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COMMENTARY

COMMENTS IN REPLY TO KASPERSON AND TAYLOR

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

References

  • 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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