2023

Activities News

Electoral Chair’s Seminar – September 20th

Losers’ consent in a deliberative assembly André Blais – Université de Montréal, Jean-François Daoust – Université de Sherbrooke, Dassonneville, Ruth – Université de Montréal, and Patrick Fournier – Université de Montréal We examine losers’ reactions to the votes taken in a citizen deliberative assembly. A citizen assembly on issues related to local electoral democracy was organized […] Read more

Activities News

Electoral Chairs’ Seminars – May 24th

An ideological trade-off: Electoral consequences of consistent and responsive party strategies Jasmien Luypaert – PhD Candidate at Gent University Political parties face a difficult balancing act when making electoral calculations. They must weigh the benefits of offering policy positions in line with their ideological heritage and traditionally bind their party base, against the need to […] Read more

Activities News

Electoral Chairs’ Seminars – May 1st

Between decentralization and asymmetry: Explaining preferences about the division of power in Canada Philippe Chassé (Université de Montréal et Sciences Po Paris), Olivier Jacques (Université de Montréal) et Colin Scott (Université Concordia) In most federations, the division of power between central and subnational governments represents an important cleavage structuring voting and party systems. Subnational units […] Read more

Activities News

Electoral Chairs’ Seminars – April 24th

Crowdsourcing or Educated Guessing? Election Forecasting, Sophistication, and Aggregation Philippe Mongrain, Nadjim Fréchet, Brian Thompson Collart, and Yannick Dufresne Many studies, primarily of American, British, and Canadian elections, have shown citizens’ forecasts to be an efficient prediction tool. Not only are citizens quite astute at guessing which candidate or party will prevail at the national […] Read more

Activities News

Electoral Chairs’ Seminars – April 17th

On the same page? Black voters in Canada and the United Kingdom: A comparative study with African-Americans  Nadjim Fréchet – PhD Candidate at Université de Montréal American political science literature shows that African-Americans form one of the most consistent voting blocs in Western democracies. If elite mobilization and a common historical background can explain African-Americans’ […] Read more

News

Winner of Excellence in teaching award from the Faculty of Arts and Science at Université de Montréal – Ruth Dassonneville

Our Chair-holder, Ruth Dassonneville, received the 2022 Excellence in teaching award. For her magnificent guidance towards her undergrad students, she devoted herself into helping them become familiar with research in the political behaviour field. For her class on elections (POL 3015) she helped students collect their own data from a collective survey, and thought them […] Read more

News

2022 Impact Awards—Talent Award winner: Semra Sevi

Semra Sevi received the annual Impact Awards that recognize the highest achievements in SSHRC-funded research, knowledge mobilization and scholarship, notably for her PhD dissertation: What Voters Want: Identifying Voter Preferences for Candidates. She also collected and published the biggest dataset regarding Canadian historical candidate at the federal level, but also provincial level in Ontario. Her dataset […] Read more

Activities News

Electoral Chairs’ Seminars – April 3rd

Is Social Media Affectively Polarizing Us? An Experiment Comparing Facebook and Instagram Users Juliette Leblanc – Master’s student at Université de Montréal Do social media raise levels of affective polarization by increasing animosity towards opposing partisans? Research show that affective polarization is influenced by the growing levels of elite ideological polarization and most importantly, the […] Read more

Activities News

Electoral Chairs’ Seminars – March 25th

Party Prediction for Twitter Kellin Pelrine, Anne Imouza, Gabrielle Desrosiers-Brisebois, Sacha Lévy, Jacob-Junqi Tian, Zachary Yang, Aarash Feizi, Cécile Amadoro, André Blais, Jean-François Godbout and Reihaneh Rabbany A large number of studies on social media are based on predictive models for inferring political affiliation of users. The methods designed for this party prediction rely on […] Read more