Journal ArticleThis chapter looks at voting patterns in the American suburbs in the national elections of 2000, 2002, 2004, and 2006. Understanding these patterns is critical to understanding future elections, because the suburbs are now quasi urban and home to over half of the U.S. population.(1) Although it was once reasonably assumed that Republican voters predominated in the suburbs, these areas are now highly contested electorally
ABSTRACT: While the United States has existed as a stable two party democracy since its inception, ...
Rural votes can often make the difference between what party controls Congress and who is living at ...
The author examined how the residents in the five-county region of the metropolitan area (Clackamas, ...
In the 2016 Presidential Election, the movement of well-off, highly-educated suburbs towards the Dem...
Two obseruations have gained widespread acceptance in the wakt ofthe 2OOOpresidential election. Firs...
This paper examines the relationship between partisan political success, in both the United States H...
© 2018 The socio-spatial structure of US metropolitan areas is the foundation of their electoral geo...
Political commentary often divides the nation into two partisan zones, urban and rural, but new anal...
The red/blue dichotomy describing presidential elections, while criticized, is ubiquitous: Red state...
This dissertation provides an update of the literature on American rural political behavior. As a f...
The Intermountain West region may be America’s new swing region. The region’s suburbs are where the ...
cities played a crucial role in the New Deal realignment that dominated presidential elections from ...
This paper seeks to determine how region, demographics, and economic characteristics affected county...
oft en voted for Democrat John Kerry, a pattern that became associated with the red state–blue state...
Red and Blue America has become the spatial metaphor for an electoral divide on two main dimensions ...
ABSTRACT: While the United States has existed as a stable two party democracy since its inception, ...
Rural votes can often make the difference between what party controls Congress and who is living at ...
The author examined how the residents in the five-county region of the metropolitan area (Clackamas, ...
In the 2016 Presidential Election, the movement of well-off, highly-educated suburbs towards the Dem...
Two obseruations have gained widespread acceptance in the wakt ofthe 2OOOpresidential election. Firs...
This paper examines the relationship between partisan political success, in both the United States H...
© 2018 The socio-spatial structure of US metropolitan areas is the foundation of their electoral geo...
Political commentary often divides the nation into two partisan zones, urban and rural, but new anal...
The red/blue dichotomy describing presidential elections, while criticized, is ubiquitous: Red state...
This dissertation provides an update of the literature on American rural political behavior. As a f...
The Intermountain West region may be America’s new swing region. The region’s suburbs are where the ...
cities played a crucial role in the New Deal realignment that dominated presidential elections from ...
This paper seeks to determine how region, demographics, and economic characteristics affected county...
oft en voted for Democrat John Kerry, a pattern that became associated with the red state–blue state...
Red and Blue America has become the spatial metaphor for an electoral divide on two main dimensions ...
ABSTRACT: While the United States has existed as a stable two party democracy since its inception, ...
Rural votes can often make the difference between what party controls Congress and who is living at ...
The author examined how the residents in the five-county region of the metropolitan area (Clackamas, ...