Left–right is a convenient tool for summarizing the complexities of voter–party linkages in a manner that is comparable across contexts and that avoids the pathologies of preference aggregation in higher dimensions. Yet several reasons exist to believe that left–right is increasingly incapable of summarizing political behavior: the inability of left–right to capture policy concerns beyond economics and religion; the accumulation of new issue concerns over time; pressures for policy convergence stemming from the globalization of the world economy; and the decline of social cleavages that historically structured vote choice. This paper shows that parties are indeed talking about a growing number of issues, they are converging on the left–righ...
How has the narrative of the social-democratic parties changed in the era of globalisation and in th...
Categories are one of the primary ways by which people make sense of complex environments. For polit...
This study examines how ideological incongruence between voters and parties influences the entry of ...
Left–right is a convenient tool for summarizing the complexities of voter–party linkages in a manner...
The left–right scale is the concept most often used to describe citizens’ and parties’ political pos...
Political conflict is often described in terms of “left” and “right” even though societal conflicts ...
Recent research demonstrates that political parties in western Europe are generally structured along...
Earlier research has concluded that European citizens do not update their Left-Right policy preferen...
The Left–Right dimension is the most common way of conceptualizing ideological difference. It is bas...
Implicit in theories of democratic elections is the idea of change—or at least the potential for cha...
This paper combines two important findings from research on how voters and parties interact: Firstly...
AbstractThe article aims to explore whether the accuracy of voters' perceptions of party ideology ar...
Published online: 24 Sep 2013.Citizens can face a difficult electoral decision when no party even br...
For much of the Twentieth century, political scientists were concerned with the decline of party—a s...
This paper examines whether shifts in a party’s ideological positioning affect their own partisans’ ...
How has the narrative of the social-democratic parties changed in the era of globalisation and in th...
Categories are one of the primary ways by which people make sense of complex environments. For polit...
This study examines how ideological incongruence between voters and parties influences the entry of ...
Left–right is a convenient tool for summarizing the complexities of voter–party linkages in a manner...
The left–right scale is the concept most often used to describe citizens’ and parties’ political pos...
Political conflict is often described in terms of “left” and “right” even though societal conflicts ...
Recent research demonstrates that political parties in western Europe are generally structured along...
Earlier research has concluded that European citizens do not update their Left-Right policy preferen...
The Left–Right dimension is the most common way of conceptualizing ideological difference. It is bas...
Implicit in theories of democratic elections is the idea of change—or at least the potential for cha...
This paper combines two important findings from research on how voters and parties interact: Firstly...
AbstractThe article aims to explore whether the accuracy of voters' perceptions of party ideology ar...
Published online: 24 Sep 2013.Citizens can face a difficult electoral decision when no party even br...
For much of the Twentieth century, political scientists were concerned with the decline of party—a s...
This paper examines whether shifts in a party’s ideological positioning affect their own partisans’ ...
How has the narrative of the social-democratic parties changed in the era of globalisation and in th...
Categories are one of the primary ways by which people make sense of complex environments. For polit...
This study examines how ideological incongruence between voters and parties influences the entry of ...