Logo image
Residential Mobility and Voter Turnout
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Residential Mobility and Voter Turnout

Peverill Squire, Raymond E. Wolfinger and David P. Glass
American Political Science Review, Vol.81(1), pp.45-66
03/1987
DOI: 10.2307/1960778
pdf
Residential Mobility and Voter Turnout1.79 MBDownloadView
Published (Version of record) Open Access
url
https://doi.org/10.2307/1960778View
Published (Version of record)American Political Science Review, 81:1 (1987) pp. 45-66.

Abstract

We examine the characteristics of a largely ignored low-turnout group--people who have recently moved. We find that neither demographic nor attitudinal attributes explain their lower turnout. Instead, the requirement that citizens must register anew after each change in residence constitutes the key stumbling block in the trip to the polls. Since nearly one-third of the nation moves every two years, moving has a large impact on national turnout rates. We offer a proposal to reduce the effect of residential mobility on turnout and estimate that turnout would increase by nine percentage points if the impact of moving could be removed. The partisan consequences of such a change would be marginal.

Political Science

Details

Metrics

1998 File views/ downloads
45 Record Views
Logo image