Previous comparative electoral studies using aggregate data indicate the importance of party-system variables, such as polarization and the number of parties, with regard to the level of volatility between two elections. Research using individual level data has shown elements, such as political knowledge, political disaffection and party identification, explain why voters remained faithful to their party or not. Until now, no study has investigated these variables simultaneously on individual level data using a large set of elections. This study fills that important gap in the literature using data from 29,591 voters in 33 elections. We find polarization influences party-switching at the individual level, rather than the sheer number of par...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Inquiry into the origins of partisan polarization has generally treated polarization as a simple, sy...
Are campaign-switchers voting less correctly than stable voters? A rich literature has already inves...
Previous comparative electoral studies using aggregate data indicate the importance of party-system ...
In the literature on electoral volatility and party defection, structural elements have been put for...
Previous research claims that the number of parties affects the representation of social cleavages i...
Previous research claims that the number of parties affects the representation of social cleavages i...
Abstract Scholars view polarization with trepidation. But polarization may clarify voters ’ choices ...
The defining properties of party identification long established for the United States fail with som...
The presence of electoral volatility, and the fact that voters can change parties from one election ...
Scholars have investigated the characteristics of volatile voters ever since the first voter surveys...
This thesis examines the effects of individuals’ policy evaluations on their propensity to switch pa...
The observed rate of Americans voting for a different party across successive presidential elections...
A rich literature has already investigated the characteristics of voters who switch parties, focusin...
Increasing voter volatility has led to a renewed research interest in determinants of party switchin...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Inquiry into the origins of partisan polarization has generally treated polarization as a simple, sy...
Are campaign-switchers voting less correctly than stable voters? A rich literature has already inves...
Previous comparative electoral studies using aggregate data indicate the importance of party-system ...
In the literature on electoral volatility and party defection, structural elements have been put for...
Previous research claims that the number of parties affects the representation of social cleavages i...
Previous research claims that the number of parties affects the representation of social cleavages i...
Abstract Scholars view polarization with trepidation. But polarization may clarify voters ’ choices ...
The defining properties of party identification long established for the United States fail with som...
The presence of electoral volatility, and the fact that voters can change parties from one election ...
Scholars have investigated the characteristics of volatile voters ever since the first voter surveys...
This thesis examines the effects of individuals’ policy evaluations on their propensity to switch pa...
The observed rate of Americans voting for a different party across successive presidential elections...
A rich literature has already investigated the characteristics of voters who switch parties, focusin...
Increasing voter volatility has led to a renewed research interest in determinants of party switchin...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Inquiry into the origins of partisan polarization has generally treated polarization as a simple, sy...
Are campaign-switchers voting less correctly than stable voters? A rich literature has already inves...