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Dive into the research topics where Cynthia R. Rugeley is active.

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Featured researches published by Cynthia R. Rugeley.


Journal of Urban Affairs | 2014

EXPLAINING THE ADOPTION AND IMPLEMENTATION OF LOCAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICIES IN THE UNITED STATES

Susan M. Opp; Jeffery L. Osgood; Cynthia R. Rugeley

ABSTRACT: Using a large national sample of U.S. cities the authors create an environmental policy index to explore the factors that explain the adoption and implementation of environmental policies at the local level. Using univariate, bivariate, and multivariate methods, these data indicate that cities with higher populations, more highly educated citizens, higher percentages of Hispanic residents, located in the West (and more specifically California), and that are central cities are more likely to engage in environmental policies. Furthermore, this article finds evidence of differences in engagement based upon the subarea of environmental protection examined.


State Politics & Policy Quarterly | 2009

Getting on the Rolls: Analyzing the Effects of Lowered Barriers on Voter Registration

Cynthia R. Rugeley; Robert A. Jackson

States and the federal government have initiated reforms designed to increase voting participation. Research has focused on the effects of these reforms-specifically, the National Voter Registration Act of 1993 (NVRA)-on voter turnout, but little research has focused directly on voter registration. Moving beyond the question of whether the NVRA increased registration, we ask: Did its implementation diminish the influence of core demographic variables on registration, producing a more representative pool of registered citizens? Relying on data from Current Population Surveys, our analyses provide limited affrmative support. The NVRA attenuated the influence of income in the states with no previous Motor Voter laws. It also reduced the on-year influence of age and the off-year influence of residential stability in these states and those that had prior passive Motor Voter laws. It did not have a similar effect on the influence of other core characteristics.


State and Local Government Review | 2014

City Limits in a Postrecessionary World Explaining the Pursuit of Developmental Policies after the Great Recession

Susan M. Opp; Jeffery L. Osgood; Cynthia R. Rugeley

This article explores the changing landscape of local economic development in the United States from a period of stability (1999) to a period of recessionary pressures (2009). This research finds support for one of the key components of the city limits thesis: competition drives developmental policy use. Additional notable findings include a declining role for private business in the economic development process, a mixed relationship between policy adoption and resident’s level of need for economic development, and an emphasis on higher visibility policies during recessionary periods.


American Journal of Political Science | 2008

Assessing the “Experience Bonus” Through Examining Strategic Entry, Candidate Quality, and Campaign Receipts in U.S. House Elections

Cherie D. Maestas; Cynthia R. Rugeley


Social Science Research | 2013

Convenient yet not a convenience sample: Jury pools as experimental subject pools.

Gregg R. Murray; Cynthia R. Rugeley; Dona-Gene Mitchell; Jeffery J. Mondak


American Review of Politics | 2012

Investigating How Voters Weigh Issues and Partisanship in Judicial Elections

Mark Jonathan McKenzie; Cynthia R. Rugeley; Michael A. Unger


Political Behavior | 2017

Americans’ Knowledge of Their Local Judges

Mark Jonathan McKenzie; Cynthia R. Rugeley; Daniel Benjamin Bailey; Seth C. McKee


Politics and Policy | 2015

Testing Voter Responses to New Style Judicial Campaign Appeals: What Works—Policy Promotion or Experience?

Mark Jonathan McKenzie; Cynthia R. Rugeley; Michael A. Unger


Archive | 2014

Understanding Americans’ Perceptions of Local Courts: Would Voters Know and Love Judge Judy More If She Were to Run for Election in a Small Town?

Mark Jonathan McKenzie; Cynthia R. Rugeley; Daniel Benjamin Bailey; Seth C. McKee


Archive | 2013

An experimental test of the effects of issues and experience on voters in judicial elections

Mark Jonathan McKenzie; Cynthia R. Rugeley

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Jeffery L. Osgood

West Chester University of Pennsylvania

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Susan M. Opp

Colorado State University

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Dona-Gene Mitchell

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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John David Gerlach

Western Carolina University

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