How do votes in direct democratic ballots translate into policy preferences about future outcomes and affect the perceived legitimacy of those outcomes? This article examines these questions in the context of sovereignty referendums: specifically, the 2016 referendum on British membership of the European Union (EU). While the referendum result gave the British government a mandate for Britain leaving the EU, it did not provide any firm guidance as to the kind of Brexit that voters would prefer and consider legitimate. To examine the perceived desirability and legitimacy of different Brexit outcomes, we conducted a nationally representative conjoint experiment measuring attitudes towards different possible negotiation outcomes. Our findings ...
This conjoint study investigates the type of mandate a referendum confers in the political decision-...
The fruit of a referendum should be political clarity. The people have spoken; the state will act in...
According to the rational choice theory, political parties seek to maximise their utility in gainin...
How do votes in direct democratic ballots translate into policy preferences about future outcomes an...
Survey data on public attitudes towards Brexit in the United Kingdom from 2017-2020. 10-wave survey ...
This article examines how the British public perceived UK Prime Minister David Cameron's plan to ren...
A surprising development in the post-referendum Brexit process has been that vote intentions have re...
A surprising development in the post-referendum Brexit process has been that vote intentions have re...
This is the final version. Available on open access from UACES via the DOI in this recordThis articl...
In a referendum in March 2016, the British public voted by a margin of 52 per cent to 48 per cent to...
This article examines how the public perceived Cameron’s renegotiation plan, and whether attitudes t...
While the decision to organise a Brexit has been the subject of seemingly endless debate, the legiti...
The UK voted by a narrow margin to leave the European Union in a referendum on 23 June 2016. This ar...
The planned referendum on whether the United Kingdom (UK) should remain within or leave the EU will ...
Published: March 2019This article suggests that common arguments questioning the legitimacy of the f...
This conjoint study investigates the type of mandate a referendum confers in the political decision-...
The fruit of a referendum should be political clarity. The people have spoken; the state will act in...
According to the rational choice theory, political parties seek to maximise their utility in gainin...
How do votes in direct democratic ballots translate into policy preferences about future outcomes an...
Survey data on public attitudes towards Brexit in the United Kingdom from 2017-2020. 10-wave survey ...
This article examines how the British public perceived UK Prime Minister David Cameron's plan to ren...
A surprising development in the post-referendum Brexit process has been that vote intentions have re...
A surprising development in the post-referendum Brexit process has been that vote intentions have re...
This is the final version. Available on open access from UACES via the DOI in this recordThis articl...
In a referendum in March 2016, the British public voted by a margin of 52 per cent to 48 per cent to...
This article examines how the public perceived Cameron’s renegotiation plan, and whether attitudes t...
While the decision to organise a Brexit has been the subject of seemingly endless debate, the legiti...
The UK voted by a narrow margin to leave the European Union in a referendum on 23 June 2016. This ar...
The planned referendum on whether the United Kingdom (UK) should remain within or leave the EU will ...
Published: March 2019This article suggests that common arguments questioning the legitimacy of the f...
This conjoint study investigates the type of mandate a referendum confers in the political decision-...
The fruit of a referendum should be political clarity. The people have spoken; the state will act in...
According to the rational choice theory, political parties seek to maximise their utility in gainin...