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Too much choice,too little impact: a multilevel analysis of the contextual determinants of preference voting
Authors:Audrey André  Sam Depauw
Institution:1. Department of Political Science, Université libre de Bruxelles, Brussels, Belgiumaudrey.andre@ ulb.ac.be;3. Department of Political Science, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium
Abstract:Abstract

Despite the rich and growing body of research addressing how turnout and party choice depend on the institutional context, far less is known about the impact of the political environment on voters’ propensity to vote for candidates – not parties. Recent single-country studies have focused almost exclusively on individual-level resource- and identity-based differences in preference voting. Combining data from the Comparative Study of Electoral Systems (CSES) and Participation and Representation in Modern Democracies (PARTIREP) election studies in six countries, this article provides the first comprehensive, cross-national test of the impact of macro-contextual factors on a voter’s decision to indicate a candidate preference, instead of simply casting a party list vote. It demonstrates that both the failure of preference votes to affect the allocation of seats and choice overload dissuade voters from marking a candidate name on the ballot. These contextual factors affect informed and uninformed voters differently, moreover. The findings have important implications for electoral scholars and political practitioners when designing electoral systems.
Keywords:Preference voting  complexity  choice set size  effectiveness  political sophistication  flexible and open-list systems
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