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Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy
>
Vol 3
> Issue 3–4
Special Issue - The Political Economy of Polarization
Edited by:
Jeffery A. Jenkins, University of Southern California, USA, jenkinja@price.usc.edu
Special Issue on The Political Economy of Polarization
Published: 01 Dec 2022
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Identifying the “Downsian Ceiling”: When Does Polarization Make Appealing to One’s Base More Attractive than Moderating to the Center
Samuel Merrill, III
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Bernard Grofman
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Thomas Brunell
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Divide and Conquer: Presidents, Parliaments, and Political Polarization during Electoral Campaigns
Kemal Kıvanç Aköz
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Ekim Arbatli
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Dina Rosenberg
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Income Inequality and Electoral Theories of Polarization
Dan Alexander
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Asya Magazinnik
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Two Decades of Polarization in American State Legislatures
Boris Shor
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Nolan McCarty
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Partisan Manipulation of Dimensionality and Party Polarization in the U.S. Congress
Hong Min Park
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Elite Polarization and Partisan Think Tanks
E. J. Fagan
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
How the Constitution Aggravates Polarized Politics: The Trap the Framers Left Us
Jeremy C. Pope
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Mass or Elite Polarization as the Driver of Authoritarian Backsliding? Evidence from 14 Polish Surveys (2005–2021)
Ipek Cinar
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Monika Nalepa
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Inducing Polarization? The Effect of Congressional Procedure and Partisan Lawmaking on Ideal Point Estimation
Austin Bussing
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Joshua Y. Lerner
Volume 3, Issue 3–4
Polarization as a Function of Chamber Size
Daniel B. Magleby
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Gregory Robinson
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Matthew Walz