Making countries small: The nationalization of districts in the United States Article Swipe
Related Concepts
Democracy
Political science
Politics
Capital (architecture)
Capital city
Geography
Public administration
Political economy
Economic growth
Economy
Economics
Economic geography
Law
Archaeology
Ignacio Lago
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YOU?
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· 2023
· Open Access
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· DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2023.6
· OA: W4320493714
YOU?
·
· 2023
· Open Access
·
· DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/psrm.2023.6
· OA: W4320493714
I rely on data from 31,754 electoral districts in the United States from 1834 until 2016 to explore how the nationalization of politics occurs within districts. I argue that in the early stages of the American democracy local concerns were more prominent in the distant districts from the capital city than in the nearby districts, and therefore the number of parties was greater in the former than in the latter. However, these differences vanished after the New Deal, when authority was centralized. Nationalization reduced the number of parties everywhere, but above all in the most distant district from Washington, D.C.
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