Internet and Democracy; Political Communication; Leader Effects; Parties and Elections; Voting Behavior
Garzia Diego, Ferreira da Silva Frederico (2019), Personalization of Politics, in Maisel Sandy (ed.), Oxford University Press, New York, 1.
GarziaDiego, Ferreira da SilvaFrederico, De AngelisAndrea (2018),
Partisan dealignment and the personalization of politics in West European parliamentary democracies, 1961-2016, University of California at Irvine, Irvine, CA.
Garzia Diego (2017), Personalization of Politics between Television and the Internet: Leader Effects in the 2013 Italian Parliamentary Election, in
Journal of Information Technology & Politics, 14(4), 1.
Garzia Diego (2017), Voter Evaluation of Candidates and Party Leaders, in Lewis-Beck Michael, Arzheimer Kai, Evans Jocelyn (ed.), SAGE, Thousand Oaks, 1.
GarziaDiego, Ferreira da SilvaFrederico, De AngelisAndrea, From party to leader mobilization? The personalization of voter turnout, in
Party Politics.
GarziaDiego, Ferreira da SilvaFrederico, De AngelisAndrea, Image that matters: News media consumption and party leader effects on voting behavior, in
The International Journal of Press/Politics.
Over the last decades, the "personalization of politics" has turned into one of the defining elements of the democratic process. However, the common wisdom that sees popular political leaders as a fundamental electoral asset for their own parties finds only limited support in the scant voting literature. So far, comparative electoral research has proven reluctant in systematically addressing the impact of leaders on voting across time and space. Equally crucial aspects such as the role played by television exposure as a driver of personalization in voting behaviour, and the relationship between the rise of Internet-based political communication and the personalization trend have so far been under-researched. The major aim of this project is to empirically assess the extent to which political leaders have come to affect voters' choice, as well as the role played by the media in driving this development across time. This project substantially extends the existing state-of-the-art on personalization of politics and electoral behaviour through its innovative methodological approach and its wider geographical/longitudinal scope. It involves the longitudinal harmonization and analysis of over a hundred existing cross-sectional datasets from European countries (1960-2015). Analysis of available panel data will complement the findings of the longitudinal analysis by focusing more in depth on causal dynamics. With regard to the research environment in which to place the study, the current state of the literature suggests that European democracies represent the locus where more research is in need. European democracies highlight many of the crucial variations in the structure of democratic politics and thus provide the ideal framework for such a thoroughly comparative analysis. The European-wide dimension of the study will allow for an extensive testing of the institutional, contextual and technological factors mediating leader effects across time and space.