The Reputational Premium : A Theory of Party Identification and Policy Reasoning /
Sniderman, Paul M.
The Reputational Premium : A Theory of Party Identification and Policy Reasoning / Edward H. Stiglitz, Paul M. Sniderman. - Course Book - 1 online resource (160 p.) : 11 line illus. 26 tables.
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- CHAPTER 1. Introduction -- CHAPTER 2. A Reputational Theory of Party Identifi cation and Policy Reasoning -- CHAPTER 3. Lessons from a Sterile Downsian Environment -- CHAPTER 4. The Electoral Logic of Party Reputations -- CHAPTER 5. The Democratic Experimen.t A SUPPLY- SIDE THEORY OF POLITICAL IDEAS AND INSTITUTIONS -- APPENDIX A. A Limit on the Infl uence of the Policy Reputations of Parties -- APPENDIX B. Study Descriptions. General Description of Methodology -- References -- Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
The Reputational Premium presents a new theory of party identification, the central concept in the study of voting. Challenging the traditional idea that voters identify with a political party out of blind emotional attachment, this pioneering book explains why party identification in contemporary American politics enables voters to make coherent policy choices. Standard approaches to the study of policy-based voting hold that voters choose based on the policy positions of the two candidates competing for their support. This study demonstrates that candidates can get a premium in support from the policy reputations of their parties. In particular, Paul Sniderman and Edward Stiglitz present a theory of how partisans take account of the parties' policy reputations as a function of the competing candidates' policy positions. A central implication of this theory of reputation-centered choices is that party identification gives candidates tremendous latitude in their policy positioning. Paradoxically, it is the party supporters who understand and are in synch with the ideological logic of the American party system who open the door to a polarized politics precisely by making the best-informed choices on offer.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9780691154145 9781400842551
10.1515/9781400842551 doi
Party affiliation.
Political parties--Public opinion.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / Political Parties.
American party system. American politics. Democrats. Republicans. candidate positioning. democratic experiment. democratic politics. elected representatives. electoral punishment. partisans. party identification. policy conviction. policy positions. policy preferences. policy reputations. policy-based voting. political competence. political landscape. political parties. political party. programmatic partisanship. programmatic party identifiers. reputational premium. spatial reasoning. spatial voting. supply-side theory. voters.
JF2071
324.2
The Reputational Premium : A Theory of Party Identification and Policy Reasoning / Edward H. Stiglitz, Paul M. Sniderman. - Course Book - 1 online resource (160 p.) : 11 line illus. 26 tables.
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Preface -- CHAPTER 1. Introduction -- CHAPTER 2. A Reputational Theory of Party Identifi cation and Policy Reasoning -- CHAPTER 3. Lessons from a Sterile Downsian Environment -- CHAPTER 4. The Electoral Logic of Party Reputations -- CHAPTER 5. The Democratic Experimen.t A SUPPLY- SIDE THEORY OF POLITICAL IDEAS AND INSTITUTIONS -- APPENDIX A. A Limit on the Infl uence of the Policy Reputations of Parties -- APPENDIX B. Study Descriptions. General Description of Methodology -- References -- Index
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
The Reputational Premium presents a new theory of party identification, the central concept in the study of voting. Challenging the traditional idea that voters identify with a political party out of blind emotional attachment, this pioneering book explains why party identification in contemporary American politics enables voters to make coherent policy choices. Standard approaches to the study of policy-based voting hold that voters choose based on the policy positions of the two candidates competing for their support. This study demonstrates that candidates can get a premium in support from the policy reputations of their parties. In particular, Paul Sniderman and Edward Stiglitz present a theory of how partisans take account of the parties' policy reputations as a function of the competing candidates' policy positions. A central implication of this theory of reputation-centered choices is that party identification gives candidates tremendous latitude in their policy positioning. Paradoxically, it is the party supporters who understand and are in synch with the ideological logic of the American party system who open the door to a polarized politics precisely by making the best-informed choices on offer.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9780691154145 9781400842551
10.1515/9781400842551 doi
Party affiliation.
Political parties--Public opinion.
POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / Political Parties.
American party system. American politics. Democrats. Republicans. candidate positioning. democratic experiment. democratic politics. elected representatives. electoral punishment. partisans. party identification. policy conviction. policy positions. policy preferences. policy reputations. policy-based voting. political competence. political landscape. political parties. political party. programmatic partisanship. programmatic party identifiers. reputational premium. spatial reasoning. spatial voting. supply-side theory. voters.
JF2071
324.2

