The Encyclopedia of U.S. Campaigns, Elections, and Electoral Behavior covers virtually everything one would want to know about American political campaigns. With more than 450 entries, these two comprehensive volumes present a significant array topics of campaigns, elections and electoral behavior. The encyclopedia's diverse content shows that although the subject matter of campaigns, elections and electoral behavior is inherently related, each topic has a distinct focus.
Key Features
Presents topics in a straightforward, easy-to-understand manner, intentionally avoiding unnecessary technical languageIncludes entries written by electoral behavior scholars from around the country
Focuses on American campaigns, elections, and electoral behavior but also provides a culturally and politically diverse perspective of American democratic practices and institutions
Offers a rich campaign history by looking at many colorful candidates, corrupt yet intriguing political machines, rapidly changing technologies, campaign organizations and strategies
Provides a description and scholarly analysis for all presidential elections, including state and general elections
Presents and simplifies complicated election laws that govern federal, state, and local elections
Examines various efforts throughout the decades to reform elections, especially from social upheaval and the resulting political realignments
Includes extensive electoral research into the development of political opinions, attitudes and ideologies in American voters