Letting the People Decide
Dynamics of a Canadian Election
- Publisher
- McGill-Queen's University Press
- Initial publish date
- Sep 1992
- Category
- General, Elections
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780773509443
- Publish Date
- Sep 1992
- List Price
- $40.95
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780773509436
- Publish Date
- Sep 1992
- List Price
- $125.00
Add it to your shelf
Where to buy it
Description
The authors have based the book primarily on data derived from the 1988 Canadian Election Study, for which they were co-investigators. The survey was a "rolling cross-section": a daily tracking of the campaign designed explicitly to monitor electoral dynamics. The multivariate techniques commonly involved in the analysis of campaign data are presented here in an accessible way, as graphs rather than tables. Videotapes of prime time news analyses on CBC, CTV, and SRC outlets, as well as some newspaper commentaries, have been integrated into the survey. This information is contrasted with an analysis of electoral dynamics based on one hundred years of census and electoral data. The authors make a variety of significant arguments about the historical and political basis of the parties' eventual positions on the issue of free trade, the overriding importance of that issue to the 1988 election, the roles of the party leaders, and, perhaps most important, the political impact of campaigns, especially of debates and media coverage. Letting the People Decide brings the study of Canadian parties into the analytical mainstream even as it supplies a new interpretation of a century of elections.
About the authors
Richard Johnston is Canada Research Chair in Public Opinion, Elections, and Representation at the University of British Columbia.
Richard Johnston's profile page
Andr� Blais is Professor of Political Science and Canada Research Chair in Electoral Studies at the Universit� de Montr�al.
Other titles by
Federalism and the Welfare State in a Multicultural World
The Canadian Party System
An Analytic History
Parties and Party Systems
Structure and Context
Social Capital, Diversity, and the Welfare State
Strengthening Canadian Democracy
The Challenge of Direct Democracy
The 1992 Canadian Referendum
The Challenge of Direct Democracy
The 1992 Canadian Referendum
Life and Religion at Louisbourg, 1713-1758
Other titles by
Across Boundaries
Essays in Honour of Robert A.Young
The Motivation to Vote
Explaining Electoral Participation
Provincial Battles, National Prize?
Elections in a Federal State
Multi-Level Electoral Politics
Beyond the Second-Order Election Model
Dominance and Decline
Making Sense of Recent Canadian Elections
Citizens
When Citizens Decide
Lessons from Citizen Assemblies on Electoral Reform
Political Leaders and Democratic Elections
To Keep or To Change First Past The Post?
The Politics of Electoral Reform
Losers' Consent
Elections and Democratic Legitimacy