This book analyzes how increases in international trade, finance,
and production have altered voter decisions, political party
positions, and the types of public issues that parties focus on in
postindustrial democracies. Although many studies interrogate
whether internationalization matters in regard to policy outcomes
and how globalization relates to mass protest, few examine
globalization and mass politics more generally. This book argues
that by reducing the room in which to maneuver in policy making,
globalization reduces the importance of economic-based issues while
increasing the electoral importance of non-economic issues. The
argument is tested on original and existing data sources.
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