This dissertation consists of three chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the literature on campaign effects, a large portion of which has been devoted to supporting or debunking the conclusions of the early studies: campaign effects are minimal. Different approaches have been taken overtime, including alternative measures of campaign effects and econometric specifications, as well as the use of idiosyncratic data sets. Currently, there are no universally accepted conclusions, nor standardized theoretical and empirical frameworks to analyze the campaign effects phenomenon. Chapter 2 develops a model of campaign information in the context of social networks. The model endogenizes the decision to share information within a voter\u27s community and expl...