Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Reference6 articles.
1. Alford, J., & Hibbing, J. R. (1981). Increasing incumbency advantage in the house. The Journal of Politics, 43, 1042–1061.
2. Collie, M. (1981). Incumbency, electoral safety, and turnover in the house of representatives, 1952–1976. The American Political Science Review, 75, 119–131.
3. Garand, J. C., & Gross, D. A. (1984). Changes in the vote margins for congressional candidates: A specification of historical trends. The American Political Science Review, 78, 17–30.
4. Linden, L. L. (2003). Are candidates really advantaged? The preference for non-incumbents in Indian elections. Massachusetts Institute of Technology (mimeo), Cambridge (Mass).
5. Matthews, R. J. (2000). Facts versus factions: The use and abuse of subjectivity in scientific research. In J. Morris (Ed.), Rethinking risk and the precautionary principle (pp. 247–282). Oxford: Butterworth Heniemann.