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ID172003
Title ProperMoney and Meaning in Elections
Other Title Informationtowards a theory of the vote
LanguageENG
AuthorBanerjee, Mukulika
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article offers a comprehensive set of explanations for why people vote. Based on evidence from Indian elections, where voter turnouts remain consistently high—and rising—despite voting not being compulsory, the article shows that two broad sets of reasons exist. First, a set of transactional factors, labelled ‘money’ here, encompass within it the instrumental and coercive reasons that propel people to vote. Secondly, evidence shows that people also attribute ‘meaning’ to the act of voting itself so they vote for the sake of performing the act itself. Drawing from the wider literature and the author's own ethnographic work, including comparative ethnographic research conducted by a team across India, this article brings together these diverse set of reasons to propose a holistic explanation for why people vote.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 54, No.1; Jan 2020: p.286-313
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies 2020-02 54, 1
Key WordsElections ;  Money and Meaning ;  Theory of the Vote