Traditionally, we have assumed that voters choose the candidates and policy platforms that benefit them the most. So why can we observe people doing the exact opposite and acting, seemingly, irrationally by voting their money away? This project examines the power of altruism in voting and whether or not voters actually place the needs of others over themselves at the polls
During the last quarter century political scientists have become increasingly preoccupied with ratio...
Examines the rationality of economic voting, using post-World War II United States national election...
This paper seeks to understand voter choice using a dichotomous model differentiating between econom...
The decade preceding 2020 has brought into question the political rationality of the average America...
Caplan (2000, 2001, 2006) proposed the rational-irrationality model arguing that irrationality is a ...
Why do voters at the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum support political candidates who genera...
We consider an election that is solely concerned with redistribution of income. It is well known tha...
The rational choice or “economic” approach to politics—public choice analysis—brought the self-inter...
Egocentric economic voting models are widely used in studies of voting behaviour in Great Britain: t...
It is incredibly unlikely that any one person’s vote will change the outcome of an election and indi...
Self-interest voting is irrational when it has even a small cost, but it can be rational for those w...
Abstract This paper presents a goal-oriented model of political participation based on two psycholog...
Four decades ago, Gerald Kramer showed that economic conditions affect electoral outcomes. Some rese...
Traditional models of why people vote conceptualize voting as a static, self-interested decision. Th...
We reconsider the classic puzzle of why election turnouts are persistently so high when formal analy...
During the last quarter century political scientists have become increasingly preoccupied with ratio...
Examines the rationality of economic voting, using post-World War II United States national election...
This paper seeks to understand voter choice using a dichotomous model differentiating between econom...
The decade preceding 2020 has brought into question the political rationality of the average America...
Caplan (2000, 2001, 2006) proposed the rational-irrationality model arguing that irrationality is a ...
Why do voters at the lower end of the socioeconomic spectrum support political candidates who genera...
We consider an election that is solely concerned with redistribution of income. It is well known tha...
The rational choice or “economic” approach to politics—public choice analysis—brought the self-inter...
Egocentric economic voting models are widely used in studies of voting behaviour in Great Britain: t...
It is incredibly unlikely that any one person’s vote will change the outcome of an election and indi...
Self-interest voting is irrational when it has even a small cost, but it can be rational for those w...
Abstract This paper presents a goal-oriented model of political participation based on two psycholog...
Four decades ago, Gerald Kramer showed that economic conditions affect electoral outcomes. Some rese...
Traditional models of why people vote conceptualize voting as a static, self-interested decision. Th...
We reconsider the classic puzzle of why election turnouts are persistently so high when formal analy...
During the last quarter century political scientists have become increasingly preoccupied with ratio...
Examines the rationality of economic voting, using post-World War II United States national election...
This paper seeks to understand voter choice using a dichotomous model differentiating between econom...