2011
DOI: 10.1016/j.electstud.2011.08.001
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More than wishful thinking: Causes and consequences of voters’ electoral expectations about parties and coalitions

Abstract: Nutzungsbedingungen: Dieser Text wird unter einer Deposit-Lizenz (Keine Weiterverbreitung -keine Bearbeitung) zur Verfügung gestellt. Gewährt wird ein nicht exklusives, nicht übertragbares, persönliches und beschränktes Recht auf Nutzung dieses Dokuments. Dieses Dokument ist ausschließlich für den persönlichen, nicht-kommerziellen Gebrauch bestimmt. Auf sämtlichen Kopien dieses Dokuments müssen alle Urheberrechtshinweise und sonstigen Hinweise auf gesetzlichen Schutz beibehalten werden. Sie dürfen dieses Dokum… Show more

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Cited by 84 publications
(104 citation statements)
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“…More recent studies have explored the importance of how polls influence vote choice with causal designs and in new contexts. These studies all confirm bandwagon effects in the Netherlands, France, Austria and Germany (Meffert et al 2011;Morton et al 2015;Stolwijk et al 2016;Van der Meer et al 2016). Using a strong causal design in a new context, we situate our research alongside these recent contributions to further expand the scope of the bandwagon effect and replicate it in yet another context with its own distinct political culture.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…More recent studies have explored the importance of how polls influence vote choice with causal designs and in new contexts. These studies all confirm bandwagon effects in the Netherlands, France, Austria and Germany (Meffert et al 2011;Morton et al 2015;Stolwijk et al 2016;Van der Meer et al 2016). Using a strong causal design in a new context, we situate our research alongside these recent contributions to further expand the scope of the bandwagon effect and replicate it in yet another context with its own distinct political culture.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 61%
“…A partial exception is Meffert and others (), which finds that West Germans and Berliners are marginally better predictors of German elections. Other work compares how individuals predict elections in their own states versus national elections.…”
mentioning
confidence: 94%
“…So far it is almost uniformly assumed that parties care strongly about policy when considering coalition options [7] [23] [24] [25]. However, the role of parties that also may follow rather office-oriented or mixed-motivated rationales of coalition formation is understudied.…”
Section: Models Of Strategic Voting In Pr Systemsmentioning
confidence: 99%