This article looks for common sources to explain the systematic electoral change produced between regional and general elections in Catalonia and Scotland. In both territories, regional voting shows a systematic pattern whereby nationalist parties tend to have more success in the regional than in the national arena. Looking for differences and similarities between the two patterns, we first revise the literature on less mobilizing elections and the different answers given to electoral change across arenas in different contexts. Secondly, we use particular data to compare those who remain loyal to the main parties with those who alternate between them depending on the electoral level. Lastly, we test whether this electoral change is better e...
This article analyses the dynamics of electoral competition in a multilevel setting. It is based on ...
This article assesses the validity of several alternative hypotheses explaining dual voting across e...
This paper addresses two hypotheses. The first is that holding two or more elections at the same tim...
In line with the prevailing methodological nationalism of electoral studies, sub-state regional elec...
Scotland and Wales went to the polls on the same day in 2016, the former in a post- independence ref...
This article sets out to find ways of analysing the relationship of regional and statewide electoral...
This book presents a comparative perspective on the new dynamics of electoral competition following ...
This paper shows that the role of national electoral dynamics on regional elections is highly mediat...
This paper attempts to throw new light on the nature of the vote for non-state wide parties that art...
The literature is still undecided on whether sub-state elections conform more to a national or regio...
This article demonstrates that regional branches of national parties do not limit regional election ...
In this article, we explore the electoral dynamics of multi-level political systems for the case of ...
Second-order election research clearly reveals that national incumbency impacts on European election...
The Canary Islands are a region with legislative capacities within the European Union (EU). It has ...
This article analyses the dynamics of electoral competition in a multilevel setting. It is based on ...
This article analyses the dynamics of electoral competition in a multilevel setting. It is based on ...
This article assesses the validity of several alternative hypotheses explaining dual voting across e...
This paper addresses two hypotheses. The first is that holding two or more elections at the same tim...
In line with the prevailing methodological nationalism of electoral studies, sub-state regional elec...
Scotland and Wales went to the polls on the same day in 2016, the former in a post- independence ref...
This article sets out to find ways of analysing the relationship of regional and statewide electoral...
This book presents a comparative perspective on the new dynamics of electoral competition following ...
This paper shows that the role of national electoral dynamics on regional elections is highly mediat...
This paper attempts to throw new light on the nature of the vote for non-state wide parties that art...
The literature is still undecided on whether sub-state elections conform more to a national or regio...
This article demonstrates that regional branches of national parties do not limit regional election ...
In this article, we explore the electoral dynamics of multi-level political systems for the case of ...
Second-order election research clearly reveals that national incumbency impacts on European election...
The Canary Islands are a region with legislative capacities within the European Union (EU). It has ...
This article analyses the dynamics of electoral competition in a multilevel setting. It is based on ...
This article analyses the dynamics of electoral competition in a multilevel setting. It is based on ...
This article assesses the validity of several alternative hypotheses explaining dual voting across e...
This paper addresses two hypotheses. The first is that holding two or more elections at the same tim...