This article develops a model of parties in multi-party systems. Instead of treating parties as vote-maximizing candidates able to take any position, parties are assumed to be controlled or at least constrained by their supporters. The model relies on a process whereby supporters sort themselves between parties, as in Aldrich (1983) and the economics literature starting with Tiebout (1956). The results of the model are sensitive to the shape of the preference distribution, particularly its skewness. This can be used to explain how a cohesive minority may have more influence than a more dispersed majority, and why certain parties are systematically advantaged over others
The goal of this thesis is to assess the electoral impact of party infighting. It addresses the key ...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This ...
In contrast to Downs' (1957) median voter result for two-candidate elections, we should not expect m...
This article develops a model of parties in multi-party systems. Instead of treating parties as vote...
We propose a model in which two parties select the internal organization that helps them win the ele...
This article presents, discusses and tests the hypothesis that it is the number of parties what can ...
We study parties' optimal ideological cohesion across electoral rules, when the following trade-off ...
We study a simple model of party formation in which both party discipline and inter-party ideologica...
What can account for ideological diversity among MPs from the same parliamentary party? While the ma...
What can account for ideological diversity among MPs from the same parliamentary party? While the ma...
Abstract Electoral competition in the United States takes place across various neighboring and overl...
I introduce a model of representative democracy with strategic parties, strategic candidates, strate...
This paper shows how political parties differentiate to reduce electoral competi-tion. Two parties c...
peer reviewedWe develop a model where voters differ in their exogenous income and in their ideologic...
We study the role of parties in a citizen-candidate repeated-elections model in which voters have in...
The goal of this thesis is to assess the electoral impact of party infighting. It addresses the key ...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This ...
In contrast to Downs' (1957) median voter result for two-candidate elections, we should not expect m...
This article develops a model of parties in multi-party systems. Instead of treating parties as vote...
We propose a model in which two parties select the internal organization that helps them win the ele...
This article presents, discusses and tests the hypothesis that it is the number of parties what can ...
We study parties' optimal ideological cohesion across electoral rules, when the following trade-off ...
We study a simple model of party formation in which both party discipline and inter-party ideologica...
What can account for ideological diversity among MPs from the same parliamentary party? While the ma...
What can account for ideological diversity among MPs from the same parliamentary party? While the ma...
Abstract Electoral competition in the United States takes place across various neighboring and overl...
I introduce a model of representative democracy with strategic parties, strategic candidates, strate...
This paper shows how political parties differentiate to reduce electoral competi-tion. Two parties c...
peer reviewedWe develop a model where voters differ in their exogenous income and in their ideologic...
We study the role of parties in a citizen-candidate repeated-elections model in which voters have in...
The goal of this thesis is to assess the electoral impact of party infighting. It addresses the key ...
[This item is a preserved copy. To view the original, visit http://econtheory.org/] This ...
In contrast to Downs' (1957) median voter result for two-candidate elections, we should not expect m...