The electoral competitiveness among candidates vying for single elected positions (e.g. president, members of parliament single member districts, or candidates for the party leadership) lacks an appropriate measurement. This paper reevaluates previous measurements and proposes a new indicator that accounts for the interaction between the number of candidates and the distribution of votes. The resulting indicator overcomes the oversensitivity problem associated with earlier specification and provides better competitiveness estimate for various electoral settings. Its applicability is universal and allows for cross-cases and longitudinal comparisons
© 2019 Araz AminnaseriPolitical parties represent social classes with conflicting interests. Elector...
The relationship between electoral competitiveness and turnout forms the foundations of understandin...
When two candidates of different quality compete in a one-dimensional policy space, the equilibrium ...
The electoral competitiveness among candidates vying for single elected positions (e.g. president, m...
The electoral competitiveness among candidates vying for single elected positions (e.g. president, m...
Electoral competition is a cornerstone of representative democracies. However, measuring its extent ...
Electoral competitiveness is a key explanatory construct across a broad swath of phenomena, finding ...
We develop a general approach to measuring electoral competitiveness for parties and governments, wh...
Past research suggests that voter behavior is influenced by perceptions of electoral competitiveness...
The concept of electoral competition plays a central role in many subfields of political science, bu...
We consider alternative methods of measuring the competitiveness of a majoritarian electoral system...
In this paper we argue that the number of candidates running for public office, their ideological di...
This article develops an empirical measure of electoral availability, i.e., the micro perspective of...
Electoral competitiveness is a key explanatory construct across a broad swath of phenomena, finding ...
In this paper, we analyze the selection by opportunistic parties of the candidates who run for elect...
© 2019 Araz AminnaseriPolitical parties represent social classes with conflicting interests. Elector...
The relationship between electoral competitiveness and turnout forms the foundations of understandin...
When two candidates of different quality compete in a one-dimensional policy space, the equilibrium ...
The electoral competitiveness among candidates vying for single elected positions (e.g. president, m...
The electoral competitiveness among candidates vying for single elected positions (e.g. president, m...
Electoral competition is a cornerstone of representative democracies. However, measuring its extent ...
Electoral competitiveness is a key explanatory construct across a broad swath of phenomena, finding ...
We develop a general approach to measuring electoral competitiveness for parties and governments, wh...
Past research suggests that voter behavior is influenced by perceptions of electoral competitiveness...
The concept of electoral competition plays a central role in many subfields of political science, bu...
We consider alternative methods of measuring the competitiveness of a majoritarian electoral system...
In this paper we argue that the number of candidates running for public office, their ideological di...
This article develops an empirical measure of electoral availability, i.e., the micro perspective of...
Electoral competitiveness is a key explanatory construct across a broad swath of phenomena, finding ...
In this paper, we analyze the selection by opportunistic parties of the candidates who run for elect...
© 2019 Araz AminnaseriPolitical parties represent social classes with conflicting interests. Elector...
The relationship between electoral competitiveness and turnout forms the foundations of understandin...
When two candidates of different quality compete in a one-dimensional policy space, the equilibrium ...