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Published online by Cambridge University Press:  aN Invalid Date NaN

Silja Häusermann
Affiliation:
Universität Zürich
Herbert Kitschelt
Affiliation:
Duke University, North Carolina

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Beyond Social Democracy
The Transformation of the Left in Emerging Knowledge Societies
, pp. xiv - xv
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2024
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NC
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Tables

  1. 1.1Social democratic policy proposals vis-à-vis different challenges

  2. 2.1Competitive patterns

  3. 2.2Voting by types of regions

  4. 2.3Voting by types of historic and contemporary regional structures

  5. 2.A1Voting by types of industrial regions

  6. 2.A2Local units

  7. 4.1Simplified eight-class Oesch scheme with representative professions

  8. 5.1Data sources and sample sizes

  9. 6.1Inward and outward overlaps in Nordic and Continental European countries

  10. 6.2Inward and outward overlaps in Southern European countries

  11. 7.1Social democratic out-switchers by destination party and socio-demographics

  12. 8.1Hypothesized partisan trajectories of union members

  13. 8.2Party support and party switching among trade unionists and non-unionists, by region

  14. 8.3Socioeconomic groups, unionization, and party switching within the Left

  15. 8.A1Trade union membership and party choice as determinants of political preferences

  16. 8.A2Class and party choice as determinants of political preferences among labor unionists

  17. 9.1Ideal-typical social democratic programs

  18. 9.2Ideal-typical competitor programs

  19. 9.3Economic and cultural attitudes: measurement

  20. 10.1Elections covered in the analyses

  21. 10.2Distribution of the outcome variable: vote choices at t − 1 and t

  22. 10.3The impact of moderation in different geographic subsets

  23. 10.4The impact of moderation on left versus non-left voters

  24. 10.5The impact of moderation on repeat voting for all left parties

  25. 10.6Incumbency effects for major left parties, conditional on economic performance

  26. 10.A1Party type classification scheme

  27. 10.A2Does moderation lose major left parties voters?

  28. 10.A3Does moderation drive major left parties’ voters toward minor left parties?

  29. 10.A4Does moderation of major left drive voters to the right?

  30. 11.1Strategic position of moderate left and right parties, electoral payoffs for outbound extreme parties in the left and right fields

  31. 11.2Payoff matrix for moderate and radical strategies of moderate left and moderate right parties

  32. 12.1Fiscal consolidations and the electoral performance of social democratic parties

  33. 12.2Different types of fiscal consolidation and vote share of social democratic parties

  34. 12.3The effect of spending-based consolidations on small left parties, the overall left field, and the likelihood of social democratic parties winning office

  35. 12.A1List of countries and parties included in the analyses

  36. 12.A2Operationalization of the variables

  37. 13.1Noninterim leaders of the SPD and their tenure from 1970

  38. 13.2Explaining leader durations across regions

  39. 13.3Are there different effects for Social Democrats and other party families?

  40. 13.4Short-term polling effects

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