Party identification has been studied extensively using both individual- and aggregate-level data. This paper attempts to formulate a statistical model that can account for the range of empirical generalizations that have emerged from aggregate time series and panel surveys. Using Monte Carlo simulation, we show that only certain types of data generation processes can account for these empirical regularities. Deciding which of the remaining types best explains the data means investigating the ways in which individual-level partisanship behaves over time. Partisanship at the aggregate level tends to be highly autocorrelated, reequilibrating slowly in the wake of each perturbation. Working downward from the analysis of aggregate data, previou...
Previous comparative electoral studies using aggregate data indicate the importance of party-system ...
Inquiry into the origins of partisan polarization has generally treated polarization as a simple, sy...
Replication materials for Butler and Pereira "How does Partisanship Influence Policy Diffusion?", Po...
Central to traditionalist and revisionist perspectives of individual-level party identification is a...
Publication based on research carried out in the framework of the European Union Democracy Observato...
This paper extends models of micro and macropartisanship in two ways. It first develops a model of i...
Political party preference is a crucial element in the analysis of economics and political science. ...
Over the past half century, scholars have utilized a variety of theoretical and methodological appro...
Abstract This paper uses mixed Markov latent class models and data from multiwave national panel sur...
Many questions central to political science, such as the issue of stability and change in the United...
Panel data are a very valuable resource for finding empirical solutions to political science puzzles...
Political scientists often argue that political processes move together in the long run. Examples in...
The defining properties of party identification long established for the United States fail with som...
Replication Data for: Personality and Political Preferences Over Time: Evidence From a Multi-Wave Lo...
This paper examines and applies of more advanced modeling methods for the time-series-cross-sectiona...
Previous comparative electoral studies using aggregate data indicate the importance of party-system ...
Inquiry into the origins of partisan polarization has generally treated polarization as a simple, sy...
Replication materials for Butler and Pereira "How does Partisanship Influence Policy Diffusion?", Po...
Central to traditionalist and revisionist perspectives of individual-level party identification is a...
Publication based on research carried out in the framework of the European Union Democracy Observato...
This paper extends models of micro and macropartisanship in two ways. It first develops a model of i...
Political party preference is a crucial element in the analysis of economics and political science. ...
Over the past half century, scholars have utilized a variety of theoretical and methodological appro...
Abstract This paper uses mixed Markov latent class models and data from multiwave national panel sur...
Many questions central to political science, such as the issue of stability and change in the United...
Panel data are a very valuable resource for finding empirical solutions to political science puzzles...
Political scientists often argue that political processes move together in the long run. Examples in...
The defining properties of party identification long established for the United States fail with som...
Replication Data for: Personality and Political Preferences Over Time: Evidence From a Multi-Wave Lo...
This paper examines and applies of more advanced modeling methods for the time-series-cross-sectiona...
Previous comparative electoral studies using aggregate data indicate the importance of party-system ...
Inquiry into the origins of partisan polarization has generally treated polarization as a simple, sy...
Replication materials for Butler and Pereira "How does Partisanship Influence Policy Diffusion?", Po...