Durably reducing transphobia: A field experiment on door-to-door canvassing D Broockman, J Kalla Science 352 (6282), 220-224, 2016 | 752 | 2016 |
Do politicians racially discriminate against constituents? A field experiment on state legislators DM Butler, DE Broockman American Journal of Political Science 55 (3), 463-477, 2011 | 665 | 2011 |
The minimal persuasive effects of campaign contact in general elections: Evidence from 49 field experiments JL Kalla, DE Broockman American Political Science Review 112 (1), 148-166, 2018 | 449 | 2018 |
Campaign contributions facilitate access to congressional officials: A randomized field experiment JL Kalla, DE Broockman American Journal of Political Science 60 (3), 545-558, 2016 | 448 | 2016 |
Bias in perceptions of public opinion among political elites DE Broockman, C Skovron American Political Science Review 112 (3), 542-563, 2018 | 437* | 2018 |
Black Politicians Are More Intrinsically Motivated To Advance Blacks’ Interests: A Field Experiment Manipulating Political Incentives DE Broockman American Journal of Political Science, 2013 | 380 | 2013 |
The causal effects of elite position‐taking on voter attitudes: Field experiments with elite communication DE Broockman, DM Butler American Journal of Political Science 61 (1), 208-221, 2017 | 314 | 2017 |
Reducing exclusionary attitudes through interpersonal conversation: Evidence from three field experiments JL Kalla, DE Broockman American Political Science Review 114 (2), 410-425, 2020 | 239 | 2020 |
Distorted Communication, Unequal Representation: Constituents Communicate Less to Representatives Not of Their Race D Broockman American Journal of Political Science, 2014 | 225* | 2014 |
Approaches to studying policy representation DE Broockman Legislative Studies Quarterly 41 (1), 181-215, 2016 | 219 | 2016 |
Do female politicians empower women to vote or run for office? A regression discontinuity approach DE Broockman Electoral Studies 34, 190-204, 2014 | 192 | 2014 |
Do Online Advertisements Increase Political Candidates' Name Recognition or Favorability? Evidence from Randomized Field Experiments DE Broockman, DP Green Political Behavior, 2012 | 153 | 2012 |
Does affective polarization undermine democratic norms or accountability? Maybe not DE Broockman, JL Kalla, SJ Westwood American Journal of Political Science 67 (3), 808-828, 2023 | 147 | 2023 |
Predispositions and the political behavior of American economic elites: Evidence from technology entrepreneurs DE Broockman, G Ferenstein, N Malhotra American Journal of Political Science 63 (1), 212-233, 2019 | 128* | 2019 |
Do congressional candidates have reverse coattails? Evidence from a regression discontinuity design DE Broockman Political Analysis 17 (4), 418-434, 2009 | 108 | 2009 |
The delegate paradox: Why polarized politicians can represent citizens best DJ Ahler, DE Broockman The Journal of Politics 80 (4), 1117-1133, 2018 | 107* | 2018 |
The design of field experiments with survey outcomes: A framework for selecting more efficient, robust, and ethical designs DE Broockman, JL Kalla, JS Sekhon Political Analysis 25 (4), 435-464, 2017 | 99 | 2017 |
Consuming cross-cutting media causes learning and moderates attitudes: A field experiment with Fox News viewers D Broockman, J Kalla OSF Preprints. April 1, 2022 | 92* | 2022 |
Which narrative strategies durably reduce prejudice? Evidence from field and survey experiments supporting the efficacy of perspective‐getting JL Kalla, DE Broockman American Journal of Political Science 67 (1), 185-204, 2023 | 86 | 2023 |
Irregularities in LaCour (2014) D Broockman, J Kalla, P Aronow | 82 | 2015 |