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COMMENTARY

COMMENTS IN REPLY TO KASPERSON AND TAYLOR

Pages 411-416 | Received 02 Dec 1968, Published online: 15 Mar 2010
 

Notes

1 K. R. Cox, “Suburbia and Voting Behavior in the London Metropolitan Area,”Annals, Association of American Geographers, Vol. 58 (1968), p. 113.

2 P. J. Taylor and R. Bordessa, “Some Implications of Science Research Methodology in Human Geography” (London School of Economics and Political Science, Graduate Geography Department, Discussion Paper, No. 9, January, 1968).

3 See for example, A. S. Goldberg, “Discerning a Causal Pattern Among Data on Voting Variables,”American Political Science Review, Vol. 60 (1966), pp. 913 22; M. Midlarsky and R. Tanter“Toward a Theory of Political Instability in Latin America,”Journal of Peace Research, Vol. 3 (1967), pp. 209 27.

4 W. S. Robinson, “Ecological Correlations and the Behavior of Individuals,”American Sociological Review, Vol. 15 (1950), pp. 351 57.

5 Cox, op. cit., footnote 1, pp. 117–19.

6 Cox, op. cit., footnote 1, p. 117.

7 Cox, op. cit., footnote 1, p. 116.

8 See, for example, K. R. Cox, “The Spatial Structuring of Information Flow and Partisan Attitudes,” in M. Dogan and S. Rokkan (Eds.), Quantitative Ecological Analysis in the Social Sciences (Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1969); K. R. Cox, “The Voting Decision in a Spatial Context,” in C. Board, R. J. Chorley, and P. Haggett (Eds.), Progress in Geography (London: Edward Arnold, 1969).

9 Cox, op. cit., footnote 1, p. 111.

10 A. Campbell, P. Converse, W. Miller, and D. E. Stokes, The American Voter (New York: John Wiley, 1960).

11 Campbell, et al, op. cit., footnote 10, p. 148.

12 A number of these studies are reviewed in my paper in Board, Chorley, and Haggett, op. cit., footnote 8.

13 D. Segal and M. Meyer, “Levels of Political Orientation,” in Dogan and Rokkan, op. cit., footnote 8.

14 R. D. Putnam, “Political Attitudes and the Local Community,”American Political Science Review, Vol. 60 (1966), pp. 640 54.

15 Working with data on in-migrants to the Columbus metropolitan area I have been able to show that the neighborhood effect varies as a function of length of time resided in Columbus. This monotonicity of the relationship is preserved when age—a possible confounding factor—is held constant; K. R. Cox, “Residential Relocation and Political Behavior: Conceptual Model and Empirical Tests” (Columbus: Department of Geography, Ohio State University, 1968, Mimeo.).

16 Putnam, op. cit., footnote 14, p. 652.

17 Putnam, op. cit., footnote 14, p. 652.

18 Cox, in Dogan and Rokkan, op. cit., footnote 8.

19 Cox, op. cit., footnote 1, pp. 116–17.

20 Kasperson's strictures regarding my acquaintance with the political science literature are not necessarily shared by all political scientists and political sociologists: the paper in question was recently selected for inclusion in a forthcoming collection of essays on the ecological study of political behavior edited by two political scientists: see M. Dogan and S. Rokkan (Eds.), Quantitative Ecological Analysis in the Social Sciences (Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1969).

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