Showing 1 through 2 of 2 records.
| | Pages: 13 pages | || | Words: 3118 words | || | |
| 1. Cavender, Amy. "Dialogue Across Traditions: Lessons from ECT and the Joint Declaration" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the MPSA Annual National Conference, Palmer House Hotel, Hilton, Chicago, IL, Apr 03, 2008 Online <PDF>. 2009-11-25 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p268915_index.html>Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: This paper explores the dialogues that led to the ECT statement and the Joint Declaration on Justification. What lessons learned from those dialogues might be applicable to political dialogue in religiously and philosophically diverse society? |
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| | Pages: 36 pages | || | Words: 8904 words | || | |
| 2. Harada, Masataka. "Re-examining Neighborhood Eects on Local Political Participation - An application of the generalization of propensity score matching" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association 67th Annual National Conference, The Palmer House Hilton, Chicago, IL, Apr 02, 2009 Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-11-25 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p362698_index.html>Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Review Method: Peer Reviewed Abstract: This paper reevaluates socioeconomic neighborhood effects on political participation taking account for the effects from sorting. Past literature of political science has identified that poverty and socioeconomic homogeneity are the two major neighborhood-level inhibitors of political participation. Those studies, however, ignore the effects of sorting either theoretically or statistically. Given the magnitude of sorting having occurred after WWII, there is enough room to suspect that neighborhood effects simply represent the difference in the dispositions of residents between neighborhoods. Moreover, randomized social experiment is not necessarily the best method in this case because it tends to pick up the applicants who have high level of voice. Using Social Capital Benchmark Survey matched with tract level census and methodologically relying on the generalization of propensity score by Imai and van Dyk(2004), this paper attempts to elucidate the heterogeneity of neighborhood effects. The results show that consideration of the propensity score makes most statistically significant neighborhood effects under parametric model disappear. Breakdown coefficients also suggest that sorting is not necessarily the inhibitor of political participation, but mismatched residency is. |
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