Agency Ideology
Paper: “Measuring Executive Agency Ideology Using Large Language Models”
Data: Static, Dynamic
Peer-Reviewed Publications
[13] Napolio, Nicholas G. 2023. “Executive Coalition Building.” Journal of Public Policy.
[12] Napolio, Nicholas G. and Christian R. Grose. 2022. “Crossing Over: Majority Party Control Affects Legislator Behavior and the Agenda." American Political Science Review 116(1): 359-366.
[11] Napolio. Nicholas G. Forthcoming. “Implementing Presidential Particularism: Bureaucracy and the Distribution of Federal Grants." Political Science Research and Methods.
[10] Jenkins, Jeffery A., and Nicholas G. Napolio. Forthcoming “Conflict over Congressional Reapportionment: The Deadlock of the 1920s.” Journal of Policy History.
[9] Heersink, Boris, Jeffery A. Jenkins, and Nicholas G. Napolio. Forthcoming. “Southern Republicans in Congress during the Pre-Reagan Era: An Exploration.” Party Politics.
[8] Wood, Abby K., Christopher S. Elmendorf, Douglas M. Spencer, and Nicholas G. Napolio. Forthcoming. “Mind the (Participation) Gap: Vouchers, Voting, and Visibility.” American Politics Research.
[7] Resh, William G., Nicholas G. Napolio, and Keunyoung (Eli) Lee. Forthcoming. “The Pivotal and Distributive Politics of Senate-Confirmed Appointee Vacancies." Presidential Studies Quarterly.
[6] Heersink, Boris, Nicholas G. Napolio and Jordan Carr Peterson. Forthcoming. “The Mixed Effects of Candidate Visits on Campaign Donations in the 2020 Presidential Election.” American Politics Research.
[5] Napolio, Nicholas G., and Jordan Carr Peterson. 2021. “Institutional Foundations of the American Revolution: Legislative Politics in Colonial North America.” Journal of Historical Political Economy 1(2):235–257.
[4] Napolio, Nicholas G. 2020. “Pork during Pandemics: Federal Spending and Public Health Crises.” Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy 1(4) 507–521.
[3] Napolio, Nicholas G., and Jordan Carr Peterson. 2019. “Their Boot in Our Face No Longer? Administrative Sectionalism and Resistance to Federal Authority in the U.S. South.” State Politics & Policy Quarterly 19(1): 101–122 .
- Covered by E&E News.
[2] Barreto, Amílcar Antonio, and Nicholas G. Napolio. 2019. “Bifurcating American National Identity: Partisanship, Sexual Orientation, and the 2016 Presidential Elections.” Politics, Groups, and Identities 8(1):143–159.
Other Publications
[1] Peterson, Jordan Carr, and Nicholas G. Napolio. 2023. “Regulatory Productivity in Federal Administration: An Empirical Analysis of the Deep State.” Rutgers Law Review 75(1): 133-183.
Public Writing and Media
“Presidential Campaign Stops Remain a Double-Edged Sword,” 3Streams. September 15, 2021.
“Control of the US Senate: What does history tell us about how much it affects legislative policymaking?” USC Dornsife News. August 5, 2021.
“What happens when senators die or are incapacitated?” The Conversation. October 14, 2020.
“The CDC isn’t favoring Trump states with coronavirus spending.” Washington Post: The Monkey Cage. March 19, 2020.
“In the South, it's not just state politicians who work against federal policies. It's the bureaucrats too" (with Jordan Carr Peterson). LSE United States American Politics and Policy Blog. February 8, 2019.
“Partisanship Drives State Agencies' Resistance to Federal Regulation" (with Jordan Carr Peterson). The Regulatory Review. May 7, 2018.