Record Details

Replication Data for: "How Modern Lawmakers Advertise Their Legislative Effectiveness to Constituents"

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

View Archive Info
 
 
Field Value
 
Title Replication Data for: "How Modern Lawmakers Advertise Their Legislative Effectiveness to Constituents"
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/S61MIY
 
Creator Hunt, Charles
Miler, Kristina
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description In a complex information environment, members of Congress must communicate to their constituents their value as a representative. Specifically, they aim to convince voters that they are effective representatives and therefore ought to be reelected. Modern scholarship has focused largely on legislators’ effectiveness as lawmakers in areas like bill introduction, sponsorship, and shepherding of legislation through congressional procedures (Volden and Wiseman 2014). But legislators do more than traditional lawmaking activities; they also engage in representational acts of advocacy and district-focused activity. This expanded notion of representational effectiveness is what legislators must publicize to constituents in order to maintain and build support and stay in office. Drawing on textual analysis of nearly 90,000 official newsletters from House members to their constituents from 2009-2020 (Cormack 2017), we demonstrate that legislators actively publicize these three types of effectiveness, and the ways in which their communication strategies depend on personal, electoral, and institutional factors.
 
Subject Social Sciences
 
Date 2023-11-27
 
Contributor Hunt, Charles