Economic crisis and elections: The European periphery
Paolo Bellucci, Marina Costa Lobo , Michael Steven Lewis-Beck
págs. 469-471
págs. 472-477
págs. 478-484
Economic and elections in Spain (1982-2008): Cross-measures, cross-time
págs. 485-490
págs. 491-497
págs. 498-505
págs. 506-512
Economic evaluations vs. ideology: Diagnosing the sources of electoral change in Turkey, 2002-2011
Ali Çarkoglu
págs. 513-521
The integration hypothesis: How the European Union shapes economic voting
págs. 522-528
Thinking about models of economic voting in hard times: Conclusion
Thomas J. Scotto
págs. 529-531
Markets vs. polls as election predictors: An historical assessment
Robert S. Erikson, Christopher Wlezien
págs. 532-539
Transnational absentee voting in the 2006 Mexican presidential election: The roots of participation
David L. Leal, Byung-Jae Lee, James A. McCann
págs. 540-549
How are we doing?: Group-based economic assessments and African American political behavior
J. Matthew Wilson
págs. 550-561
págs. 562-575
The alternative incumbency effect: Electing women legislators in Indonesia
Sarah Shair-Rosenfield
págs. 576-587
The relationship between age and turnout: A roller-coaster ride
Yosef Bhatti, Kasper M. Hansen, Hanna Wass
págs. 588-593
Proxy documents as a source of measurement error in the Comparative Manifestos Project
Kostas Geminis
págs. 594-604
How to scale coded text units without bias: A response to Gemenis
Kenneth Benoit, Michael Laver, Will Lowe, Slava Mikhaylov
págs. 605-608
Conceptualising and measuring 'centrism' correctly on the Left-Right scale (RILE) - without systematic bias: A general response by MARPOR
Ian Budge, Michael D. McDonald
págs. 609-612