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Men and Women's Voting Behavior


# 55195
Men and Women's Voting Behavior
A look at how certain issues influence the voting behavior of men and women during presidential elections.
3,050 words (approx. 12.2 pages) | 10 sources | APA | 2004 United States


Paper Summary:

This paper explores the hypothesis that, when voting during presidential elections, men tend to be influenced by the economic and war issues, while women tend to be influenced by social issues (abortion, education, healthcare). Appended to the paper is the survey that was used as part of the research effort for this paper.

Introduction
Statement of the Problem
Hypothesis
Executive Summary
Rationale
Methodology
Literature Review
Percentage of Men and Women Voting for
Presidential Candidates 1980-1996
Candidate Support by Gender (March - July 2000)
Data Collected (women)
Data Collected (men)
Conclusion
References
Questionnaire for Survey

From the Paper:

"Introduction: People in society have varied tastes and choices according to which they live their lives and wish to improve their living. People generally talk about and discuss issues of concern with each other. This helps to bring about more awareness about issues at hand, and allows one to decide what kinds of action should be taken in order to move towards a desirable outcome. As a result of such notions, often people tend to become quite political minded in their approaches, and end up taking sides at the time of elections. The reason for this is that different kinds of political leadership demonstrate their respective stances on social issues. Policies developed by these leaderships or potential leadership focus on areas that people are greatly interested in. Though policy formation also encompasses issues that are normally not revealed to the public, a major amount of the policies are revealed or at least promised to the people in order to gain their attention and favor. "

Cite this paper

APA Citation:

Men and Women's Voting Behavior (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 10, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-Men-and-Women's-Voting-Behavior/55195

MLA Citation:

"Men and Women's Voting Behavior" 15 January 2012. Web. 10 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Research-Paper-Men-and-Women's-Voting-Behavior/55195>




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