
As a quantitative political scientist who specializes in survey research, I have programmed many conjoint experiments in Qualtrics!
As a quantitative political scientist who specializes in survey research, I have programmed many conjoint experiments in Qualtrics!
::::: {#block-d3b7eb330a30abf011ba .sqs-block .html-block .sqs-block-html block-type=“2” border-radii=“{"topLeft":{"unit":"px","value":0.0},"topRight":{"unit":"px","value":0.0},"bottomLeft":{"unit":"px","value":0.0},"bottomRight":{"unit":"px","value":0.0}}”} As a quantitative political scientist who specializes in survey research, I have programmed many conjoint experiments in Qualtrics!
I am friends with Andrew (a pseudonym used here for anonymity), an American who lives in rural Virginia, votes Republican, supports Donald Trump, and holds far-right beliefs.
Jessica Trounstine’s 2018 book Segregation by Design: Local Politics and Inequality in American Cities contributes to the public policy literature by exploring how segregation has affected local policy outcomes in the United States.
One measure of unequal opportunity is intergenerational economic mobility, the “chance that people who spent their childhood in that location ended up, as adults, higher on the income and economic-status ranking than their parents” (Sanders 2017). A person who lives in a region with high intergenerational economic mobility will be more likely to be in a higher income bracket in their 40s than their parents were at the same age: “the place you
Premier Dalton McGuinty’s decision to introduce a harmonized sales tax (HST) on July 1st, 2010 in Ontario was met with widespread opposition. Politicians denounced the move as politically disastrous. Lorne Gunter argued in the National Post that “McGuinty lacks the natural revulsion for higher taxes that most consumers have.” Considering the political challenges, why did McGuinty implement the HST?