What creates heterogeneity in ballot order effects?: Evidence from Korea's local elections of education superintendent
Byung-hill Jun, Heechul Min
págs. 1-14
The importance of issue-ownership and salience for voters' knowledge of parties' issue positions
Yves Dejaeghere, Patrick F.A. Van Erkel
págs. 15-25
Which measure of political difference between parties works better?: A comparison in predicting coalition formation
Martin Mölder
págs. 26-38
The miracle of the markets: Identifying key campaign events in the Scottish independence referendum using betting odds
Matthew Wall, Rory Costello, Stephen Lindsay
págs. 39-47
The effects of ambiguous rhetoric in congressional elections
Kerri Milita, Elizabeth N. Simas, John Barry Ryan, Yanna Krupnikov
págs. 48-63
So who really does the donkey work in ‘multi-speed membership parties’?: Comparing the election campaign activity of party members and party supporters
Paul Webb, Mónica Poletti, Tim Bale
págs. 64-74
…And keep your enemies closer: Building reputations for facing electoral challenges
Santiago Olivella, Kristin Kanthak, Brian F. Crisp
págs. 75-86
Social pressure and voting: A field experiment conducted in a high-salience election
Todd Rogers, Donald P. Green, John Ternovski, Carolina Ferrerosa Young
págs. 87-100
The dynamics of political identity and issue attitudes in adolescence and early adulthood
Roderik Rekker, Loes Keijsers, Susan Branje, Wim Meeus
págs. 101-111
The incumbency disadvantage in South Korean National Assembly elections: Evidence from a regression discontinuity approach
Jungho Roh
págs. 112-122



