“…Several other authors have produced evidence to that effect, however, albeit only for case study areas rather than for the entire countrysee, for example, Kinsella, McTague, and Raleigh (2015), Myers (2013) and Sussell (2013). More recently, Johnston, Manley and Jones (2016) have produced clear evidence, using a multilevel model of segregation, that polarization increased over the period 1992-2012 at three spatial scales (see also Johnston, Jones and Manley [2018], which includes the 2016 election); Lang and Pearson-Merkowitz (2015) reached similar conclusions. Since 1992, the pattern of voting at presidential elections has become increasingly more polarized across the nine divisions deployed by the Bureau of the Census for much statistical presentation; additionally, it has become more polarized across the states within those divisions, as well as across the counties (or county-equivalents) within states.…”