
Contents
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Assessing Dyadic Representation: Congruence and Responsiveness Assessing Dyadic Representation: Congruence and Responsiveness
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Shifting Patterns of Responsiveness Shifting Patterns of Responsiveness
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Information and Responsiveness Information and Responsiveness
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Assessing Collective Representation Assessing Collective Representation
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Shifting patterns of Collective Representation Shifting patterns of Collective Representation
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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References References
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20 Representation
Get accessLarry M. Bartels is Professor and May Werthan Shayne Chair of Public Policy and Social Science, and Co-Director of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions at Vanderbilt University.
Joshua D. Clinton is Professor of Political Science, and Co-Director, Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, Vanderbilt University.
John G. Geer is Distinguished Professor and Chair of Political Science at Vanderbilt University.
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Published:04 August 2014
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Abstract
We examine the history of political representation in the United States using a multi-stage statistical analysis of the changing relationship between roll call votes in the US House of Representatives and the preferences of citizens (as measured by presidential votes). We show that members of Congress have become considerably more responsive to constituents’ preferences over the past 40 years, reversing a half-century drought in responsiveness stemming from the South’s one-party Jim Crow era. However, the House as a whole has become less representative, veering too far left when Democrats are in the majority and too far right when Republicans are.
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