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ID171344
Title ProperHow partisan is local law enforcement? evidence from Sheriff cooperation with immigration authorities
LanguageENG
AuthorThompson, Daniel M
Summary / Abstract (Note)Is local law enforcement conducted differently based on the party in power? I offer an answer to this question by focusing on a case in which law enforcement is elected and has meaningful independent discretion: sheriff compliance with federal requests to detain unauthorized immigrants. Using a regression discontinuity design in a new dataset of over 3,200 partisan sheriff elections and administrative data on sheriff behavior, I find that Democrats and Republicans comply at nearly the same rate. These results contribute to ongoing research into the role that partisanship plays in local policy making, indicating that law enforcement officers make similar choices across party lines even when they have broad authority. I also present evidence that sheriffs hold more similar immigration enforcement views across party than the general public, highlighting the role of candidate entry and selection in determining the level of partisan polarization.
`In' analytical NoteAmerican Political Science Review Vol. 114, No.1; Feb 2020: p.222-236
Journal SourceAmerican Political Science Review 2020-02 114, 1
Key WordsImmigrants ;  Local Law Enforcement ;  Sheriff Cooperation ;  Immigration Authorities