The study of voting behaviour remains a vibrant sub-discipline of political science. The Handbook of Electoral Behaviour is an authoritative and wide ranging survey of this dynamic field, drawing together a team of the world's leading scholars to provide a state-of-the-art review that sets the agenda for future study. Taking an interdisciplinary approach and focusing on a range of countries, the handbook is composed of eight parts. The first five cover the principal theoretical paradigms, establishing the state of the art in their conceptualisation and application, and followed by chapters…mehr
The study of voting behaviour remains a vibrant sub-discipline of political science. The Handbook of Electoral Behaviour is an authoritative and wide ranging survey of this dynamic field, drawing together a team of the world's leading scholars to provide a state-of-the-art review that sets the agenda for future study.
Taking an interdisciplinary approach and focusing on a range of countries, the handbook is composed of eight parts. The first five cover the principal theoretical paradigms, establishing the state of the art in their conceptualisation and application, and followed by chapters on their specific challenges and innovative applications in contemporary voting studies. The remaining three parts explore elements of the voting process to understand their different effects on vote outcomes.
The SAGE Handbook of Electoral Behaviour is an essential benchmark publication for advanced students, researchers and practitioners in thefields of politics, sociology, psychology and research methods. Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Kai Arzheimer is Professor of Politics at the University of Mainz. His interests are political attitudes, research methods, and voting behaviour, particularly in Germany and other West European countries, and parties of the Radical Right. Professor Arzheimer has written over 50 articles, chapters, and books on these topics and is the co-editor, with Jocelyn Evans, of Electoral Behaviour (Sage, 2008) in the Library of Political Science series. Jocelyn Evans is Professor of Politics at the University of Leeds. His interests are voting behaviour, particularly in France and other European countries, and parties of the Radical Right. Professor Evans is the author of Voters and Voting: an Introduction (Sage, 2004) and co-editor, with Kai Arzheimer, of Electoral Behaviour (Sage, 2008) in the Library of Political Science series. He has written over 50 articles and books on various aspects of electoral behaviour. He served as editor of Parliamentary Affairs between 2005 and 2011. He has held visiting research positions at the ZA-Eurolab in Cologne, Germany, and the CIDSP, Grenoble, France. Michael S. Lewis-Beck is F. Wendell Miller Distinguished Professor of Political Science at the University of Iowa. His interests are comparative elections, election forecasting, political economy, and quantitative methodology. Professor Lewis-Beck has authored or co-authored over 260 articles and books, including Economics and Elections, The American Voter Revisited, French Presidential Elections, Forecasting Elections, The Austrian Voter, and Applied Regression. He has served as Editor of the American Journal of Political Science and of the Sage QASS series (the green monographs) in quantitative methods. Currently he is Associate Editor of International Journal of Forecasting and of French Politics. In addition to his position at Iowa, he has held various positions abroad including, more recently, Paul Lazersfeld University Professor at the University of Vienna; Visiting Professor at Center for Citizenship and Democracy, University of Leuven (KU Leuven), Belgium; Visiting Professor at LUISS University, Rome; Visiting Senior Scholar, Political Science, University of Aarhus, Denmark. michael-lewis-beck@uiowa.edu
Inhaltsangabe
01 Introduction - Kai Arzheimer, Jocelyn Evans & Michael S. Lewis-Beck INSTITUTIONAL APPROACHES 02 Institutional effects on voter choice - Shaun Bowler 03 Party systems and voter alignments - Asa von Schoultz 04 Voter behaviour in 2nd order elections - Herman Schmitt and Eftikia Teperoglou 05 Clarity of responsibility - Thiago Silva and Guy Whitten 06 Voting in new democracies - Lenka Bustikova and Elizabeth Zechmeister SOCIOLOGICAL APPROACHES 07 Age(ing) - Ruth Dassonneville 08 Gender - Rosie Campbell 09 Class - Geoff Evans 10 Religion - Martin Elff and Sigrid Rossteutscher 11 Ethnicity - Maria Sobolewska 12 Social networks and voter mobilisation - Marc Hooghe PARTISANSHIP 13 Evolving role of partisanship - Elias Dinas 14 Party identification: a reassessment - Don Green and Susanne Baltes 15 Cognitive mobilisation - Todd Donovan VOTER DECISION-MAKING 16 Strategic voting - Thomas Gschwend and Michael Meffert 17 Genetics - Carisa Bergner and Pete Hatemi 18 Affect - David Redlawsk and Douglas Pierce 19 Referenda - Alan Renwick 20 Turnout - Hanna Wass and André Blais ISSUES AND ATTITUDES 21 Ideology and core values - Robert Lupton, Adam Enders and William Jacoby 22 Issue ownership - Wouter van der Brug 23 Valence and competence - Jane Green and Will Jennings 24 Value cleavages - Romain Lachat 25 Evaluating the economy - Marina Costa Lobo and Mike Lewis-Beck 26 VP-function: a review - Mary Stegmaier, Beomseob Park and Mike Lewis-Beck CANDIDATES AND CAMPAIGNS 27 Voter evaluations of candidates - Diego Garzia 28 Geolocation - Jocelyn Evans 29 Personal vote - Thomas Zittel 30 Candidate attractiveness - Markus Klein and Ulrich Rosar 31 Campaign effects - Richard Johnston 32 Media and campaigns - Diane Mutz and Eunji Kim 33 Campaign spending - Zachary Albert and Ray La Raja POLLING AND FORECASTING 34 Opinion polling and vote - Rob Ford, Chris Wlezien, Mark Pickup and Will Jennings 35 Econometric approaches to forecasting - Eric Bélanger and David Trotter 36 Wisdom of crowds - Andreas Murr 37 Political markets - Andreas Graefe 38 Social media and elections - Luigi Curini, Stefano Iacus and Andrea Ceron METHODS 39 Survey experiments - Rob Johns 40 Multi-level modelling - Marcel Lubbers and Take Sipma 41 Cross-national data sources - Catherine de Vries 42 Psephology and technology - Kai Arzheimer 43 Conclusion - Marianne Stewart
01 Introduction - Kai Arzheimer, Jocelyn Evans & Michael S. Lewis-Beck INSTITUTIONAL APPROACHES 02 Institutional effects on voter choice - Shaun Bowler 03 Party systems and voter alignments - Asa von Schoultz 04 Voter behaviour in 2nd order elections - Herman Schmitt and Eftikia Teperoglou 05 Clarity of responsibility - Thiago Silva and Guy Whitten 06 Voting in new democracies - Lenka Bustikova and Elizabeth Zechmeister SOCIOLOGICAL APPROACHES 07 Age(ing) - Ruth Dassonneville 08 Gender - Rosie Campbell 09 Class - Geoff Evans 10 Religion - Martin Elff and Sigrid Rossteutscher 11 Ethnicity - Maria Sobolewska 12 Social networks and voter mobilisation - Marc Hooghe PARTISANSHIP 13 Evolving role of partisanship - Elias Dinas 14 Party identification: a reassessment - Don Green and Susanne Baltes 15 Cognitive mobilisation - Todd Donovan VOTER DECISION-MAKING 16 Strategic voting - Thomas Gschwend and Michael Meffert 17 Genetics - Carisa Bergner and Pete Hatemi 18 Affect - David Redlawsk and Douglas Pierce 19 Referenda - Alan Renwick 20 Turnout - Hanna Wass and André Blais ISSUES AND ATTITUDES 21 Ideology and core values - Robert Lupton, Adam Enders and William Jacoby 22 Issue ownership - Wouter van der Brug 23 Valence and competence - Jane Green and Will Jennings 24 Value cleavages - Romain Lachat 25 Evaluating the economy - Marina Costa Lobo and Mike Lewis-Beck 26 VP-function: a review - Mary Stegmaier, Beomseob Park and Mike Lewis-Beck CANDIDATES AND CAMPAIGNS 27 Voter evaluations of candidates - Diego Garzia 28 Geolocation - Jocelyn Evans 29 Personal vote - Thomas Zittel 30 Candidate attractiveness - Markus Klein and Ulrich Rosar 31 Campaign effects - Richard Johnston 32 Media and campaigns - Diane Mutz and Eunji Kim 33 Campaign spending - Zachary Albert and Ray La Raja POLLING AND FORECASTING 34 Opinion polling and vote - Rob Ford, Chris Wlezien, Mark Pickup and Will Jennings 35 Econometric approaches to forecasting - Eric Bélanger and David Trotter 36 Wisdom of crowds - Andreas Murr 37 Political markets - Andreas Graefe 38 Social media and elections - Luigi Curini, Stefano Iacus and Andrea Ceron METHODS 39 Survey experiments - Rob Johns 40 Multi-level modelling - Marcel Lubbers and Take Sipma 41 Cross-national data sources - Catherine de Vries 42 Psephology and technology - Kai Arzheimer 43 Conclusion - Marianne Stewart
Rezensionen
An excellent volume covering all the major classical topics in political and electoral behavior, with a first-class line up of leading international scholars, this Handbook will prove invaluable for colleagues and students seeking a comprehensive and up-to-date overview of the sub-field Professor Pippa Norris 20170112
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