
Contents
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25.1 Identity Voting: The Aligned Electorate 25.1 Identity Voting: The Aligned Electorate
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25.1.1 Partisan Identification 25.1.1 Partisan Identification
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25.1.2 Social Cleavages 25.1.2 Social Cleavages
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25.1.3 The Exceptions 25.1.3 The Exceptions
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25.2 Dealignment: Away from Identity Voting? 25.2 Dealignment: Away from Identity Voting?
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25.3 The Valence Revolution: From Identity to Evaluation 25.3 The Valence Revolution: From Identity to Evaluation
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25.4 Electoral Participation 25.4 Electoral Participation
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25.5 And Yet 25.5 And Yet
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25.6 Identity and Voting Within the UK 25.6 Identity and Voting Within the UK
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25.7 Conclusions 25.7 Conclusions
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References References
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25 Voting and Identity
Get accessCharles Pattie is a Professor in the Department of Geography at the University of Sheffield.
Ron Johnston is a Professor in the School of Geographical Sciences at the University of Bristol.
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Published:02 January 2010
Cite
Abstract
This article traces that shift in academic understandings of British voting. Explanations of electoral alignment drew primarily on two different theoretical traditions: partisan identification and social cleavages. The origins of dealignment lie deep in the 1970s recession. Dealignment was a political earthquake waiting to happen. A striking generational shift in political attitudes had occurred among skilled manual workers. Political failure in the 1970s was one of the triggers of partisan dealignment. British electoral behaviour is now influenced much more by valence issues than by class and partisan identity. Identity and voting within the UK are both reported here. British voting studies have moved against the grain, leaving behind an interest in identity as other areas of politics embrace it. The cases of Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) and nationalist voting notwithstanding, the new accepted wisdom in the field is that identity is now much less important than evaluations of government performance.
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