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Democracy Under Siege Parties Voters And Elections After The Great Recession Timothy Hellwig

  • SKU: BELL-50853552
Democracy Under Siege Parties Voters And Elections After The Great Recession Timothy Hellwig
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Democracy Under Siege Parties Voters And Elections After The Great Recession Timothy Hellwig instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.45 MB
Pages: 257
Author: Timothy Hellwig, Yesola Kweon, Jack Vowles
ISBN: 9780198846208, 0198846207
Language: English
Year: 2020

Product desciption

Democracy Under Siege Parties Voters And Elections After The Great Recession Timothy Hellwig by Timothy Hellwig, Yesola Kweon, Jack Vowles 9780198846208, 0198846207 instant download after payment.

The Global Financial Crisis of 2008-2009 was catalyst for the most precipitous economic downturn in eight decades. This book examines how the GFC and ensuing Great Recession affected electoral politics in the world's developed democracies. The initial wave of research on the crisis concluded it did little to change the established relationships between voters, parties, and elections. Yet nearly a decade since the initial shock, the political landscape has changed in many ways, the extent to which has not been fully explained by existing studies. Democracy Under Siege? pushes against the received wisdom by advancing a framework for understanding citizen attitudes, preferences, and behaviour. It makes two central claims. First, while previous studies of the GFC tend to focus on an immediate impact of the crisis, Hellwig, Kweon, and Vowles argue that economic malaise has a long lasting impact. In addition to economic shock, the economic recovery has a significant impact on
citizens' assessment of political elites. Second, the authors argue that unanticipated exogenous shocks like the GFC grants party elites an opening for political manoeuvre through public policy and rhetoric. As a result, political elites have a high degree of agency to shape public perceptions and behaviour. Political parties can strategically moderate citizens' economic uncertainty, mobilise/demobilise voters, and alter individuals' political preferences. By leveraging data from over 150,000 individuals across over 100 nationally-representative post-election surveys from the 1990s to 2017, this book shows how economic change during a tumultuous era affected economic perceptions, policy demands, political participation, and the vote.

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