Ricerca

Ricerca

Ricerca

Segnalazione bibliografica. American Political Science Review (2011), 105: 79-99 Autori: Vincenzo Galasso, Tommaso Nannicini Abstract Is electoral competition good for political selection? To address this issue, we introduce a theoretical model where ideological parties select and allocate high-valence (experts) and low-valence (party loyalists) candidates into electoral districts. Voters care about a national policy (e.g., party ideology) and the valence of their district's candidates. High-valence candidates are more costly for the parties to recruit. We show that parties compete by selecting and allocating good politicians to the most contestable districts. Empirical evidence on Italian members of parliament confirms this prediction: politicians with higher...

De Sio, L. (2007). Al di là delle apparenze. Il risultato delle elezioni. In R. D’Alimonte & A. Chiaramonte (Eds.), Proporzionale ma non solo. Le elezioni politiche del 2006 (pp. 243–304). Bologna: Il Mulino.

Dopo il terremoto elettorale del 2013 (Chiaramonte e De Sio 2014), il sistema politico italiano ha conosciuto ulteriori scosse telluriche in seguito all'esito delle elezioni politiche del 2018. Quest'ultime, infatti, hanno certificato il successo di partiti challenger (Bellucci 2018) - su tutti il Movimento 5 Stelle (M5S) - e il rovesciamento dei rapporti di forza all'interno della coalizione di centrodestra. Il verdetto emerso dalle urne nel 2018 ha confermato la fluidità del sistema politico italiano (Chiaramonte et al. 2018). Il "voto del cambiamento" (Chiaramonte e De Sio 2019) ha infatti - indirettamente - trovato esito nella nascita...

Wlezien, C. (2013). Russell J. Dalton and Christopher Anderson (eds), Citizens, context, and choice: How context shapes citizens’ electoral choices, reviewed by Christopher Wlezien. Party Politics, 19(4), 684–686. http://doi.org/10.1177/13540688134...

Segnalazione bibliografica. Autori: Brad Verhulst, Lindon J. Eaves, Peter K. Hatemi American Journal of Political Science 56(1), 34-51 (January 2012) Abstract The assumption in the personality and politics literature is that a person's personality motivates them to develop certain political attitudes later in life. This assumption is founded on the simple correlation between the two constructs and the observation that personality traits are genetically influenced and develop in infancy, whereas political preferences develop later in life. Work in psychology, behavioral genetics, and recently political science, however, has demonstrated that political preferences also develop in childhood and are equally influenced by genetic factors. These findings cast...