Daniel A. N. Goldstein
Assistant Prof/postdoc at UiO. Prior: Max Weber at EUI and PhD at Yale. Political economy, climbing, etc. daniel-a-n-goldstein.com
- Reposted by Daniel A. N. Goldstein📢 New Article 👥 Daniel Alexander Novick Goldstein @daniel-a-n-goldstein.com (ISV) & Drew Stommes 👉 Who Should Fight? Experimental Evidence on Policy Corrections to the Unequal Costs of US Wars 📗 Open Access in International Studies Quarterly 🔗 doi.org/10.1093/isq/...
- Do citizens want to address unfair burden-sharing in public goods? New research out in ISQ @isq-jrnl.bsky.social with @drewstommes.bsky.social addresses this question by highlighting the unequal socioeconomic costs of US wars academic.oup.com/isq/article/...
- Using formal theory, a survey experiment, & text analysis, we find: • People prefer “direct corrections” - policies that address the disparity itself • “Indirect corrections” that compensate burdened groups get less support • Fairness matters more than social identity in shaping preferences
- This research has been a long time coming, and we would like to acknowledge the support of several people who have helped throughout the process, including Alex Coppock, Greg Huber, Ebonya Washington, Jonathan Caverley, and Kyle Peyton, among many others
- Reposted by Daniel A. N. GoldsteinThe 5th Nordic Political Behavior Workshop in Trondheim! @lchristensen.bsky.social @rdassonneville.bsky.social @finseraas.bsky.social et al!
- For no particular reason, anyone interested in a model of bureaucratic resistance may find the following interesting! www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/... #PolSci
- The EPA (like most Federal agencies) is facing alarming “institutional erosion”, maybe worse than the chaos of the 1980s. And this quote gets to the real point. This is not about policy differences. These are institutional changes that require acts by Congress #EPA #InstitutionalDisruption #Congress
- This is the article by Lisa Friedman, whose reporting I have draw on extensively in my work on the EPA and institutional disruption
- Reposted by Daniel A. N. Goldstein[This post could not be retrieved]
- Reposted by Daniel A. N. Goldstein"If someone legally in the United States can be grabbed from his home for engaging in constitutionally protected political activity, we are in a drastically different country from the one we inhabited before," writes our columnist Michelle Goldberg.
- Trump’s firing of key officials and the gutting of agencies is more than headlines—it’s reshaping American government capacity with long-term effects on political stability and policy. My @thejop.bsky.social article explores how “institutional disruption” impacts government performance over time 🧵
- Government workers respond to disruptive leadership in three ways: 1️⃣ Resistance: Sticking to the agency’s mission 2️⃣ Temporary Reversals: A weakened commitment to mission, but agencies can recover 3️⃣ Erosion: Abandoning the mission entirely and missions may take years to recover
-
View full threadReach out if you’d like to chat about the long-term implications! jop.blogs.uni-hamburg.de/reversals-of...
- Reposted by Daniel A. N. GoldsteinThe @lsegovernment.bsky.social / STICERD political science & political economy WiP seminar resumes tomorrow with @dang11.bsky.social, and an exciting line up for the Winter Term