Research

A measure of foreign policy position

Estimated foreign policy positions of the Members of Congress (1965 – 2020) are available here: House  Senate (Citation: Gyung-Ho Jeong. 2018. “Measuring Foreign Policy Positions of Members of the US Congress,” Political Science Research and Methods 6(1): 181-196).

 

Publications

2023, Why Would a Majority Agree to Adopting Supermajority Rules When They Empower a Minority? The Institutional Choice of the National Assembly of Korea
GH Jeong
Journal of Legislative Studies. Forthcoming

2022, Beyond party: ideological convictions and foreign policy conflicts in the US congress
W Bendix, GH Jeong
International Politics 59 (5), 827-850

2021, The US Congress and Rogue States
S Kotb, GH Jeong
Foreign Policy Analysis 17 (3)

2021, The polarisation of energy policy in the US Congress
GH Jeong, W Lowry
Journal of Public Policy 41 (1), 17-41

2020, Troops in “Harm’s Way,” the President, and Congressional War‐Funding Decisions
GH Jeong
Presidential Studies Quarterly 50 (3), 568-591

2020, Public Opinion and Senate Treaty Ratification
GH Jeong
Analyses and Alternatives, 4(2): 5-38

2020, Gender and foreign policy: Are female members of Congress more dovish than their male colleagues?
W Bendix, GH Jeong
Political Research Quarterly 73 (1), 126-140

2019, Division at the water’s edge: The polarization of foreign policy
GH Jeong, PJ Quirk
American Politics Research 47 (1), 58-87

2018, Measuring foreign policy positions of members of the US congress
GH Jeong
Political Science Research and Methods 6 (1), 181-196).

2017, The supermajority core of the US Senate and the failure to join the League of Nations
GH Jeong
Public Choice 173 (3-4), 325-343

2016, Electoral Rules and Bureaucratic Effectiveness
GH Jeong
Politics & Policy 44 (6), 1089-1115

2014, How preferences change institutions: The 1978 energy Act
GH Jeong, WR Lowry, GJ Miller, I Sened
The Journal of Politics 76 (2), 430-445

2013, Congressional politics of US immigration reforms: Legislative outcomes under multidimensional negotiations
GH Jeong
Political Research Quarterly 66 (3), 600-614

2011, Cracks in the opposition: Immigration as a wedge issue for the Reagan coalition
GH Jeong, GJ Miller, C Schofield, I Sened
American Journal of Political Science 55 (3), 511-525

2009, Closing the deal: negotiating civil rights legislation
GH Jeong, GJ Miller, I Sened
American Political Science Review 103 (4), 588-606

2009, Constituent influence on international trade policy in the United States, 1987–2006
GH Jeong
International Studies Quarterly 53 (2), 519-540

2009, Political compromise and bureaucratic structure: the political origins of the Federal Reserve System
GH Jeong, GJ Miller, AC Sobel
The Journal of Law, Economics, & Organization 25 (2), 472-498

2008, Testing the predictions of the multidimensional spatial voting model with roll call data
GH Jeong
Political Analysis 16 (2), 179-196

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