In the spatial model of voting, voters choose the candidate closest to them in the ideological space. Recent work by (Degan and Merlo 2009) shows that it is falsifiable on the basis of individual voting data in multiple elections. We show how to tackle the fact that the model only partially identifies the distribution of voting profiles and we give a formal revealed preference test of the spatial voting model in 3 national elections in the US, and strongly reject the spatial model in all cases.//We also construct confidence regions for partially identified voter characteristics in an augmented model with unobserved valence dimension, and identify the amount of voter heterogeneity necessary to reconcile the data with spatial preferences.Fort...
Political polarization is a common topic in the news and media, but not much has been done to unders...
This article provides a model for analyzing approval voting elections. Within a standard probabilist...
The directional and proximity models offer dramatically different theories for how voters make decis...
In the spatial model of voting, voters choose the candidate closest to them in the ideological space...
© Springer International Publishing AG 2016. Understanding political phenomena requires measuring th...
In most multidimensional spatial models, the systematic component of agent utility functions is spec...
In most multidimensional spatial models, the systematic component of agent utility functions is spec...
In most multidimensional spatial models, the systematic component of agent utility functions is spec...
<div><p></p><p>The spatial theory of elections is widely used to examine how party policy is linked ...
This article provides direct estimates of the parameters of spatial utility models of voting using d...
Spatial models of political competition are typically based on two assumptions. One is that all the ...
We test the spatial voting model under the hypothesis that the voter preferences are of a more gener...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
Spatial models of political competition are typically based on two assumptions. One is that all the ...
Electoral democracies are built on the idea of representation. The electorate selects politicians to...
Political polarization is a common topic in the news and media, but not much has been done to unders...
This article provides a model for analyzing approval voting elections. Within a standard probabilist...
The directional and proximity models offer dramatically different theories for how voters make decis...
In the spatial model of voting, voters choose the candidate closest to them in the ideological space...
© Springer International Publishing AG 2016. Understanding political phenomena requires measuring th...
In most multidimensional spatial models, the systematic component of agent utility functions is spec...
In most multidimensional spatial models, the systematic component of agent utility functions is spec...
In most multidimensional spatial models, the systematic component of agent utility functions is spec...
<div><p></p><p>The spatial theory of elections is widely used to examine how party policy is linked ...
This article provides direct estimates of the parameters of spatial utility models of voting using d...
Spatial models of political competition are typically based on two assumptions. One is that all the ...
We test the spatial voting model under the hypothesis that the voter preferences are of a more gener...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
Spatial models of political competition are typically based on two assumptions. One is that all the ...
Electoral democracies are built on the idea of representation. The electorate selects politicians to...
Political polarization is a common topic in the news and media, but not much has been done to unders...
This article provides a model for analyzing approval voting elections. Within a standard probabilist...
The directional and proximity models offer dramatically different theories for how voters make decis...