In this paper we explore the positioning of Australian political parties at the 2001 federal election using data from the Australian Election Study and discuss some of the strategic implications. We focus on some of the attitudes of Senate voters for the various parties, concentrating on how Inglehart's postmaterialism measures can be used to supplement more traditional left-right descriptions of the party system. In order to make some assessment of the significance of the electoral context we make some comparisons with the 1998 election and also examine party positioning in relation to other sets of attitudes about potentially salient issues
From the codebook: "The study has two goals. The first is to continue the broad line of enquiry est...
In this paper we re-evaluate explanations, derived from the Australian Election Study surveys, for t...
In this paper we re-evaluate explanations, derived from the Australian Election Study surveys, for t...
In this paper we explore the positioning of Australian political parties at the 2001 federal electio...
In this paper we explore recent Australian electoral politics using both Inglehart’s ideas on postma...
In this paper we explore the relationship between postmodern values and voting in Australia. The bes...
Political parties are an important, indeed almost ubiquitous, feature of liberal-democracy systems o...
This paper discusses whether and how the Australian Labor Party (ALP) can balance the arguably confl...
Recent research in Australian sociology and political science has debated the extent to which postma...
This research highlights the influence of political context upon the measurement of post...
The Tasmanian Labor Party has found itself, like many western social democratic parties, recently s...
This paper examines voter attitudes and behaviour at the 2007 Australian federal election., using da...
Over the past three decades the notion that western party-systems remain frozen has been challenged...
Australia has both a federal system and parliamentary government. One result of this combination is...
A common preoccupation of both students and practitioners of politics has for long been the extent ...
From the codebook: "The study has two goals. The first is to continue the broad line of enquiry est...
In this paper we re-evaluate explanations, derived from the Australian Election Study surveys, for t...
In this paper we re-evaluate explanations, derived from the Australian Election Study surveys, for t...
In this paper we explore the positioning of Australian political parties at the 2001 federal electio...
In this paper we explore recent Australian electoral politics using both Inglehart’s ideas on postma...
In this paper we explore the relationship between postmodern values and voting in Australia. The bes...
Political parties are an important, indeed almost ubiquitous, feature of liberal-democracy systems o...
This paper discusses whether and how the Australian Labor Party (ALP) can balance the arguably confl...
Recent research in Australian sociology and political science has debated the extent to which postma...
This research highlights the influence of political context upon the measurement of post...
The Tasmanian Labor Party has found itself, like many western social democratic parties, recently s...
This paper examines voter attitudes and behaviour at the 2007 Australian federal election., using da...
Over the past three decades the notion that western party-systems remain frozen has been challenged...
Australia has both a federal system and parliamentary government. One result of this combination is...
A common preoccupation of both students and practitioners of politics has for long been the extent ...
From the codebook: "The study has two goals. The first is to continue the broad line of enquiry est...
In this paper we re-evaluate explanations, derived from the Australian Election Study surveys, for t...
In this paper we re-evaluate explanations, derived from the Australian Election Study surveys, for t...