participation_graphs.R Open
:unav
View article: Who Participates in Local Government? Evidence from Meeting Minutes
Who Participates in Local Government? Evidence from Meeting Minutes Open
Scholars and policymakers have highlighted institutions that enable community participation as a potential buffer against existing political inequalities. Yet these venues may bias policy discussions in favor of an unrepresentative group o…
View article: City Learning: Evidence of Policy Information Diffusion from a Survey of U.S. Mayors
City Learning: Evidence of Policy Information Diffusion from a Survey of U.S. Mayors Open
Most studies of policy diffusion attempt to infer the processes through which policies spread by observing outputs (policy adoptions). We approach these issues from the other direction by directly analyzing a key policymaking input—informa…
View article: Vol. 17(1): Replication Data for: Who Participates in Local Government? Evidence from Meeting Minutes
Vol. 17(1): Replication Data for: Who Participates in Local Government? Evidence from Meeting Minutes Open
Scholars and policymakers have highlighted institutions that enable community participation as a potential buffer against existing political inequalities. Yet, these venues may be biasing policy discussions in favor of an unrepresentative …
View article: Few big-city mayors see running for higher office as appealing
Few big-city mayors see running for higher office as appealing Open
Former mayors are not unknown in Congress and in governors' mansions - but does running a big city act as a springboard for higher office? To answer this question, Katherine Levine Einstein, David M. Glick, Maxwell Palmer and Robert J. Pre…
View article: As the Trump administration retreats on climate change, US cities are moving forward
As the Trump administration retreats on climate change, US cities are moving forward Open
This article was originally published in The Conversation on February 20, 2018. Read the original article here: https://theconversation.com/as-the-trump-administration-retreats-on-climate-change-us-cities-are-moving-forward-91612
View article: 2016 Menino Survey of Mayors
2016 Menino Survey of Mayors Open
The 2015 Menino Survey of Mayors represents the second nationally representative survey of American mayors released by the Boston University Initiatives on Cities. The Survey, based on interviews with 89 sitting mayors conducted in 2015, p…
View article: New research finds little evidence of anti-black racial bias by public housing authorities
New research finds little evidence of anti-black racial bias by public housing authorities Open
Despite great strides in Civil Rights and representation, there are still concerns over racial bias in the provision of public services. In new research Katherine Levine Einstein and David Glick examined whether or not access to public hou…
View article: Does Race Affect Access to Government Services? An Experiment Exploring Street‐Level Bureaucrats and Access to Public Housing
Does Race Affect Access to Government Services? An Experiment Exploring Street‐Level Bureaucrats and Access to Public Housing Open
While experimental studies of local election officials have found evidence of racial discrimination, we know little about whether these biases manifest in bureaucracies that provide access to valuable government programs and are less tied …
View article: How exposure to conspiracy theories can reduce trust in government.
How exposure to conspiracy theories can reduce trust in government. Open
Conspiracy theories are not new – from theories about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy to concerns that 9/11 might have been an ‘inside job’, alternative explanations about important events have an appeal to many parts of the…