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BAP lit review structure - Coggle Diagram
BAP lit review structure
Introduction what is Euroscepticism
Literature on responsiveness
Mainstream parties respond
Reasons why mainstream parties would respond
Consequences of not responding
Trust: Bakker et al 2020
Satisfaction with democracy: Tausendpfund & Stecker
Spiral of distrust: Hooghe & Dassonneville (2018
Loss of votes: Raskin & Sadeh 2022
Spoon and Williams 2015
Spoon and Williams 2017
Williams & Ishiyama, 2018 (also finds reasons why mainstream parties would not respond or not respond directly)
Meijers 2017
Wejns & Bursens, 2021
Mainstream parties do not respond
Reasons why mainstream parties would not respond
Electoral consequences of responding
The gap
Meijers & Williams (2020)
Williams & Ishiyama, 2018
Good for risks: Abou-Chadi, 2016
For reputational concerns: Rohrscneider & Whitefield, 2016
Hellstrom, 2008
On the whole very limited movement for mainstream parties: Rohrschneider & Whitefield, 2016
Responsiveness matters for both domestic and EP elections: (De Vries 2010)
3 options for mainstream parties: Maguid, 2005
Public elite gap (Goldberg et al, 2020)
Hooghe & Marks (2009)