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Elections

Participating journal: Economics of Governance
We are inviting submissions for a Collection on "Elections".

Topics of interest include but are not limited to:

- electoral competition

- the behavior of political parties

- candidate selection

- campaign strategies and campaign finance

- polarization

- the institutional framework including redistricting, ballot access and other aspects of election law

- the study of alternative voting rules

- reforms such as liquid democracy or other means of aggregating preferences.

We welcome theoretical and empirical approaches, including game-theoretic, reduced form or structural estimation, and experimental research.

All submissions will be screened by the guest editors, and those successfully screened will be reviewed by anonymous referees as part of the journal’s regular peer-review process.

All articles will be published immediately upon acceptance in their final version on the journal website, as part of the topical collection, with the first publications possible prior to the submission deadline (July 31, 2026).

We look forward to receiving your contributions.

Participating journal

Submit your manuscript to this collection through the participating journal.

Editors

  • Jon X. Eguia PhD

    Professor, Economics and Political Science, Michigan State University, East Lansing, United States.

    After graduating from Caltech, he worked at NYU and University of Bristol, before joining MSU in 2014. Jon Eguia's research is in Microeconomic Theory and Political Economy, in topics including voting and elections, redistricting, polarization, collective choice, implementation theory, inequality, coalition formation, and conflict.

  • Gergely Ujhelyi PhD

    Professor, Economics, University of Houston, Houston, United States.
    His research is in Public Economics, Political Economy, and Development Economics. Topics of interest include bureaucrats and the institutions that govern them, the demand and supply of political candidates, and the causes and consequences of natural resource policies. He obtained his PhD in Economics from Harvard University in 2007.

Articles

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