Crossref Citations
This article has been cited by the following publications. This list is generated based on data provided by
Crossref.
Cahill, Christine
and
Tomashevskiy, Andrey
2019.
Private Donations and Policy Ambiguity.
Comparative Political Studies,
Vol. 52,
Issue. 5,
p.
754.
ROVNY, JAN
and
POLK, JONATHAN
2020.
Still blurry? Economic salience, position and voting for radical right parties in Western Europe.
European Journal of Political Research,
Vol. 59,
Issue. 2,
p.
248.
Koedam, Jelle
2021.
Avoidance, ambiguity, alternation: Position blurring strategies in multidimensional party competition.
European Union Politics,
Vol. 22,
Issue. 4,
p.
655.
Lin, Nick
and
Lehrer, Roni
2021.
Everything to everyone and the conditioning effect of intraparty cohesion: A replication in a cross-national context.
Party Politics,
Vol. 27,
Issue. 5,
p.
909.
kamphorst, jonne
2021.
Too Important to Ignore? Why Ambiguity and Broad Appeals Fail With Rising Issue Salience.
SSRN Electronic Journal ,
Tolvanen, Juha
2021.
On Political Ambiguity and Anti-Median Platforms.
SSRN Electronic Journal ,
CERON, ANDREA
and
VOLPI, ELISA
2022.
How do parties react to defections? Electoral strategies after a valence loss.
European Journal of Political Research,
Vol. 61,
Issue. 4,
p.
1042.
Bene, Márton
Ceron, Andrea
Fenoll, Vicente
Haßler, Jörg
Kruschinski, Simon
Larsson, Anders Olof
Magin, Melanie
Schlosser, Katharina
and
Wurst, Anna-Katharina
2022.
Keep Them Engaged! Investigating the Effects of Self-centered Social Media Communication Style on User Engagement in 12 European Countries.
Political Communication,
Vol. 39,
Issue. 4,
p.
429.
Bierbrauer, Felix
Tsyvinski, Aleh
and
Werquin, Nicolas
2022.
Taxes and Turnout: When the Decisive Voter Stays at Home.
American Economic Review,
Vol. 112,
Issue. 2,
p.
689.
Dennison, James
and
Vrânceanu, Alina
2022.
Introduction to Migration Studies.
p.
375.
Han, Kyung Joon
2022.
Who refuses ambiguity? Voters’ issue salience and the electoral effect of party position ambiguity.
Comparative European Politics,
Vol. 20,
Issue. 1,
p.
73.
Krishnarajan, Suthan
and
Jensen, Carsten
2022.
When Is A Pledge A Pledge?.
British Journal of Political Science,
Vol. 52,
Issue. 4,
p.
1911.
TOLVANEN, JUHA
TREMEWAN, JAMES
and
WAGNER, ALEXANDER K.
2022.
Ambiguous Platforms and Correlated Preferences: Experimental Evidence.
American Political Science Review,
Vol. 116,
Issue. 2,
p.
734.
Han, Kyung Joon
2022.
Radical right success and mainstream parties’ position ambiguity on immigration.
Acta Politica,
Vol. 57,
Issue. 4,
p.
818.
Røed, Maiken
2023.
When do political parties listen to interest groups?.
Party Politics,
Vol. 29,
Issue. 2,
p.
374.
Leidecker-Sandmann, Melanie
and
Thomas, Fabian
2023.
Die (Massen-) Medien im Wahlkampf.
p.
43.
Strnad, Michal
2023.
In search for more ‘authentic’ EU attitudes: re-evaluating regionalist parties’ EU positioning from sub-state parliamentary debates.
Territory, Politics, Governance,
Vol. 11,
Issue. 6,
p.
1228.
Gyárfášová, Oľga
and
Hlatky, Roman
2023.
Personalized politics: Evidence from the Czech and Slovak Republics.
Electoral Studies,
Vol. 81,
Issue. ,
p.
102567.
Gross, Martin
Krauss, Svenja
and
Praprotnik, Katrin
2023.
Electoral strategies in multilevel systems: the effect of national politics on regional elections.
Regional Studies,
Vol. 57,
Issue. 5,
p.
844.
Atzpodien, Dana Siobhan
2023.
Reconciling Intra‐Party and Intra‐Coalition Dissent in Morality Politics: Parliamentary Debates on Marriage Equality in the German Bundestag.
Swiss Political Science Review,
Vol. 29,
Issue. 3,
p.
271.