2010
DOI: 10.1007/s00181-010-0415-2
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Dodging the vote?

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Cited by 4 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Using such measures requires studying political ideology directly, as in the case of survey research and more intensive approaches (e.g., see Converse 1964;Inglehart 1988), or through analyses of the contents of the writings and speeches of politicians. As Jackson and Kingdon (1992, 25 Cebula and Mixon (2012) point out that Downs's (1957) work forms the foundation of scholarly research on voter participation in the U.S. that focuses on whether or not the decision to vote, in general, is rational. 26 Faith and Tollison (1983) and Kjar and Laband (2002) also add that the search costs associated with detecting the merits of home district candidates will generally be lower than those associated with discovery of the merits of more distant candidates.…”
Section: Relevance and Limitations Of The Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using such measures requires studying political ideology directly, as in the case of survey research and more intensive approaches (e.g., see Converse 1964;Inglehart 1988), or through analyses of the contents of the writings and speeches of politicians. As Jackson and Kingdon (1992, 25 Cebula and Mixon (2012) point out that Downs's (1957) work forms the foundation of scholarly research on voter participation in the U.S. that focuses on whether or not the decision to vote, in general, is rational. 26 Faith and Tollison (1983) and Kjar and Laband (2002) also add that the search costs associated with detecting the merits of home district candidates will generally be lower than those associated with discovery of the merits of more distant candidates.…”
Section: Relevance and Limitations Of The Findingsmentioning
confidence: 99%