Results 151 to 160 of about 13,821 (188)
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GI Partisanship

2018
The generation of Americans who served in the armed forces during World War II helped give the Democratic Party its commanding lead in voter identifications for years to come. This insight comes from an analysis of polls conducted between 1937 and 1953, all but a few by the Gallup Organization.
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Negotiating Partisanship

2019
Abstract After New York women won the vote in 1917, many joined political party clubs and some ran for office. In the 1920s, only a few won seats in the state legislature, and only one served more than one term. A few women won other posts—register of New York County and alderwoman—and a few others won appointive government and judicial ...
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Hyper-Partisanship

2018
Hyper-partisanship is a form of competitive utility-maximizing. Good or ethical partisanship is found in the mean between non-partisan detachment and hyper-partisan devotion to a cause, and finding this mean requires practical wisdom on the part of citizens and rulers.
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Partisanship Reconsidered

2009
Abstract This article discusses partisanship and focuses mostly on the concept of party identification. It tries to show how party identification can be theoretically defined and measured empirically. It introduces the unmoved mover and pinpoints the location of party identification in the funnel of causality.
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Partisanship

2013
Anthony F. Heath   +4 more
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Partisanship

2019
Carsten Jensen, Georg Wenzelburger
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