Congratulations to Dr. Jason Douglas Todd for the publication of award-winning article in American Political Science Review

Jason Douglas Todd

Our very best congratulations to Dr. Jason Douglas Todd, on his recently published paper titled Can Elections Motivate Responsiveness in a Single-Party Regime? Experimental Evidence from Vietnam in American Political Science Review! This paper, coauthored with Dr. Edmund Malesky of Duke University and Dr. Anh Tran of Indiana University, has also won the 2021 Best Paper Award from the American Political Science Association’s Southeast Asian Politics Group.

Abstract

A growing body of evidence attests that legislators are sometimes responsive to the policy preferences of citizens in single-party regimes, yet debate surrounds the mechanisms driving this relationship. We experimentally test two potential responsiveness mechanisms—elections versus mandates from party leaders—by provisioning delegates to the Vietnamese National Assembly with information on the policy preferences of their constituents and reminding them of either (1) the competitiveness of the upcoming 2021 elections or (2) a central decree that legislative activities should reflect constituents’ preferences. Consistent with existing work, delegates informed of citizens’ preferences are more likely to speak on the parliamentary floor and in closed-session caucuses. Importantly, we find that such responsiveness is entirely driven by election reminders; upward incentive reminders have virtually no effect on behavior.

Read the full paper

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055422000879

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