Author/Title |
Research Type |
Related Fields |
Guo, Z., Li, Z. & Lin, T. Informed Inattention: How Political Connections Undermine Judicial Responsiveness in China. Chin. Polit. Sci. Rev. (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s41111-024-00260-4 |
Publications, Articles |
Comparative Politics, Political Methodology, Quantitative Methods |
Whiting, Susan H., “Validating Vignette Designs with Real-World Data: A Study of Legal Mobilization in Response to Land Grievances in Rural China,” (with Xiao Ma), China Quarterly, Vol. 246 (June 2021). |
Publications, Articles |
Comparative Politics, Law and Society, Political Methodology, Political Science |
Cansunar, Asli. (2021). Who Is High Income, Anyway? Social Comparison, Subjective Group Identification, and Preferences over Progressive Taxation. The Journal of Politics, 83(4), 1292-1306. |
Publications, Articles |
Political Economy, Political Methodology, Quantitative Methods |
Wilkerson, John, Nora Webb-Williams and Andreu Casas. Images as Data for Social Science Research: An Introduction to Convolutional Neural Nets for Image Classification. New York, Cambridge Elements, 2020. |
Publications, Books |
Data Visualization, Political Methodology, Political Science |
Christopher Adolph, Christian Breunig, and Chris Koski. 2020. “The Political Economy of Budget Trade-offs.” Journal of Public Policy. 40(1). March. 25–50. |
Publications, Articles |
American Politics, Political Economy, Political Methodology, Public Policy |
Christopher Adolph. Bankers, Bureaucrats, and Central Bank Politics: The Myth of Neutrality. Cambridge University Press, 2013. |
Publications, Books |
Comparative Politics, Political Economy, Political Methodology |
Victor Shih, Christopher Adolph, and Mingxing Liu. 2012. “Getting Ahead in the Communist Party: Explaining the Advancement of Central Committee Members in China.” American Political Science Review 106(1): 166–187. |
Publications, Articles |
Comparative Politics, East Asian, Political Economy, Political Methodology |