We construct a decision-theoretic model of turnout, in which individuals maximize their subjective expected utility in a context of repeated elections. In the model a nonnegative signaling motivation to vote exists for all citizens, regardless of their ideology or beliefs about the closeness of the election, and is proportional to a citizen's external efficacy, patience, and electoral pessimism. We find tentative support for all three effects in an empirical model of turnout using NES data (1976-1988). This paper suggests that the signaling motivation may play a role in a citizen’s decision to vote
In the first two essays of this dissertation we propose and estimate two policy-preference-based mod...
In the first two essays of this dissertation we propose and estimate two policy-preference-based mod...
In this paper, we propose a unified approach to study participation and voting in multiple elections...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
We analyze a psychologically based model of voter turnout. Potential voters experience regret if the...
We analyze a psychologically-based model of voter turnout. Potential voters expe-rience regret if th...
Existing theories of turnout model individuals ’ decisions to vote as a function of the utility they...
The Central puzzle we seek to address is “Why does what is arguably the most plausible account of th...
The Central puzzle we seek to address is “Why does what is arguably the most plausible account of th...
Bendor, Diermeier, and Ting (2003) develop a behavioral alternative to rational choice models of tur...
The so-called "paradox of voting" is major anomaly for rational choice theories of elections. If vot...
We incorporate prospect-theory preferences in a game-theoretic model to study voter turnout. We show...
Voting is an expressive act. Since people are not born wanting to express themselves politi-cally, t...
In the first two essays of this dissertation we propose and estimate two policy-preference-based mod...
In the first two essays of this dissertation we propose and estimate two policy-preference-based mod...
In this paper, we propose a unified approach to study participation and voting in multiple elections...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
In this paper, citizens vote in order to influence the election outcome and in order to signal their...
We analyze a psychologically based model of voter turnout. Potential voters experience regret if the...
We analyze a psychologically-based model of voter turnout. Potential voters expe-rience regret if th...
Existing theories of turnout model individuals ’ decisions to vote as a function of the utility they...
The Central puzzle we seek to address is “Why does what is arguably the most plausible account of th...
The Central puzzle we seek to address is “Why does what is arguably the most plausible account of th...
Bendor, Diermeier, and Ting (2003) develop a behavioral alternative to rational choice models of tur...
The so-called "paradox of voting" is major anomaly for rational choice theories of elections. If vot...
We incorporate prospect-theory preferences in a game-theoretic model to study voter turnout. We show...
Voting is an expressive act. Since people are not born wanting to express themselves politi-cally, t...
In the first two essays of this dissertation we propose and estimate two policy-preference-based mod...
In the first two essays of this dissertation we propose and estimate two policy-preference-based mod...
In this paper, we propose a unified approach to study participation and voting in multiple elections...