Citizens, Context, and Choice

How Context Shapes Citizens' Electoral Choices

Christopher J Anderson editor Russell J Dalton editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:2nd Dec '10

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Citizens, Context, and Choice cover

A large body of electoral studies and political party research argues that the institutional context defines incentives that shape citizen participation and voting choice. With the unique resources of the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems, this book provides the first systematic evaluation of this topic. A distinguished international team of electoral scholars finds that the institutional context has only a modest impact on citizen political choices compared to individual level factors. Furthermore, the formal institutional characteristics of electoral systems that have been most emphasized by electoral studies researchers have less impact than characteristics of the party system that are separate from formal institutions. Advanced multi-level analyses demonstrate that contextual effects are more often indirect and interactive, and thus their effects are typically not apparent in single nation election studies. The results have the potential to reshape our understanding of how the institutional framework and context of election matters, and the limits of institutional design in shaping citizen electoral behavior.

The integrative new institutionalism approach of context, institutions and political behaviour makes the book very readable. * Torgeir Krohn, Political Studies Review Vol. 11 *
Citizens, Context, and Choice is an important work that I think belongs on the shelves of all scholars of political behavior. It covers a lot of ground and does so in a focused and rigorous way, building on what we already know about political behavior and yet challenging our understanding. * Christopher Wlezien, Temple University *
This volume provides a coherent and ground-breaking account of the subtle ways in which formal and less formal institutions may affect voting behaviour. The use of multilevel analytic methods coupled with new finer measures of political organisation (such as the effective number of parties, and of course party polarization) is to be commended... this volume certainly provides an insightful and rigorous study of the dynamics of voting. * Natacha Postel-Vinay, PhD student in Economic History at LSE *
Citizens, Context, and Choice breaks important new ground in the study of voting behavior, with an exceptionally talented set of contributors providing a variety of studies of how macropolitical contexts affect individuals' electoral choices. The papers are uniformly very good, but this volume is also much more than the sum of its parts. It develops more fully than has ever been done before the concept of "political supply" - the number, distinctiveness, and predictability of choices offered to the voter. And through a number of empirical studies it demonstrates that political supply is a central factor in understanding citizens' choices to participate and the meaning of their vote. This is work that will have to be taken account of in all further studies of electoral choice. * Professor W. Phillips Shively, University of Minnesota *

ISBN: 9780199599233

Dimensions: 241mm x 167mm x 26mm

Weight: 638g

314 pages