The Context of Responsiveness: Resident Preferences, Water Scarcity, and Municipal Conservation Policy

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Abstract

The extent to which municipal policy is determined by the preferences of residents is a topic of growing importance. Recent work on the subject has challenged conventional wisdom and found that municipal policy is often, but not always, responsive to the ideology of residents. This paper takes up an important potential implication of these findings, exploring how resident ideology may interact with issue severity in the adoption of municipal policy. Hypotheses suggest that resident preferences will have the greatest effect in the presence of high issue severity and that issue severity will have the largest impact when residents have ideological preferences in line with policy solutions. I test hypotheses using municipal water rates, with models showing that the effects of resident ideology and water scarcity interact with each other to influence water conservation policy.

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Switzer, D. (2020). The Context of Responsiveness: Resident Preferences, Water Scarcity, and Municipal Conservation Policy. Review of Policy Research, 37(2), 260–279. https://doi.org/10.1111/ropr.12377

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