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Bibliography: Voter Trust

Abrajano, M. A., & Alvarez,R. M. (2010). Assessing the Causes and Effects of Political Trust Among U.S. Latinos. American Politics Research, 38(1), 110–141.

Adona, Natalie, and Paul Gronke.2018. “Understanding the Voter Experience: The Public’s View of Election Administration and Reform.” Downloaded August 2, 2023 from https://democracyfund.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/2018_CCESReport_vFinal.pdf.

Alvarez, R. Michael, Jian Cao, and Yimeng Li. 2021. “VotingExperiences, Perceptions of Fraud, and Voter Confidence.” Social Science Quarterly 102 (4): 1225–1238.

Anderson, Carol and Tonya Bolden.2019. One Person, No Vote: How Not All Voters Are Treated Equally. New York, Bloomsbury.

Anderson, Christopher, André Blais, Shaun Bowler,Todd Donovan and Ola Listhaug. 2005. Losers’ Consent: Elections and Democratic Legitimacy. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Ang, Zoe, AndrewReeves, Jon C. Rogowski, and Arjun Vishwanath. 2022. “Partisanship, Economic Assessments, and Presidential Accountability.” American Journal of Political Science 66(2): 468-484.

Anker, Ashley E., Thomas Hugh Feeley, Bonnie McCracken, and Carolyn A. Lagoe. 2016. “Measuring the Effectiveness of Mass-Mediated Health Campaigns Through

Meta-Analysis.” Journal of Health Communication 4: 439-456.

Arceneaux, Craig. 2018. “Decentralized Administration.” In Electoral Integrity in America: Securing Democracy, edited by Pippa Norris, Sarah Cameron, and Thomas Wynter. Oxford University Press.

Arceneaux, Kevin and Rory Truex.2022. “Donald Trump and the Lie.” Forthcoming, Perspectives on Politics.

Atkeson, Lonna Rae and Kyle Saunders. 2007. “The Effect of ElectionAdministration on Voter Confidence: A Local Matter?” PS: Political Science & Politics 40(4), 655-660.

Ballhaus, Rebecca, Joe Palazzolo, and Andrew Restuccia. 2021. “Trump and His AlliesSet the Stage for Riot Well Before January 6.” Wall Street Journal, January 8, 2021.

Beaulieu, Emily. 2014. “From voter ID to party ID: How political partiesaffect perceptions of election fraud in the U.S.” Electoral Studies 35: 24-32.

Benkler, Yochai, et al. 2020.“Mail-In Voter Fraud: Anatomy of a Disinformation Campaign.” Berkman Center Research Publication No. 2020-6.

Berlinski, Nicolas, Margaret Doyle, Andrew M. Guess, Gabrielle Levy, Benjamin Lyons, Jacob M. Montgomery, Brendan Nyhan and Jason Reifler. 2023. “The Effects of Unsubstantiated Claims of Voter Fraud on Confidence in Elections.” Journal of Experimental Political Science 10(1): 34-49.

Berman, Eli, Michael Callen, Clark Gibson, JamesD. Long and Arman Rezaee. 2019. “Election Fairness and Government Legitimacy in Afghanistan.” Journal of Economic Behavior & Organization 168: 292-317.

Biggers, Daniel, Elizabeth Mitchell Elder, Seth Hill, Thad Kousser and Gabriel Lenz.2022. “Can Addressing IntegrityConcerns about Mail Balloting Increase Turnout? Results from a Large-Scale Field Experiment in the 2020 Presidential Election.” Journal of Experimental Political Science.

Birch, Sarah. 2008. “Electoral Institutions and Popular Confidence in Electoral Processes: A Cross-National Analysis.” Electoral Studies 27(2): 305–320.

Blais, André, and Marc André Bodet. 2006. “How Do Voters Form Expectations about the Parties’ Chances of Winning the Election?” Social Science Quarterly 87 (3): 477–493.

Blake, Aaron. “GOP election deniers increasingly admit they’re just going off vibes.” Washington Post, March 23, 2023. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2023/03/14/election-deniers-evidence-belief

Braley, Alia, Gabriel Lenz, Dhaval Adjodah, Hossein Rahnama, and Alex Pentland. 2023. “The Subversion Dilemma:Why Voters Who Cherish Democracy Participate in Democratic Backsliding.” Nature Human Behaviour.

Bright Line Watch.2021. “Still milesapart: Americans and the state of U.S. democracy half a year into the Biden presidency.” https://brightlinewatch.org/still-miles-apart-americans-and-the-state-of-u-s-democracy-half- a-year-into-the-biden-presidency/

Bright Line Watch. 2022. “Rebound in Confidence: American Democracy and the 2022 Midterm Elections.” November 2022. Downloaded August 1, 2023 from http://brightlinewatch.org/american-democracy-and-the-2022-midterm-elections/.

Bright Line Watch. 2023. “Uncharted Territory: The Aftermath of Presidential Indictments.” July 26, 2023. Downloaded July 31, 2023 from http://brightlinewatch.org/uncharted-territory-the-aftermath-of-presidential-indictments/.

Bryant, Lisa A. 2020. “SeeingIs Believing: An Experiment on Absentee Ballots and Voter Confidence.” American Politics Research 48 (6): 700–704.

Bump, Philip. 2020. “Trump’s effort to steal the election comes down to some utterly ridiculous statistical claims.” Washington Post, December 9, 2020. https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2020/12/09/trumps-effort-steal-election-comes-dow n-some-utterly-ridiculous-statistical-claims/

Bunche, Ralph. 1941. “Disfranchisement of the Negro.”in S. Brown, A. Davis, and U. Lee (editors), The Negro Caravan (New York: Dryden Press).

Bush, Sarah Sunn and LaurenPrather. 2017. “The Promise and Limits of Election Observers in Building Election Credibility.” Journal of Politics 79(3):921–935.

Bush, Sarah Sunn and Lauren Prather. 2018. “Who’s There? Election ObserverIdentity and the Local Credibility of Elections.” International Organization 72(3):659–692.

Bush, Sarah Sunn and Lauren Prather.2022. Monitors and Meddlers: How Foreign Actors Influence Local Trust in Elections. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Carey, John, Brian Fogarty, Brendan Nyhan, and Jason Reifler. 2023. “Corrections vs. Prebunking: Testing Different Approaches to Promoting Confidence in Elections.” Working paper.

Chapman, Emilee, and Katherine Clayton. 2023. “The Effects of Convenience Voting on Democratic Values, Political Efficacy, and Electoral Trust.” Working paper. https://osf.io/fp7xv.

Chen, M. Keith, Kareem Haggag, Devin G. Pope, and Ryne Rohla. 2022. “Racial Disparities in Voting Wait Times: Evidence from Smartphone Data.” The Review of Economics and Statistics 104 (6): 1341–50.

Chinoy, Ira. 2010. “Battle of the Brains:Election-Night Forecasting at the Dawn of the Computer Age.” Ph.D dissertation (University of Maryland).

Christenson, Dino P., Sarah E. Kreps, and Douglas L. Kriner. "Contemporary presidency: Going public in an era of social media: Tweets, corrections, and public opinion." Presidential Studies Quarterly 51(1): 151-165.

Citizen Data. 2022. “The AmericanDemocracy Roadmap: Playbookfor Trusted Elections.” Report available at https://citizendata.docsend.com/view/udxw3hhqunies55k.

Claassen, Ryan L., David B. Magleby, J. Quin Monson, and Kelly D. Patterson. 2013.“Voter Confidence and the Election-Day Voting Experience.” Political Behavior 35 (2): 215–35.

Clayton, Katherine, and Robb Willer. 2023. “Endorsements from Republican politicians can increase confidence in U.S. elections.” Forthcoming, Research and Politics.

Clayton, Katherine, Nicholas Davis, Brendan Nyhan, Ethan Porter, Timothy Ryan, and Thomas Wood. 2021. “Elite rhetoric can undermine democratic norms.” Proceedingsof the National Academy of Sciences 118 (23): e2024125118.

Cottrell, David, Michael C. Herron, and Daniel A. Smith. 2021. “Voting Lines, Equal Treatment, and EarlyVoting Check-In Times in Florida.” State Politics& Policy Quarterly 21 (2): 109–38.

Curiel, John, CharlesStewart III, and Jack Williams.2021. “The Blue Shift in the 2020 Election.” Report for the MIT Election Data & Science Lab.

DeSantis, Ron. 2023.“Governor Ron DeSantis Highlights Accomplishments DuringFirst Year of Election Integrity Office.” July 14, 2023. https://www.flgov.com/2023/07/14/governor-ron-desantis-highlights-accomplishments-during-first-year-of-election-integrity-office/

Delavande, Adeline, and Charles F. Manski. 2012. “Candidate Preferences and Expectations of Election Outcomes.” Proceedings of the NationalAcademy of Sciences109 (10): 3711–3715.

Donovan, Kathleen, Paul M. Kellstedt, Ellen M. Key, and Matthew J. Lebo. 2020. “Motivated Reasoning, PublicOpinion, and Presidential Approval.” PoliticalBehavior 42(4): 1201-1221.

Druckman, James. 2022.“ Misperceptions, Competition, and Support for Democracy: Are Meta-Perception Corrections Effective?” https://www.ipr.northwestern.edu/documents/working-papers/2022/wp-22-46.pdf

Eggers, Andrew C., Martin Ellison,and Sang Seok Lee. "Theeconomic impact of recession announcements." Journal of Monetary Economics 120 (2021): 40-52. 

Erikson, RobertS., Michael MacKuen, and James A. Stimson. 2002. The Macro Polity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Erlich, Aaron. 2018. "Measuring How Information Changes Electoral Uncertainty in a Developing Democracy: Experimental Evidence from the Country of Georgia." Unpublished manuscript. Accessed here https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/mwg7u on 2023, July 27.

Erlich, Aaron and Nicholas Kerr. 2016. “The Local Mwananchi has Lost Trust?: Design Transition and Legitimacy in Kenyan ElectionManagement.” Journal of Modern African Studies 54(4):671–702.

Esaiasson, Peter, Sveinung Arnesen, and Hannah Werner. 2023. “How to be Graciousabout Political Loss —The Importance of Good Loser Messages in Policy Controversies. Comparative Political Studies.” Comparative Political Studies 56(5): 599–624.

Fahey, James J. 2022. “The Big Lie: Expressive Responding and Misperceptions in the United States.” Journal of Experimental Political Science 10 (2): 267-278.

Fernekes, Collier, Katie Harbath, and Maria Bianchi Buck. 2022.“How Tech and Election Officials Can Protect Elections Online.” Bipartisan Policy Center, August 2022. https://bipartisanpolicy.org/report/how-to-protect-elections-online/

Foley, Edward B. 2013. “A Big Blue Shift: Measuring an Asymmetrically Increasing Margin of Litigation.” Journal of Law and Politics 28: 501-546.

Foley, Edward B., and Charles StewartIII. 2020. “Explaining the Blue Shift in Election Canvassing.” Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy 1 (2): 239–65.

Fraga, Bernard L. 2018. The TurnoutGap: Race, Ethnicity, and Political Inequality in a Diversifying America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Gaudette, Jennifer, Seth Hill, Thad Kousser, Mackenzie Lockhart, and Mindy Romero. 2022. “After The 2022 Midterms, Do Americans Trust Elections?” Yankelovich Center for Social Science Research. https://yankelovichcenter.ucsd.edu/_files/reports/After-The-2022-Midterms-Do-Americans-Trust-Elections.pdf

Gaudette, Jennifer, Seth Hill, Thad Kousser, Mackenzie Lockhart, and Mindy Romero. 2023. “Can Official Messaging on Trust in Elections Break Through Partisan Polarization?” Paper presented at the 2023 Midwest Political Science Association Meetings.

Graham, Matthew, and Omer Yair. 2023. “Expressive Responding and Trump’sBig Lie.” Forthcoming, Political Behavior.

Groeling, Tim. 2008. “Who’s the Fairest of Them All? An Empirical Test for Partisan Bias on ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox News.” Presidential Studies Quarterly 38 (4): 631–657.

Hall, Thad E., J. Quin Monson and Kelly D. Patterson. 2009. “The Human Dimension of Elections: How Poll Workers Shape Public Confidence in Elections.” Political Research Quarterly 62(3):507–522.

Hollander, Barry A. 2014. “The Surprised Loser: The Role of Electoral Expectations and News Media Exposure in Satisfaction with Democracy.” Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 91(4): 651-668.

Holman, Mirya R. and J. Celeste Lay. 2018. “They See Dead People (Voting): Correcting Misperceptions about Voter Fraud in the 2016U.S. Presidential Election.” Journal of Political Marketing 18 (1-2): 31-68.

Hopkins, Danie, J. 2018. The Increasingly United States: How and Why American Political Behavior Nationalized. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Hopkins, Daniel J. 2023. Stable Condition: Elites'Limited Influence on Health Care Attitudes. Russell Sage Foundation.

Institute for Governmental Studies. 2020. “Voters willing to tolerate delays in the election vote count to maximize Californians’ opportunities to register and vote.” March 3, 2020. https://escholarship.org/content/qt3mc6q8dz/qt3mc6q8dz.pdf

Jenkins, Matthew David, and Daniel Gomez.2022. “Trump Lies,Truth Dies? Epistemic Crisis and the Effect of False Balance Reporting on Beliefs About Voter Fraud.” Forthcoming, The International Journal of Press/Politics.

Jochem, Torsten, Ilia Murtazashvili and Jennifer Murtazashvili. 2020. “Can the Design of Electoral Institutions Improve Perceptions of Democracy in Fragile States?Evidence from Afghanistan.” Journal of Global Security Studies 5(3): 443–462.

Karp, Jeffrey A., Alessandro Nai, and Pippa Norris. 2018. “Dial ‘F’ for Fraud: Explaining Citizens Suspicions about Elections.” Electoral Studies 53 (June): 11–19.

Kerr, Nicholas. 2013. “Popular Evaluations of Election Quality in Africa: Evidence from Nigeria.” Electoral Studies 32(4):819–837.

Kerr, Nicholas. 2018.“Election-Day Experiences and Evaluations of Electoral Integrity in Unconsolidated Democracies: Evidence from Nigeria.” Political Studies 66(3):667–686.

Keyssar, Alexander. 2000. The Right to Vote: The Contested History of Democracy in the United States. New York: Basic Books.

King, Bridgett A. 2020. “Waitingto vote: the effect of administrative irregularities at polling locations and voter confidence.” Policy Studies, 41(2-3), 230-248.

Koch, J.W. (2019),Racial Minorities’ Trust in Government and Government Decisionmakers. Social Science Quarterly, 100: 19-37

Kousser J. Morgan. 1974. The Shaping of Southern Politics:Suffrage Restriction and the Establishment of the One-Party South, 1880–1910. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Kunda, Ziva. 1990. "The case for motivated reasoning." Psychological Bulletin 108(3): 480-498.

Kuru, Ozan, Josh Pasek, and Michael W Traugott. 2020. “When Polls Disagree: How Competitive Results and Methodological Quality Shape Partisan Perceptions of Polls and Electoral Predictions.” International Journal of Public Opinion Research 32(3): 586–603.

Lee, Frances E. 2018. “The 115th Congress and Questions of Party Unity in a Polarized Era.” Journal of Politics 80 (4): 1464-73.

Leemann, Lucas, LukasF. Stoetzer, and Richard Traunmüller. 2021. “Eliciting Beliefs as Distributions in Online Surveys.” Political Analysis 29 (4): 541–553.

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Lupia, Arthur.2016. Uninformed: Why PeopleSeem to Know So LittleAbout Political and What We Can Do About It. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Lyons, Benjamin A., and KaitlynS. Workman. 2022. “Explicit voter fraud conspiracy cues increase belief among co-partisans but have broader spillover effects on confidence in elections.” Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review 3 (3): 1-35.

Maldonado, Arturo,and Mitchell A. Seligson. 2014.“ Electoral Trust in Latin America.” In Pippa Norris, Richard W. Frank, and Ferran Martinezi Coma (eds.), Advancing Electoral Integrity. New York: Oxford Academic.

Malzahn, Janet and Andrew B. Hall. 2023. “Election-Denying Republican Candidates Underperformed in the 2022 Midterms.” Working paper. https://www.gsb.stanford.edu/faculty-research/working-papers/election-denying-republican-candidates-underperformed-2022-midterms

Mauk, Marlene. 2022."Electoral integrity matters:how electoral process conditions the relationship between political losing and political trust." Quality & Quantity 56(3): 1709-1728.

Mernyk, Joseph S., Sophia L. Pink, James N. Druckman, and Robb Willer. 2022. “Correcting Inaccurate Metaperceptions Reduces Americans’ Support for Partisan Violence.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences119(16): e2116851119.

Mongrain, Philippe. 2023. “Suspicious Minds: Unexpected Election Outcomes, Perceived Electoral Integrity and Satisfaction With Democracy in American Presidential Elections.” Forthcoming, Political Research Quarterly.

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Nyhan, Brendan, Jason Reifler, Sean Richey, Gary L. Freed. 2014 “Effective Messages in Vaccine Promotion: A Randomized Trial.” Pediatrics 133 (4): e835–e842.

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Pasek, Michael H., Lee-Or Ankori-Karlinsky, Alex Levy-Vene, and Samantha L. Moore-Berg. 2022. “Biased and Inaccurate Meta-Perceptions about Out-Partisans’ Support for Democratic Principles May Erode Democratic Norms.” Scientific Reports 12: 16284.

Pennycook, Gordon, and David G. Rand. 2021. “Examining false beliefs about voter fraud in the wake of the 2020 Presidential Election.” Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review 2(1): 1-19.

Pettigrew, Stephen. 2017. “The Racial Gap in Wait Times: Why Minority Precincts Are Underserved by Local Election Officials.” Political Science Quarterly 132 (3): 527–47. https://doi.org/10.1002/polq.12657.

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