Journal of Politics

Papers
(The H4-Index of Journal of Politics is 26. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-05-01 to 2024-05-01.)
ArticleCitations
Leviathan’s Latent Dimensions: Measuring State Capacity for Comparative Political Research94
The Stability of Immigration Attitudes: Evidence and Implications71
What Have We Learned about Gender from Candidate Choice Experiments? A Meta-Analysis of Sixty-Seven Factorial Survey Experiments71
Helping or Hurting? How Governing as a Junior Coalition Partner Influences Electoral Outcomes69
Word Embeddings: What Works, What Doesn’t, and How to Tell the Difference for Applied Research53
Racial Sympathy and Its Political Consequences52
Quid Pro Quo? Corporate Returns to Campaign Contributions47
Was There a Culture War? Partisan Polarization and Secular Trends in US Public Opinion42
Understanding Partisan Cue Receptivity: Tests of Predictions from the Bounded Rationality and Expressive Utility Perspectives42
(Mis)estimating Affective Polarization42
It Is Not Only What You Say, It Is Also How You Say It: The Strategic Use of Campaign Sentiment36
Family History and Attitudes toward Out-Groups: Evidence from the European Refugee Crisis36
Populist Psychology: Economics, Culture, and Emotions36
Self-Confidence and Gender Gaps in Political Interest, Attention, and Efficacy34
Democratic Hypocrisy and Out-Group Threat: Explaining Citizen Support for Democratic Erosion34
Projecting Confidence: How the Probabilistic Horse Race Confuses and Demobilizes the Public33
Gender Quotas, Women’s Representation, and Legislative Diversity32
Do Women Pay a Higher Price for Power? Gender Bias in Political Violence in Sweden32
Partisan Consumerism: Experimental Tests of Consumer Reactions to Corporate Political Activity31
Voter Preferences and the Political Underrepresentation of Minority Groups: Lesbian, Gay, and Transgender Candidates in Advanced Democracies29
Does Homeownership Influence Political Behavior? Evidence from Administrative Data28
Where Self-Interest Trumps Ideology: Liberal Homeowners and Local Opposition to Housing Development28
Does Public Opinion Affect the Preferences of Foreign Policy Leaders? Experimental Evidence from the UK Parliament28
Information Control and Public Support for Social Credit Systems in China26
The Populist Appeal: Personality and Antiestablishment Communication26
Combining Patronage and Merit in Public Sector Recruitment26
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