Validity of measured party positions on European integration: Assumptions, approaches, and a comparison of alternative measures
Leonard Ray
págs. 11-22
Crossvalidating data on party positioning on European integration
Gary Marks, Liesbet Hooghe, Marco R. Steenbergen, Ryan Bakker
págs. 23-38
The salience of the European integration issue: Three data sources compared
Catherine E. Netjes, Harmen A. Binnema
págs. 39-49
Do expert surveys produce consistent estimates of party stances on European integration?: Comparing expert surveys in the difficult case of Central and Eastern Europe
Stephen Whitefield, Milada Anna Vachudova, Marco R. Steenbergen, Robert Rohrschneider, Gary Marks, Matthew P. Loveless
págs. 50-61
Cross-temporal and cross-national comparisons of party left-right positions
Michael D. McDonald, Silvia M. Mendes, Myunghee Kim
págs. 62-75
Experts and manifestos: Different sources - Same results for comparative research?
Hans Keman
págs. 76-89
Estimating party policy positions: Comparing expert surveys and hand-coded content analysis
Kenneth Benoit, Michael Laver
págs. 90-107
págs. 108-120
Do they work?: Validating computerised word frequency estimates against policy series
Ian Budge, Paul Pennings
págs. 121-129
Benchmarks for text analysis: A response to Budge and Pennings
Kenneth Benoit, Michael Laver
págs. 130-135
Missing the message and shooting the messenger: Benoit and Laver's 'response'
Ian Budge, Paul Pennings
págs. 136-141
Fertile grounds for extreme right-wing parties: Explaining the Vlaams Blok's electoral success
Hilde Coffé, Bruno Heyndels, Jan Vermeir
págs. 142-155
Unionist party competition and the Orange Order vote in Northern Ireland
Jocelyn A.J. Evans, Jonathan Tonge
págs. 156-167
Election and party system effects on policy representation: Bringing time into a comparative perspective
Ian Budge, Michael D. McDonald
págs. 168-179
US Senate campaigns, negative advertising, and voter mobilization in the 1998 midterm election
Robert A. Jackson, Thomas M. Carsey
págs. 180-195