Title of article :
Social Identity, Electoral Institutions and the Number of Candidates
Author/Authors :
DICKSON، ERIC S. نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
27
From page :
349
To page :
375
Abstract :
The empirical literature in comparative politics holds that social cleavages affect the number of candidates or parties when electoral institutions are ‘permissive’, but it lacks a theoretical account of the strategic candidate entry and exit decisions that ultimately determine electoral coalitions in plural societies. This article incorporates citizen-candidate social identities into game-theoretic models of electoral competition under plurality and majority-runoff electoral rules, indicating that social group demographics can affect the equilibrium number of candidates, even in non-permissive systems. Under plurality rule, the relationship between social homogeneity and the effective number of candidates is non-monotonic and, contrary to the prevailing Duvergerian intuition, for some demographic configurations even the effective number of candidates cannot be near two. Empirical patterns in cross-national presidential election results are consistent with the theoretical model.
Journal title :
British Journal of Political Science
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
British Journal of Political Science
Record number :
652502
Link To Document :
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