Robert E. Lang and Thomas W. Sanchez
March 2008
This brief examines the voting patterns of the country's most globally networked cities and show how these trends may impact presidential campaign strategies.
Robert E. Lang and Thomas W. Sanchez
2006
This election brief addresses how changing demographics and metropolitan form impact the nation’s politics.
This special Metropolitan Institute report indicates that the Boomburb counties are perhaps becoming more contested and less reliably Republican than the exurban counties.
Robert E. Lang and Dawn Dhavale
2005
The brief looks at voting patterns in the the major socio-political sections of the state. The brief ends with a discussion of what lessons will likely be drawn from the 2005 Governors’ race.
Robert E. Lang, Dawhn Dhavale, and Kristin Haworth
2004
This Census Note provides a first-ever look at voting patterns in the nation’s micropolitan areas. It shows that these places more closely resemble rural communities than bigger metropolitan areas in terms of how they vote. |