National audienceThis paper proposes an analysis of strategic communication on platforms by candidates during an electoral campaign. A candidate's platform in a (possibly) multidimensional policy space is fixed, but is imperfectly known by voters. A candidate strategically decides the emphasis he puts on the various issues, and thus the precision of the information he conveys to voters on his position on each issue. We show that if voters are fully rational, then all the relevant information is revealed at equilibrium, whatever the candidate's true position. We then study a model of boundedly rational voters, who take at face value the messages sent by the politicians, without being able to decipher their strategies. If voters are boundedly...
We study elections between two candidates who hold some private information valuable for the whole e...
We provide a game-theoretical model of manipulative election campaigns with two political candidates...
Abstract We study the informational effectiveness of electoral campaigns. Voters may not think about...
National audienceThis paper proposes an analysis of strategic communication on platforms by candidat...
This paper proposes a game to study strategic communication on platforms by parties. Parties’ platfo...
Can campaign communications credibly transmit information about candidates ’ pol-icy intentions? To ...
In modern elections, ideologically motivated candidates with a wealth of information about individua...
In this paper I develop a formal theory of campaign communications. Voters have beliefs about the qu...
Why do political candidates who are largely office-motivated sometimes espouse views that are non-co...
This paper examines the role of voter-to-voter communication in the candidates ’ strategic choice of...
This thesis contains three chapters exploring the implications of strategically biased information o...
This paper studies a model of how political parties use resources for campaigning to inform voters. ...
We model a two-candidate electoral competition in which there is uncertainty about a policy-relevant...
We study a model in which two parties compete by announcing their policies, after receiving conditio...
88 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.Political competition and cand...
We study elections between two candidates who hold some private information valuable for the whole e...
We provide a game-theoretical model of manipulative election campaigns with two political candidates...
Abstract We study the informational effectiveness of electoral campaigns. Voters may not think about...
National audienceThis paper proposes an analysis of strategic communication on platforms by candidat...
This paper proposes a game to study strategic communication on platforms by parties. Parties’ platfo...
Can campaign communications credibly transmit information about candidates ’ pol-icy intentions? To ...
In modern elections, ideologically motivated candidates with a wealth of information about individua...
In this paper I develop a formal theory of campaign communications. Voters have beliefs about the qu...
Why do political candidates who are largely office-motivated sometimes espouse views that are non-co...
This paper examines the role of voter-to-voter communication in the candidates ’ strategic choice of...
This thesis contains three chapters exploring the implications of strategically biased information o...
This paper studies a model of how political parties use resources for campaigning to inform voters. ...
We model a two-candidate electoral competition in which there is uncertainty about a policy-relevant...
We study a model in which two parties compete by announcing their policies, after receiving conditio...
88 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2005.Political competition and cand...
We study elections between two candidates who hold some private information valuable for the whole e...
We provide a game-theoretical model of manipulative election campaigns with two political candidates...
Abstract We study the informational effectiveness of electoral campaigns. Voters may not think about...