Reproducibility and robustness of economics and political science research
Reproducibility and robustness of economics and political science research
Science aspires to be cumulative. Reproducibility efforts strengthen science by testing the reliability of published findings, promoting self-correction, and informing policy-making. Computational reproductions, whereby independent researchers reproduce the results of published studies, are an essential diagnostic tool. Such efforts should have greater visibility. However, little social science reproduction and robustness has been conducted at scale. Here we reproduced original analyses and conducted robustness checks of 110 articles that were published in leading economics and political science journals with mandatory data and code sharing policies17,18. We found that more than 85% of published claims were computationally reproducible. In robustness checks, our reanalyses showed that 72% of statistically significant estimates remain significant and in the same direction, and the median reproduced effect size is nearly the same as the originally published effect size (that is, 99% of the published effect size). Additionally, 6 independent research teams examined 12 pre-specified hypotheses about determinants of robustness. Research teams with more experience found lower levels of robustness, and robustness did not correlate with author characteristics or data availability.
151-156
Brodeur, Abel
f2ebafd6-13ef-4432-9d74-45124539c4f8
Mikola, Derek
c17f64f5-758b-4374-b1a9-f373ff8a578c
Cook, Nikolai
af361d06-4efe-46fe-bb32-e8d0a48502be
Beeder, Monica
0d3ef837-7aaf-4d42-841a-3329d2e137e8
1 April 2026
Brodeur, Abel
f2ebafd6-13ef-4432-9d74-45124539c4f8
Mikola, Derek
c17f64f5-758b-4374-b1a9-f373ff8a578c
Cook, Nikolai
af361d06-4efe-46fe-bb32-e8d0a48502be
Beeder, Monica
0d3ef837-7aaf-4d42-841a-3329d2e137e8
Brodeur, Abel, Mikola, Derek and Cook, Nikolai
,
et al.
(2026)
Reproducibility and robustness of economics and political science research.
Nature, 652, .
(doi:10.1038/s41586-026-10251-x).
Abstract
Science aspires to be cumulative. Reproducibility efforts strengthen science by testing the reliability of published findings, promoting self-correction, and informing policy-making. Computational reproductions, whereby independent researchers reproduce the results of published studies, are an essential diagnostic tool. Such efforts should have greater visibility. However, little social science reproduction and robustness has been conducted at scale. Here we reproduced original analyses and conducted robustness checks of 110 articles that were published in leading economics and political science journals with mandatory data and code sharing policies17,18. We found that more than 85% of published claims were computationally reproducible. In robustness checks, our reanalyses showed that 72% of statistically significant estimates remain significant and in the same direction, and the median reproduced effect size is nearly the same as the originally published effect size (that is, 99% of the published effect size). Additionally, 6 independent research teams examined 12 pre-specified hypotheses about determinants of robustness. Research teams with more experience found lower levels of robustness, and robustness did not correlate with author characteristics or data availability.
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 February 2026
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 April 2026
Published date: 1 April 2026
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 511554
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511554
ISSN: 0028-0836
PURE UUID: 0515a693-afb7-4565-8697-c319e6f90e0c
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Date deposited: 20 May 2026 16:51
Last modified: 21 May 2026 02:12
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Contributors
Author:
Abel Brodeur
Author:
Derek Mikola
Author:
Nikolai Cook
Author:
Monica Beeder
Corporate Author: et al.
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