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Jan Zilinsky
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Cited by
Year
How many people live in political bubbles on social media? Evidence from linked survey and Twitter data
G Eady, J Nagler, A Guess, J Zilinsky, JA Tucker
Sage Open 9 (1), 2158244019832705, 2019
3232019
The happiness gap in Eastern Europe
S Djankov, E Nikolova, J Zilinsky
Journal of comparative economics 44 (1), 108-124, 2016
1692016
Exposure to the Russian Internet Research Agency foreign influence campaign on Twitter in the 2016 US election and its relationship to attitudes and voting behavior
G Eady, T Paskhalis, J Zilinsky, R Bonneau, J Nagler, JA Tucker
Nature communications 14 (1), 62, 2023
862023
Democratic deconsolidation revisited: Young Europeans are not dissatisfied with democracy
J Zilinsky
Research & Politics 6 (1), 2053168018814332, 2019
502019
Reducing Government Debt ratios in an era of low growth
P Mauro, J Zilinsky
Peterson Institute for International Economics Policy Briefs, 2016
242016
Higher wages for low-income workers lead to higher productivity
J Wolfers, J Zilinsky
RAISING LOWER-LEVEL WAGES: WHEN AND WHY IT MAKES, 6, 2015
222015
Don’t Republicans tweet too? Using Twitter to assess the consequences of political endorsements by celebrities
J Zilinsky, C Vaccari, J Nagler, JA Tucker
Perspectives on Politics 18 (1), 144-160, 2020
202020
Learning about income inequality: What is the impact of information on perceptions of fairness and preferences for redistribution?
J Zilinsky
Available at SSRN 2485121, 2014
152014
Which Republicans are most likely to think the election was stolen? Those who dislike democrats and don’t mind white nationalists
J Zilinsky, J Nagler, J Tucker
Washington Post 19, 2021
132021
Toxic speech and limited demand for content moderation on social media
F Pradel, J Zilinsky, S Kosmidis, Y Theocharis
American Political Science Review, 1-18, 2024
72024
Fiscal Tightening and Economic Growth: Exploring Cross-Country Correlations
P Mauro, J Zilinsky
Peterson Institute for International Economics Policy Briefs, 2015
62015
Division does not imply predictability: Demographics continue to reveal little about voting and partisanship
SS Kim, J Zilinsky
Political Behavior 46 (1), 67-87, 2024
42024
Understanding sovereign wealth funds
J Zilinsky
Harvard University, 2009
42009
Geographic Boundaries and Local Economic Conditions Matter for Views of the Economy
J Bisbee, J Zilinsky
Political Analysis 31 (2), 288-294, 2023
32023
Donate to help us fight back: Political fundraising and toxic rhetoric online
SS Kim, J Zilinsky, B Brew
Party Politics, 13540688241235901, 2023
32023
Technocracy in Central/Eastern Europe and its impact on democratization
JA Tucker, J Zilinsky
The Technocratic Challenge to Democracy, 232-246, 2020
32020
Beliefs in Conspiracy Theories and Online News Consumption during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic
S Jin, J Zilinsky, F Pradel, Y Theocharis
Journal of Quantitative Description: Digital Media 4, 2024
22024
Raising Lower-Level Wages: When and Why It Makes Economic Sense
T Hellebrandt, M Jarand, JF Kirkegaard, T Moran, AS Posen, J Wolfers, ...
Peterson Institute for International Economics, 2015
22015
Donate To Help Us Fight Back: Mobilization Rhetoric in Political Fundraising
SS Kim, J Zilinsky, B Brew
12023
Do Users Ever Draw a Line? Offensiveness and Content Moderation Preferences on Social Media
F Pradel, J Zilinsky, S Kosmidis, Y Theocharis
OSF Preprints. November 22, 2022
12022
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