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Turner College Research Update ― January 5, 2026

A recent post here at Turner Business discusses new research by Turner College economists Frank Mixon and Fady Mansour, along with Auburn University's Steve Caudill, indicating that the impact of violent crime on human behavior potentially touches upon whether U.S. Representatives perform their legislative responsibilities or instead engage in shirking behavior. The results their study suggest that representatives from notably dangerous Congressional districts (i.e., those where gun homicide rates exceed the mean gun homicide rate by two standard deviations or more) tend to engage in less shirking behavior than other representatives. That is, these legislators tend to skip a significantly smaller percentage – representing almost 35% of the overall mean percentage – of roll call votes than others in the U.S. House during the 118th Congress. Since our prior post, this study has been accepted for publication by the American Journal of Economics and Sociology and it will appear in a future issue of the journal. Founded in 1941 with support from the Robert Schalkenbach Foundation (which has been renamed to The Progress and Poverty Institute) and published by Wiley, the American Journal of Economics and Sociology is an international, interdisciplinary scholarly journal publishing original, peer reviewed, high-quality studies which aim to add to our knowledge of issues within the broad fields of economics, sociology, political science, and social science generally. The Journal welcomes well-done papers dealing with tax issues, given their potential economic and sociological implications. The use of contemporary empirical tools and analytically sound frameworks/models is strongly encouraged.





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