Elections and Voting Behaviour in BritainHarvester Wheatsheaf, 1994 - 190 lappuses This is a revised edition of a basic text on elections and voting behaviour. It covers the 1992 General Election campaign, results and aftermath. |
No grāmatas satura
1.–3. rezultāts no 6.
49. lappuse
... raises a problem , however . If voting behaviour was so stable how can we account for electoral change ? In the short term , between pairs of elections , if this model were accurate we would expect little change . If we think in terms ...
... raises a problem , however . If voting behaviour was so stable how can we account for electoral change ? In the short term , between pairs of elections , if this model were accurate we would expect little change . If we think in terms ...
55. lappuse
... raised to 16 ; more pupils stay on at school beyond the minimum age ( and more take A - level Politics ) ; more students now enter higher education than ever before . It is possible that as the general educational level has risen , so ...
... raised to 16 ; more pupils stay on at school beyond the minimum age ( and more take A - level Politics ) ; more students now enter higher education than ever before . It is possible that as the general educational level has risen , so ...
138. lappuse
... raises an important ques- tion . What exactly do turn - out figures measure ? Different coun- tries have different rules about voting in Australia it is compulsory , for example - and this affects the interpretation of the figures . In ...
... raises an important ques- tion . What exactly do turn - out figures measure ? Different coun- tries have different rules about voting in Australia it is compulsory , for example - and this affects the interpretation of the figures . In ...
Saturs
Analysing election results | 4 |
The analysis of intervalscale data | 14 |
Aggregate and survey data compared | 23 |
Autortiesības | |
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aggregate alignment Alliance analysis appear areas attitudes basis become Britain British Butler and Stokes calculated called campaign cent Chapter characteristics class voting clear clearly concerned Conservative consider constituency continue correlation Crewe dealignment decline difficult economic effect election election results electoral evidence example expected explain extent fact factors favour figures given groups hand Heath housing important increased individual influence interests issue issue voting Labour lead less Liberal Democrats major major parties mean measure Michigan Note opinions overall partisan party choice party identification party leaders patterns percentage performance period political polls position preferences problem question regional relationship relatively reported respondents score seats share shows social Source South statistical strong studies suggested survey swing switching Table television tion trend turn-out variables variation volatility vote Labour voters voting behaviour working-class
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Democratic Governance and New Technology: Technologically Mediated ... Ivan Horrocks,Jens Hoff,P. W. Tops Priekšskatījums nav pieejams - 2000 |