Political Analysis Advance Access originally published online on July 20, 2005
Political Analysis 2005 13(4):365-386; doi:10.1093/pan/mpi025
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Institutional Context, Cognitive Resources and Party Attachments Across Democracies
Department of Political Science, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027
e-mail: jdh39{at}columbia.edu
e-mail: gck2001{at}columbia.edu
e-mail: ell2002{at}columbia.edu
This paper develops and tests arguments about how national-level social and institutional factors shape the propensity of individuals to form attachments to political parties. Our tests employ a two-step estimation procedure that has attractive properties when there is a binary dependent variable in the first stage and when the number of second-level units is relatively small. We find that voters are most likely to form party attachments when group identities are salient and complimentary. We also find that institutions that assist voters in retrospectively evaluating partiesspecifically, strong party discipline and few parties in governmentincrease partisanship. These institutions matter most for those individuals with the fewest cognitive resources, measured here by education.
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