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Political Research Quarterly, Vol. 57, No. 2, 245-255 (2004)
DOI: 10.1177/106591290405700206

Mobilizing African-American Voters Using Direct Mail and Commercial Phone Banks: A Field Experiment

Donald P. Green

Yale University

This essay summarizes the results of a large-scale randomized experiment conducted during the 2000 election campaign by the NAACP National Voter Fund, which sought to mobilize African-American voters. Focusing solely on the direct mail and phone banking components of the NAACP-NVF campaign, this study examines the voting behavior of 980,208 participants residing in single-voter households, 1.7 percent of whom were randomly assigned to a control group. The experiment permits us to estimate (1) the extent to which the National Voter Fund’s phone calls and direct mail increased voter turnout and (2) the approximate cost per vote. Within this sample, the NVF’s two pieces of GOTV mail, three live phone calls, and two recorded phone calls had modest effects, generating approximately 7,100 additional votes at $158 per vote. The upper bound of a 90 percent confidence interval puts these figures at 16,214 additional votes at $69 per vote.


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J. E. Leighley
Commentary on "Attitudes, Opportunities and Incentives: A Field Essay on Political Participation"
Political Research Quarterly, March 1, 2008; 61(1): 46 - 49.
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