
The Resilient Voter
Description
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Building on arguments that stressful polling place conditions subject citizens to stress that can prevent them from casting complete ballots or even choosing to vote at all, the authors ask whether those who endure polling place frustrations and persevere to cast a ballot might become so stressed by their experience that they are unable to mark their ballots in a manner consistent with their standing policy preferences. Using a creative experimental design, the authors examine the ways in which complex ballot language, registration difficulties, and long polling place lines affect voters' stress levels, and how such anxieties translate into the willingness to cast a complete ballot and the ability to vote in a manner conforming to previously expressed preferences.
The authors demonstrate that even though most voters prove remarkably resilient in the face of some potentially stressful polling place barriers, they are not immune to all polling place conditions. Further, they illustrate that some segments of the electorate tend to be more vulnerable to polling place stressors than others and illustrate the ways in which the compound effects of multiple barriers can exert an even wider impact.
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Content
Chapter 2: Sweating the Vote: Polling Place Stress as a Voting Barrier
Chapter 3: Studying Polling Place Stress: An Experimental Approach
Chapter 4: Can You Read Me? Ballot Access Complexity and Voter Behavior
Chapter 5: Does a Placebo Ballot Lead to a Voting Headache? Provisional Ballots and Voter Behavior
Chapter 6: The Waiting is the Hardest Part? Polling Place Wait Times and Voter Behavior
Chapter 7: Are the Barriers Higher for Some Voters? The Conditional Effects of Polling Place Stressors
Chapter 8: Dealing with Polling Place Stressors: Conclusions and Implications
Appendix A: Subject Recruitment
Appendix B: Pre-Test Survey
Appendix C: Post-Test, Mock Election Ballot
Appendix D: Measures, Coding, and Distribution of Responses
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