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Session Submission Type: Virtual Created Panel
Polarization became a widely used concept to analyze politics and legislative behavior during the last decade, insdide and outside the U.S. What are its causes and implications? Should observers always expect to see outcomes closer to the extremes rather than centrist policies? This panel discusses features of this concept in the American case
Inducing Polarization: Procedural Bias in Ideal Point Estimation - Austin Bussing, Sam Houston State University; Joshua Yoshio Lerner, NORC at the University of Chicago
Political Parties as Drivers of U.S. Polarization: 1927-2018 - Nathan J. Canen, University of Houston; Chad Kendall; Francesco Trebbi, University of British Columbia
The Paradox of Moderation in a Polarized Era - Michael A. Bailey, Georgetown University
To Moderate, or Not to Moderate: Strategic Media Sharing by Cong. Campaigns - Maggie Macdonald, New York University; Joshua A. Tucker, New York University; Richard Bonneau, NYU; Jonathan Nagler, New York University