Frank Baumgartner

  • Permalink Gallery

    Blacks are much more likely to be executed for killing whites than whites who have killed blacks.

Blacks are much more likely to be executed for killing whites than whites who have killed blacks.

Share this:

Last year saw the increased popularization of the “#BlackLivesMatter” movement in the wake of the killing of unarmed Black men by police in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York. In new research, Frank Baumgartner, Amanda Grigg, and Alisa Mastro find that in the area of capital punishment, Black lives seem to matter far less than whites’. They find that, since 1976, […]

  • Permalink Gallery

    Popular presidents can influence Congress with the State of the Union, but an unpopular president will simply be ignored.  

Popular presidents can influence Congress with the State of the Union, but an unpopular president will simply be ignored.  

Share this:

President Obama faces both a Republican House and Senate, potentially reducing significantly his power over the legislature. Could the increasingly unpopular Obama still exercise some degree of influence through his State of the Union address? Using more than 60 years of data on Congressional policy agendas and the State of the Union John Lovett, Shaun Bevan, and Frank Baumgartner […]

  • Permalink Gallery

    Electoral turnover has very little effect on the spending habits of Western democracies.

Electoral turnover has very little effect on the spending habits of Western democracies.

Share this:

Do new electoral brooms sweep clean the economic policies of the parties that went before? In new research that examines how incoming Western governments set their spending priorities, Derek A. Epp, John Lovett, and Frank R. Baumgartner find that budgets tend to be set with little regard to a government’s ideology, be it left or right. They argue that […]

We are no more or less generous to the poor now than we were in 1960.

Share this:

Many commentators accuse government of being far too generous towards the poor, while others bemoan the lack of support for those in poverty. Max Rose and Frank R. Baumgartner have looked at how media commentary and government policy on poverty have changed over the past fifty years. They find that while the government and media had a sympathetic focus on […]

This work by LSE USAPP blog is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported.