How Voters Feel

How Voters Feel is a 2013 book by Stephen Coleman, Professor of Political Communication at the University of Leeds.[1] [2]

How Voters Feel
AuthorStephen Coleman
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
SubjectPolitical Communication
GenrePolitics
PublishedApril 2013
Pages280
ISBN9781107014602

About

The book is about hidden genealogies of democracy, and particularly its most widely recognized act which is voting. The book looks at a unique insight into how it feels to be a democratic citizen. The book is based on in-depth research involving 60 interviews with voters and non-voters.[3][4] [5]

gollark: Does that fix the thing where you can just use nonexistent variables and it treats them as the empty string?
gollark: Shell is amazing and wondrous; I'm rewriting minoteaur in it.
gollark: It's wildly inconsistent, unsafe (in the poor error handling sense), slow, and makes many simple operations far too hard.
gollark: Æææææææ
gollark: I like to confuse all by using e^(2i)-based indexing.

References

  1. "How Voters Feel | Politics: general interest | Cambridge University Press". cambridge.org. Retrieved 2014-04-16.
  2. Game, Chris (2014). "Stephen Coleman,How Voters Feel". Local Government Studies. 40 (2): 333–335. doi:10.1080/03003930.2014.884270.
  3. "'How Voters Feel': Latest Book by Professor Stephen Coleman is Published » Institute of Communications Studies". ics.leeds.ac.uk. Retrieved 2014-04-16.
  4. "How Voters Feel - Stephen Coleman - Guardian Bookshop". guardianbookshop.co.uk. Retrieved 2014-04-16.
  5. Coleman, Stephen (2010-05-08). "Electoral reform begins at the polling station | Stephen Coleman | Comment is free | theguardian.com". The Guardian. theguardian.com. Retrieved 2014-04-16.
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