The 'secret garden of politics' where some win and others lose their candidate selection bids and why some aspirant candidates are successful while others fail has been an enduring puzzle within political science. This book solves this puzzle by proposing and applying a universally applicable multistage approach to discover the relationship between selection rules, selectors' biases, aspirants' attributes, and selection outcomes. Rare party and survey data on winning and losing candidates and insider views on what it takes to win a selection contest at multiple selection stages are compared and used to reveal the inner workings of the secret garden. With a primary focus on the British Labour party over several elections, the findings challe...
In this paper, we analyze the selection by opportunistic parties of the candidates who run for elect...
Political parties in Belgium are free to decide on their methods of candidate selection. Hence, one ...
Political parties in Belgium are free to decide on their methods of candidate selection. Hence, one ...
The 'secret garden of politics' where some win and others lose their candidate selection bids and wh...
Analyses of by-elections traditionally focus on explorations of electoral behaviour, rather than on ...
No established liberal democracy has achieved sex balance in its national legislature. Scholars agre...
Whilst most UK political parties have now accepted the need to increase the number of women represen...
Presented at the ECPG (European Conference on Politics and Gender), in Uppsala, Sweden (June, 2015)....
This paper presents a model of candidate selection through political parties where politicians diffe...
Analyses of candidate selection processes are usually based on either the formal rules included in p...
There has been surprisingly little consideration of how the selection of political candidates compar...
Whilst most UK political parties have now accepted the need to increase the number of women represen...
This thesis contributes to the under-researched field of political selection, namely one’s re-select...
Candidate selection is often described as “the secret garden of politics” (Gallagher & Marsh, 1988)....
It is clear that the major political parties in Britain consider the under-representation of women i...
In this paper, we analyze the selection by opportunistic parties of the candidates who run for elect...
Political parties in Belgium are free to decide on their methods of candidate selection. Hence, one ...
Political parties in Belgium are free to decide on their methods of candidate selection. Hence, one ...
The 'secret garden of politics' where some win and others lose their candidate selection bids and wh...
Analyses of by-elections traditionally focus on explorations of electoral behaviour, rather than on ...
No established liberal democracy has achieved sex balance in its national legislature. Scholars agre...
Whilst most UK political parties have now accepted the need to increase the number of women represen...
Presented at the ECPG (European Conference on Politics and Gender), in Uppsala, Sweden (June, 2015)....
This paper presents a model of candidate selection through political parties where politicians diffe...
Analyses of candidate selection processes are usually based on either the formal rules included in p...
There has been surprisingly little consideration of how the selection of political candidates compar...
Whilst most UK political parties have now accepted the need to increase the number of women represen...
This thesis contributes to the under-researched field of political selection, namely one’s re-select...
Candidate selection is often described as “the secret garden of politics” (Gallagher & Marsh, 1988)....
It is clear that the major political parties in Britain consider the under-representation of women i...
In this paper, we analyze the selection by opportunistic parties of the candidates who run for elect...
Political parties in Belgium are free to decide on their methods of candidate selection. Hence, one ...
Political parties in Belgium are free to decide on their methods of candidate selection. Hence, one ...