Synopses & Reviews
Academic studies of elections are not in the business of predicting outcomes. They are in the business of explaining them. The best studies treat voting data as raw material with which to explore socio-psychological processes such as individual decision-making and such sources of influence as issues, personality, media, socio-economic background, and party loyalty. The ebb and flow of ideologies and the comparative workings of different political systems are core topics on which election studies shed light. Looking back on more than fifty years of voting research, some of its major practitioners and critics reflect here on what has--and has not--been accomplished.
Synopsis
Academic studies of elections are not in the business of predicting outcomes. They are in the business of explaining them. The best studies treat voting data as raw material with which to explore soci
About the Author
Elihu Katzis Trustee Professor at the Annenberg School for Communication, the University of Pennsylvania, and Professor Emeritus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Yael Warshel is a graduate student at the Annenberg School for Communication, the University of Pennsylvania Elihu Katzis Trustee Professor at the Annenberg School for Communication, the University of Pennsylvania, and Professor Emeritus of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Yael Warshel is a graduate student at the Annenberg School for Communication, the University of Pennsylvania