With How the States Shaped the Nation, Melanie Jean Springer looks to place contemporary reforms in historical context and explores how state electoral institutions have been instrumental in shaping voting behaviour throughout the twentieth century. Springer shows that voting patterns can change over time, even if only incrementally, with a one step forward two steps back logic that is often frustrating. Jeff Lupo finds this a fascinating read and recommends it to those interested in knowing more about American politics
Rebecca Mead has crafted a detailed history of suffrage campaigns in the western states. While her a...
The essays printed in this volume were originally delivered as lectures inthe Cornell Symposium on ...
Review of: "Winning the Vote: The Triumph of the American Woman Suffrage Movement," by Robert P. J. ...
Natacha Postel-Vinay is impressed by the radical and bold conclusions presented in this study of the...
Electoral administration is a topic that only occasionally and dramatically breaks into the public c...
Alexander Keyssar's largely intellectual history of suffrage throughout the nation's history and Mar...
The notion that electoral history may be divided into long periods of stability broken periodically ...
Review of: The Indiana Voter: The Historical Dynamics of Party Allegiance During the 1870\u27s. Hamm...
Review of: The Rise of the States: Evolution of American State Government. Teaford, Jon C
Patrick Dunleavy reviews a fascinating, but flawed, history of democratic thinking from an American ...
A half century of research shows that most citizens are shockingly uninformed about public affairs, ...
Reviewed Title: How America\u27s Political Parties Change (And How They Don\u27t) by Michael Barone....
A review of two recent books on the history of voting participation in America displays some of the ...
Book review: How Democratic is the American Constitution? By Robert A. Dahl. New Haven, CT: Yale Uni...
American Democracy offers a compellingly-argued rethinking of how we might conceptualise America’s d...
Rebecca Mead has crafted a detailed history of suffrage campaigns in the western states. While her a...
The essays printed in this volume were originally delivered as lectures inthe Cornell Symposium on ...
Review of: "Winning the Vote: The Triumph of the American Woman Suffrage Movement," by Robert P. J. ...
Natacha Postel-Vinay is impressed by the radical and bold conclusions presented in this study of the...
Electoral administration is a topic that only occasionally and dramatically breaks into the public c...
Alexander Keyssar's largely intellectual history of suffrage throughout the nation's history and Mar...
The notion that electoral history may be divided into long periods of stability broken periodically ...
Review of: The Indiana Voter: The Historical Dynamics of Party Allegiance During the 1870\u27s. Hamm...
Review of: The Rise of the States: Evolution of American State Government. Teaford, Jon C
Patrick Dunleavy reviews a fascinating, but flawed, history of democratic thinking from an American ...
A half century of research shows that most citizens are shockingly uninformed about public affairs, ...
Reviewed Title: How America\u27s Political Parties Change (And How They Don\u27t) by Michael Barone....
A review of two recent books on the history of voting participation in America displays some of the ...
Book review: How Democratic is the American Constitution? By Robert A. Dahl. New Haven, CT: Yale Uni...
American Democracy offers a compellingly-argued rethinking of how we might conceptualise America’s d...
Rebecca Mead has crafted a detailed history of suffrage campaigns in the western states. While her a...
The essays printed in this volume were originally delivered as lectures inthe Cornell Symposium on ...
Review of: "Winning the Vote: The Triumph of the American Woman Suffrage Movement," by Robert P. J. ...