Chicago Studies in American Politics
A series edited by Benjamin I. Page, Susan Herbst,
Lawrence R. Jacobs, and James Druckman
Also in the series:
ELECTING JUDGES: THE SURPRISING EFFECTS OF CAMPAIGNING ON JUDICIAL LEGITIMACY
by James L. Gibson
FOLLOW THE LEADER?: HOW VOTERS RESPOND TO POLITICIANS’ POLICIES AND PERFORMANCE
by Gabriel S. Lenz
THE SUBMERGED STATE: HOW INVISIBLE GOVERNMENT POLICIES UNDERMINE AMERICAN
by Suzanne Mettler
DISCIPLINING THE POOR: NEOLIBERAL PATERNALISM AND THE PERSISTENT POWER OF RACE
by Joe Soss, Richard C. Fording, and Sanford F. Schram
WHY PARTIES? A SECOND LOOK
by John H. Aldrich
NEWS THAT MATTERS: TELEVISION AND AMERICAN OPINION, UPDATED EDITION
by Shanto Iyengar and Donald R. Kinder
SELLING FEAR: COUNTERTERRORISM, THE MEDIA, AND PUBLIC OPINION
by Brigitte L. Nacos, Yaeli Bloch-Elkon, and Robert Y. Shapiro
OBAMA’S RACE: THE 2008 ELECTION AND THE DREAM OF A POST-RACIAL AMERICA
by Michael Tesler and David O. Sears
FILIBUSTERING: A POLITICAL HISTORY OF OBSTRUCTION IN THE HOUSE AND SENATE
by Gregory Koger
IN TIME OF WAR: UNDERSTANDING AMERICAN PUBLIC OPINION FROM WORLD WAR II TO IRAQ
by Adam J. Berinisky
US AGAINST THEM: ETHNOCENTRIC FOUNDATIONS OF AMERICAN OPINION
by Donald R. Kinder and Cindy D. Kam
THE PARTISAN SORT: HOW LIBERALS BECAME DEMOCRATS AND CONSERVATIVES BECAME REPUBLICANS
by Matthew Levendusky
Additional series titles follow index