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Income and Ideology

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The article was published on 2015-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 24 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Income distribution & Ideology.

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The Contingent, Contextual Nature of the Relationship Between Needs for Security and Certainty and Political Preferences: Evidence and Implications

TL;DR: This article showed that the relationship between need for security and certainty and political preferences vary considerably, sometimes to the point of directional shifts, on the basis of issue domain and contextual factors governing the content and volume of political discourse individuals are exposed to.
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Who Blames the Poor?: Multilevel evidence of support for and determinants of individualistic explanation of poverty in Europe

TL;DR: The authors analyzed the support for and determinants of individualistic explanations of poverty among Europeans using multilevel logistic regression models and found that the level of support for the individualistic explanation of poverty varies between European nations.
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Direct and indirect effects based on difference-in-differences with an application to political preferences following the Vietnam draft lottery

TL;DR: This paper propose a difference-in-differences approach for disentangling a total treatment effect within specific subpopulations into a direct effect and an indirect effect operating through a bin.
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Mobilizing the Wealthy: Doing “Privilege Work” and Challenging the Roots of Inequality:

TL;DR: The authors studied the mobilization of a small group of wealthy activists who join underprivileged allies to expose and contest the root causes of wealth consolidation; they offer an instructive alternative to "philanthro-capitalism" whereby the wealthy give after extreme accumulation.
References
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The moderator–mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations.

TL;DR: This article seeks to make theorists and researchers aware of the importance of not using the terms moderator and mediator interchangeably by carefully elaborating the many ways in which moderators and mediators differ, and delineates the conceptual and strategic implications of making use of such distinctions with regard to a wide range of phenomena.
Book

An introduction to the bootstrap

TL;DR: This article presents bootstrap methods for estimation, using simple arguments, with Minitab macros for implementing these methods, as well as some examples of how these methods could be used for estimation purposes.
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SPSS and SAS procedures for estimating indirect effects in simple mediation models.

TL;DR: It is argued the importance of directly testing the significance of indirect effects and provided SPSS and SAS macros that facilitate estimation of the indirect effect with a normal theory approach and a bootstrap approach to obtaining confidence intervals to enhance the frequency of formal mediation tests in the psychology literature.
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Mediation in experimental and nonexperimental studies: New procedures and recommendations.

TL;DR: Efron and Tibshirani as discussed by the authors used bootstrap tests to assess mediation, finding that the sampling distribution of the mediated effect is skewed away from 0, and they argued that R. M. Kenny's (1986) recommendation of first testing the X --> Y association for statistical significance should not be a requirement when there is a priori belief that the effect size is small or suppression is a possibility.
Book

The Authoritarian Personality

TL;DR: The Authoritarian Personality "invented a set of criteria by which to define personality traits, ranked these traits and their intensity in any given person on what it called the 'F scale' (F for fascist)".