Political campaigns are much more attack-filled in some countries than in others. What accounts for it? One answer hinges on the country’s party system. We propose that two-party systems encourage more negativity than multiparty systems because parties in a multiparty system (1) must maintain good relationships with parties with which they may want to enter into coalition and (2) run the risk of supporters of the attacked party moving to support a third party. We test the relationship between party system and attack behaviour in New Zealand, which in 1996 changed from a single-member district, first-past-the-post system to a mixed-member proportional system. The result was a more fragmented party system, resulting in coalition and minority ...
This paper examines the impact of New Zealand’s 1996 adoption of a mixed member proportional (MMP) v...
This article describes how political parties in parliamentary election campaigns in Western Europe m...
Are election campaigns in Western Europe becoming more negative? Under which circumstances do politi...
Political campaigns are much more attack-filled in some countries than in others. What accounts for ...
In 1996 New Zealand changed its electoral system from single-member-district plurality to a form of ...
This paper investigates the effect of a change in electoral system on the relative importance of par...
This paper investigates the effect of a change in electoral system on the relative importance of par...
This paper investigates the effect of a change in electoral systemon the relative importance of part...
Political party organisations respond to the challenges of their environments. Different organisatio...
Anti-party sentiment tends to be seen as a relatively recent problem for the world's democracies. Ev...
Abstract. Following approval of a referendum in 1993, New Zealand replaced its first-past-the-post e...
The 1999 election produced probably the lowest voting turnout of any twentieth-century New Zealand e...
The 1999 election produced probably the lowest voting turnout of any twentieth-century New Zealand e...
This article examines which political parties are the most likely targets of negative campaigning in...
This article examines the conditions under which different kinds of parties resort to negative campa...
This paper examines the impact of New Zealand’s 1996 adoption of a mixed member proportional (MMP) v...
This article describes how political parties in parliamentary election campaigns in Western Europe m...
Are election campaigns in Western Europe becoming more negative? Under which circumstances do politi...
Political campaigns are much more attack-filled in some countries than in others. What accounts for ...
In 1996 New Zealand changed its electoral system from single-member-district plurality to a form of ...
This paper investigates the effect of a change in electoral system on the relative importance of par...
This paper investigates the effect of a change in electoral system on the relative importance of par...
This paper investigates the effect of a change in electoral systemon the relative importance of part...
Political party organisations respond to the challenges of their environments. Different organisatio...
Anti-party sentiment tends to be seen as a relatively recent problem for the world's democracies. Ev...
Abstract. Following approval of a referendum in 1993, New Zealand replaced its first-past-the-post e...
The 1999 election produced probably the lowest voting turnout of any twentieth-century New Zealand e...
The 1999 election produced probably the lowest voting turnout of any twentieth-century New Zealand e...
This article examines which political parties are the most likely targets of negative campaigning in...
This article examines the conditions under which different kinds of parties resort to negative campa...
This paper examines the impact of New Zealand’s 1996 adoption of a mixed member proportional (MMP) v...
This article describes how political parties in parliamentary election campaigns in Western Europe m...
Are election campaigns in Western Europe becoming more negative? Under which circumstances do politi...