Nathan Barron (@nathantbarron) 's Twitter Profile
Nathan Barron

@nathantbarron

PhD Candidate @CarlAlbertCtr @OUPoliSci

ID: 1230778725639348224

linkhttp://nathantbarron.github.io calendar_today21-02-2020 08:58:48

71 Tweet

206 Followers

414 Following

Carl Albert Center (@carlalbertctr) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Thanks #OUDISC and University of Oklahoma Research for the funding. The results from the pilot project with On the rift 4 now let archivist JA Pryse refine a workflow that will let us speed up description during processing as well as make handwritten documents searchable on our platforms.

Steve Rogers (@steverogersinfo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

🚨Accountability in State Legislatures🚨 This 📔 examines each stage of state legislative elections, from candidates' decisions to run to voters' decisions on election day & finds little evidence elections hold state legislators accountable. A🧵(1/10) shorturl.at/GKOQZ

Katie Peach (@katie_peach) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New article! My first first-author paper! In this piece, we explore the US public’s perceptions of the risks disinformation poses, as well as who they blame and who they believe is harmed. misinforeview.hks.harvard.edu/article/seeing…

Kyle Saunders (@kylelsaunders) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I hope it’s becoming apparent to scholars and observers (and I’m looking at you Jost, Sander van der Linden, and others) that, consequential conspiracism IS NOT just asymmetrically on the right. (See our piece here: link.springer.com/article/10.100… Tagging Enders, Farhart, @JoeUscinski,

Mia Costa (@mia_i_costa) 's Twitter Profile Photo

New in Political Behavior from me and Zachary Albert. Electability matters more for "negative partisans," and they are more willing to trade ideological and policy representation for a better shot at beating the other side. link.springer.com/10.1007/s11109…

New in <a href="/PolBehavior/">Political Behavior</a> from me and <a href="/zack_albert123/">Zachary Albert</a>. Electability matters more for "negative partisans," and they are more willing to trade ideological and policy representation for a better shot at beating the other side. link.springer.com/10.1007/s11109…