
David E. Broockman
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About David
Broockman's research considers how voters and politicians decide; generally using field experiments and other approaches that allow for rigorous causal inferences to be drawn. Broockman’s published academic work spans the topics of public opinion; voter behavior; and research methodology. During his career in the private sector; Brookman designed and implemented field experiments at the AFL-CIO; the Analyst Institute; Google; and CREDO Action.
Contributions
Evidence that Legislators Grant Special Access to Donors
Politicians Think American Voters are More Conservative than They Really Are
How Race Influences Citizen Contact with Officeholders
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Publications
Argues that members of Congress grant preferential access to purported political donors over concerned constituents. Is the first experimental demonstration of the biasing role of money in politics.
Employs a unique experimental design to demonstrate that black politicians are more intrinsically motivated to represent blacks’ interests than are whites. When the incentives of politicians to respond to a putative request from a black individual are experimentally reduced, black politicians generally continue to provide representation though white politicians generally do not.