Based on research focusing on England, Prisca Jöst finds that the political behaviour of those on lower incomes appears to be more strongly influenced by their neighbours compared to the wealthy. This finding points to the higher importance of a social norm of voting for the less well-off
This article explores the role of political context in shaping economic biases in representation-the...
Why do the rich and poor support different parties in some places? We argue that voting along class ...
We investigated whether income gaps in voting turnout vary with country-level economic inequality, a...
There is extant literature documenting the unequal representation of the interests of economically d...
The conventional wisdom that the poor are less likely to vote than the rich is based upon research o...
Many students of British voting patterns have tested for the existence of contextual effects, which ...
Egocentric economic voting models are widely used in studies of voting behaviour in Great Britain: t...
Even though taking part in elections is one of the most direct tools to influence the sociopolitical...
Mobility of high-income individuals across borders puts pressure on governments to lower taxes. A ce...
The majority of political economy models predict that rich voters should oppose taxes and redistribu...
Income-maximizing consumers should vote in predictable ways: support for liberal, redistributive gov...
Recent years have seen a proliferation of research on the connection between voters and elites. One ...
How does income inequality affect political representation? Jan Rosset, Nathalie Giger and Julian Be...
Political economics predicts that the rich oppose redistribution and vote for conservative parties. ...
Research on a variety of advanced democracies has shown that there is a link between mass preference...
This article explores the role of political context in shaping economic biases in representation-the...
Why do the rich and poor support different parties in some places? We argue that voting along class ...
We investigated whether income gaps in voting turnout vary with country-level economic inequality, a...
There is extant literature documenting the unequal representation of the interests of economically d...
The conventional wisdom that the poor are less likely to vote than the rich is based upon research o...
Many students of British voting patterns have tested for the existence of contextual effects, which ...
Egocentric economic voting models are widely used in studies of voting behaviour in Great Britain: t...
Even though taking part in elections is one of the most direct tools to influence the sociopolitical...
Mobility of high-income individuals across borders puts pressure on governments to lower taxes. A ce...
The majority of political economy models predict that rich voters should oppose taxes and redistribu...
Income-maximizing consumers should vote in predictable ways: support for liberal, redistributive gov...
Recent years have seen a proliferation of research on the connection between voters and elites. One ...
How does income inequality affect political representation? Jan Rosset, Nathalie Giger and Julian Be...
Political economics predicts that the rich oppose redistribution and vote for conservative parties. ...
Research on a variety of advanced democracies has shown that there is a link between mass preference...
This article explores the role of political context in shaping economic biases in representation-the...
Why do the rich and poor support different parties in some places? We argue that voting along class ...
We investigated whether income gaps in voting turnout vary with country-level economic inequality, a...