by Alejandro Moreno (Editor), Alejandro Moreno (Editor), Richard Gunther (Editor), Paul A. Beck (Editor), Pedro C. Magalhães (Editor)
Voting in Old and New Democracies examines voting behavior and its determinants based on 26 surveys from 18 countries on five continents between 1992 and 2008. It systematically analyzes the impact on voting choice of factors rooted in the currently dominant approaches to the study of electoral behavior, but adds to this analysis factors introduced or reintroduced into this field by the Comparative National Elections Project (CNEP)-socio-political values, and political communication through media, personal discussion, and organizational intermediaries. It demonstrates empirically that these long-neglected factors have significant political impact in many countries that previous studies have overlooked, while economic voting is insignificant in most elections once long-term partisan attitudes are taken into consideration. Its examination of electoral turnout finds that the strongest predictor is participation by other family members, demonstrating the importance of intermediation. Another chapter surveys cross-national variations in patterns of intermediation, and examines the impact of general social processes (such as socioeconomic and technological modernization), country-specific factors, and individual-level attitudinal factors as determinants of those patterns. Complementing its cross-national comparative analysis is a detailed longitudinal case study of one country over 25 years. Finally, it examines the extent of support for democracy as well as significant cross-national differences in how democracy is understood by citizens.
Written in a clear and accessible style, Voting in Old and New Democracies significantly advances our understanding of citizen attitudes and behavior in election settings.
Format: Illustrated
Pages: 342
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 04 Sep 2015
ISBN 10: 1138913316
ISBN 13: 9781138913318
'This book is essential reading for all scholars interested in the democratic role of elections. Analyzing a unique database consisting of survey data from 18 countries it provides important new insights into the relevance of political intermediation through the communications of mass media, political organizations and ordinary citizens for democratic politics on a global scale.' -Rudiger Schmitt-Beck, University of Mannheim
'This insightful book makes productive use of innovative survey questions from a wide range of countries to shed light on long-neglected questions regarding how voters acquire and direct their concerns onto the objects of electoral choice: political parties. In so doing the study introduces an apparently new term to the lexicon of political behavior: political intermediation. The study uses this concept as a lens with which to focus attention on the role of intermediaries (family, friends, the media, and social groups) in framing political choices: roles that appear to condition decisions in the voting booth.' - Mark N. Franklin, European University Institute
`La evidencia presentada en Voting in Old and New Democracies ensancha la agenda de investigacion sobre el comportamiento politico-electoral en el mundo, poniendo sobre la mesa la importancia de factores como los canales de intermediacion politica -que influyen en la relacion entre partidos politicos y ciudadanos-, los cuales suelen estar ausentes en el analisis de la decision de voto. Dicha contribucion, sumada a la relevancia que se le da al proceso de modernizacion -ahora experimentado a traves de cambios tecnologicos que se viven en el mundo con el uso de las redes socio-digitales y el Internet- indican que el estudio comparado del comportamiento electoral es todavia una agenda de investigacion abierta a nuevas explicaciones teoricas y hallazgos novedosos. Voting in Old and New democracies contribuye a ello.'-Isaac Cisneros, Perfiles Latinoamericanos