Assessing (and fixing?) Election Day lines: Evidence from a survey of local election officials
Stephen Ansolabehere, Daron Shaw
págs. 1-11
The rise of negative partisanship and the nationalization of U.S. elections in the 21st century
Alan I. Abramowitz, Steven Webster
págs. 12-22
The Seat Product Model of the effective number of parties: A case for applied political science
Yuhui Li, Matthew Soberg Shugart
págs. 23-34
Ideology, party systems and corruption voting in European democracies
Nicholas Charron, Andreas Bagenholm
págs. 35-49
págs. 50-59
págs. 60-69
Income inequality and election outcomes in OECD countries: New evidence following the Great Recession of 2008–2009
Florence Bouvet, Sharmila King
págs. 70-79
Voter perceptions of coalition policy positions in multiparty systems
Thomas M. Meyer, Daniel Strobl
págs. 80-91
Institutional determinants of invalid voting in post-communist Europe and Latin America
Karel Kouba, Jakub Lysek
págs. 92-104
Changes in the menu of manipulation: Electoral fraud, ballot stuffing, and voter pressure in the 2011 Russian election
Colin J. Harvey
págs. 105-117
Economic globalisation, the perceived room to manoeuvre of national governments, and electoral participation: Evidence from the 2001 British General Election
Nils D. Steiner
págs. 118-128
Winds of Change: Voter Blame and Storm Gudrun in the 2006 Swedish Parliamentary Election
Lina M. Eriksson
págs. 129-142
The effects of lawn signs on vote outcomes: Results from four randomized field experiments
Donald P. Green, Jonathan S. Krasno, Alexander Coppock, Benjamin D. Farrer, Brandon Lenoir, Joshua N. Zingher
págs. 143-150
First-time boost beats experience: The effect of past eligibility on turnout
Yosef Bhatti, Kasper M. Hansen, Hanna Wass
págs. 151-158
Estimating parties' left-right positions: Determinants of voters' perceptions' proximity to party ideology
Kathrin Barbara Busch
págs. 159-178
págs. 179-189
Limited information and coordinated voting in multi-party elections under plurality rule: The role of campaigns
Andrei Zhirnov
págs. 190-201
págs. 202-212
Forecasting the 2015 British general election: The 1992 debacle all over again?
Stephen D. Fisher, Michael S. Lewis-Beck
págs. 225-229
140 characters to victory?: Using Twitter to predict the UK 2015 General Election
Pete Burnap, Rachel Gibson , Luke Sloan, Rosalynd Southern, Matthew Williams
págs. 230-233
Piecing it all together and forecasting who governs: The 2015 British general election
Stephen D. Fisher
págs. 234-238
Combining national and constituency polling for forecasting
Chris Hanretty, Ben Lauderdale, Nick Vivyan
págs. 239-243
From polls to votes to seats: Forecasting the 2015 British general election
Robert Ford, Will Jennings, Mark Pickup, Christopher Wlezien
págs. 244-249
The British Election Study 2015 general election constituency forecast
Jonathan Mellon, Edward Fieldhouse
págs. 250-254
págs. 255-259
Forecasting the 2015 British election through party popularity functions
Mary Stegmaier, Laron K. Williams
págs. 260-263
The British general election: Synthetic forecasts
Michael S. Lewis-Beck, Richard Nadeau, Éric Bélanger
págs. 264-268
Forecasting the 2015 British general election: The Seats-Votes model
Paul Whiteley, Harold D. Clarke, David Sanders, Marianne C. Stewart
págs. 269-273
Do local elections predict the outcome of the next general election?: Forecasting British general elections from local election national vote share estimates
Christopher Prosser
págs. 274-278
Forecasting the 2015 general election using aggregate local election data
Colin Rallings, Michael Thrasher, Galina Borisyuk
págs. 279-282