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English (3)


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2019 (3)

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Book
Get out the vote : how to increase voter turnout
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9780815736936 Year: 2019 Publisher: Washington, D.C. : Brookings Institution Press,

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Book
Why bother? : rethinking participation in elections and protests
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9781108465946 9781108475228 9781108690416 1108465943 1108475221 110867979X 1108683843 1108690416 Year: 2019 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Why do vote-suppression efforts sometimes fail? Why does police repression of demonstrators sometimes turn localized protests into massive, national movements? How do politicians and activists manipulate people's emotions to get them involved? The authors of Why Bother? offer a new theory of why people take part in collective action in politics, and test it in the contexts of voting and protesting. They develop the idea that just as there are costs of participation in politics, there are also costs of abstention - intrinsic and psychological but no less real. That abstention can be psychically costly helps explain real-world patterns that are anomalies for existing theories, such as that sometimes increases in costs of participation are followed by more participation, not less. The book draws on a wealth of survey data, interviews, and experimental results from a range of countries, including the United States, Britain, Brazil, Sweden, and Turkey.


Book
Public Choice
Author:
ISBN: 3039212729 3039212710 Year: 2019 Publisher: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

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Interest in politics and the political process—topics that economists consider to be the purview of the sub-field of study known as public choice—appears to be as high as ever. This Special Issue aims to provide a collection of high-quality studies covering many of the varied topics traditionally investigated in the growing field of public choice economics. These include expressive and instrumental voting, checks and balances in the enforcement of rules, electoral disproportionality, foreign aid and political freedom, voting cycles, (in)stability of political ideology, federal spending on environmental goods, pork-barrel and general appropriations spending, politics and taxpayer funding for professional sports arenas, and political scandal and “friends-and-neighbors” voting in general elections. In bringing these topics together in one place, this Special Issue offers a mix of conceptual/formal and empirical studies in public choice economics.

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