
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Jonathan Rodden, political science professor at Stanford and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution speaks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the geography of voting. The main focus is on the tendency of urban voters around the world to vote for candidates on the left relative to suburban and rural voters. Rodden argues that this pattern is related to the geography of work and housing going back to the industrial revolution. He also discusses the implications of various voting systems such as winner-take-all vs. proportional representation, the electoral college and how political systems and voter preferences can produce unexpected outcomes.
By Russ Roberts4.7
42164,216 ratings
Jonathan Rodden, political science professor at Stanford and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution speaks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the geography of voting. The main focus is on the tendency of urban voters around the world to vote for candidates on the left relative to suburban and rural voters. Rodden argues that this pattern is related to the geography of work and housing going back to the industrial revolution. He also discusses the implications of various voting systems such as winner-take-all vs. proportional representation, the electoral college and how political systems and voter preferences can produce unexpected outcomes.

2,455 Listeners

2,268 Listeners

1,825 Listeners

1,513 Listeners

79 Listeners

990 Listeners

487 Listeners

22 Listeners

6,620 Listeners

551 Listeners

131 Listeners

2,033 Listeners

31 Listeners

736 Listeners

3,363 Listeners

718 Listeners

816 Listeners

8,451 Listeners

449 Listeners

147 Listeners

1,113 Listeners