85 research outputs found
Do Citizens Care About Federalism? An Experimental Test
The ongoing debate over the political safeguards of federalism has essentially ignored the role that citizens might play in restraining federal power. Scholars have assumed that citizens care only about policy outcomes and will invariably support congressional legislation that satisfies their substantive policy preferences, no matter the cost to state powers. Scholars thus typically turn to institutions-the courts or institutional features of the political process-to cabin congressional authority. We argue that ignoring citizens is a mistake. We propose a new theory of the political safeguards of federalism in which citizens help to safeguard state authority. We also test our theory using evidence from a nationally representative survey experiment that focuses on the timely issue of physician-assisted suicide. We find that citizens are not single-mindedly interested in policy outcomes; trust in state govern- ments and federalism beliefs, on the urging of political elites, reduce their willingness to support a federal ban on physician-assisted suicide
Ethnocentrism as a ShortâTerm Force in the 2008 American Presidential Election
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/91187/1/AJPS_564_sm_suppmat.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/91187/2/j.1540-5907.2011.00564.x.pd
Has the M Word Been Framed? Marijuana, Cannabis and Public Opinion
Over the past two decades, a growing cadre of US states has legalized the drug commonly known as âmarijuana.â But even as more states legalize the drug, proponents of reform have begun to shun the term âmarijuanaâ in favor of the term âcannabis.â Arguing that the âMâ word has been tainted and may thus dampen public support for legalization, policy advocates have championed âcannabisâ as an alternative and more neutral name for the drug. Importantly, however, no one has tested whether calling the drug âcannabisâ as opposed to âmarijuanaâ actually has any effect on public opinion. Using an original survey experiment, we examine whether framing the drug as âmarijuanaâ as opposed to âcannabisâ shapes public attitudes across a range of related topics: support for legalization of the drug, moral acceptance of its use, tolerance of activities involving the drug, perceptions of the drugâs harms, and stereotypes of its users. Throughout each of our tests, we find no evidence to suggest that the public distinguishes between the terms âmarijuanaâ and âcannabis.â We conclude with implications of our findings for debates over marijuana/cannabis policy and for framing in policy discourse more generally
Replication Data for: Infectious Disease, Disgust, and Imagining the Other
Replication data (.dta) and syntax (.do) for article
âAnd why is that a partisan issue?â Source cues, persuasion, and school lunches
Data (.dta) and replication code (.do
Has the "M" word been framed? Marijuana, cannabis, and public opinion.
Over the past two decades, a growing cadre of US states has legalized the drug commonly known as "marijuana." But even as more states legalize the drug, proponents of reform have begun to shun the term "marijuana" in favor of the term "cannabis." Arguing that the "M" word has been tainted and may thus dampen public support for legalization, policy advocates have championed "cannabis" as an alternative and more neutral name for the drug. Importantly, however, no one has tested whether calling the drug "cannabis" as opposed to "marijuana" actually has any effect on public opinion. Using an original survey experiment, we examine whether framing the drug as "marijuana" as opposed to "cannabis" shapes public attitudes across a range of related topics: support for legalization of the drug, moral acceptance of its use, tolerance of activities involving the drug, perceptions of the drug's harms, and stereotypes of its users. Throughout each of our tests, we find no evidence to suggest that the public distinguishes between the terms "marijuana" and "cannabis." We conclude with implications of our findings for debates over marijuana/cannabis policy and for framing in policy discourse more generally
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