Metropolitan Sources of Electoral Behaviour in Eleven Countries
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Köp båda 2 för 981 kr'Based on a painstaking empirical analysis of eleven country cases, this study documents the pervasiveness and importance of the re-territorialisation of politics in a globalised world. This return of territory is not patterned along cleavages as we know them, but based on new territorialised contrasts within and between metropolitan areas. The thought-provoking study draws our attention to the challenge the metropolitanisation of politics poses to national parties and democratic traditions.' Hanspeter Kriesi, Stein Rokkan Chair for Comparative Politics, European University Institute 'A virtuoso work of comparative politics filled with insights about how places condition politics. This magisterial achievement gathers uniform electoral data from different parts of the main metropolitan areas of the US, Canada, Western and Eastern Europe and Israel, analyses them using the same methods, including multi-level analysis, and paints a definitive portrait of the changing metropolitan political terrains and their implications for national politics. A must-read for all those interested in the geography of politics.' Professor John Mollenkopf, Distinguished Professor of Political Science and Sociology, The Graduate Center, City University of New York 'This book starts from the observation that in recent years urbanised centres have emerged all over the world, influencing their surrounding areas. Against the background of this metropolitanisation of contemporary societies, the authors reflect critically on the widespread assumption that national institutions and national political cleavages determine political conflicts, party structures and voting behaviour, not only at national but also at regional and local level. Has the emergence of metropolitan regions changed the conditions on which this assumption has been based? And in which way do the new metropolitanised spatial structures impact on political behaviour in metropolitan regions? These are the questions tackled by an international research team over the last ten years. The results published in this book are thought-provoking because they show clearly that to understand political processes in contemporary societies we have to take what the authors call the newly evolved metropolitan political ecology seriously.' Hubert Heinelt, Professor for Public Administration, Institute of Political Science, Technische Universitat Darmstadt 'This sophisticated and detailed empirical analysis of political participation and partisanship in a range of countries successfully challenges the dominant nationalisation thesis that where you live increasingly does not matter to your political outlook and behaviour. In a world that is increasingly organised socio-spatially in terms of metropolitan regions, the social settings provided by metropolitan places now crucially shape the contours of mass politics. Studies can no longer ignore the critical place contexts identified so clearly in this path-breaking volume.' John Agnew, Distinguished Professor of Geography, University of California 'Metropolitan space matters, whether for electoral turnout or the alignment of political parties in post-industrial democracies. And the effect of space is not simply that of compositional processes aggregating citizens of particular types and convictions in the same places. There is a political effect sui generis following from people converging in dense metropolitan areas or living in dispersed open spaces. This book constitutes an ambitious and comprehensive undertaking to drive this point home, convincing in its empirical scope, depth and rigour. It also poses new puzzles: What exactly is the experience of social space that makes people update their political dispositions? And dynamically, are people drawn to spaces that exercise such effects?' Herbert Kitschelt, George V Allen Professor of International Relations, Duke University
Jefferey M Sellers is Professor of Political Science and Public Policy, Planning and Development at the University of Southern California. The author of Governing From Below: Urban Regions in the Global Economy (Cambridge University Press, 2002) and editor of Metropolitanization and Political Change(VS Verlag, 2005) as well as numerous articles and book chapters, he is co-founder and co-director of the International Metropolitan Observatory Project. Daniel Kubler is Professor of Political Science at the University of Zurich and co-director of the International Metropolitan Observatory Project. He has co-edited Metropolitan governance: capacity, democracy and the dynamics of place (Routledge, 2005) and authored numerous articles and book chapters related to metropolitan governance, urban democracy and public policy analysis. Alan Walks is Associate Professor of Geography at the University of Toronto. He is the author of a number of scholarly articles and book chapters related to electoral geography, urban inequality, and the relationship between suburbanisation and ideology. Melanie Walter-Rogg is Professor of Political Science at the University of Regensburg. She is author of a number of scholarly articles and book chapters related to metropolitan governance and urban democracy as well as political culture and behaviour.
Contributors xvii Preface 1 Chapter One: Introduction - the Metropolitanisation of Politics Jefferey M. Sellers and R. Alan Walks 3 Chapter Two: Place, Institutions and the Political Ecology of US Metropolitan Areas Jefferey M. Sellers 37 Chapter Three: Metropolitan Political Ecology and Contextual Effects in Canada R. Alan Walks 87 Chapter Four: Political Ecology of Metropolitan Great Britain R. Alan Walks 125 Chapter Five: The Emerging Metropolitan Political Ecology of France Vincent Hoffmann-Martinot and Jefferey M. Sellers 161 Chapter Six: The Metropolitan Bases of Political Cleavage in Switzerland Daniel Kubler, Urs Scheuss and Philippe Rochat 199 Chapter Seven: Does Political Ecology Matter? Voting Behaviour in German Metropolitan Areas Melanie Walter-Rogg 227 Chapter Eight: The Political Ecology of the Spanish Metropolis - Place, Socio-Economic and Regional Effects Clemente J. Navarro 267 Chapter Nine: Metropolitan and Political Change in Sweden Daniel Kubler and Henry Back 299 Chapter Ten: The Delocalised Homo Politicus - The Political Ecology of Polish Metropolitan Areas Pawel Swianiewicz 325 Chapter Eleven: The Political Ecology of Czech Metropolitan Areas - is there a Post-Communist Metropolitan Model? Tomas Kostelecky, Daniel Cermak and Jana Vobecka 355 Contents vi The Political Ecology of the Metropolis Chapter Twelve: Metropolitan Processes and Voting Behaviour in Israel Eran Razin and Anna Hazan 389 Chapter Thirteen: Conclusion - Metropolitan Sources of Political Behaviour Jefferey M. Sellers, Daniel Kubler, R. Alan Walks, Philippe Rochat and Melanie Walter-Rogg 419 Chapter Fourteen: Methodological Appendix Jefferey M. Sellers and Philippe Rochat 479 Index 501