Morality in Politics
Jung, Jae-Hee and Scott Clifford. 2024. “Varieties of Values: Moral Values Are Uniquely Divisive.” American Political Science Review https://doi.org/10.1017/S0003055424000443. [Dataverse]
Jung, Jae-Hee. 2023. “Does Moral Rhetoric Fuel or Reduce Divides Between Parties and Non-Copartisan Voters?” Electoral Studies 84: 102640. [Dataverse]
Jung, Jae-Hee. 2020. “The Mobilizing Effect of Parties’ Moral Rhetoric.” American Journal of Political Science 64(2): 341-355. [Dataverse] (Winner of the Best Paper Award at the 2018 Manifesto Corpus Conference)
Party Messages
Jung, Jae-Hee and Zeynep Somer-Topcu. 2022. “United We Stand, Divided We Fall? The Effects of Parties’ Brexit Rhetoric on Voters’ Perceptions of Party Positions.” Journal of Elections, Public Opinion & Parties 32(3): 596-614. [Dataverse]
Jung, Jae-Hee and Margit Tavits. 2021. “Valence Attacks Harm the Electoral Performance of the Left but Not the Right.” Journal of Politics 83(1): 277-290. [Dataverse]
Media Frames
Culpepper, Pepper, Ryan Shandler, Jae-Hee Jung, and Taeku Lee. 2024. “‘The Economy is Rigged’: Inequality Narratives, Fairness, and Support for Redistribution in Six Countries.” Comparative Political Studies https://doi.org/10.1177/00104140241252072. [Dataverse]
Culpepper, Pepper, Jae-Hee Jung, and Taeku Lee. 2024. “Banklash: How Media Coverage of Bank Scandals Moves Mass Preferences on Financial Regulation.” American Journal of Political Science 68(2): 427-444. [Dataverse]
Social Norms
Jung, Jae-Hee and Margit Tavits. 2024. Counter-Stereotypes and Attitudes Toward Gender and LGBTQ Equality (Elements in Gender and Politics). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Jung, Jae-Hee and Margit Tavits. 2021. “Do Referendum Results Change Norm Perceptions and Personal Opinions?” Electoral Studies 71: 102307. [Dataverse]