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Figures

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 November 2021

Katrina F. McNally
Affiliation:
Eckerd College, Florida

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Representing the Disadvantaged
Group Interests and Legislator Reputation in US Congress
, pp. xii - xiii
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Figures

  1. 2.1Average national support for increases in government spending For the Poor, Childcare, Social Security, and Black Americans, 1990–2012

  2. 2.2The advocacy window

  3. 3.1Disadvantaged-group advocacy in Congress

  4. 3.2Members of Congress with reputation as disadvantaged-group advocate

  5. 3.3Disadvantaged-group advocacy among Democrats, 1993–2014

  6. 3.4Disadvantaged group advocacy among Republicans, 1993–2014

  7. 3.5All disadvantaged group advocates across chambers

  8. 3.6Types of advocates across chambers

  9. 3.7Reputations for advocacy in each chamber across groups

  10. 4.1Average district ambient temperature and percentage of group members by district and disadvantaged group

  11. 4.2Predicted effects of ambient temperature for members with reputations as advocates relative to non-advocates for descriptive representatives

  12. 4.3Predicted effects of ambient temperature for members with reputations as primary or secondary advocates relative to non- or superficial advocates for descriptive representatives

  13. 5.1Predicted effects of ambient temperature for members with reputations as advocates relative to non-advocates for descriptive representatives

  14. 6.1Group-specific bill cosponsorship in the House, by Congress

  15. 6.2Group-specific bill cosponsorship in the Senate, by Congress

  16. 6.3Group-specific bill sponsorship in the House, by Congress

  17. 6.4Group-specific bill sponsorship in the Senate, by Congress

  18. 6.5Number of additional bills cosponsored benefiting disadvantaged groups with high committee-group alignment

  19. 6.6Number of additional bills sponsored benefiting disadvantaged groups with high committee-group alignment

  20. 6.7Number of additional bills cosponsored benefiting disadvantaged groups with moderate committee-group alignment

  21. 6.8Number of additional bills sponsored benefiting disadvantaged groups with moderate perceived deservingness

  22. 6.9Number of additional bills cosponsored benefiting disadvantaged groups with low committee-group alignment

  23. 6.10Number of additional bills sponsored benefiting disadvantaged groups with low committee-group alignment

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  • Figures
  • Katrina F. McNally, Eckerd College, Florida
  • Book: Representing the Disadvantaged
  • Online publication: 18 November 2021
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  • Figures
  • Katrina F. McNally, Eckerd College, Florida
  • Book: Representing the Disadvantaged
  • Online publication: 18 November 2021
Available formats
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  • Figures
  • Katrina F. McNally, Eckerd College, Florida
  • Book: Representing the Disadvantaged
  • Online publication: 18 November 2021
Available formats
×