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The American political science review

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The article was published on 1906-01-01 and is currently open access. It has received 578 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Political science of religion & International political economy.

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Citations
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Institutional reform of economic legislation in Egypt

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a method to solve the problem of "uniformity" and "uncertainty" in the context of health care, and propose a solution.
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Inferring network structure from cascades

TL;DR: This paper offers three topological methods to infer the structure of any directed network given a set of cascade arrival times, for a very general class of models where the activation probability of a node is a generic function of its degree and the number of its active neighbors.
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Mobility and Conflict

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study the role of inter-group differences in the emergence of conflict and derive several testable predictions about when conflict will arise, and show that conflict may arise when the cost of mobility is moderate, but may not necessarily emerge when the costs are high.
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“Tilted Scales:” The Impact of the U.S. Supreme Court on American Income Inequality

TL;DR: This paper used a time series analysis on the U.S. Supreme Court over the last fifty years to show that patterns of court outcomes can affect the distribution of income in the United States.
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Social Mobility Explains Populism, Not Inequality or Culture

TL;DR: This paper found that low social mobility consistently correlates with the geography of populism, both within and across developed countries, and neither do the prominent cultural hypotheses of immigrant stocks, social media use, nor the share of seniors in the population.
References
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Matching as Nonparametric Preprocessing for Reducing Model Dependence in Parametric Causal Inference

TL;DR: A unified approach is proposed that makes it possible for researchers to preprocess data with matching and then to apply the best parametric techniques they would have used anyway and this procedure makes parametric models produce more accurate and considerably less model-dependent causal inferences.
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Text as Data: The Promise and Pitfalls of Automatic Content Analysis Methods for Political Texts

TL;DR: A survey of automated text analysis for political science can be found in this article, where the authors provide guidance on how to validate the output of the models and clarify misconceptions and errors in the literature.
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Analyzing Incomplete Political Science Data: An Alternative Algorithm for Multiple Imputation

TL;DR: This work adapts an algorithm and uses it to implement a general-purpose, multiple imputation model for missing data that is considerably faster and easier to use than the leading method recommended in the statistics literature.
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Working With Missing Values

TL;DR: In this paper, the effects of missing values are illustrated for a linear model, and a series of recommendations are provided for missing values can produce biased estimates, distorted statistical power, and invalid conclusions.
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cem: Coarsened exact matching in Stata

TL;DR: A Stata implementation of coarsened exact matching, a new method for improving the estimation of causal effects by reducing imbalance in covariates between treated and control groups, is introduced.