Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
D. Denver, Gordon Hands (1997)
Modern Constituency Electioneering: Local Campaigning in the 1992 General Election
R. Johnston, K. Jones, S. Burgess, C. Propper, R. Sarker, A. Bolster (2004)
Scale, Factor Analyses, and Neighborhood EffectsGeographical Analysis, 36
R. Johnston, K. Jones, C. Propper, R. Sarker, S. Burgess, A. Bolster (2005)
A missing level in the analyses of British voting behaviour: the household as context as shown by analyses of a 1992–1997 longitudinal surveyElectoral Studies, 24
A. Linde (2005)
DIC in variable selectionStatistica Neerlandica, 59
G. Rodriguez, N. Goldman (1995)
An assessment of estimation procedures for multilevel models with binary responsesJournal of The Royal Statistical Society Series A-statistics in Society, 158
Thomas Wood (1950)
SOUTHERN POLITICS IN STATE AND NATION. By V. O. Key, Jr. with Alexander Heard. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. 1949.University of Miami law review, 4
A. Zuckerman, J. Dasovic, J. Fitzgerald (2007)
Partisan Families: The Social Logic of Bounded Partisanship in Germany and Britain
David Nickerson (2008)
Is Voting Contagious? Evidence from Two Field ExperimentsAmerican Political Science Review, 102
R. Putnam (1995)
Tuning In, Tuning Out: The Strange Disappearance of Social Capital in AmericaPS: Political Science & Politics, 28
P. Taylor, R. Johnston (1979)
Geography of Elections
Spiegelhalter Spiegelhalter, Best Best, Van Der Linde Van Der Linde (2002)
Bayesian Models of Complexity and FitJournal of the Royal Statistical Society, 64
R. Huckfeldt, John Sprague (1995)
Citizens, Politics and Social Communication: Information and Influence in an Election Campaign
D. Cutts (2006)
Continuous campaigning and electoral outcomes:the Liberal Democrats in BathPolitical Geography, 25
M. Tranmer, D. Steel (2001)
Ignoring a Level in a Multilevel Model: Evidence from UK Census DataEnvironment and Planning A, 33
D. Cutts, E. Fieldhouse, K. Purdam, D. Steel, M. Tranmer (2007)
Voter Turnout in British South Asian Communities at the 2001 General ElectionThe British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 9
S. Menard (2004)
Six Approaches to Calculating Standardized Logistic Regression CoefficientsThe American Statistician, 58
H. Goldstein, J. Rasbash (1996)
Improved Approximations for Multilevel Models with Binary ResponsesJournal of The Royal Statistical Society Series A-statistics in Society, 159
J. Agnew (1988)
Place and Politics : The Geographical Mediation of State and Society
R. Johnston, C. Pattie (1995)
The Impact of Spending on Party Constituency Campaigns at Recent British General ElectionsParty Politics, 1
C. Pattie, R. Johnston (2000)
‘People Who Talk Together Vote Together’: An Exploration of Contextual Effects in Great BritainAnnals of the Association of American Geographers, 90
I. McAllister, Donley Studlar (1992)
Region and Voting in Britain, 1979-87: Territorial Polarization or Artifact?American Journal of Political Science, 36
C. Pattie, R. Johnston (1999)
Context, Conversation and Conviction: Social Networks and Voting at the 1992 British General ElectionPolitical Studies, 47
D. Spiegelhalter, N. Best, B. Carlin, A. Linde (2002)
Bayesian measures of model complexity and fitJournal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series B (Statistical Methodology), 64
G. Boulton (1974)
Progress in geography, 5: C. Board, R.J. Chorley, P. Haggett and D.R. Stoddart. Edward Arnold, London, 1973, 334 pp., £5.00.Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 15
W. Browne, S. Subramanian, K. Jones, H. Goldstein (2005)
Variance partitioning in multilevel logistic models that exhibit overdispersionJournal of the Royal Statistical Society: Series A (Statistics in Society), 168
H. Goldstein (2006)
Multilevel Statistical ModelsTechnometrics, 48
C. Pattie, R. Johnston (2001)
Talk as a political context: conversation and electoral change in British elections, 1992–1997Electoral Studies, 20
A. Zuckerman, J. Dasovic, J. Fitzgerald (2005)
How Family Networks Affect the Political Choices of Boundedly Rational Persons: Turnout and Vote Choice in Recent British Elections
N. Buck (2000)
Political values: a family matter?
S. Orford, A. Schuman (2002)
Micro‐geography and socialization: New ways of investigating the turnout problemBritish Elections & Parties Review, 12
R. Johnston, K. Jones, C. Propper, S. Burgess (2007)
Region, Local Context, and Voting at the 1997 General Election in EnglandAmerican Journal of Political Science, 51
R. Schmitt-Beck (2007)
Paul F. Lazarsfeld/Bernard Berelson/Hazel Gaudet, The People’s Choice. How the Voter Makes Up his Mind in a Presidential Campaign, New York/London 1944
R. Johnston, C. Propper, S. Burgess, R. Sarker, A. Bolster, K. Jones (2005)
Spatial Scale and the Neighbourhood Effect: Multinomial Models of Voting at Two Recent British General ElectionsBritish Journal of Political Science, 35
A. Zuckerman, L. Kotler-Berkowitz (1998)
Politics and SocietyComparative Political Studies, 31
D. Denver (2008)
Another Reason to Support Marriage? Turnout and the Decline of Marriage in BritainThe British Journal of Politics and International Relations, 10
John Books, Charles Prysby (1999)
Contextual Effects on Retrospective Economic Evaluations The Impact of the State and Local EconomyPolitical Behavior, 21
R. Lampard (1997)
Party Political Homogamy in Great BritainEuropean Sociological Review, 13
W. Miller (1978)
Social Class and Party Choice in England: A New AnalysisBritish Journal of Political Science, 8
H. Clarke, David Sanders, Marianne Stewart, P. Whiteley (2004)
Political Choice in Britain
M. Jennings, Richard Niemi (1968)
The Transmission of Political Values from Parent to ChildAmerican Political Science Review, 62
K. Burnham, David Anderson (2003)
Model selection and multimodel inference : a practical information-theoretic approachJournal of Wildlife Management, 67
W. Glaser (1959)
The Family and Voting TurnoutPublic Opinion Quarterly, 23
P. Lazarsfeld, B. Berelson, Hazel Gaudet (1945)
The people's choice., 6
Cox Cox (1969)
The Voting Decision in a Spatial ContextProgress in Geography, 1
Zuckerman Zuckerman, Kotler‐Berkowitz Kotler‐Berkowitz (1998)
Politics and Society: Political Diversity and Uniformity in Households as a Theoretical PuzzleComparative Political Studies, 31
D. Butler, Donald Stokes (1974)
Political change in Britain
J. Gimpel, Joshua Dyck, D. Shaw (2004)
Registrants, Voters, and Turnout Variability Across NeighborhoodsPolitical Behavior, 26
For many years, scholars of voting behavior have been thwarted in their attempts to identify micro spatial variations in turnout by data limitations. This has meant that most analyses have been ecological, which has implications for valid inference. Here, for the first time, a hierarchical approach is used to show the relative importance of several micro spatial scales, including the household, on voter participation. The findings highlight the importance of the household context. While those who live together often turn out together, the relative level of clustering within households as opposed to between geographical areas is found to be more important for two‐person households compared to other households. Even after taking account of whether individuals are likely to self‐select others from similar social backgrounds or with similar political attitudes, there is strong evidence of large and significant household effects on voter participation.
American Journal of Political Science – Wiley
Published: Jul 1, 2009
Read and print from thousands of top scholarly journals.
Already have an account? Log in
Bookmark this article. You can see your Bookmarks on your DeepDyve Library.
To save an article, log in first, or sign up for a DeepDyve account if you don’t already have one.
Copy and paste the desired citation format or use the link below to download a file formatted for EndNote
Access the full text.
Sign up today, get DeepDyve free for 14 days.
All DeepDyve websites use cookies to improve your online experience. They were placed on your computer when you launched this website. You can change your cookie settings through your browser.