Social Science Quarterly, Volume 79, Issues 1-2Southwestern Social Science Association and the University of Texas, 1998 - Political science |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 59
Page 372
... party , 13 percent voted for their second - favorite party , and 5 percent cast ballots for their least preferred party . Our major independent variables were respondents ' district - level viability scores , filtering out partisanship ...
... party , 13 percent voted for their second - favorite party , and 5 percent cast ballots for their least preferred party . Our major independent variables were respondents ' district - level viability scores , filtering out partisanship ...
Page 373
... party . She may choose to do so because her number - two party looks like it will do well in the district and she wants to climb aboard the bandwagon . If that is the case , we should see a significant positive rela- tionship between ...
... party . She may choose to do so because her number - two party looks like it will do well in the district and she wants to climb aboard the bandwagon . If that is the case , we should see a significant positive rela- tionship between ...
Page 375
most - preferred party to climb on the number - two party's bandwagon . However , since the coefficient does not achieve significance in this case , we cannot make any positive claim to that effect . Finally , we turn to those ...
most - preferred party to climb on the number - two party's bandwagon . However , since the coefficient does not achieve significance in this case , we cannot make any positive claim to that effect . Finally , we turn to those ...
Contents
March | 1 |
Public Policy and the Geography of U S Environmentalism | 55 |
The Early PostMao Period | 91 |
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