Published on 01 January 2018

Same institutions, same outcomes? Comparing the effect of electoral competition on the level of concentration of votes

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Silva, Glauco Peres Da

Description

Abstract The purpose of this paper is to identify the effect of electoral district magnitude on the spatial concentration of votes. Usually, district magnitude is a proxy for intraparty electoral competition, which incentivizes the personal vote. Studies about Brazil and other countries have considered the personal vote an explanation for the regional concentration of votes. However, the difficulty in directly identifying the concentration levels still remains—even though the districts possess different magnitudes—because the concentration levels of different candidates must not be directly compared. Nevertheless, the electoral simultaneity of the federal and the state legislative elections offers a quasi-experimental case for the effect of different magnitudes over votes’ spatial concentration, controlling for the variation of disputed seats over time. The data ranges from 1998 to 2010 and results indicate the magnitudes lead to the regional concentration of votes, confirming theoretical expectations.

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Metrics

Dataset Index

0.3

FAIR Score

13%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

SciELO journals

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Political Science and International Relations

Field

Social Sciences

Domain

Social Sciences

Confidence Score

54%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Keywords

80503 Networking and CommunicationsFOS: Computer and information sciences160699 Political Science not elsewhere classifiedFOS: Political science

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00