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MAHALLEY D. ALLEN
University of Kansas
CARRIE PETTUS
University of Kansas
DONALD
P. HAIDER-MARKEL
University of Kansas
Making the National Local: Specifying the
Conditions for National Government Influence
on State Policymaking
The national
government can force or entice state governments to act on policy through
a variety of actions, including providing monetary incentives and sanctions.
We examine how and under what conditions actions of the national government
influence the diffusion of policy across the states. We test our hypotheses
on the cases of the diffusion of partial birth abortion laws, truth-in-sentencing
laws, and hate crime laws using event history analysis on pooled cross-sectional
data from the 50 states. Our results suggest that, in addition to fiscal
incentives, the national government can influence state policymaking when
it sends strong, clear signals to the states concerning its preferences
and the potential for future action. But even national-level signals that
are weak and ambiguous may influence state policymaking indirectly.
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