Abstract
Every 10 years, states set about redrawing the lines of their Congressional districts. Scholars in political science have long been interested in the strategic behavior and representational outcomes of this process. While majority-minority districts are intended to provide a constraint on strategic party behavior in order to ensure substantive representation of minority interests, researchers have noted a perverse effect that results in potentially less-representative political outcomes. In 2003, Kenneth Shotts, David Lublin, and D. Stephen Voss debated the veracity of the perverse effects claim, but Shotts’ critique was missing a key interaction between partisanship and the liberalizing effect of majority-minority districts. In the course of performing this necessary extension on Shotts’ work, we found that our results have an unexpected, and important, methodological implication for Congress scholars. Specifically, we were unable to replicate his results precisely due to sublte changes in DW-NOMINATE estimates that result from periodic updating of the database. Further-more, after substantially expanding the dataset, we continue to find the same null results and the evidence supporting the interaction is statistically ambiguous. Though these null results do not prove or disprove the perverse-effects hypothesis, they do undermine Shotts’ evidence of a liberalizing effect of majority-minority districting. While we lack sufficient precision to estimate whether majority-minority districting has a positive, negative, or truly no effect on minority representation (and the conditional effect of party control), it is more concerning that small changes to DW-NOMINATE would prevent the replication of these past results, given the abundance of studies that use it to measure legislator ideology.
References
Abramowitz, A. I., B. Alexander and M. Gunning (2006) “Incumbancy, Redistricting, and the Decline of Competition in U.S. House Elections,” Journal of Politics, 68:75–88.10.1111/j.1468-2508.2006.00371.xSearch in Google Scholar
Binder, S. A. and F. Maltzman (2002) “Senatorial Delay in Confirming Federal Judges, 1947–1998,” American Journal of Political Science, 46:190–199.10.2307/3088422Search in Google Scholar
Black, D. (1958) The Theory of Committees and Elections. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.Search in Google Scholar
Bowen, H. R. (1943) “The Interpretation of Voting in the Allocation of Economic Resources,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 58:27–48.10.2307/1885754Search in Google Scholar
Brambor, T., W. R. Clark and M. Golder (2006) “Understanding Interaction Models: Improving Empirical Analyses,” Political Analysis, 14:63–82.10.1093/pan/mpi014Search in Google Scholar
Cameron, C., D. Epstein and S. O’Halloran (1996) “Do Majority-Minority Districts Maximize Substantive Black Representation in Congress?” American Political Science Review, 90:794–812.10.2307/2945843Search in Google Scholar
Carson, J. L. and M. H. Crespin (2004) “The Effect of State Redistricting Methods on Electoral Competition in United State House of Representative Races,” State Politics & Policy Quarterly, 4:455–469.10.1177/153244000400400406Search in Google Scholar
Chen, J. and J. Rodden (2013) “Unintentional Gerrymandering: Political Geography and Electoral Bias in Legislatures,” Quarterly Journal of Political Science, 8:239–269.10.1561/100.00012033Search in Google Scholar
Cohen, J. (1992) “A Power Primer,” Psychological Bulletin, 112:155–159.10.1037/0033-2909.112.1.155Search in Google Scholar
Collaboration, O. S. (2012) “An Open, Large-Scale, Collaborative Effort to Estimate the Reproducibility of Psychological Science,” Perspectives on Psychological Science, 7:657–660.10.1177/1745691612462588Search in Google Scholar
Dafoe, A. (2014) “Science Deserves Better: The Imperative to Share Complete Replication Files,” PS: Political Science & Politics, 47:60–66.Search in Google Scholar
Downs, A. (1957) An Economic Theory of Democracy. New York: Harper and Row.Search in Google Scholar
Erikson, R. S. (1972) “Malapportionment, Gerrymandering, and Party Fortunes in Congressional Elections,” American Political Science Review, 66:1234–1245.10.2307/1957176Search in Google Scholar
Friedrich, R. J. (1982) “In Defense of Multiplicative Terms in Multiple Regression Equations,” American Journal of Political Science, 26:797–833.10.2307/2110973Search in Google Scholar
Gamble, K. L. (2011) “Black Voice: Deliberation in the United States Congress,” Polity, 43:291–312.10.1057/pol.2011.6Search in Google Scholar
Gelman, A. and D. Weakliem (2009) “Of Beauty, Sex and Power,” American Scientist, 97:310–316.10.1511/2009.79.310Search in Google Scholar
Griffin, J. D. and B. Newman (2005) “Are Voters Better Represented?” Journal of Politics, 67:1206–1227.10.1111/j.1468-2508.2005.00357.xSearch in Google Scholar
Grofman, B. and L. Handley (1998) “Estimating the Impact of Voting-Right-Related Districting on Democratic Strength in the U.S. House of Representatives,” In: (B. Grofman, ed.) Race and Redistricting in the 1990s, Representation. New York: Agathon Press, volume 5.Search in Google Scholar
Hetherington, M. J. (2001) “Resurgent Mass Partisanship: The Role of Elite Polarization,” American Political Science Review, 95:619–631.10.1017/S0003055401003045Search in Google Scholar
Hill, K. A. (1995) “Does the Creation of Majority Black Districts Aid Republicans? An Analysis of the 1992 Congressional Elections in Eight Southern States,” Journal of Politics, 57:384–401.10.2307/2960312Search in Google Scholar
Hotelling, H. (1929) “Stability in Competition,” Economic Journal, 39:41–57.10.2307/2224214Search in Google Scholar
Jenkins, J. A. and N. W. Monroe (2012) “Buying Negative Agenda Control in the U.S. House,” American Journal of Political Science, 56:897–912.10.1111/j.1540-5907.2012.00593.xSearch in Google Scholar
Kassow, B. J. and C. J. Finocchiaro (2011) “Responsiveness and Electoral Accountability in the U.S. Senate,” American Politics Research, 39:1019–1044.10.1177/1532673X11411650Search in Google Scholar
King, G. (1995) “Replication, Replication,” PS: Political Science & Politics, 28:443–499.Search in Google Scholar
King, G. (2003) “The Future of Replication,” International Studies Perspectives, 4:100–105.Search in Google Scholar
Kousser, T., J. B. Lewis and S. H. Masket (2007) “Ideological Adaptation? The Survival Instinct of Threatened Legislators,” Journal of Politics, 69:828–843.10.1111/j.1468-2508.2007.00578.xSearch in Google Scholar
La Raja, R. (2013) “Redistricting: Reading between the Lines,” Annual Review of Political Science, 12:203–223.10.1146/annurev.polisci.10.071105.095822Search in Google Scholar
Lebo, M. J., A. J. McGlynn and G. Koger (2007) “Strategic Party Government: Party Influence in Congress, 1789–2000,” American Journal of Political Science, 51:64–481.10.1111/j.1540-5907.2007.00262.xSearch in Google Scholar
Lublin, D. (1997) The Paradox of Representation: Racial Gerrymandering and Minority Interests in Congress. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press.10.1515/9780691221397Search in Google Scholar
Lublin, D., T. L. Brunell, B. Grofman and L. Handley (2009) “Has the Voting Rights Act Outlived its Usefulness? in a World, “No”,” Legislative Studies Quarterly, 34:525–553.10.3162/036298009789869673Search in Google Scholar
Lublin, D. and D. S. Voss (2003) “The Missing Middle: Why Median-Voter Theory Can’t Save Democrats from Singing the Boll-Weevil Blues,” Journal of Politics, 65:227–237.10.1111/1468-2508.t01-1-00011Search in Google Scholar
Nakao, K. (2011): “Racial Redistricting for Minority Representation without Partisan Bias: A Theoretical Approach,” Economics and Politics, 23:132–151.10.1111/j.1468-0343.2010.00379.xSearch in Google Scholar
Preuhs, R. R. (2006) “The Conditional Effects of Minority Descriptive Representation: Black Legislators and Policy Influence in the American States,” Journal of Politics, 68:585–599.10.1111/j.1468-2508.2006.00447.xSearch in Google Scholar
Russell, J. F. (2013) “If a Job is Worth Doing, It is Worth Doing Twice,” Nature, 496:7.10.1038/496007aSearch in Google Scholar
Shotts, K. W. (2001) “The Effect of Majority-Minority Mandates on Partisan Gerrymandering,” American Journal of Political Science, 45:120–135.10.2307/2669363Search in Google Scholar
Shotts, K. W. (2002) “Gerrymandering, Legislative Composition, and National Policy Outcomes,” American Journal of Political Science, 46:398–414.10.2307/3088384Search in Google Scholar
Shotts, K. W. (2003a) “Does Racial Redistricting Cause Conservative Policy Outcomes? Preferences of Southern Representatives in the 1980s and 1990s,” Journal of Politics, 65:216–226.10.1111/1468-2508.t01-1-00010Search in Google Scholar
Shotts, K. W. (2003b) “Racial Redistricting’s Alleged Perverse Effects: Theory, Data, and “Reality”,” Journal of Politics, 65:238–243.10.1111/1468-2508.t01-1-00012Search in Google Scholar
Swain, C. M. (1995) Black Faces, Black Interests: The Representation of African Americans in Congress. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.Search in Google Scholar
Washington, E. (2012) “Do Majority-Black Districts Limit Blacks’ Representation? The Case of the 1990 Redistricting,” Journal of Law and Economics, 55:251–274.10.1086/661991Search in Google Scholar
Article note
A previous draft of this paper was presented at the 2012 Northeast Political Science Association Conference in Boston, Massachusetts. The authors would like to sincerely thank Kenneth Shotts for his gracious help and feedback on this project. He is a great example of how good scholars should approach their work. We also thank Charles Crabtree, Luke Keele, and the anonymous reviewers for their helpful comments on and critiques of this paper. Any omissions or errors are our own. Replication data are available at (http://dx.doi.org/10.7910/DVN/28763).
©2015 by De Gruyter
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Political Institutions and State Sales Tax Base Erosion
- Party Control and Perverse Effects in Majority-Minority Districting: Replication Challenges When Using DW-NOMINATE
- Unbiased Estimation of the Average Treatment Effect in Cluster-Randomized Experiments
- Substantive Importance and the Veil of Statistical Significance
- Assessing Robustness of Findings About Racial Redistricting’s Effect on Southern House Delegations
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Articles
- Political Institutions and State Sales Tax Base Erosion
- Party Control and Perverse Effects in Majority-Minority Districting: Replication Challenges When Using DW-NOMINATE
- Unbiased Estimation of the Average Treatment Effect in Cluster-Randomized Experiments
- Substantive Importance and the Veil of Statistical Significance
- Assessing Robustness of Findings About Racial Redistricting’s Effect on Southern House Delegations