Competitive Elections and Democracy in America

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A01=Heather K. Evans
American Politics
Author_Heather K. Evans
campaign negativity
Campaigns
Category=JPHF
CCES
Competition
Competitive Congressional Elections
Competitive Districts
Competitive elections
Competitive House Race
Competitive Races
Competitive Senate Race
Congress
Congressional elections
congressional elections analysis
Cook Political Report
Cooperative Congressional Election Study (CCES)
Democracy
District Partisanship
effects of electoral competitiveness on citizens
Elections
electoral behavior research
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Interaction Tweets
Larry Sabato
legislative studies
Liberal Students
Median Voter
Michigan State University
Negative Political Ads
Non-competitive Elections
Noncompetitive Districts
Noncompetitive Elections
Noncompetitive Races
Ordered Logit Models
Participation
Partisan Gerrymandering
Political Behaviour
political participation
Public opinion
Redistricting Process
Redrawing District Lines
Regular Election Cycle
Safe Districts
voter attitudes
Voting

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415632676
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Nov 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Competition seems to be an inevitable part of present-day elections in the United States. However, recent publications have debated whether we should encourage or discourage competitive elections. In Competitive Elections and Democracy in America, Heather Evans closely examines the debate over competition in elections and questions whether or not they are beneficial for democracy in the US.

Evans clearly lays out the basis of the debate over competition and defines what exactly constitutes a competitive election. She then uses an innovative data set that she assembled to analyze the 2006-2010 congressional elections, testing whether the competitiveness of an election affects citizens’ political knowledge, political interest, and opinions of Congress, their representatives, and the governmental system as a whole. She subsequently evaluates the positive effects that competitive elections have on constituencies, and in turn gives equal weight to the negative effects. An examination of the effects "ugly" campaigns have on voters is also incorporated, relevant to today’s oft-used "mud-slinging" campaign tactics. Evans concludes with a thoughtful and analytical assessment of whether competition is valuable for elections, and how to increase competition if it indeed has merit for political campaigns.

Through the book’s analyses, Evans demonstrates that competitive elections do have lasting effects on voters that go beyond just the length of a campaign. Her research reinforces the vital role that political competition plays in modern democracies, and offers a careful evaluation of how and why competitive elections affect citizens in the US.

Heather K. Evans is an Assistant Professor at Sam Houston State University. Her research interests include youth political engagement, elections, female representation in the discipline, and the effect of entertainment media on political attitudes. Her research has been published in PS: Political Science and Politics and the Journal of Political Science Education.

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