All Stories

  1. Connecting to Congress During COVID-19: Political Representation and Two-Way Crisis Communication
  2. Expanding the Conversation: Multiplier Effects From a Deliberative Field Experiment
  3. Field experiment evidence of substantive, attributional, and behavioral persuasion by members of Congress in online town halls
  4. Deliberative Democracy between Theory and Practice
  5. Connecting to Constituents
  6. What Is Good Public Deliberation?
  7. Representative Communication: Web Site Interactivity and Distributional Path Dependence in the U.S. Congress
  8. DELIBERATION'S LEGITIMATION CRISIS: REPLY TO GLEASON
  9. The Multiple Institutional Logics of Innovation
  10. Means, Motive, and Opportunity in Becoming Informed about Politics: A Deliberative Field Experiment with Members of Congress and Their Constituents
  11. Estimating Treatment Effects in the Presence of Noncompliance and Nonresponse: The Generalized Endogenous Treatment Model
  12. The Coevolution of Networks and Political Attitudes
  13. Who Wants To Deliberate—And Why?
  14. Disentangling Diversity in Deliberative Democracy: Competing Theories, Their Blind Spots and Complementarities*
  15. Meaning and Measurement: Reorienting the Race Politics Debate
  16. Three-Fifths a Racist: A Typology for Analyzing Public Opinion About Race
  17. Family Disputes: Diversity in Defining and Measuring Deliberation
  18. Book ReviewsThomas C Schelling, .Strategies of Commitment and Other Essays.Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2006. Pp. 360. $39.95 (cloth); $19.95 (paper).
  19. Patients, privacy and trust: Patients’ willingness to allow researchers to access their medical records
  20. Technology adoption and institutional change in the United States senate
  21. Connecting to Congress
  22. Thinking through Democracy: Between the Theory and Practice of Deliberative Politics
  23. Home (Page) Style
  24. Giving Hands and Feet to Morality
  25. Book ReviewsJoseph Heath, .Communicative Action and Rational Choice.Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 2001. Pp. 375. $42.95 (cloth).
  26. Choices, Values, and Frames, edited by Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky, New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000, 840 pp., $40.00.
  27. Book Notes
  28. The Emergence of Postculturalism
  29. Networks and Political Attitudes: Structure, Influence, and Co-Evolution
  30. Who Wants to Deliberate?
  31. Home (Page) Style
  32. Introduction: Common Voices
  33. Form Follows Function
  34. References
  35. Framing the Public: Do Citizens Have “Real” Preferences?
  36. A Few Days of Democracy Camp
  37. Conclusion: A Preface to Deliberative Democratic Theory
  38. Estimating Treatment Effects in the Presence of Noncompliance and Nonresponse: The Generalized Endogenous Treatment Model
  39. Deliberative Ripples: The Network Effects of Political Events
  40. Who Wants to Deliberate - and Why?
  41. Website Interactivity & 'Distributional Path Dependence' in the U.S. Congress: An Analysis of Freshmen
  42. How Deliberation Counts: Talking, Voting, and Strategy in Democratic Choice
  43. Philosophical Psychology with Political Intent
  44. Measuring and Explaining the Quality of Web Sites in the (Virtual) House of Representatives
  45. Measuring and Explaining the Quality of Web Sites in the (Virtual) House of Representatives
  46. Home (Page) Style
  47. Measuring and Explaining the Quality of Web Sites in the (Virtual) House of Representatives
  48. Explaining the Diffusion of Web-Based Communication Technology among Congressional Offices: A Natural Experiment using State Delegations
  49. Means, Motive, & Opportunity in Becoming Informed About Politics: A Deliberative Field Experiment with Members of Congress and Their Constituents
  50. Networks, Hierarchies, and Markets: Aggregating Collective Problem Solving in Social Systems