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The Social Context of Political Change: Durability, Volatility, and Social Influence

R. Robert Huckfeldt

American Political Science Review, 1983, vol. 77, issue 4, 929-944

Abstract: This article translates several explanations for contextual effects upon politics into mathematical, dynamic representations. These representations are used to consider several questions. Under what circumstances does the social context lead to durability and volatility in mass political preferences? Do different specifications of contextual influence lead to different conclusions regarding its dynamic consequences? Does the social context have different dynamic implications for individual preference and for the aggregate preferences of the population as a whole? These questions are not addressed by gathering and analyzing data, but rather by examining the deductive consequences of the various explanations for contextual influence.

Date: 1983
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