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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Christopher Berry\, William J. and Alicia Townsend Friedman Pro
 fessor\,&nbsp\;Harris School of Public Policy\, University of Chicago\, wi
 ll present “Does Where You Live Shape How You Vote?”&nbsp\;as part of the 
 CPR Seminar Series.Abstract: Scholars have long been concerned with the ef
 fects of residential context on individuals’ life chances and political ou
 tcomes. But attempts to&nbsp\;provide evidence of the causal effects of ne
 ighborhoods are hampered by a severe selection problem. Observed neighborh
 ood characteristics may be&nbsp\;correlated with unobserved individual cha
 racteristics which drive the outcome of interest. Understanding the extent
  to which the correlation between local&nbsp\;context and individual outco
 mes is driven by the influence of the context on the individual or the cho
 ice of individuals with certain characteristics to live&nbsp\;in certain l
 ocations—that is\, how much of the correlation is due to treatment vs. sel
 ection—is important for understanding the generation of political&nbsp\;id
 eology\, partisan identity\, and democratic participation. In this paper\,
  we leverage unique data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescen
 t to&nbsp\;Adult Health Survey to analyze the relationship between local c
 ontext and individual political views and participation for respondents wh
 o move from one&nbsp\;location to another versus those who stay in the sam
 e location. We explore the role of both treatment and selection in the dev
 elopment of political ideology&nbsp\;and propensity to participate in poli
 tics and offer evidence of both pathways.&nbsp\;
DTEND:20240229T220000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T111504Z
DTSTART:20240229T203000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:CPR Seminar Series: 'Does Where You Live Shape How You Vote?'
UID:RFCALITEM639140805042606679
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Christopher Berry\, William J. and Alicia T
 ownsend Friedman Professor\,&nbsp\;<span style="background-color: initial\
 ; font-family: inherit\; font-size: inherit\; text-align: inherit\; text-t
 ransform: inherit\; word-spacing: normal\; caret-color: auto\; white-space
 : inherit">Harris School of Public Policy\, University of Chicago\, will p
 resent </span>“Does Where You Live Shape How You Vote?”&nbsp\;<span style=
 "background-color: initial\; font-family: inherit\; font-size: inherit\; t
 ext-align: inherit\; text-transform: inherit\; word-spacing: normal\; care
 t-color: auto\; white-space: inherit">as part of the CPR Seminar Series.</
 span><span style="background-color: initial\; font-family: inherit\; font-
 size: inherit\; text-align: inherit\; text-transform: inherit\; word-spaci
 ng: normal\; caret-color: auto\; white-space: inherit"></span></p><p><span
  style="background-color: initial\; font-family: inherit\; font-size: inhe
 rit\; text-align: inherit\; text-transform: inherit\; word-spacing: normal
 \; caret-color: auto\; white-space: inherit"><strong>Abstract:</strong> </
 span>Scholars have long been concerned with the effects of residential con
 text on individuals’ life chances and political outcomes. But attempts to&
 nbsp\;provide evidence of the causal effects of neighborhoods are hampered
  by a severe selection problem. Observed neighborhood characteristics may 
 be&nbsp\;correlated with unobserved individual characteristics which drive
  the outcome of interest. Understanding the extent to which the correlatio
 n between local&nbsp\;context and individual outcomes is driven by the inf
 luence of the context on the individual or the choice of individuals with 
 certain characteristics to live&nbsp\;in certain locations—that is\, how m
 uch of the correlation is due to treatment vs. selection—is important for 
 understanding the generation of political&nbsp\;ideology\, partisan identi
 ty\, and democratic participation. In this paper\, we leverage unique data
  from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to&nbsp\;Adult Health 
 Survey to analyze the relationship between local context and individual po
 litical views and participation for respondents who move from one&nbsp\;lo
 cation to another versus those who stay in the same location. We explore t
 he role of both treatment and selection in the development of political id
 eology&nbsp\;and propensity to participate in politics and offer evidence 
 of both pathways.&nbsp\;</p>
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