A Unified Theory of Party Competition
This book integrates spatial and behavioral perspectives – in a word, those of the
Rochester and Michigan schools – into a unified theory of voter choice and party strat-
egy. The theory encompasses both policy and nonpolicy factors, effects of turnout,
voter discounting of party promises, expectations of coalition government, and party
motivations based on policy as well as office. Optimal (Nash equilibrium) strategies
are determined for alternative models for presidential elections in the United States
and France, and for parliamentary elections in Britain and Norway. These polities
cover a wide range of electoral rules, numbers of major parties, and governmental
structures. The analyses suggest that the more competitive parties generally take
policy positions that come close to maximizing their electoral support, and that these
vote-maximizing positions correlate strongly with the mean policy positions of their
supporters.
James F. Adams is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of
California, Santa Barbara. His primary research interest is the application of spa-
tial modeling to real-world elections and the insights this approach can provide
into theories of political representation. He is the author of Party Competition and
Responsible Party Government: A Theory of Spatial Competition Based upon Insights
from Behavioral Voting Research (2001) as well as articles in the American Journal
of Political Science, the Journal of Politics, the British Journal of Political Science,
and Public Choice.
Samuel Merrill III is Professor Emeritus of Mathematics and Computer Science
at Wilkes University. He received his Ph.D. in mathematics from Yale University.
His current research involves mathematical and statistical modeling, particularly in
political science. He is the author (with Bernard Grofman) of A Unified Theory of
Voting (Cambridge University Press, 1999) and Making Multicandidate Elections
More Democratic (1988) and has published in a number of journals, including the
American Political Science Review, the American Journal of Political Science, and
the Journal of the American Statistical Association. He has been a visiting professor
at Yale University and a visiting scholar at the University of Washington.
Bernard Grofman is Professor of Political Science (and adjunct Professor of
Economics) at the University of California, Irvine. He received his Ph.D. in political
science from the University of Chicago in 1972. He is an expert on comparative
election systems and models of voting, and on social choice theory. He has published
more than 200 articles in journals such as the American Political Science Review,
the American Journal of Political Science, Electoral Studies, and Public Choice,
and he has authored or coedited seventeen books. He has been a Fellow of the
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University; a vis-
iting professor at the University of Michigan, the University of Washington, and the
University of Mannheim; and a scholar-in-residence at the University of Bologna,
Kansai University (Osaka), the German Science Center (Berlin), Pompeu Fabra Uni-
versity (Barcelona), and the Brookings Institution. He is a past president of the Public
Choice Society and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
© Cambridge University Press www.cambridge.org
Cambridge University Press
0521544939 - A Unified Theory of Party Competition: A Cross-National Analysis
Integrating Spatial and Behavioral Factors
James F. Adams, Samuel Merrill III and Bernard Grofman
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