págs. 1-10
págs. 11-20
What makes people believe that their party won the election?
Dieter Stiers, Jean-François Daoust, André Blais
págs. 21-29
Coalitions in the news: How saliency and tone in news coverage influence voters' preferences and expectations about coalitions
págs. 30-39
Going back to the well: A panel study into the election boost of political support among electoral winners and losers
Tom W. G. van der Meer, Eefje H. Steenvoorden
págs. 40-53
págs. 54-61
Appraisals of President Obama's economic performance: Racial resentment and attributional responsibility
David C. Wilson, Darren W. Davis
págs. 62-72
Natural disasters and clientelism: The case of floods and landslides in Colombia
Jorge Gallego
págs. 73-88
Multi-dimensional policy preferences in the 2015 British general election: A conjoint analysis
Akitaka Matsuo, Seonghui Lee
págs. 89-98
Electoral competition, political risks, and parties' responsiveness to voters' issue priorities
Tarik Abou-Chadi
págs. 99-108
Do clientelistic machines affect electoral outcomes?: Mayoral incumbency as a proxy for machine prowess
Lucas Núñez
págs. 109-119
Risky business: Where do presidential campaigns visit?
Joy Langston, Guillermo Rosas
págs. 120-130
Does education affect immigration attitudes?: Evidence from an education reform
Henning Finseraas, Øyvind Søraas Skorge, Marte Strom
págs. 131-135
Endogenous district magnitude and political party fragmentation in subnational Indonesia: A research note
Blane D. Lewis
págs. 136-145



