Previous scholarship has provided ample evidence that non-spatial considerations can trump voters’ policy preferences in candidate selections. The literature has been less successful, however, in providing a sense of the factors that raise candidates’ non-policy appeal. Faced with the challenging task of separating policy- and non-policy aspects of individual vote choices, empirical research has frequently relied on shorthand measures like candidate incumbency. This paper separates the valence component from policy-based candidate selection by explicitly supplying voters with information on the policy agreement between themselves and their district candidates. Relying on the distinction between campaign valence and character valence by Ston...
This paper studies changes in voting preferences over election campaigns. Building on the literature...
This paper offers graphic illustration of so-called “valence” models of candidates responding to the...
Political parties in US politics are becoming increasingly polarized, with a growing number of extre...
Most formal models of valence competition add a single, separable and unweighted component to the st...
We study a voting model in which policy motivated candidates competefor the attention of voters, who...
Although the concept of party valence figures in many studies of voting behavior, very few have meas...
Most formal models of valence competition add a single, separable and unweighted component to the st...
In a representative democracy elections constitute the main channel for individuals to express their...
International audienceSpatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since th...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
Part of the growing literature on valence politics interprets the electoral impact of party competen...
Standard spatial voting theory models voters looking at each candidate separately and then casting a...
We employ conjoint analysis to understand how voters make decisions when faced with multi-dimensiona...
We connect three characteristics of political candidates: their preferences, their platforms and the...
Abstract. This paper proposes a two-party spatial model of policy and valence issues for office-seek...
This paper studies changes in voting preferences over election campaigns. Building on the literature...
This paper offers graphic illustration of so-called “valence” models of candidates responding to the...
Political parties in US politics are becoming increasingly polarized, with a growing number of extre...
Most formal models of valence competition add a single, separable and unweighted component to the st...
We study a voting model in which policy motivated candidates competefor the attention of voters, who...
Although the concept of party valence figures in many studies of voting behavior, very few have meas...
Most formal models of valence competition add a single, separable and unweighted component to the st...
In a representative democracy elections constitute the main channel for individuals to express their...
International audienceSpatial models of voting have dominated mathematical political theory since th...
The application of spatial voting theories to popular elections presupposes an electorate that choos...
Part of the growing literature on valence politics interprets the electoral impact of party competen...
Standard spatial voting theory models voters looking at each candidate separately and then casting a...
We employ conjoint analysis to understand how voters make decisions when faced with multi-dimensiona...
We connect three characteristics of political candidates: their preferences, their platforms and the...
Abstract. This paper proposes a two-party spatial model of policy and valence issues for office-seek...
This paper studies changes in voting preferences over election campaigns. Building on the literature...
This paper offers graphic illustration of so-called “valence” models of candidates responding to the...
Political parties in US politics are becoming increasingly polarized, with a growing number of extre...