In a spatial model of voting, a voter's utility for a candidate is a function of ideological distance from the candidate and a candidate's quality. Candidate quality can potentially bias the measure of ideological distance in two ways. First, voters may be more drawn to high quality candidates thereby reducing the ideological distance. Second, a candidate's ideological position is a function of rivals�qualities and his own quality. We derive a theoretical model to sign the direction of both biases analytically. Next, using techniques established in the industrial organization literature, we estimate the model using two sets of instrumental variables
In the spatial model of voting, voters choose the candidate closest to them in the ideological space...
Anthony Downs? highly influential spatial model of electoral choice assumes that voters? ideological...
We study a model in which voters choose between two candidates on the basis of both ideology and com...
In a spatial model of voting, a voter's utility for a candidate is a function of ideological distanc...
In a spatial model of voting, a voters utility for a candidate is a func-tion of ideological distanc...
This article provides direct estimates of the parameters of spatial utility models of voting using d...
This paper introduces a model where elections are games where voters have preferences over a public ...
Examines the use of spatial models in analyzing an electoral process. Conceptualizations of the set ...
When two candidates of different quality compete in a one dimensional policy space, the equilibrium ...
When two candidates of different quality compete in a one-dimensional policy space, the equilibrium ...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
In this paper I demonstrate that the distribution of votes influences the theoretical predictions fo...
We propose a modified spatial-voting rule to explain why congressional candidates adopt more extreme...
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...
In the spatial model of voting, voters choose the candidate closest to them in the ideological space...
Anthony Downs? highly influential spatial model of electoral choice assumes that voters? ideological...
We study a model in which voters choose between two candidates on the basis of both ideology and com...
In a spatial model of voting, a voter's utility for a candidate is a function of ideological distanc...
In a spatial model of voting, a voters utility for a candidate is a func-tion of ideological distanc...
This article provides direct estimates of the parameters of spatial utility models of voting using d...
This paper introduces a model where elections are games where voters have preferences over a public ...
Examines the use of spatial models in analyzing an electoral process. Conceptualizations of the set ...
When two candidates of different quality compete in a one dimensional policy space, the equilibrium ...
When two candidates of different quality compete in a one-dimensional policy space, the equilibrium ...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
In this paper I demonstrate that the distribution of votes influences the theoretical predictions fo...
We propose a modified spatial-voting rule to explain why congressional candidates adopt more extreme...
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...
In the spatial model of voting, voters choose the candidate closest to them in the ideological space...
Anthony Downs? highly influential spatial model of electoral choice assumes that voters? ideological...
We study a model in which voters choose between two candidates on the basis of both ideology and com...