Title of article :
The political geography of macro-level turnout in American political development
Author/Authors :
David Darmofal، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
28
From page :
123
To page :
150
Abstract :
Aggregate turnout rates are among the central indicators of democratic performance in the American polity. Despite the considerable implications of macro turnout, however, most studies of turnout focus instead on the micro level. As a consequence, we know little about how local, political, and historical influences have impacted turnout over the course of American political development. The result is a somewhat impoverished conception of turnout that often removes the political from political participation. In this article, I argue for a new, macro-level perspective that highlights the political dimension of turnout by placing turnout in the local political settings in which it has taken place. I contrast two competing explanations of macro turnout variation across local electorates, a political account and Elazarʹs cultural thesis, and discuss their implications for the political geography of macro turnout in American electoral history. I then examine this political geography by employing a local indicator of spatial association (a LISA statistic) to identify the spatial structuring of macro turnout in the United States from 1828 through 2000. I demonstrate that a political perspective provides greater leverage than Elazarʹs cultural perspective in explaining the political geography of macro turnout in the United States.
Keywords :
Partisan competition , Political culture , Political geography , American political development , Macro behavior , LISA statistic
Journal title :
Political Geography
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Political Geography
Record number :
1292201
Link To Document :
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