five

Replication data for: War, the Presidency, and Legislative Voting Behavior

收藏
NIAID Data Ecosystem2026-03-08 收录
下载链接:
https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/OMESOW
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
An extraordinary body of scholarship suggests that war, perhaps more than any other contributor, is responsible for the emergence of a distinctly modern presidency. Central to this argument is a belief that members of Congress predictably and reliably line up behind the president during times of war. Few scholars, however, have actually subjected this argument to quantitative investigation. This paper does so. Estimating ideal points for members of Congress at the start and end of the most significant wars in the past century, we find consistent--albeit not uniform--evidence of a wartime effect. The outbreaks of both World Wars and the post-9/11 era--though not the Korean or Vietnam wars--coincided with discernible changes in member voting behavior that better reflected the ideological leanings of the presidents then in office. In the aftermath of all these wars, meanwhile, members shifted away from the sitting president’s ideological orientation. These findings are not confined to any single subset of policies, are robust to a wide variety of modeling specifications, and run contrary to scholarship that emphasizes ideological consistency in members’ voting behavior.
创建时间:
2015-05-22
5,000+
优质数据集
54 个
任务类型
进入经典数据集
二维码
社区交流群

面向社区/商业的数据集话题

二维码
科研交流群

面向高校/科研机构的开源数据集话题

数据驱动未来

携手共赢发展

商业合作