Wright, Lauren, Jonathan Mummolo, and Madeleine Marr. 2025. “How Framing Gender Diversity in Government AffectsPerceptions of Substantive Representation”. Journal of Politics. Reference Link
Ba, Bocar, Haosen Ge, Jacob Kaplan, Dean Knox, Mayya Komisarchik, Gregory Lanzalotto, Rachel Mariman, Jonathan Mummolo, Roman Rivera, and Michelle Torres. 2025. “Political Diversity in U.S. Police Agencies”. American Journal of Political Science. Reference Link
Wright, Lauren, Jonathan Mummolo, and Madeleine Marr. n.d. “How Framing Gender Diversity in Government Affects Perceptions of Substantive Representation”. The Journal of Politics. Reference Link
Duarte, Guilherme, Noam Finkelstein, Dean Knox, Jonathan Mummolo, and Ilya Shpitser. 2023. “An Automated Approach to Causal Inference in Discrete Settings”. Journal of the American Statistical Association. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan. 2021. “Re-Evaluating Police Militarization”. Nature: Human Behaviour 5: 181-82. Referenced from www.nature.com: Re-evaluating Police Militarization. Reference Link
Knox, Dean, Will Lowe, and Jonathan Mummolo. n.d. “Can Racial Bias in Policing Be Credibly Estimated Using Data Contaminated by Post-Treatment Selection?.” Reference Link
Knox, Dean, and Jonathan Mummolo. 2020. “Toward a General Causal Framework for the Study of Racial Bias in Policing”. Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy. Reference Link
Esberg, Jane, Jonathan Mummolo, and Sean Westwood. n.d. “The Stability of Criminal Justice Policy Views: Evaluating the Effects of Factual Corrections and Appeals to Social Identity.” Reference Link
Ba, Bocar, Dean Knox, Jonathan Mummolo, and Roman Rivera. 2021. “The Role of Officer Race and Gender in Police-Civilian Interactions in Chicago”. Science 371 (6530): 696-702. Referenced from science.sciencemag.org: The Role of Officer Race and Gender in Police-Civilian Interactions in Chicago. Reference Link
Knox, Dean, and Jonathan Mummolo. 2020. “Making Inferences About Racial Disparities in Police Violence”. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Reference Link
Goerger, Samantha, Jonathan Mummolo, and Sean Westwood. 2022. “Which Police Departments Want Reform? Barriers to Evidence-Based Policymaking”. Journal of Experimental Political Science. Reference Link
Knox, Dean, Will Lowe, and Jonathan Mummolo. 2020. “Administrative Records Mask Racially Biased Policing”. American Political Science Review. Referenced from www.cambridge.org: Administrative Records Mask Racially Biased Policing. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan, Erik Peterson, and Sean Westwood. 2021. “The Limits of Partisan Loyalty”. Political Behavior. Referenced from papers.ssrn.com: The Limits of Partisan Loyalty. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan. 2018. “Militarization Fails to Enhance Police Safety or Reduce Crime But May Harm Police Reputation”. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 15 (37): 9181-86. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan. 2018. “Modern Police Tactics, Police-Citizen Interactions and the Prospects for Reform”. The Journal of Politics 80 (1): 1-15. Reference Link
Hopkins, Daniel J., and Jonathan Mummolo. 2017. “Assessing the Breadth of Framing Effects”. Quarterly Journal of Political Science 12 (1): 37-57. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan, and Erik Peterson. 2016. “How Content Preferences Limit the Reach of Voting Aids”. American Politics Research 45 (2): 159-85. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan, and Clayton Nall. 2016. “Why Partisans Do Not Sort: The Constraints on Political Segregation”. The Journal of Politics 79 (1): 45-59. Referenced from www.journals.uchicago.edu: Why Partisans Do Not Sort: The Constraints on Political Segregation. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan. 2016. “News from the Other Side: How Topic Relevance Limits the Prevalence of Partisan Selective Exposure”. The Journal of Politics 78 (3): 763-73. Referenced from www.journals.uchicago.edu: News from the Other Side: How Topic Relevance Limits the Prevalence of Partisan Selective Exposure. Reference Link
Hopkins, Daniel J., Jonathan Mummolo, Victoria Esses, Cheryl Kaiser, Helen Marrow, and Monica McDermott. 2016. “Out of Context: The Unexpected Absence of Spatial Variation in U.S. Immigrants’ Perceptions of Discrimination”. Politics, Groups and Identities 4 (3): 363-92. Reference Link
Bailey, Michael A., Jonathan Mummolo, and Hans Noel. 2012. “Tea Party Influence: A Story of Activists and Elites”. American Politics Research 40 (5): 769-804. Reference Link
Grimmer, Justin, Eitan Hersh, Marc Meredith, Jonathan Mummolo, and Clayton Nall. 2018. “Obstacles to Estimating Voter ID Laws’ Effect on Turnout”. The Journal of Politics 80 (3): 1045-51. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan, and Erik Peterson. 2019. “Demand Effects in Survey Experiments: An Empirical Assessment”. American Political Science Review 113 (2): 517-29. Referenced from www.cambridge.org: Demand Effects in Survey Experiments: An Empirical Assessment. Reference Link
Hainmueller, Jens, Jonathan Mummolo, and Yiqing Xu. 2019. “How Much Should We Trust Estimates from Multiplicative Interaction Models? Simple Tools to Improve Empirical Practice”. Political Analysis 27 (2): 163-92. Referenced from www.cambridge.org: How Much Should We Trust Estimates from Multiplicative Interaction Models? Simple Tools to Improve Empirical Practice. Reference Link
Mummolo, Jonathan, and Erik Peterson. 2018. “Improving the Interpretation of Fixed Effects Regression Results”. Political Science Research and Methods 6 (4): 829-35. Referenced from www.cambridge.org: Improving the Interpretation of Fixed Effects Regression Results. Reference Link