Rural votes can often make the difference between what party controls Congress and who is living at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. This Carsey fact sheet presents detailed patterns of rural voting by region and shows that these patterns are better explained by looking at demographic factors rather than simply by where people live
Typically, scholars think about vote choice as a decision based on economic interests; conventional ...
One of the most critical influences in American voting behavior is the political split between urban...
This paper explores the rural-urban divide, as it exists within Nebraska, which is a state that is l...
In the 2004 presidential election, rural voters tended to favor Republican George W. Bush, while urb...
oft en voted for Democrat John Kerry, a pattern that became associated with the red state–blue state...
In this fact sheet, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting data for nearly 9,000 rur...
Political commentators routinely treat rural America as an undifferentiated bastion of strength for ...
In this brief, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting patterns over the last five pr...
Political commentary often divides the nation into two partisan zones, urban and rural, but new anal...
It is a common conceit in American politics that urban voters tend to vote for the Democratic Party,...
The past several decades have revealed a dividing trend between the voting behavior of urban and rur...
This paper examines the relationship between partisan political success, in both the United States H...
This dissertation provides an update of the literature on American rural political behavior. As a f...
Why the Right? Evaluating Vote Choice in Rural America focuses on explaining the seemingly “counteri...
Voter turnout is a key measure of the legitimacy of any given democracy. A government elected in a h...
Typically, scholars think about vote choice as a decision based on economic interests; conventional ...
One of the most critical influences in American voting behavior is the political split between urban...
This paper explores the rural-urban divide, as it exists within Nebraska, which is a state that is l...
In the 2004 presidential election, rural voters tended to favor Republican George W. Bush, while urb...
oft en voted for Democrat John Kerry, a pattern that became associated with the red state–blue state...
In this fact sheet, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting data for nearly 9,000 rur...
Political commentators routinely treat rural America as an undifferentiated bastion of strength for ...
In this brief, authors Dante Scala and Kenneth Johnson examine voting patterns over the last five pr...
Political commentary often divides the nation into two partisan zones, urban and rural, but new anal...
It is a common conceit in American politics that urban voters tend to vote for the Democratic Party,...
The past several decades have revealed a dividing trend between the voting behavior of urban and rur...
This paper examines the relationship between partisan political success, in both the United States H...
This dissertation provides an update of the literature on American rural political behavior. As a f...
Why the Right? Evaluating Vote Choice in Rural America focuses on explaining the seemingly “counteri...
Voter turnout is a key measure of the legitimacy of any given democracy. A government elected in a h...
Typically, scholars think about vote choice as a decision based on economic interests; conventional ...
One of the most critical influences in American voting behavior is the political split between urban...
This paper explores the rural-urban divide, as it exists within Nebraska, which is a state that is l...