H
Harold D. Clarke
Researcher at University of Texas at Dallas
Publications - 215
Citations - 6974
Harold D. Clarke is an academic researcher from University of Texas at Dallas. The author has contributed to research in topics: Politics & Voting. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 213 publications receiving 6740 citations. Previous affiliations of Harold D. Clarke include University of Texas at Austin & Virginia Tech.
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Book
Political Choice in Britain
TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the political choice in Britain before and after the 2001 general election and found that the majority of voters did not vote in the 2001 election and the subsequent campaign.
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The Political Economy of Attitudes toward Polity and Society in Western European Democracies
TL;DR: This article investigated the political economy of public attitudes toward prevailing political and social arrangements in eight Western European countries and found that the effects of economic conditions extend beyond their impact on governing party support to influence feelings of life and democracy satisfaction and demands for radical and reformist social change.
Book
Performance Politics and the British Voter
TL;DR: The authors argue that voters rely heavily on partisan cues and party leader images as guides to electoral choice, and that performance politics is at the heart of contemporary democracy, with voters forming judgments about how well competing parties and leaders perform on important issues.
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Does Mode Matter For Modeling Political Choice? Evidence From the 2005 British Election Study
TL;DR: The results of an extensive survey comparison experiment conducted as part of the 2005 British Election Study as discussed by the authors show statistically significant, but generally small, differences in distributions of key explanatory variables in models of turnout and party choice.
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Prospections, Retrospections, and Rationality: The "Bankers" Model of Presidential Approval Reconsidered
TL;DR: MacKuen, Erikson, and Stimson (1992) recently have challenged a long-standing conventional wisdom by claiming that sociotropic prospections dominate presidential approval models as mentioned in this paper.