2012
DOI: 10.1080/17457289.2011.642241
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Second-Order Arguments for Second-Order Elections? Measuring “Election Stakes” in a Multilevel Context: The Case of Norway

Abstract: Low turnout and the prevalence of national arena motivation in sub-and supranational elections are claimed to be due to voters perceiving that less is "at stake" in secondorder national elections. The article asks whether voters' differential assessments of election stakes when confronted with elections to different representative institutions are evidence of electoral sophistication. In the context of Norwegian elections to county and municipal councils, the standard approaches based on aggregate and survey d… Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…In 2010, much of the campaigning was indeed directed at local issues (Gemenis, ). In some instances, however, voters may not automatically perceive regional and local elections as ‘second order’ (Ervik, ; Johns, ). This may be particularly true in the Greek case, since two weeks before Election Day, Papandreou announced that he would call a snap general election if voters were not expressing sufficient support for PASOK candidates.…”
Section: Theory: Economic Voting and Conditioning Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In 2010, much of the campaigning was indeed directed at local issues (Gemenis, ). In some instances, however, voters may not automatically perceive regional and local elections as ‘second order’ (Ervik, ; Johns, ). This may be particularly true in the Greek case, since two weeks before Election Day, Papandreou announced that he would call a snap general election if voters were not expressing sufficient support for PASOK candidates.…”
Section: Theory: Economic Voting and Conditioning Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2010, much of the campaigning was indeed directed at local issues (Gemenis, 2012). In some instances, however, voters may not automatically perceive regional and local elections as 'second order' (Ervik, 2012;Johns, 2011).This may be particularly true in the Greek case, since two weeks before Election Day, Papandreou announced that he would call a snap general election if voters were not expressing sufficient support for PASOK candidates. In presenting the regional vote as a referendum on the government's austerity programme, he clearly attempted to turn it into a contest of national importance, with potentially immediate effects on the future of the national government.…”
Section: Theory: Economic Voting and Conditioning Effectsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Its most important task-hospitals-was taken over by the state in 2002. The county council elections are clearly second-order elections-also compared to municipal council elections (Ervik, 2012).…”
Section: The Case Of Norway: State Structure and Party Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We zien dat bij de gemeenteraadsverkiezingen van 2014 met 54% aanzienlijk minder kiezers een stem uitbrachten dan bij de Tweede Kamerverkiezingen van 2012, waar de opkomst op 75% lag. Dit verschil in opkomst tussen deze twee typen verkiezingen is geen typisch Nederlands verschijnsel, maar zien we in veel westerse landen (Heath e.a., 1999;Ervik, 2012;Marien e.a., 2015). En 2014 is geen uitzonderlijk jaar, het opkomstpercentage bij de gemeenteraadsverkiezingen ligt sinds 1998 onder de 60%.…”
Section: Opkomst Bij Gemeenteraadsverkiezingen 2014 En Tweede Kamerveunclassified