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Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: The 2008 Primaries
Chapter 3: Campaigns
Chapter 4: General Elections
Chapter 5: Regional Patterns and Swing States: Regional
Analyses
Chapter 6: Leading Counties: 2004 and 2008 Votes and Turnouts:
Selected Economic, Demographic and Religious Correlates
Chapter 7: Other Key 2008 Elections
Chapter 8: Nonpartisan Referenda
Chapter 9: Post-2008: Congressional Votes
Chapter 10: Toward a More Perfect Union: Ten Scenarios
Stanley D. Brunn is professor of geography at the University of Kentucky. Gerald R. Webster is professor of geography at the University of Wyoming. Richard L. Morrill is professor emeritus of geography at the University of Washington. Fred M. Shelley is professor of geography at the University of Oklahoma. Stephen J. Lavin was professor of geography at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln. J. Clark Archer is professor of geography at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln.
This beautifully executed work uses maps, charts, and text to
effectively analyze and communicate the interplay of political
forces and geography in the 2008 elections. The atlas is divided
into 10 chapters, each with maps and commentary. Chapters 2 through
6 focus on the presidential election, describing the outcomes of
the primaries and caucuses that led to the nominations of Senators
Obama and McCain, their election campaigns, media coverage, and
endorsements. Election results are analyzed at the state and county
levels, then by region, with an emphasis on swing states.
Comparisons with the 2004 election are provided. Socioeconomic
indicators are examined by focusing on the extremes—the 200
counties with the highest and lowest rankings on selected
variables. The resulting maps and narratives effectively portray
the effect of variables such as military presence, education, in-
and out-migration, employment by economic sector, creative class
employment, race, ethnicity, and income on the election outcome.
Chapter 7 examines selected campaigns for Senate seats and
governorships, while chapter 8 discusses the geography of voting on
several state referenda involving controversial issues, including
same-sex marriage, abortion, and physician-assisted suicide.
Chapter 9 focuses on election results at the congressional-district
level and analysis of several important 2009 House votes. Finally,
chapter 10 offers 10 brief scenarios about the American electoral
landscape. The 200-plus maps are the heart of this work, of course,
and they do not disappoint, effectively using a wide range of
colors, clear captions, and a variety of mapping styles. The atlas
ends with a sampling of bumper stickers and commemorative stamps
that evoke nostalgia just three years after the election. The index
covers, and effectively differentiates, graphs, maps, tables, and
text. Much more than a reference work, this atlas will engage the
casual reader as well as the political junkie. Recommended for all
public, academic, and middle- and high-school libraries—many
libraries will want to add a copy to their circulating collections
as well.
*Booklist, Starred Review*
Political geographers use three contexts to study elections and
political behavior: demographic (men vs. women, young vs. old),
where people live (urban vs. rural), and proximity (people tend to
make voting decisions similar to those nearby). The 200 maps here
describe an election that was historic in that it was the first
election of a Presidential candidate of African American descent
and was marked by an unprecedented interest and high turnout of
voters and widespread use of social media. Each of these ten
chapters contains maps and narrative primarily depicting voting
patterns at the national level from the primaries to the final
returns. There’s even a suggestion that changing Election Day to
two days in September would raise turnout.
*Library Journal (Reference)*
Brunn (Cities of the World) and coeditors Gerald R. Webster,
Richard L. Morrill, Fred M. Shelley, Stephen J. Lavin, and J. Clark
Archer—all professors of geography at institutions across the
United States—here present ten chapters of geographical and
political perspectives on the 2008 U.S. presidential election, with
nods to views from other disciplines such as history, economics,
and sociology. Also examined from those standpoints are six other
races, including important senatorial and gubernatorial quests;
eight statewide referenda; four votes of the 111th U.S. House of
Representatives; and topics such as primaries, campaigns, general
elections, and regional patterns. Each chapter’s accessible
narrative is accompanied by several well-rendered maps (for a total
of more than 200)—the combination serves to clarify issues of
interest in the 2008 election in a way that is unmatched by other
works. The editors close with ten scenarios that could positively
influence national elections, e.g., public financing of
presidential elections and abolishing the electoral college. BOTTOM
LINE This title succeeds at making political geography accessible
and demonstrates the power of the discipline in relation to
questions of social science. It is an excellent addition to most
higher education and large public library collections because of
its clear, attractive visual style and easily understood
information.
*Library Journal*
This atlas presents 200-plus visually engaging and deeply
analytical maps and narratives about the 2008 elections. Contents
include an introduction and nine chapters with national/state maps,
and essays that explore major issues or describe the maps. Chapter
2 focuses on the nomination process with maps that depict primary
selection processes and voting patterns. Chapter 3 contains maps
that show key features of the campaign itself, e.g., campaign stops
made by McCain and Obama leading up to the election (a fascinating
way to visualize candidates' frantic travel patterns). Chapter 4,
the most substantive, features a large number of maps and essays
about the results of the presidential election. Maps are included
for other party candidates as well. Chapter 5 breaks down regional
voting patterns by comparing 2004 and 2008 election results.
Chapter 6 analyzes key demographic, occupational, and socioeconomic
indicators, emphasizing highest- and lowest-ranking data that
reflect broader social, economic, and cultural trends nationwide.
Chapter 7 looks at various statewide elections for governor and for
state legislatures; it assists the process of comparing and
contrasting national election results with state election results.
Chapter 8 shows the results of key referenda on issues such as stem
cell research and same-sex marriage. Chapter 9 focuses on voting
patterns for key issues in the 111th House of Representatives in
2009 and the rating of House members by special interest groups.
Chapter 10 outlines ten scenarios for the 2012 elections. The
quality of the contents and analysis in this affordable,
well-referenced work should inspire new research. Summing Up:
Highly recommended. Lower-level undergraduates and above; general
readers.
*CHOICE*
A superb and richly illustrated explanation of the spatial and
temporal differences in the U.S. electorate. The maps help to
disentangle characteristics of the population from settlement
patterns in the United States, which helps answer the perennial
question of why the map of state-level election results is so red
but the election is so close. It should be read by geographers,
geography students, political scientists, the electorate, and the
campaign staff of both major political parties.
*Geographical Review*
Much effort and care has been put into determining what should be
mapped, and how, and providing a substantial textual commentary
involving fifty-one different authors. The result is a handsome
product.
*AAG Review of Books*
An outstanding set of analyses of voting in the 2008 election and
related subjects. With beautiful, provocative maps and concise,
readable, and historically informed interpretations by experts,
this book will be the recognized authority on the subject.
*James Allen, California State University, Northridge*
Scholars and practitioners have long understood the interplay of
political forces and geography. This dynamic was on vivid display
in the 2008 presidential election, and much of it has been captured
in this important new volume. Primaries and caucuses, referenda and
ballot initiatives, Electoral College forces and much else, this
new atlas provides those truly interested in 21st-century
presidential elections a treasure trove of information. And my
goodness, what maps!
*Daniel M. Shea, Allegheny College*
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