Tag Articoli con tag "lorenzo de sio"

Tag: lorenzo de sio

Sei importanti paesi al voto tra 2017 e 2018, 40 partiti, ma soprattutto due anni e mezzo di lavoro da parte di 21 studiosi da 13 diverse università europee e americane, coordinati dal CISE in un progetto diretto da Lorenzo De Sio. Sono questi i numeri dell'Issue Competition Comparative Project: un progetto che ha mostrato come, in un contesto sempre più post-ideologico, la competizione partitica vada ormai letta in termini di posizioni e credibilità su specifici temi d'attualità e di policy. E' questa l'impostazione di fondo che ha ispirato il disegno generale di questa...

Aldo Paparo & Lorenzo De Sio (2017) PTV gap as a new measure of partisanship: a panel-data, multi-measure validation showing surprising partisanship stability, Contemporary Italian Politics, 9:1, 60-83, DOI: 10.1080/23248823.2017.1289733 Abstract Comparative studies of partisanship lack a comparable transatlantic measure. In the U.S. the traditional ANES measure is used, while in European multi-party systems a party-closeness measure is mostly used. A recent contribution proposed PTV (propensity-to-vote) gap as a potential solution to this issue, showing that the gap in PTV scores between the best- and the second best-placed party has desirable properties in the American case. In this article we test the...

Lorenzo De Sio, Mark N. Franklin, Till Weber, The risks and opportunities of Europe: How issue yield explains (non-)reactions to the financial crisis, Electoral Studies, Volume 44, December 2016, Pages 483-491, ISSN 0261-3794, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.electstud.2016.06.006. Abstract The financial crisis subjected the EU to its first truly serious stress test. A majority of citizens is now opposed to further integration. But party systems have barely adjusted, instead perpetuating traditional patterns of an evasive mainstream with Euroskeptic fringes. To explain this unexpected outcome we draw on issue yield (De Sio and Weber, 2014), a general model of political competition that unites public opinion, party...