ABSTRACT

Electoral behaviour is one of the most dynamic areas of study in the field of comparative politics today. A strongly emerging theme in recent years has been the need to set the study of voting behaviour in its wider context, that is to understand how the behaviour of the individual (non)voter is conditioned by the environment in which the election is occurring. The main motivation for this book is to respond to this need.

The Act of Voting examines voting – both the question of whether to vote (ie. electoral turnout) and who to vote for – in context from a range of interdisciplinary perspectives. In addition to other topics and themes, chapters explore the national or social identities of individuals and how these contribute to complex social dynamics, discuss the institutions that determine who is able to vote and over what, and analyse the impact of the locale on the voting act.

Offering chapters by up-and-coming scholars in the field of electoral behaviour, as well as reflections on how the act of voting should be viewed in the broadest context – normatively, institutionally and socially, this book will be of interest to students and scholars researching political behaviour, public opinion and politics more generally.

chapter 1|8 pages

The act of voting

Identities, institutions and locale

part I|48 pages

Identity and the act of voting

chapter 3|22 pages

Does Ulster still say ‘no'?

Public opinion and the future of Northern Ireland

part II|78 pages

Institutions and the act of voting

chapter 4|21 pages

Transnational citizenship and access to electoral rights

Defining the demos in European states

chapter 6|15 pages

EU treaty referendums in Ireland and Denmark

A comparative analysis of different conceptions of sovereignty and their democratic implications

chapter 7|19 pages

Confronting Europe

The Irish referendums on Lisbon

part III|58 pages

Locale and the act of voting

chapter 9|17 pages

Candidates, parties and constituency relations

A study in Irish clientelism

chapter 10|15 pages

Exploring the non-alignment of party and candidate assessments in Ireland

Do voters really follow candidates?

part IV|94 pages

Turnout and vote choice

chapter 12|24 pages

Political inequality in second order elections

Resources, campaign mobilization and voter turnout 1

chapter 14|21 pages

Identity formation and political generations

Age, cohort and period effects in Irish elections