Abstract

covering all thirteen presidential elections, and 10 midterm elections, since 1948, a crucial turning point came in 1977 when NSF established NES as the first national social science resource, a model NSF later used with the General Social Survey and the Panel Study of Income Dynamics. Prior to this time, the leaders of the Michigan election studies, the predecessors of NES, sought funding independently for each election study. Although team leaders, including especially Warren E. Miller, placed great value on developing the time series, sought to explore the frontiers of research on electoral politics and public opinion, and understood the significance of these studies for the broader re-

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