The Scottish Parliament elections of 2007 were the third to be held under the country’s mixed-member proportional system. As voters continue to adapt to the new system, we explore two aspects of its use: i) preferences for coalitions as opposed to single-party government, and ii) ticket-splitting. The two are considered together for two reasons. First, both can be seen as manifestations of a preference for multiple parties, and as a result they share a number of likely predictors in common. In empirical practice, however, we find that rather different factors predict the two variables: ticket-splitting looks to be based on strategic partisan or ideological calculation, whereas coalition attitudes are less about partisan interests and more a...
This paper examines how a party’s decision to enter a coalition government affects voter perceptions...
Researchers have paid little attention to the way citizens evaluate different electoral systems. Thi...
An expanding literature indicates that in multiparty systems with coalition governments, citizens co...
The Scottish Parliament elections of 2007 were the third to be held under the country’s mixed-member...
The Scottish Parliament elections of 2007 were the third to be held under the country's mixed-member...
The Scottish Parliament elections of 2007 were the third to be held under the country?s mixed-member...
This paper adapts features of a model of Brams/Fishburn (1992) on coalition voting to the context of...
It is clear that coalition governments are likely to become a fact of political life in Scotland. In...
Why do voters support different parties at elections when given the opportunity of casting two votes...
THESIS 10269Mixed-member electoral systems give people the opportunity of voting for the same repres...
"Coalition preferences in multiparty systems have received increasing attention in recent years, bot...
Researchers have paid little attention to the way citizens evaluate different electoral systems. Thi...
In this paper, I suggest that voters may act strategically in proportional representation elections ...
Coalition governments are the norm in parliamentary democracies. Yet, despite the predominance of th...
This paper examines how a party’s decision to enter a coalition government affects voter perceptions...
Researchers have paid little attention to the way citizens evaluate different electoral systems. Thi...
An expanding literature indicates that in multiparty systems with coalition governments, citizens co...
The Scottish Parliament elections of 2007 were the third to be held under the country’s mixed-member...
The Scottish Parliament elections of 2007 were the third to be held under the country's mixed-member...
The Scottish Parliament elections of 2007 were the third to be held under the country?s mixed-member...
This paper adapts features of a model of Brams/Fishburn (1992) on coalition voting to the context of...
It is clear that coalition governments are likely to become a fact of political life in Scotland. In...
Why do voters support different parties at elections when given the opportunity of casting two votes...
THESIS 10269Mixed-member electoral systems give people the opportunity of voting for the same repres...
"Coalition preferences in multiparty systems have received increasing attention in recent years, bot...
Researchers have paid little attention to the way citizens evaluate different electoral systems. Thi...
In this paper, I suggest that voters may act strategically in proportional representation elections ...
Coalition governments are the norm in parliamentary democracies. Yet, despite the predominance of th...
This paper examines how a party’s decision to enter a coalition government affects voter perceptions...
Researchers have paid little attention to the way citizens evaluate different electoral systems. Thi...
An expanding literature indicates that in multiparty systems with coalition governments, citizens co...