Pub Opinion Quart
Introduction
Public Opinion Quarterly, 86(4)
INTEREST CATEGORY: MARKETING RESEARCH
POSTING TYPE: TOCs
https://academic.oup.com/poq/issue/86/4
Survey Attention and Self-Reported Political Behavior
—R Michael Alvarez ; Yimeng Li [Google Scholar]
Emotionally Coping with Terrorism
—Antoine J Banks; Heather M Hicks; Jennifer L Merolla [Google Scholar]
Lying for Trump? Elite Cue-Taking and Expressive Responding on Vote Method
—Enrijeta Shino; Daniel A Smith; Laura Uribe [Google Scholar]
Estimating the Between-Issue Variation in Party Elite Cue Effects
—Ben M Tappin [Google Scholar]
Research Notes
Strategic Discrimination in the 2020 Democratic Primary
—Jon Green; Brian Schaffner; Sam Luks [Google Scholar]
Does Social Desirability Bias Distort Survey Analyses of Ideology and Self-Interest? Evidence from a List Experiment on Progressive Taxation
—Tobias Heide-Jørgensen [Google Scholar]
Varieties of Mobility Measures: Comparing Survey and Mobile Phone Data during the COVID-19 Pandemic
—Fabian Kalleitner ; David W Schiestl; Georg Heiler [Google Scholar]
Polarization Eh? Ideological Divergence and Partisan Sorting in the Canadian Mass Public
—Eric Merkley [Google Scholar]
Economic Inequality, the Working Poor, and Belief in the American Dream
—Benjamin J Newman [Google Scholar]
Before the Party Hijacks: The Limited Role of Party Cues in Appraisal of Low-Salience Policies—Experimental Evidence
—Clareta Treger [Google Scholar]
The Polls
The Polls—Trends: Welfare Regimes and Support for Income Redistribution in Europe
—Aleš Kudrnáč; Ivan Petrúšek [Google Scholar]
Book Reviews
Ken Kollman and John E. Jackson. Dynamic Partisanship: How and Why Voter Loyalties Change
—Caitlin Davies
Yanna Krupnikov and John B. Ryan. The Other Divide: Polarization and Disengagement in American Politics
—Taewoo Kang
Stacy Ulbig. Angry Politics: Partisan Hatred and Political Polarization among College Students
—Steven W Webster