The essays in this collection show how electoral geography has shifted from empiricist activity towards a closer involvement with the wider issues addressed by social scientists. They illustrate the potential contributions that electoral geographers can make towards the understanding of global, national and local societies.
The essays in this collection show how electoral geography has shifted from empiricist activity towards a closer involvement with the wider issues addressed by social scientists. They illustrate the potential contributions that electoral geographers can make towards the understanding of global, national and local societies.
1. Developments in Electoral Geography Part 1: The State of Electoral
Geography
2. From Political Methodologyt to Geographical Social Theory? A
Critical Review of Electoral Geography 1960-87
3. Whither Electoral
Geography? A Critique Part 2: The Cleavage Model and Electoral Geography
4.
The Electoral Geography of the Netherlands in the Era of Mass Politics,
1888-1986
5. Tradition Contra Change: The Political Geography of Irish
Referenda, 1937-87
6. Volatile Stability: New Zealands 1987 General Election
7. An Ecological Perspective on Working Class Political Behaviour:
Neighbourhood and Class Formation in Sheffield
8. Lipset and Rokkan
Revisited: Electoral Cleavages, Electoral Geography, and Electoral Strategy
in Great Britain
9. The Cleavage Model and Electoral Geography: A Review Part
3: American Exceptionalism
10. Populism and Agrarian Ideology: The 1982
Nebraska Corporate Farming Referendum
11. Social Transformation and Changing
Urban Electoral Behaviour
12. Spatial Targeting Strategies: Representation
and Local Politics
13. Identical Geography, Different Party: A Natural
Experiment on the Magnitude of Party Differences in the U. S. Senate
1960-1984
14. Local Voting and Social Change Part 4: Future Directions
15.
Electoral Geography and the Ideology of Place: The Making of Regions in
Belgian Electoral Politics
16. Regulating Union Representation Elections:
Towards of Third Type of Electoral Geography
17. Extending The World of
Electoral Geography
Ron Johnston, Fred M. Shelley, Peter J. Taylor