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Atlas of the 2020 Elections [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 320 pages, height x width x depth: 237x300x23 mm, weight: 1511 g, 5 Graphs, 131 Maps, 9 Tables
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-May-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1538151979
  • ISBN-13: 9781538151976
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 135,34 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 320 pages, height x width x depth: 237x300x23 mm, weight: 1511 g, 5 Graphs, 131 Maps, 9 Tables
  • Izdošanas datums: 04-May-2022
  • Izdevniecība: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • ISBN-10: 1538151979
  • ISBN-13: 9781538151976
The 2020 presidential election was one of the most historic, contested, and contentious in American history. Joe Biden was the oldest person elected President. Kamala Harris was the first female elected Vice President, and the first Vice President of Black and Asian descent. The primaries, campaigns, and elections were held for the first time amid an international and national pandemic. Despite this, voter turnout was the highest in 120 years. Donald Trump was the first president in modern times refusing to concede, leading to numerous lawsuits over the election process and results, although election litigation and state officials found no evidence of large-scale voter fraud. Nevertheless, continued claims of a stolen election led to a riotous mob occupation of the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021, in an attempt to overturn the Electoral College results.

The Atlas of the 2020 Elections explains the results of the 2020 elections with a series of unique maps unleashing the illustrative power of cartography and the explanatory power of history and political geography. The contributorsa balanced mix of geographers, political scientists, and historiansprovide a comprehensive examination of the election process from the primary campaigns through the general election and post-election events. In addition to the presidential election, the Atlas has full coverage of other important races, including congressional races, state races, and local and state referenda. Illustrated with more than 150 meticulously drawn full-color maps and numerous graphs and tables, the Atlas will be an essential reference and a fascinating resource for scholars, teachers, students, pundits, campaign staff, and political junkies alike, all who care about the American democratic process.

Recenzijas

Far more than a straight-forward spatial analysis of the vote, this atlas offers telling insights into a wide range of matters pertinent to the 2020 U.S. presidential election: campaign travel and spending patterns, the geographic language used in the debates, regional religious influences on the vote, and much more. The contributors to the atlas comprise a veritable who's who of prominent commentators on politics and electoral geography. Together they have produced a set of essays and maps that make this book an indispensable guide to one of the most consequential presidential elections of our time. -- Alexander B. Murphy, University of Oregon Many books are called invaluable, but this one is essential. A century or more from now, people will still be talking about the 2020 election. The results were clearDonald Trump was ousted from the White House and Joe Biden installedbut also controversial and disputed by the losing side, fueling a deeply disturbing insurrection at the U.S. Capitol while the electoral vote was being tabulated on January 6, 2021. Americans need to study this election, and the forces that drove it, because understanding what happened will help us prevent the conditions that fomented a rebellion. The authors do a brilliant job of presenting the data; the volumes maps are stunning and the analysis insightful. -- Larry J. Sabato, University of Virginia Center for Politics The authors of the entries in the Atlas of the 2020 Elections offer a unique and welcome contribution to our understanding of the tumultuous events of 2020. Their deft use of maps illuminates the action from multiple geographical perspectives--national, regional, state, county, and city. Their book will serve as valuable primary resource for scholars and students of American electoral politics. -- Gary C. Jacobson, University of California, San Diego Red and blue have become synonymous with our political parties, and with this, citizens, scholars, and popular observers alike have all become more attuned to the political geography of American elections. Since the 2008 election, the quadrennial Atlas series from Rowman & Littlefield has done much to increase our understanding of this geography and the latest edition on the 2020 election edited by Watrel et al. continues this tradition of excellence. In this book, readers will find informative discussions of topics ranging from campaign dynamics, to historical and spatial analyses, to demographic features of this election, from scholars drawn from a variety of disciplines. The insightful analyses are complemented by extensive maps, tables, and figures. This book is an essential addition to the library of anyone interested in understanding the political geography of one of the most consequential elections in recent decades. -- David Darmofal, University of South Carolina The importance of Americas distinctive political geography just keeps growing from one election to the next, as our citizens and institutions respond to the surging forces of partisanship and polarization. The comprehensive series of maps and figures packed into the Atlas of the 2020 Elections provide a unique account of a remarkable and historic contest held during an unprecedented moment in history. From election results and candidate visits to campaign donations and congressional roll-call votes, this volume shows that nearly everything in politics has a geographic story behind it that can be best told with the help of a well-drawn map. -- David Hopkins, Boston College

List of Figures and Tables
v
Preface ix
Chapter 1 Introduction
1(3)
Robert H. Watrel
Kimberly Johnson Maier
Chapter 2 Primary Elections
4(20)
The 2020 Presidential Primary Campaigns
4(20)
Fred M. Shelley
Heather Hollen
Chapter 3 The Campaign
24(33)
The 2020 Campaign
24(3)
John Heppen
Donorsheds: Individual Contributions to Biden and Trump
27(3)
Carl T. Dahlman
Campaign Expenditures in the 2020 Presidential Election
30(3)
Chris Maier
Presidential Candidate Campaign Travel during the 2020 Presidential Election Campaign
33(10)
J. Clark Archer
Jill A. Archer
Geographic Language and the 2020 Presidential Debates
43(7)
Matthew Balentine
Gerald R. Webster
Newspaper Endorsements of Presidential Candidates in the 2020 Election
50(4)
Daniel A. McGowin
Gerald R. Webster
Black Lives Matter Protests, 2020
54(3)
Kenneth French
Chapter 4 Outcomes
57(64)
Results of the 2020 Presidential Election at the State and County Levels
57(17)
John Heppen
Fred M. Shelley
Richard L. Morrill
Voter Participation in the 2020 Election
74(4)
Chris Maier
The 2020 Presidential Election in Historical Perspective
78(16)
Fred M. Shelley
J. Clark Archer
Robert H. Watrel
Spatial Analysis of the 2020 Presidential Election
94(5)
John Heppen
Metropolitan Concentration of the Democratic Vote, 2020
99(4)
Jason Combs
Richard L. Morrill
The Rural Vote
103(3)
Christopher R. Laingen
Micropolitan County Voting
106(3)
Jason Combs
"Flipped" Counties in the 2020 Election
109(3)
Jason Combs
Election Outcomes: Absolute and Relative
112(6)
Richard L. Morrill
Kimberly Johnson Maier
Postelection Voter Suppression Laws: The Georgia Example
118(3)
Richard Engstrom
Chapter 5 Regions
121(25)
Northeast
121(4)
William Berentsen
Appalachia
125(4)
Kenneth C. Martis
Southeast
129(4)
Jonathan I. Leib
Midwest
133(3)
John Heppen
Great Plains
136(4)
Robert H. Watrel
Mountain West
140(3)
Tony Robinson
Pacific Region
143(3)
John Agnew
Juan Herrera
Chapter 6 Demographics and Identity
146(56)
Population Subgroups
146(28)
Fiona M. Davidson
Richard L. Morrill
Hispanic Voting Trends and the 2020 Presidential Election
174(5)
Ryan Weichelt
The Black Vote
179(4)
Fiona M. Davidson
Rashauna Mickens Hintz
One Hundred Years of Women's Suffrage and the 2020 Election
183(10)
Fiona M. Davidson
Kimberly Johnson Maier
Religion and the 2020 US Presidential Election
193(6)
Fred M. Shelley
Bible Belt
199(3)
Daniel McGowin
Gerald R. Webster
Chapter 7 Congressional Elections and Roll-Call Votes
202(38)
A "Blue Wave": The 2018 Congressional Elections
202(4)
Ryan Weichelt
Membership, Party, and Caucuses in the 116th Congress
206(5)
Erin H. Fouberg
House Roll-Call Votes in the 116th Congress
211(6)
Erin H. Fouberg
Overview of the 2020 Senate Elections
217(5)
Ryan Weichelt
Arizona Senate Election
222(3)
Wyatt Pajtash
As Maine Goes, No Goes the Nation: The 2020 Senate Election
225(4)
Benjamin Forest
The 2020 Montana Senatorial Election
229(3)
Kenneth French
The 2020 Colorado Third Congressional District Election
232(4)
Rebecca Theobald
Dwayne Liller
The 2020 Texas Twenty-Third Congressional District Election
236(4)
Cameron Wingren
Chapter 8 State Elections, Local Elections, and Referenda
240(35)
Persistence and Change in State and Local Elections, 2020
240(5)
Richard L. Morrill
Mississippi Changes State Flag from Confederate Insignia to Magnolia
245(4)
Jordan Brasher
George Floyd and Voter Attitudes and Turnout in Minnesota
249(4)
John Heppen
Matthew Millett
The 2020 Election in Montana: A Triumph for Trumpism---But for How Long?
253(3)
Larry Knopp
The 2020 North Carolina Presidential and Gubernatorial Election
256(5)
Katie Weichelt
The Geography of Wisconsin Election Results and the 2020 Presidential Election
261(5)
Ryan Weichelt
Marijuana Legalization on the Ballot in 2020: The Juggernaut Continues
266(6)
Richard L. Morrill
Larry Knopp
Florida's Amendment 2 and the 2020 Presidential Election
272(3)
Thomas Craig
Chapter 9 Postelection Events
275(13)
Georgia Runoffs: Democrats Take the Senate Majority with Double Victories
275(5)
J. Miles Coleman
House of Representatives Votes on Certifying Arizona and Pennsylvania Electoral College Results, January 6 and 7, 2021
280(4)
Kenneth C. Martis
The 2020 Census and Reapportionment
284(4)
Kenneth C. Martis
Chapter 10 The 2020 Election and Beyond
288(4)
The 2020 Election: Looking Beyond for the Unexpected
288(4)
Stanley D. Brunn
Chapter 11 Technical Issues, Data, and Mapping
292(7)
Robert H. Watrel
Kimberly Johnson Maier
Index 299(8)
About the Contributors 307
J. Clark Archer is a professor of geography, University of NebraskaLincoln.

Fiona Davidson is an associate professor of geography at the University of Arkansas.

Erin H. Fouberg is associate vice president for academic affairs and a professor of geography at Northern State University.

John Heppen is a professor in geography at the University of Wisconsin-River Falls.

Kimberly Johnson Maier is an instructor of Geography at South Dakota State University.

Kenneth C. Martis is an emeritus professor of geography at West Virginia University.

Richard L. Morrill is an emeritus professor of geography at the University of Washington.

Fred M. Shelley is an emeritus professor of geography at the University of Oklahoma.

Robert H. Watrel is an associate professor of geography at South Dakota State University.

Ryan Weichelt is a professor of geography at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire.