Elections are celebrated in democracies as well as in non-democracies. Studies on the factors explaining turnout normally focus, however, only on democracies. Are turnout patterns different in non-democracies? If so, how different are those? In this paper I address this issue with a unique dataset covering 1251 elections −678 democratic (in 107 countries) and 250 nondemocratic elections (in 81 countries) for the lower house and 209 democratic (in 57 countries) and 114 nondemocratic (in 60 countries)- for the period 1961–2008. I find that the turnout determinants are contingent upon the regimes and that the most important differences lay in the institutional and in the political factors
This is the accepted and refereed manuscript to the articleResearch about voter turnout has expanded...
What is the influence of presidentialism on legislative turnout? Does it matter for electoral partic...
Research dealing with contemporary western democracies has consistently shown that turnout is substa...
Electoral authoritarian regimes are by far the most common type of autocracy in the world today. An...
This paper examines in a descriptive manner how two groups of variables, institutional and socio-eco...
The purpose of this research project is to further the understanding of the connection between inter...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive and legal institutions. Different institut...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive, and legal institutions. Different institu...
Over the last 25 years, cross-national variation in voter turnout has received increased attention f...
Despite decades of research, there is no consensus as to the core correlates of national-level voter...
This paper tests two neo-institutional explanations of voter turnout using data from new democracies...
We test the effect of the importance of elections by focusing on turnout at presidential and legisla...
A burgeoning literature has started to address the link between income inequality and electoral turn...
This paper tests two neo-institutional explanations of voter turnout using data from new democracies...
© 2016 European Consortium for Political Research. There is a consensus in recent literature on elec...
This is the accepted and refereed manuscript to the articleResearch about voter turnout has expanded...
What is the influence of presidentialism on legislative turnout? Does it matter for electoral partic...
Research dealing with contemporary western democracies has consistently shown that turnout is substa...
Electoral authoritarian regimes are by far the most common type of autocracy in the world today. An...
This paper examines in a descriptive manner how two groups of variables, institutional and socio-eco...
The purpose of this research project is to further the understanding of the connection between inter...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive and legal institutions. Different institut...
World democracies widely differ in legislative, executive, and legal institutions. Different institu...
Over the last 25 years, cross-national variation in voter turnout has received increased attention f...
Despite decades of research, there is no consensus as to the core correlates of national-level voter...
This paper tests two neo-institutional explanations of voter turnout using data from new democracies...
We test the effect of the importance of elections by focusing on turnout at presidential and legisla...
A burgeoning literature has started to address the link between income inequality and electoral turn...
This paper tests two neo-institutional explanations of voter turnout using data from new democracies...
© 2016 European Consortium for Political Research. There is a consensus in recent literature on elec...
This is the accepted and refereed manuscript to the articleResearch about voter turnout has expanded...
What is the influence of presidentialism on legislative turnout? Does it matter for electoral partic...
Research dealing with contemporary western democracies has consistently shown that turnout is substa...