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PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS - 2012 (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   123506


Continuity and change in Senegalese party politics: lessons from the 2012 elections / Resnick, Danielle   Journal Article
Resnick, Danielle Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Senegal's 2012 presidential and legislative elections reaffirmed the country's longstanding reputation as one of Africa's most stable democracies. The elections also represented a critical juncture for the country's party system, demonstrated by the use of new campaign techniques as well as the gradual exit from the political scene of an older generation of elites. At the same time, this article argues, the elections revealed continuing weaknesses within the party system, including low levels of institutionalization and the limited ability of the opposition to mobilize key constituencies, such as underemployed urban youth. These trends are demonstrated through disaggregated election data that show a high degree of electoral volatility and party de-alignment as well as low levels of voter turnout. Thus, while Senegal has now achieved the two rounds of party turnover often deemed to be an important indicator of democratic consolidation, the elections also revealed that a vibrant, pluralistic party system can nonetheless fail to engage citizens over time.
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2
ID:   123084


How the economy and partisanship shaped the 2012 presidential a / Jacobson, Gary C   Journal Article
Jacobson, Gary C Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract GARY C. JACOBSON analyzes the 2012 presidential and congressional elections. He finds that Barack Obama won despite the weak economy because Democrat partisans outnumbered Republican in the highly polarized electorate and remained unusually loyal to their candidate. The relationship between presidential and House and Senate voting patterns was extraordinarily strong, making it the most partisan, nationalized, and president-centered election in at least 60 years.
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3
ID:   119750


Right play: so what if it's a terrible slogan? / Gelb, Leslie H   Journal Article
Gelb, Leslie H Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Key Words United States  Syria  Libya  Qaddafi  Obama  Bashar al-Assad 
Mitt Romney  Presidential Elections - 2012  Foreign Policy 
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