Datasets

Datasets are arranged by type. Click on a dataset name to expand its description (including date range) as well as to download a .csv of current data and a .pdf codebook that documents included variables. For information on how to cite this data please visit our how to cite page. 

    Media
  • Media
    Parliamentary & Legislative
  • Federal Reports
  • Legislation
    Public Opinion & Interest Groups
  • Direct Democracy Votes

Research

The Relationship between Media and Political Agendas
Previous studies have demonstrated that the extent to which media coverage influences the issue priorities of policy makers is contingent on the type of issue, media, and political agenda. This article contends that the relationship between media and political agendas varies ... Read more

 

Staff

Frédéric Varone
Title: Professor
Institution(s): University of Geneva

Frédéric Varone is Professor of Public Policy at the Department of Political Science and International Relations, University of Geneva. His research interests include comparative public policy, programme evaluation and interest groups.

CAP related Research Projects:

- Re-parliamentarization? A quantitative assessment of the Swiss Parliament's legislative function

- Lobbying, litigation and direct democracy: Comparing advocacy strategies of interest groups in Switzerland and California

- The Politics of Attention: West European politics in times of change

 


Pascal Sciarini
Title: Professor
Institution(s): University of Geneva

Pascal Sciarini is Professor of Swiss and Comparative politics at the University of Geneva, Switzerland. His main research topics are decision-making processes, direct democracy, Europeanization and political behavior. His work on these topics has appeared in several journals. His most recent book, which he co-authored with Manuel Fischer and Denise Traber, is Political Decision-making in Switzerland: The consensus model under pressure, Basingstoke/New York: Palgrave Macmillan (2015). He is also co-editor of the Handbook of Swiss politics, Zurich: NZZ Libro (2014).


Anke Tresch
Title: SNSF Research Professor
Institution(s): University of Lausanne

Anke Tresch is a SNSF Research Professor in the Institute of Political, Historic and International Studies at the University of Lausanne, where she directs a research project on "Party strategies and the dynamics of electoral competition in multiparty democracies" (2014-2018). She received her Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of Zurich in 2007. Her research combines interests in media and politics, political communication, voting behavior, and the public sphere.

Website: https://sites.google.com/site/anketresch/home


Roy Gava
Title: Lecturer
Institution(s): University of Geneva

Roy Gava is Lecturer and post-doc researcher at the Department of Political Science and International Relations. His research interests include comparative public policy, financial regulation and internationalization.


Explore Policy Trends

Click to explore policy trends with Switzerland pre-selected. The Trends tool allows for policy comparisons across governing institutions and countries.

The Swiss Policy Agendas team includes Roy Gava, Pascal Sciarini and Frédéric Varone at the University of Geneva and Anke Tresch at the University of Lausanne.

Principal Investigator: Pascal Sciarini and Frédéric Varone
Location: University of Geneva
Downloadable Data Series: 4
Time Span: 1848-2014
Total Observations: 13,872

Sponsoring Institutions

The following CAP related projects were funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation:

Swiss Policy Agendas

Featured Research:
The Relationship between Media and Political Agendas

Previous studies have demonstrated that the extent to which media coverage influences the issue priorities of policy makers is contingent on the type of issue, media, and political agenda. This article contends that the relationship between media and political agendas varies across the phases of the decision-making process. Based on a comprehensive dataset on issue attention in media coverage and various policy-making channels covering the years 1996–2003, the article ... Read more

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