Whether Americans have “sorted” into politically like-minded counties and to what extent is hotly debated by academic and journalists. This paper examines whether or not geographic sorting has occurred and why it has occurred using a novel, dynamic analysis. Our findings indicate that geographic sorting is on the rise, but that it is a very recent phenomenon. In the 1970s and 1980s, counties tended to become more competitive, but by 1996 a pattern of partisan sorting had emerged and continued through the present. Results suggest this pattern is driven by Southern re-alignment and voting behavior in partisan stronghold counties. Lastly, we find evidence that migration can drive partisan sorting, but only accounts for a small portion of the c...
Geographers and demographers have been analyzing U.S. regional population change for decades. From t...
An overview of our methodology and results suggests that there does exist a trend stationary pattern...
It is often argued whether the American electorate is in a period of polarization (Abramowitz 2010),...
Whether Americans have “sorted” into politically like-minded counties and to what extent is hotly de...
Past research has argued that over the last 30 years, the United States has become much more geograp...
Almost any electoral map of the United States clearly shows an association between political beliefs...
<p>Geographic clustering has been linked to contemporary political polarization by jour- nalists and...
Political scientists, journalists, and astute political observers agree that American political part...
Much has been written in recent years about the claimed polarisation of the US electorate, with subs...
This paper evaluates aggregate-level partisan change in presidential and midterm elections at the co...
This project addresses the question of whether American elections became more geographically polariz...
© 2016 by the Southern Political Science Association. All rights reserved. Social divisions between ...
This paper examines whether shifts in a party’s ideological positioning affect their own partisans’ ...
© 2018 In the large literature on the growing polarization of the American electorate and its repres...
Arguments that Americans are becoming increasingly polarized - ideologically and geographically - ha...
Geographers and demographers have been analyzing U.S. regional population change for decades. From t...
An overview of our methodology and results suggests that there does exist a trend stationary pattern...
It is often argued whether the American electorate is in a period of polarization (Abramowitz 2010),...
Whether Americans have “sorted” into politically like-minded counties and to what extent is hotly de...
Past research has argued that over the last 30 years, the United States has become much more geograp...
Almost any electoral map of the United States clearly shows an association between political beliefs...
<p>Geographic clustering has been linked to contemporary political polarization by jour- nalists and...
Political scientists, journalists, and astute political observers agree that American political part...
Much has been written in recent years about the claimed polarisation of the US electorate, with subs...
This paper evaluates aggregate-level partisan change in presidential and midterm elections at the co...
This project addresses the question of whether American elections became more geographically polariz...
© 2016 by the Southern Political Science Association. All rights reserved. Social divisions between ...
This paper examines whether shifts in a party’s ideological positioning affect their own partisans’ ...
© 2018 In the large literature on the growing polarization of the American electorate and its repres...
Arguments that Americans are becoming increasingly polarized - ideologically and geographically - ha...
Geographers and demographers have been analyzing U.S. regional population change for decades. From t...
An overview of our methodology and results suggests that there does exist a trend stationary pattern...
It is often argued whether the American electorate is in a period of polarization (Abramowitz 2010),...