Noah Kaplan
University of Houston
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Noah Kaplan.
Legislative Studies Quarterly | 2009
Eduardo Alemán; Ernesto Calvo; Mark P. Jones; Noah Kaplan
We use bill cosponsorship and roll-call vote data to compare legislators’ revealed preferences in the U.S. House of Representatives and the Argentine Chamber of Deputies. We estimate ideal points from bill cosponsorship data using principal-component analysis on an agreement matrix that included information on all bills introduced in the U.S. House (1973–2000) and Argentine Chamber (1983–2002). The ideal-point estimates of legislators’ revealed preferences based on cosponsorship data strongly correlate with similar estimates derived from roll-call vote data. Also, cosponsorship activity in the U.S. House has lower dimensionality than cosponsorship has in the Argentine Chamber. We explain this lower discrimination as a function of individual- and district-level factors in both countries. The comparative analysis of legislative voting behavior has enjoyed a resurgence of interest in the last decade (Carey 2006; Morgenstern 2004; Sieberer 2006). New statistical techniques and the greater availability of data now allow researchers to map legislative coalitions, explore party discipline, and explain political realignments in multiparty systems (see, for examples, Aleman and Saiegh 2007; Amorim Neto, Cox, and McCubbins 2003; Clinton, Jackman, and Rivers 2004; Desposato 2005; Haspel, Remington, and Smith 1998; Hix, Noury, and Roland 2006; Hug and Schulz 2007; Jones and Hwang 2005a; Londregan 2000; Morgenstern 2004; Poole 2005; and Rosenthal and Voeten 2004). Efforts to understand voting behavior in legislatures across Europe and Latin America not only expand our knowledge about lawmaking and legislative parties, but also promise to shed new light on the forces that shape legislators’ preferences within different institutional contexts.
The Economists' Voice | 2008
Aaron S. Edlin; Andrew Gelman; Noah Kaplan
In a battleground state like Colorado or New Mexico, voting in the presidential election may be equivalent to giving
Political Analysis | 2005
Joseph Bafumi; Andrew Gelman; David K. Park; Noah Kaplan
30,000 -
American Journal of Political Science | 2006
Noah Kaplan; David Park; Travis N. Ridout
50,000 to others in expected value, and as such is an extremely efficient form of charity, according to Aaron Edlin, Andrew Gelman and Noah Kaplan.
Review of Policy Research | 2006
Christina Hughes; Noah Kaplan; Joseph Y. Howard
Presidential Studies Quarterly | 2012
Noah Kaplan; David K. Park; Andrew Gelman
Archive | 2003
Aaron S. Edlin; Andrew Gelman; Noah Kaplan
Archive | 2011
Noah Kaplan; David K. Park; Andrew Gelman
National Bureau of Economic Research | 2007
Aaron S. Edlin; Andrew Gelman; Noah Kaplan
Archive | 2011
Noah Kaplan; Ernesto J. Calvo; George Hawley