Most existing theoretical work on party competition pays little attention to the evolution of party systems between elections as a result of defections between parties. In this article, we treat individual legislators as utility-maximizing agents tempted to defect to other parties if this would increase their expected payoffs. We model the evolution of party systems between elections in these terms and discuss this analytically, exploring unanswered questions using computational methods. Under office-seeking motivational assumptions, our results strikingly highlight the role of the largest party, especially when it is “dominant” in the technical sense, as a pole of attraction in interelectoral evolution
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
Most existing theoretical work on party competition pays little attention to the evolution of party ...
Most existing theoretical work on party competition pays little attention to the evolution of party ...
We apply the iterative algorithm by Merrill and Adams (Political Analysis 9:347\u2013361, 2001) to c...
Western democracies exhibit a remarkable continuity and stability in their party systems. Parties th...
We study a unidimensional model of spatial competition between two parties with two types of politic...
We model political parties as adaptive decision-makers who compete in a sequence of elections. The k...
We study a unidimensional model of spatial competition between two parties with two types of politic...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
Most existing theoretical work on party competition pays little attention to the evolution of party ...
Most existing theoretical work on party competition pays little attention to the evolution of party ...
We apply the iterative algorithm by Merrill and Adams (Political Analysis 9:347\u2013361, 2001) to c...
Western democracies exhibit a remarkable continuity and stability in their party systems. Parties th...
We study a unidimensional model of spatial competition between two parties with two types of politic...
We model political parties as adaptive decision-makers who compete in a sequence of elections. The k...
We study a unidimensional model of spatial competition between two parties with two types of politic...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...
Electoral systems are commonly treated as exogenous determinants of political party systems, yet our...
International audienceThis paper studies a uni-dimensional model of electoral competition between tw...