The comparative study of split-ticket voting
Barry C. Burden, Gretchen Helmke
págs. 1-7
Split-ticket voting as the rule: Voters and permanent divided government in Brazil
Barry Ames, Andy Baker, Lucio Renno
págs. 8-20
Why voters in patronage democracies split their tickets: Strategic voting for ethnic parties
Kanchan Chandra
págs. 21-32
págs. 33-40
Candidate effects and spill-over in mixed systems: Evidence from New Zealand
Jeffrey Karp
págs. 41-50
Strategic voting in established and new democracies: Ticket splitting in mixed-member electoral systems
Robert G. Moser, Ethan Scheiner
págs. 51-61
Testing sincere versus strategic split-ticket voting at the aggregate level: Evidence from split house-president outcomes, 1900-2004
Thomas L. Brunell, Bernard Grofman
págs. 62-69
Ticket splitting as electoral insurance: The Mexico 2000 elections
Gretchen Helmke
págs. 70-78
Voter responses to challenger opportunity costs
Sanford Clark Gordon, Gregory Alain Huber, Dimitri Landa
págs. 79-93
págs. 94-100
Citizens' freedom to choose representatives: Ballot structure, proportionality and "fragmented" parliaments
Paulo Trigo Pereira, Joao Andrade e Silva
págs. 101-110
págs. 111-122
A regression discontinuity design analysis of the incumbency advantage and tenure in the U.S. House
Daniel Mark Butler
págs. 123-128
págs. 129-140