1994
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8306.1994.tb01865.x
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The Geography of the Nazi Vote: Context, Confession, and Class in the Reichstag Election of 1930

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Cited by 118 publications
(73 citation statements)
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“…Recent work, especially in sociology and geography but increasingly in political science as well, in both the qualitative and quantitative tradition, has attempted to address the problem of diffusion in new and innovative ways~Oberschall, 1989;Koopmans, 1993;O'Loughlin, Flint et al, 1994;Strang and Soule, 1998!. Much of this work can be conveniently summarized as focusing on either "agent-based" or "structurebased" diffusion.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Recent work, especially in sociology and geography but increasingly in political science as well, in both the qualitative and quantitative tradition, has attempted to address the problem of diffusion in new and innovative ways~Oberschall, 1989;Koopmans, 1993;O'Loughlin, Flint et al, 1994;Strang and Soule, 1998!. Much of this work can be conveniently summarized as focusing on either "agent-based" or "structurebased" diffusion.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, a study conducted by O'Loughlin, Flint and Anselin [1994] which investigates Nazi voter geography; Jenkins and Sala [1998] which examines the spatial distribution of voters in the United States; Perdomo [2004] in Mexico, and Montero [2010] in Brazil. In the context of Indonesia, little effort yet significant has been exercised by Prahutama [2014] through his studies at the local elections in Central Java.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…Due to their heterogeneous social foundations, the Nazis were called the "First German Volkspartei" (Falter 1990). Despite the broad social appeal of the NSDAP being undeniable, some authors nevertheless continue to seek segment-specific appeal as well as regional variations in support (see O'Loughlin 1994, 2002, Brustein 1996, King et al 2008). Due to the disastrous consequences of their electoral success it is still of enormous interest to fully understand how this party was able to form the political landscape (see Flint 1998Flint , 2001) and which specific economic interests it appealed in a distinguishable and asymmetric way (King et al 2008, 3 Brustein 1996.…”
Section: The Rise Of the Nazi Party On The Country-sidementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to the disastrous consequences of their electoral success it is still of enormous interest to fully understand how this party was able to form the political landscape (see Flint 1998Flint , 2001) and which specific economic interests it appealed in a distinguishable and asymmetric way (King et al 2008, 3 Brustein 1996. Studies focusing on the spatial distribution of the Nazi vote found regional variations and hot spots indicating differential local and regional campaign effectiveness (see Flint 1998, 2001, O'Loughlin et al, 1994, O'Loughlin 2002.…”
Section: The Rise Of the Nazi Party On The Country-sidementioning
confidence: 99%