Plus ça change...? Institutional, Political and Social Influences on Local Spatial Variations in Australian Federal Voting

It is often argued that features such as partisan de-alignment and targeted campaigning have led to certain kinds of local influences on voting (such as candidate and incumbency effects) becoming more important in recent decades, whereas theories of individualism and class de-alignment imply that th...

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Main Author: Charnock, David
Format: Journal Article
Published: Routledge Publishing, Taylor & Francis Group 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36134
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author Charnock, David
author_facet Charnock, David
author_sort Charnock, David
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description It is often argued that features such as partisan de-alignment and targeted campaigning have led to certain kinds of local influences on voting (such as candidate and incumbency effects) becoming more important in recent decades, whereas theories of individualism and class de-alignment imply that the importance for voting of local contextual effects, such as ones based on social class context, should have reduced. In this article, I use an extensive set of multilevel analyses to explore the extent to which these outcomes are evident in Australia over the past four decades. As well as presenting and discussing several detailed findings of interest, relating to all of political and social factors and contextual effects, I also argue that the institutional structure has inhibited the extent of anything but short-term changes at the local level.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-361342017-09-13T15:18:39Z Plus ça change...? Institutional, Political and Social Influences on Local Spatial Variations in Australian Federal Voting Charnock, David It is often argued that features such as partisan de-alignment and targeted campaigning have led to certain kinds of local influences on voting (such as candidate and incumbency effects) becoming more important in recent decades, whereas theories of individualism and class de-alignment imply that the importance for voting of local contextual effects, such as ones based on social class context, should have reduced. In this article, I use an extensive set of multilevel analyses to explore the extent to which these outcomes are evident in Australia over the past four decades. As well as presenting and discussing several detailed findings of interest, relating to all of political and social factors and contextual effects, I also argue that the institutional structure has inhibited the extent of anything but short-term changes at the local level. 2007 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36134 10.1080/10361140701595783 Routledge Publishing, Taylor & Francis Group restricted
spellingShingle Charnock, David
Plus ça change...? Institutional, Political and Social Influences on Local Spatial Variations in Australian Federal Voting
title Plus ça change...? Institutional, Political and Social Influences on Local Spatial Variations in Australian Federal Voting
title_full Plus ça change...? Institutional, Political and Social Influences on Local Spatial Variations in Australian Federal Voting
title_fullStr Plus ça change...? Institutional, Political and Social Influences on Local Spatial Variations in Australian Federal Voting
title_full_unstemmed Plus ça change...? Institutional, Political and Social Influences on Local Spatial Variations in Australian Federal Voting
title_short Plus ça change...? Institutional, Political and Social Influences on Local Spatial Variations in Australian Federal Voting
title_sort plus ça change...? institutional, political and social influences on local spatial variations in australian federal voting
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36134