3356 |
SETUPS: Voting Behavior: The 2000 Election |
Instructor |
Charles Prysby, University of North Carolina, Greensboro
Carmine Scavo, East Carolina University |
Subject |
Political science, elections |
Topic |
Elections, voting behavior, and survey data through the analysis of the 2000 United States general election |
Time frame |
2000 |
Abstract |
Discussion and data exercises in six areas:
- background to the 2000 Presidential election including nominations, the campaign, and the outcome
- analyzing voting behavior including the sources of individual voting behavior and electoral dynamics
- survey research methods including the SETUPS dataset, survey sampling plans, and sources of errors in surveys
- principles of data analysis including the relationships between variables, useful statistics, statistical packages, and recoding variables
- six exercises:
- obtaining a simple two-variable contingency table and examining the relationship between the variables
- reading simple contingency tables
- using multivariate analysis through the introduction of a control variable in order to understand a two-variable relationship
- testing possible explanations of a two-variable relationship by using multivariate analysis
- using multivariate analysis to understand a two-variable relationship
- using multivariate analysis and variable relationships
- user information on the codebook and interval-level variables
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Supplemental material |
Bibliography of suggested readings |
Related Dataset |
American National Election Study, 2000: Pre- and Post-Election Survey (ICPSR #3131), conducted by Nancy Burns, Donald R. Kinder, Steven J. Rosenstone, Virginia Sapiro, and the National Election Studies |
Variables |
Subset of items was drawn from the full election survey, including questions on voting behavior, political involvement, media involvement, candidate images, presidential approval and government performance, economic conditions, ideology, general spending and taxation, social welfare policy, foreign policy and defense issues, social and other domestic issues, civil rights and equality, and general orientations toward government. A number of social and demographic characteristics such as gender, race, age, marital status, education, occupation, income, religious affiliation, region, and employment status are also included. |
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