Presidential Elections
Strategies and Structures of American Politics
By (author) Nelson W. Polsby professor of political sc, Aaron Wildavsky, Steven E. Schier Carleton College, David A. Hopkins
Publication date:
05 August 2019Length of book:
320 pagesPublisher
Rowman & Littlefield PublishersDimensions:
262x184mm7x10"
ISBN-13: 9781538125106
Polsby and Wildavsky’s classic text argues that the institutional rules of the presidential nomination and election processes, in combination with the behavior of the mass electorate, structure the strategic choices faced by politicians in powerful and foreseeable ways. We can make sense of the decisions made by differently situated political actors—incumbents, challengers, Democrats, Republicans, consultants, party official, activists, delegates, journalists, and voters—by understanding the ways in which their world is organized by incentives, regulations, events, resources, customs, and opportunities.
Since it first published in 1964, Presidential Elections has been an instant classic. Schier and Hopkins continue the tradition by offering a 360-degree view of the changing American elections landscape.