We employ conjoint analysis to understand how voters make decisions when faced with multi-dimensional choices. Respondents are asked to choose between candidates that vary along three valence (education, income and honesty) and two ideological attributes (attitudes toward tax and spending and the rights of same-sex couples). We have administered the conjoint analysis experiment to 186 subjects, resulting in 5022 votes over pair-wise compared candidates. Our results indicate that education and integrity - but not income - indeed behave like valence issues where voters prefer more to less. They also show that voters\u2019 preference takes the competency form. The marginal impact of valued valence attributes is conditional on the candidate\u20...
Previous scholarship has provided ample evidence that non-spatial considerations can trump voters’ p...
This paper responds to Evans and Kat?s critique of the valence politics model of electoral choice. T...
We develop a dynamic, 2-party citizen-candidate model in which candidates are distinguished by both ...
Most formal models of valence competition add a single, separable and unweighted component to the st...
Most formal models of valence competition add a single, separable and unweighted component to the st...
In a representative democracy elections constitute the main channel for individuals to express their...
This research explores voter preferences in the multi-dimensional policy space of the 2015 UK genera...
I study a model of electoral competition where two parties that care about both the spoils of office...
Abstract: Political scientists have increasingly deployed conjoint survey experiments to understand...
This paper combines two important findings from research on how voters and parties interact: Firstly...
Standard spatial voting theory models voters looking at each candidate separately and then casting a...
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Down...
We study a voting model in which policy motivated candidates competefor the attention of voters, who...
Although the concept of party valence figures in many studies of voting behavior, very few have meas...
This research explores voter preferences in the multi-dimensional policy space of the 2015 UK genera...
Previous scholarship has provided ample evidence that non-spatial considerations can trump voters’ p...
This paper responds to Evans and Kat?s critique of the valence politics model of electoral choice. T...
We develop a dynamic, 2-party citizen-candidate model in which candidates are distinguished by both ...
Most formal models of valence competition add a single, separable and unweighted component to the st...
Most formal models of valence competition add a single, separable and unweighted component to the st...
In a representative democracy elections constitute the main channel for individuals to express their...
This research explores voter preferences in the multi-dimensional policy space of the 2015 UK genera...
I study a model of electoral competition where two parties that care about both the spoils of office...
Abstract: Political scientists have increasingly deployed conjoint survey experiments to understand...
This paper combines two important findings from research on how voters and parties interact: Firstly...
Standard spatial voting theory models voters looking at each candidate separately and then casting a...
Spatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since the seminal work of Down...
We study a voting model in which policy motivated candidates competefor the attention of voters, who...
Although the concept of party valence figures in many studies of voting behavior, very few have meas...
This research explores voter preferences in the multi-dimensional policy space of the 2015 UK genera...
Previous scholarship has provided ample evidence that non-spatial considerations can trump voters’ p...
This paper responds to Evans and Kat?s critique of the valence politics model of electoral choice. T...
We develop a dynamic, 2-party citizen-candidate model in which candidates are distinguished by both ...