We investigate the relative impact of respondent’s and spouse’s class on voting behaviour using logistic diagonal reference models. We test several hypotheses with data from the British Election Surveys of 1974, 1979, 1983 and 1987. We find that there are still differences between men and women in the extent to which their own class positions account for the way they vote, women being more influenced by their partner’s class position than are men. We also find that, although men have in general a higher class position, a ’class dominance ’ model cannot account for the greater influence of husbands than of wives. Our results do however modify the conventional approach to class in important respects. We find significant interaction effects, w...
How does the social background of MPs and candidates influence voting behaviour? Analysis by Oliver ...
Contains fulltext : 112060_a.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access) ...
Influential theories of class voting assume that the phenomenon occurs because classes hold differen...
We investigate the class identity of married women as it relates to their own and their husband's cl...
This article applies theoretical ideas in the literature on the household division of labor to the a...
This paper extends previous work on the changing importance of individual and contextual social clas...
We assess the impact of social class and local context on individual vote in Britain from 1964 to 19...
In this study we seek to broaden the debate on women and class analysis to married women’s and men's...
Social class has long been assumed to be the predominant social or structural determinant of voting...
Classic studies in political sociology argued that differences in countries' patterns of mobility ar...
This paper reviews three interconnected issues that have been central to the controversial problem o...
Studies that explain the class voting have often focused on “bottom-up” social factors, but paid lit...
Class analysis traditionally has focused on the position of men in the occupational system: Women ha...
How does the social background of MPs and candidates influence voting behaviour? Analysis by Oliver ...
We investigate trends and cross-national variation in the impact of class, religious, and gender cle...
How does the social background of MPs and candidates influence voting behaviour? Analysis by Oliver ...
Contains fulltext : 112060_a.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access) ...
Influential theories of class voting assume that the phenomenon occurs because classes hold differen...
We investigate the class identity of married women as it relates to their own and their husband's cl...
This article applies theoretical ideas in the literature on the household division of labor to the a...
This paper extends previous work on the changing importance of individual and contextual social clas...
We assess the impact of social class and local context on individual vote in Britain from 1964 to 19...
In this study we seek to broaden the debate on women and class analysis to married women’s and men's...
Social class has long been assumed to be the predominant social or structural determinant of voting...
Classic studies in political sociology argued that differences in countries' patterns of mobility ar...
This paper reviews three interconnected issues that have been central to the controversial problem o...
Studies that explain the class voting have often focused on “bottom-up” social factors, but paid lit...
Class analysis traditionally has focused on the position of men in the occupational system: Women ha...
How does the social background of MPs and candidates influence voting behaviour? Analysis by Oliver ...
We investigate trends and cross-national variation in the impact of class, religious, and gender cle...
How does the social background of MPs and candidates influence voting behaviour? Analysis by Oliver ...
Contains fulltext : 112060_a.pdf (author's version ) (Open Access) ...
Influential theories of class voting assume that the phenomenon occurs because classes hold differen...