The paper argues that recent work finding muted (or even positive!) electoral effects of austerity on incumbent support suffers from selection bias: incumbents avoid austerity when they are electorally vulnerable.
Which is all plausible. Though, I wish the paper engaged a little more with the "credibility politics" of austerity.
E.g., in 🇬🇧, the Tories pushed through spending cuts despite clear opposition, but did enough damage to Labour's credibility that they won 3 elections in a row!
This type of vignette/conjoint design is very clean, but makes it difficult to capture the valence aspect of austerity politics.
Of course, this was a big part of Pierson's original thesis: that electoral effects are dependent on blame-shifting and credit-claiming strategies...
"Does Class-Based Campaigning Work? How Working Class Appeals Attract and Polarize Voters" by @JRob617, Stubager, Thau & Tilley
Appeals to the working class increase support among working class voters and (to some extent) polarize voters by class.
"Polarize" here just means that the gap in support among working class vs upper middle class voters increases.
However, it's pretty remarkable how small the electoral costs are with this strategy! Upper middle class voters are not very bothered by this type of language.
What's especially attractive about these symbolic appeals - especially to right-wing parties! - is that they operate mostly independently of policy/ideology.
And of course, I'm now wondering about the "credibility politics" of class-based appeals. (Bit of a theme emerging here!)
The effect sizes are very large given that this is just "cheap talk"!
Is there really an electoral advantage to be had here? (What's to stop the other party making the same type of appeal?)
And what happens to these effects when we include a "rebuttal" in the vignette (e.g. a sceptical media commentary, or an opposition politician making accusations of hypocrisy)?
"Computational Identification of Media Frames:
Strengths, Weaknesses, and Opportunities" by @pmyteh and Culpepper
Comparing 3 computational methods for identifying media frames (k-means clustering, EFA, STM). Broadly encouraging, though main takeaway is that "scale matters".
Variation in framing may be overwhelmed by other sources of variation (stylistic, vocab). So this approach is most suited to datasets where texts are from the same / similar sources.
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In April 2022, Russian hackers leaked a cache of 22,000 emails from a network of encrypted Protonmail accounts, including ex-MI6 chief Sir Richard Dearlove.
The emails were uploaded to a site with the domain name "sneakystrawhead" – apparently a reference to Boris Johnson's typically unkempt hairstyle...
A group of hard-right Brexiteers, including a former head of MI6, secretly attacked a top science journal after their debunked paper on an "alternative" Covid vaccine was rejected.
From @ComputerWeekly & @BylineTimes, this is a MUST READ 👇
This piece raises serious questions about the conduct of Sir Richard Dearlove, the former head of MI6 who is best known for his role in the intelligence failures surrounding the Iraq war.
In the early stages of the pandemic, Dearlove began collaborating with a group of scientists who claimed to have proof that the Covid pandemic was the result of a lab leak.
Mansfield's in-depth ethnographic work has given him an unmatched insight into the inner lives of Women. #Mansfieldat90
While feminist scholars pointed to spousal inequalities in domestic work, Mansfield's meticulous research allowed him to uncover previously unacknowledged contributions of men to the running of a household.
In 2021, Harvard apologized to Terry Karl and many others who were sexually harassed by Jorge Domínguez, acknowledging "institutional failures".
At the same time, Harvard was doing the exact same thing to the complainants in the Comaroff case!
And that's not the only overlap...
Jorge Domínguez had been director of the @HarvardWCFIA from 1996 - 2006, a position that allowed him to exert considerable power over funding opportunities.
John Comaroff is affiliated with the Weatherhead Center, as are (by my count) 22 of the 38 signatories to the open letter.
Of course, it's not exactly surprising that many social science faculty are affiliated with one of the main centers for social science research.
But several of the signatories hold (or held) leadership positions, not just affiliations.
Adding new links to the map each week is depressing, but one silver lining is seeing a coalition of journalists, lawyers, academics, and citizens come together to expose this government's corruption.
"I thought, I need a side project that's going to keep me occupied, something useful, that's nothing to do with Trump."
Q: Why does cronyism matter?
A: The idea that we created a ‘VIP lane’ for politically-connected firms goes against every set of anti-corruption best practices that's ever been written. By creating that system, the government incentivised all kinds of opportunistic behaviour.