You can find my Google Scholar profile [here.]

Replication data for my publications is available from my dataverse [here.]

Information on my activities as a reviewer can be found on my Publons/Web of Science profile [here.]

Articles

Homola, Jonathan, Miguel M. Pereira, and Margit Tavits. 2024. “Fixed Effects and Post-Treatment Bias in Legacy Studies.” American Political Science Review 118: 537-544. [Link] [Replication] [OSF Preprint, March 2023] [OSF Preprint, June 2020]

Tavits, Margit, Petra Schleiter, Jonathan Homola, and Dalston Ward. 2024. “Fathers’ leave increases attitudinal gender equality.” American Political Science Review 118: 488-494. [Link] [Replication]

Homola, Jonathan, Connor Huff, Yui Nishimura, and Amorae Times. 2023. “The Gendered Legacies of the Frontier and Military Enlistment Behavior.” Journal of Historical Political Economy 2: 635-653. [Link]

Homola, Jonathan, Jon C. Rogowski, Betsy Sinclair, Michelle Torres, Patrick D. Tucker, and Steven W. Webster. 2023. “Through the ideology of the beholder: how ideology shapes perceptions of partisan groups.” Political Science Research and Methods 11: 275-292. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

Homola, Jonathan. 2022. “The Effects of Women’s Descriptive Representation on Government Behavior.” Legislative Studies Quarterly 47: 295-308. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

  • Wiley, March 2022: “International Women’s Day/Women’s History Month” [Link]
  • LSQ, February/March 2022: “Let the Women Speak: Special Issue for International Women’s Day 2022 and beyond” [Link]
  • LSQ, February 2022: “Researcher’s Choice: Top Cited Articles in 2021” [Link]

Homola, Jonathan. 2021. “Partisanship and perceived threats about immigration.” Party Politics 27: 977-982. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

Homola, Jonathan, Miguel M. Pereira, and Margit Tavits. 2020. “Legacies of the Third Reich: Concentration Camps and Outgroup Intolerance.” American Political Science Review 114: 573-590. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

  • Winner of the Sage Best Paper Award (for the best comparative politics paper presented at the 2018 APSA annual conference)
  • APSA Comparative Politics Newsletter, Fall 2019: “Q&A – Legacies of the Third Reich: Concentration Camps and Outgroup Intolerance” [Link]

Homola, Jonathan. 2019. “Are Parties Equally Responsive to Women and Men?” British Journal of Political Science 49: 957-975. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

  • Süddeutsche Zeitung, February 24, 2018: “Volk und Vertreter” [Link]

Homola, Jonathan, and Margit Tavits. 2018. “Contact Reduces Immigration-Related Fears for Leftist but Not for Rightist Voters.” Comparative Political Studies 51: 1789-1820. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

Boston, Joshua, Jonathan Homola, Betsy Sinclair, Michelle Torres, and Patrick D. Tucker. 2018. “The Dynamic Relationship between Personality Stability and Political Attitudes.” Public Opinion Quarterly 82: 843-865. [Link] [Abstract]

Butler, Daniel M., and Jonathan Homola. 2017. “An Empirical Justification for the Use of Racially Distinctive Names to Signal Race in Experiments.” Political Analysis 25: 122-130. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

Homola, Jonathan, Natalie Jackson, and Jeff Gill. 2016. “A measure of survey mode differences.” Electoral Studies 44: 255-274. [Link] [Replication]

Ezrow, Lawrence, Jonathan Homola, and Margit Tavits. 2014. “When Extremism Pays: Policy Positions, Voter Certainty, and Party Support in Postcommunist Europe.” Journal of Politics 76: 535-547. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

  • APSA Comparative Politics Newsletter, Fall 2014: “Party Positioning and Election Outcomes: Comparing Post-Communist Europe to Established Democracies.” [Link]

Ezrow, Lawrence, Margit Tavits, and Jonathan Homola. 2014. “Voter Polarization, Strength of Partisanship, and Support for Extremist Parties.” Comparative Political Studies 47: 1558-1583. [Link] [Appendix] [Replication]

  • Washington Post, Monkey Cage, August 15, 2014: “When does polarization matter?” [Link]

Budge, Ian, and Jonathan Homola. 2012. “How Far Have European Political Parties Followed the Americans to the Right in the Later Post-War Period? A Textual Analysis.” Cambio 2: 71-86. [Link] [Replication]

Book Chapters

Gill, Jeff, and Jonathan Homola. 2018. “Issues in Polling Methodologies: Inference and Uncertainty.” In: Lonna Rae Atkinson and R. Michael Alvarez (eds.): The Oxford Handbook of Polling and Polling Methods. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 275-298. [Link] [Replication]

Work in Progress

Alizade, Jeyhun, Rafaela Dancygier, and Jonathan Homola. Structures of Bias: How the State Systematically Downplays Right-Wing Extremism. Under review. [Abstract]

  • Washington Post, Monkey Cage, December 13, 2022: “Germany foiled a far-right coup attempt. It still has a right-wing problem.” [Link]

Dassonneville, Ruth, Nadjim Fréchet, Alexandra Jabbour, Benjamin Ferland, and Jonathan Homola. Are Parties Still Responsive to Public Opinion? Revise & resubmit. [Abstract]

López Álvarez, Santiago, and Jonathan Homola. More Bullets, More Doves? The Impact of Violence on Political Behavior. Under review. [Abstract]

Homola, Jonathan. The Political Consequences of Group-Based Identities. [Abstract]

Homola, Jonathan, and Jeff Gill. A Flexible Class of Bayesian Frailty Models For Political Science Data. [Abstract]

Bhakta, Kishan, Maranda Joyce, Tabitha Koch, and Jonathan Homola. Politician Responses in the Aftermath of Violent Threats. Work in progress.

Etchevarren Acquarone, Iris, and Jonathan Homola. Closer to You? Candidate Gender and Proximity Voting. Work in progress. [Abstract]

Homola, Jonathan, Petra Schleiter, and Margit Tavits. The UK Voter ID reform: effects on voter attitudes and behaviour. Work in progress.

Torres, Michelle, and Jonathan Homola. The Shades and Shapes of the Pink Wave: Visual Perspectives of the Women’s March. Work in progress.