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Yphtach Lelkes

H-index: 32
Political science 42%
Communication & Media Studies 25%
chriswarshaw.bsky.social
Our paper introducing the "American Local Government Elections Database" is online at Scientific Data. The data includes 78,000 candidates in 57,000 electoral contests in races for seven distinct local political offices in most medium and large cities and counties over the last three decades.
American local government elections database - Scientific Data
Scientific Data - American local government elections database
www.nature.com

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

derekholliday.com
In our PNAS we don't necessarily find a negative relationship between affpol and antidemocratic norm support, but certainly a non-linear one (appendix fig. below).

Personally, I think FT measures have some pretty major empirical oddities we're still evaluating

🔗 www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/...
Non-linear relationship between affective polarization and support for 4 antidemocratic norms

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

sjjphd.bsky.social
Can’t believe this isn’t satire
Screenshot of an email from my university saying: “Today, we write to share two important updates about Penn’s policies and procedures for when, where, and how open expression can take place.”

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

mollieoreilly.bsky.social
I definitely assumed the weapons the cops "took off the streets" were being destroyed, not returned to the streets for profit. I don't know WHY I assumed harm was actually being reduced, but I know better now!
Newark Police have proudly taken guns off the street for years through gun buybacks. But at the same time they have inadvertently put their own weapons back in circulation.

The Newark Police Department confirmed that they traded-in about a thousand guns in 2016 and 2017 to a firearms dealer, in exchange for discounts on new equipment. That dealer then resells the weapons.

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

notalawyer.bsky.social
this dude is basically the nation’s leading expert on legal ethics, we are so cooked.
But Stephen Gillers, an expert in judicial ethics at New York University's law school, disagreed, noting that the test in the recusal statute is based on the perspective of a fair-minded person who has all the facts.
"I don't think such an objective observer would question Alito's impartiality based on this incident," Gillers said in an email. "I find it impossible to believe that Alito knew the flag was flying upside down or, if he did know, that he knew the relationship to 'Stop the Steal.' I don't believe he would have allowed this to happen otherwise."
Gillers added that while Alito's explanation for how it happened is "hard to believe, it is more credible than the view that he knowingly chose to fly the flag upside down knowing its political message."

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

adamserwer.bsky.social
Here’s what the national guard bullshit is really about. www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archiv...
As we approach the summer of 2024, the economy is growing, migration to the border has declined at least temporarily owing to what appears to be a new crackdown by Mexican authorities, and in many major cities, crime is returning to historic lows, leaving protests as the most suitable target for demagoguery. The Biden administration’s support for Israel divides Democrats and unites Republicans, so the longer the issue remains salient, the better it is for the GOP. More broadly, the politics of “American carnage” do not work as well in the absence of carnage. Far-right politics operate best when there is a public perception of disorder and chaos, an atmosphere in which the only solution such politicians ever offer can sound appealing to desperate voters. Social-media bubbles can suffice to maintain this sense of siege among the extremely online, but cultivating this perception among most voters demands constant reinforcement.

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

carlislerainey.bsky.social
Luskin's "Robert's Rules: Suggestions for Writing" has some excellent, pithy advice for academic writers.

#polisky

PDF: github.com/soodoku/on-w...

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

jayrosen.bsky.social
At NPR... "I and a couple of other editorial leaders were encouraged to make sure that any coverage of a Trump lie was matched with a story about a lie from Hillary Clinton. Another colleague asked what to do if one candidate just lied more than the other."

Silence. slate.com/business/202...
NPR Is a Mess. But “Wokeness” Isn’t the Problem.
The real story behind the public broadcaster’s woes.
slate.com
ylelkes.bsky.social
You might be in the intersection of this venn diagram (at APSA and into built to spill)

Reposted by: Yphtach Lelkes

ntd.bsky.social
americans (reps+dems) dislike norm violations. but some (reps) still vote for norm-breakers. so we're back at vote choice. again. not public opinion abt norm-violations. vote choice. back-sliding is an elite-constraint problem; cant public opinion way out of it.

paper: tinyurl.com/normviopubop...
ylelkes.bsky.social
In an another piece, converse talks about one reason for the invention of pid was so that it couldn’t be benchmarked to Gallups vote choice. www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

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