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David L Wiltse
David L Wiltse
Adresse e-mail validée de sdstate.edu
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Trust in physicians and trust in government predict COVID‐19 vaccine uptake
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse, BA Meyer
Social Science Quarterly 103 (3), 509-520, 2022
532022
Don’t blame donors for ideological polarization of political parties: Ideological change and stability among political contributors, 1972-2008
RJ La Raja, DL Wiltse
American Politics Research 40 (3), 501-530, 2012
462012
The Messenger Matters: Religious Leaders and Overcoming COVID-19 Vaccine Hesitancy
F Viskupic, D Wiltse
PS: Political Science and Politics 55 (3), 504 - 509, 2022
382022
Political partisanship and trust in government predict popular support for COVID-19 vaccine mandates for various professions and demographic groups: A research note
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse
American Politics Research 51 (2), 139-146, 2023
112023
Money that draws no interest: Public financing of legislative elections and candidate emergence
RJ La Raja, DL Wiltse
Election Law Journal 14 (4), 392-410, 2015
112015
Beyond vaccination: messaging from religious leaders can help increase adherence to COVID-19 mitigation guidelines following vaccination. A research note
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse, BA Meyer
The Social Science Journal, 1-10, 2022
102022
Pharmacists to partner with religious leaders to overcome vaccine hesitancy among Christians
BA Meyer, F Viskupič, DL Wiltse
Journal of the American Pharmacists Association 62 (1), 302-304, 2022
102022
Reminders of existing vaccine mandates increase support for a COVID-19 vaccine mandate: Evidence from a survey experiment
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse, A Badahdah
Vaccine 40 (51), 7483-7487, 2022
92022
Typologies of party finance systems: a comparative study of how countries regulate party finance and their institutional foundations
DL Wiltse, RJ La Raja, DE Apollonio
Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy 18 (3), 243-261, 2019
62019
Subsidizing Equality: Female Candidate Emergence and Clean Elections
DL Wiltse
Election Law Journal: Rules, Politics, and Policy 17 (2), 85-99, 2018
62018
Drivers of COVID-19 booster uptake among nurses
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse
American Journal of Infection Control 51 (8), 895-899, 2023
52023
Trust in physicians predicts COVID-19 booster uptake among older adults: Evidence from a panel survey
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse
Aging and Health Research 3 (1), 100127, 2023
52023
Attitudes toward COVID-19 vaccine mandate: The role of psychological characteristics and partisan self-identification
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse, A Kayaalp
Personality and Individual Differences 206, 112119, 2023
42023
Pocketbook versus identity? Farmers’ attitudes towards international trade
F Viskupič, E Celik Wiltse, DL Wiltse
The Social Science Journal, 1-11, 2022
32022
COVID-19 parental vaccine hesitancy among nurses in the state of South Dakota
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse
Journal of Community Health 48 (2), 245-251, 2023
22023
Individual vs. collective motives in the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002
VG Moscardelli, M Haspel, D Wiltse
American Politics Research 35 (1), 79-102, 2007
22007
Psychological entitlement predicts support for mandatory COVID-19 vaccination
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse
Journal of Medicine, Surgery, and Public Health 2, 100043, 2024
12024
Age and partisan self-identification predict uptake of additional COVID-19 booster doses: Evidence from a longitudinal study
D Wiltse, F Viskupič
Preventive Medicine Reports 36, 102407, 2023
12023
Partisan self-identification predicts attitudes of South Dakota nurses toward COVID-19 vaccine mandate for healthcare workers
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse
Health Policy and Technology 12 (3), 100777, 2023
12023
Attitudes toward annual COVID-19 boosters are highly structured by partisan self-identification and trust in government: Evidence from a longitudinal survey
F Viskupič, DL Wiltse
Vaccine: X 14, 100337, 2023
12023
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