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Serious Money offers a detailed analysis of the relationship
between fundraising methods and contributing decisions in
presidential nomination campaigns, specifically 1988 and 1992.
Brown, Powell, and Wilcox explore the fundamental differences
between direct mail solicitation and personal solicitation
networks, and how candidate resources dictate the use of unique
methods of solicitation. Candidate resources analyzed include
home-state power bases, access to national party networks and the
national legislative agenda, congressional office, social identity,
and ideological proximity. With respect to contributing decisions,
the book focuses on the three fundamental sources of the decision
to contribute: the purposive, solidary, and material motives of
contributors. The research is based largely upon newly conducted
surveys of contributors to presidential candidates in 1992 and
1988, on a panel study of the 1988 contributors designed to examine
campaign targeting decisions and contributing behavior during the
1992 election cycle, and on interviews with campaign fundraising
professionals.
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