Heather Stoll. July 30, 2014

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Supplemental Materials for Elite Level Conflict Salience and Dimensionality in Western Europe: Concepts and Empirical Findings, West European Politics 33 (3) Heather Stoll July 30, 2014 This paper contains supplemental materials for Stoll (2010), Elite Level Conflict Salience and Dimensionality in Western Europe: Concepts and Empirical Findings. It has been updated to reflect the corrected salience and dimensionality measures (see the Errata). 1 Conflict and Issue Salience by Country We initially present graphs of conflict and issue salience comparable to the main paper s Figure 1 for all eighteen Western European countries included in the study. In addition to the graphs that present LOWESS smoothed data (Figures 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9), we also include graphs that present the original, unsmoothed data (Figures 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10). The main paper s Figure 1 is reproduced here to aid readers. These four countries (Belgium, France, Norway and the United Kingdom) lead off all sets of graphs; the remaining countries appear alphabetically. Note that for the three countries in the analysis that underwent third wave transitions to democracy (Greece, Portugal, and Spain), we additionally measure the salience of a seventh ideological conflict: a democratic authoritarian conflict around the transition to democracy and the legacy of the authoritarian regime. The CMP coding categories associated with this ideological conflict are PER201, Human Rights and Freedom and PER202, Democracy. For all other countries, this conflict is assigned a salience of zero; to simplify the graphs, it is not shown for them. 2 Raw Dimensionality by Country We next present graphs of the raw ideological (Figures 11 15) and issue dimensionality (Figures 16 20). The measure described in the main paper, which weighs dimensions by their estimated salience using Molinar s (1991) modified version of Laakso and Taagepera s (1979) effective number, is shown as a solid black line. We also show an alternative measure 1

that uses the effective number itself, shown as a dotted black line. This demonstrates how the effective number does in fact over-count the most salient dimension and hence over-estimate the dimensionality. Note that the seventh democratic authoritarian conflict is taken into account in calculating the dimensionality for all countries, and at the regional level. Note also that in calculating the raw ideological dimensionality, the non-ideological proportion of party manifestos (i.e., the proportion of party manifestos not devoted to the ideological conflicts studied) is thrown out of the calculation by reexpressing the base saliences as the percentages of the ideological proportion. Similarly, in calculating the raw issue dimensionality, the noncoded proportion of party manifestos is disregarded by rescaling the base saliences as the percentages of the coded proportion. 3 More on Measuring the Raw Space Finally, we provide more information about the measures of the raw space appearing in the main paper, which both update and slightly modify the measures introduced earlier in Stoll (2004). See Stoll(2011) for a prior appearance of these modified(but not updated) measures. The measures used here and in Stoll (2011) diverge from Stoll s (2004) in that by averaging over parties, they effectively normalize all parties manifestos to the same length so that each contributes equally to the raw space, instead of allowing parties with longer manifestos to contribute more. Below, we elaborate upon the association of Comparative Manifesto Project (CMP) coding categories (Budge, Klingemann, Volkens, Bara and Tanenbaum, 2001; Budge, Klingemann, Volkens, Bara and McDonald, 2006) with the various ideological conflicts. Table 1 reproduces in tabular format the baseline associations between the CMP coding categories and the six potentially salient ideological conflicts that were originally described in the Appendix to the main paper. Many of these associations are uncontroversial. However, not all are. A brief discussion of the rationale underlying some of the less obvious, and hence more problematic, associations follows. Decentralization (PER301) and Centralization (PER302) are viewed as issues associated with the ethnic conflict because many ethnic conflicts are driven by geographically concentrated groups who seek greater political autonomy. National Way of Life: Negative (PER602) and National Way of Life: Positive (PER601) contain appeals to established national ideas, opposition to the existing national state, and expressions of nationalism in general, issues that also seem best related to the ethnic conflict. Particularly problematic categories are Social Justice, Multiculturalism: Positive, Multiculturalism: Negative, Underprivileged Minority Groups and Non-Economic Demographic Groups. The Social Justice category relates primarily to equality in resources and opportunities but also includes racial discrimination. The former should be associated with the socioeconomic conflict and the latter with ethnic conflict. Unfortunately, because we cannot parcel out the quasi-sentences related to racial discrimination without re-coding the manifestos, and because the plurality of these issues relate to socioeconomics, we associate this category with the socioeconomic conflict. This means that the salience of the ethnic cleavage may be underestimated and the salience of the socioeconomic cleavage overestimated. Similarly, the Multiculturalism, Non-economic Demographic Groups, and 2

Underprivileged Minority Groups categories mostly tap the ethnic conflict but to some extant also tap issues related to the religious and post-materialist conflicts. As before, the categories have been associated with the conflict to which the plurality of issues relate, in this case the ethnic, which means that the salience of the former conflicts may be underestimated and the salience of the latter overestimated. Ten coding categories are effectively left out of the baseline associations because we did not see how to unambiguously link them to a single ideological conflict. Many contain what might be viewed as classic valence issues. These even more problematic categories are: Political Authority (PER305); Culture (PER502); Law and Order (PER605); Social Harmony (PER606); Constitutionalism: Positive (PER203); Constitutionalism: Negative (PER204); Government Efficiency (PER303); Corruption (PER304); Democracy (PER202); and Freedom and Human Rights (PER201). The exception is for the countries that underwent a third wave transition to democracy: Greece, Portugal, and Spain. For these three countries, the Freedom and Human Rights and Democracy categories seem to obviously relate to and hence are associated with the democratic authoritarian conflict over the nature of the political regime and the legacy of authoritarianism, as discussed earlier. To deal with these difficult-to-associate categories, we introduce some country- and timespecific modifications to the baseline associations. These modifications are: The Culture and Law and Order categories are associated with either the postmaterialist, the ethnic, or no conflict in a country depending upon the strength of their correlations with the baseline coding categories associated with these conflicts. For example, countries where Culture both reasonably correlates (r > 0.30) with one of the two post-materialist categories and is not more strongly correlated with the ethnic coding categories are Greece and the United Kingdom; for these two countries, Culture is consequently associated with the post-materialist conflict. Note that we begin the Law and Order association in 1960 because of its non-ideological prominence in the aftermath of World War II in several countries. The two National Way of Life categories may be more properly associated with the foreign policy than with the ethnic conflict for countries that have faced significant external threats, from border disputes to cold wars. Accordingly, we take whichever of the two associations seems the most reasonable for each country. For Greece (Turkey), Germany (post-war reconstruction and the Cold War) and Ireland (Northern Ireland), this is deemed to be the foreign policy conflict. For France (de-colonization and the Cold War) and Austria (post-war reconstruction), this same association is made until the 1980s. Because the issues in these categories are then taken up by the Freedom Movement and the Greens in Austria from 1981, and by the National Front in France from 1986, we associate these categories with the post-materialist and ethnic conflicts from 1981 and 1986 onwards, respectively, in these two countries. In both Belgium and Spain, where demands for greater autonomy for ethno-linguistic national minorities have been closely tied to revisions in the existing constitutional 3

structure, we associate the two Constitutionalism categories with the ethnic conflict. In Austria, the call for a strong state has been a particular hallmark of the far right Freedom Movement; hence, the Political Authority category is associated with postmaterialism. Table 2 summarizes the modifications to the baseline associations. To show that our conclusions are not unduly sensitive to these choices, which might appear too idiosyncratic, we present versions of Figures 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 that use only the baseline associations to calculate conflict salience. These are Figures 21 25, respectively. Finally, because of the difficulty of distinguishing between the ethnic and the postmaterialist conflicts due to the way in which the CMP designed its coding categories, we calculate the salience of what is effectively a combined post-materialist-cum-ethnic ideological conflict. To do so, we associate the following coding categories with this new conflict: the baseline coding categories associated with the ethnic conflict ( Decentralization ; Centralization ; National Way of Life, Negative ; National Way of Life, Positive ; Multiculturalism, Positive ; Multiculturalism, Negative ; Underprivileged Minorities ; Non-economic Demographic Groups ); the baseline coding categories associated with the post-materialist conflict ( Anti-growth and Environment ); and the Culture and Law and Order categories. Again, we take this approach because while we believe that a distinction should be made between these two ideological conflicts, it is difficult to do so using the CMP data: we admit that there is a certain degree of arbitrariness in how the prior coding categories are assigned to the ideological conflicts in the original schema. We then compare the salience of this conflict with that of the foreign policy conflict, as defined by the baseline associations; the socioeconomic conflict; the religious conflict; the urban rural conflict; and the democratic authoritarian conflict. Table 3 presents a modified version of the main paper s Table 1, which contains decadeby-decade estimates of the salience of the first six of these ideological conflicts for Western Europe as a whole. Figures 26 30 present the corresponding country-by-country saliences (versions of Figures 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9) and Figures 31 35 present the corresponding countryby-country raw ideological dimensionalities (versions of Figures 11 15). From this table and these figures, we see that we tell a very similar story to that originally told by the main paper. In individual countries, we observe both almost identical trends and relative saliences from country to country, although the combined post-materialist/ethnic cleavage is unsurprisingly now much more salient than either the individual post-materialist or ethnic conflicts were. We also see largely identical trends in the ideological dimensionality, albeit often with a somewhat larger increase (e.g., Norway). Hence, while the combined postmaterialist/ethnic cleavage is a stronger rival to the socioeconomic conflict in most countries since the 1970s, bringing the raw space closer to two dimensional for many countries today, the socioeconomic conflict remains preeminent. At the common Western European level, we come to similar conclusions. For example, the average salience of the combined postmaterialist/ethnic conflict is now twenty-six percent in the early 2000s relative to ten percent in the 1950s, versus forty-one and forty-two percent for the socioeconomic, respectively. And 4

while the raw ideological dimensionality sees a greater increase(to 1.9 dimensions in the early 2000s, versus to 1.6 when using the original set of ideological conflicts) beginning in the 1970s, the increase is still modest (one-half an ideological dimension in total over the postwar period). Hence, while using the combined post-materialist/ethnic conflict may bring our results more closely into alignment with expert surveys in that it boosts the salience of the secondary dimension that contends with socioeconomics, we come to the same conclusions about the phenomena of dealignment and realignment. References Budge, Ian, Hans-Dieter Klingemann, Andrea Volkens, Judith Bara and Eric Tanenbaum, eds. 2001. Mapping Policy Preferences: Estimates for Parties, Electors, and Governments 1945 1998. New York: Oxford University Press. Budge, Ian, Hans-Dieter Klingemann, Andrea Volkens, Judith Bara and Michael McDonald, eds. 2006. Mapping Policy Preferences II: Estimates for Parties, Electors, and Governments in Eastern Europe, European Union and OECD 1990 2003. New York: Oxford University Press. Laakso, Markku and Rein Taagepera. 1979. Effective Number of Parties: A Measure with Application to Western Europe. Comparative Political Studies 12 (1): 3 27. Molinar, Juan. 1991. Counting the Number of Parties: An Alternative Index. American Political Science Review 85 (4): 1383 91. Stoll, Heather. 2004. Social Cleavages, Political Institutions, and Party Systems: Putting Preferences Back into the Fundamental Equation of Politics. Ph.D. diss., Stanford University.. 2011 Dimensionality and the Number of Parties in Legislative Elections. Party Politics 17 (3): 405 430. 5

Belgium France Norway United Kingdom Figure 1: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 6

Belgium France Norway United Kingdom Figure 2: Unsmoothed conflict and issue salience in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 7

Austria Denmark Finland Germany Figure 3: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 8

Austria Denmark Finland Germany Figure 4: Unsmoothed conflict and issue salience in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 9

Greece Iceland Ireland Italy Figure 5: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 10

Greece Iceland Ireland Italy Figure 6: Unsmoothed conflict and issue salience in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 11

Luxembourg Netherlands Portugal Spain Figure 7: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 12

Luxembourg Netherlands Portugal Spain Figure 8: Unsmoothed conflict and issue salience in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 13

Sweden Switzerland Figure 9: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience in two Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 14

Sweden Switzerland Figure 10: Unsmoothed conflict and issue salience in two Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); post-materialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 15

Belgium France Norway United Kingdom Figure 11: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 16

Austria Denmark Finland Germany Figure 12: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 17

Greece Iceland Ireland Italy Figure 13: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 18

Luxembourg Netherlands Portugal Spain Figure 14: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 19

Sweden Switzerland Figure 15: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in two Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 20

Belgium France 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Norway United Kingdom 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Figure 16: LOWESS smoothed raw issue dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 21

Austria Denmark 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Finland Germany 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Figure 17: LOWESS smoothed raw issue dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 22

Greece Iceland 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Ireland Italy 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Figure 18: LOWESS smoothed raw issue dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 23

Luxembourg Netherlands 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Portugal Spain 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Figure 19: LOWESS smoothed raw issue dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 24

Sweden Switzerland 5 10 15 20 25 30 5 10 15 20 25 30 Figure 20: LOWESS smoothed raw issue dimensionality in two Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom). An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 25

26 Code Description Code Description Code Description Socioeconomics Ethnic Foreign Policy PER401 Free enterprise PER301 Decentralization PER101 Foreign Special Relationships, PER402 Incentives PER302 Centralization Positive PER403 Market Regulation PER601 National Way of Life, Positive PER102 Foreign Special Relationships, PER404 Economic Planning PER602 National Way of Life, Negative Negative PER405 Corporatism PER607 Multiculturalism, Positive PER103 Anti-imperialism PER406 Protectionism, Positive PER608 Multiculturalism, Negative PER104 Military, Positive PER407 Protectionism, Negative PER705 Underprivileged Minorities PER105 Military, Negative PER408 Economic Goals PER706 Non-economic Demographic PER106 Peace PER409 Keynesian Demand Mgmt. Groups PER107 Internationalism, Positive PER410 Productivity PER108 EC/EU, Positive PER411 Technology & Infrastructure Religious PER109 Internationalism, Negative PER412 Controlled Economy PER603 Traditional Morality, PER110 EC/EU, Negative PER413 Nationalization Positive PER414 Economic Orthodoxy PER604 Traditional Morality, Democratic Authoritarian PER415 Marxist Analysis Negative PER201 Human Rights & Freedom PER503 Social Justice PER202 Democracy PER504 Welfare State Expansion Post-materialist PER505 Welfare State Limitation PER416 Anti-Growth Urban Rural PER506 Education Expansion PER501 Environment PER703 Agriculture & Farmers PER507 Education Limitation PER701 Labor Groups, Positive PER702 Labor Groups, Negative PER704 Middle Class & Professional Groups Table 1: Baseline CMP coding category conflict associations for the seven potentially salient ideological conflicts. Note that the democratic authoritarian conflict is coded as having zero salience for all countries except Greece, Portugal, and Spain.

Country Foreign Policy Ethnic Post-materialism Austria + PER305 + PER601 (< 1981) PER601 + PER601 ( 1981) + PER602 (< 1981) PER602 + PER602 ( 1981) Belgium + PER203 + PER204 + PER502 + PER605 (> 1959) France + PER502 + PER601 ( 1982) PER601 ( 1982) + PER602 ( 1982) PER602 ( 1982) + PER605 (> 1959) Germany + PER601 PER601 + PER602 PER602 Greece + PER502 + PER601 PER601 + PER602 PER602 Ireland + PER601 PER601 + PER602 PER602 Italy + PER502 Luxembourg + PER502 + PER605 (> 1959) Netherlands + PER502 + PER605 (> 1959) Norway + PER502 Portugal + PER502 Spain + PER203 + PER204 + PER502 + PER605 Switzerland + PER502 + PER605 (> 1959) United Kingdom + PER502 + PER605 (> 1959) Table 2: Country and time-specific modifications to the baseline CMP coding category conflict associations in Table 1. 27

1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s 2000s Conflict and Issue Salience Socioeconomic 42 43 41 40 39 41 (Free Enterprise) 3.0 2.7 2.0 2.1 2.1 1.4 (Welfare State) 5.8 7.0 6.7 7.3 7.4 9.0 Post-materialist/ethnic 10 13 17 21 24 26 (Multiculturalism) 1.2 0.82 0.89 0.65 1.1 1.7 (Centralization) 1.4 2.3 3.0 3.0 2.8 2.9 (Environmental Protection) 0.22 0.90 3.6 5.9 7.2 5.7 Religious 2.2 1.5 2.4 1.9 2.7 2.7 Urban rural 5.8 3.8 2.4 2.5 2.5 2.7 Foreign policy 11 11 8.0 9.6 9.5 9.5 (EC/EU) 0.93 1.7 1.6 1.9 3.3 3.4 (Special Relationships) 2.3 1.8 0.93 0.89 0.44 0.41 Social Groups 15 13 12 12 10 11 Valence 6.3 5.3 6.5 9.0 10 8.3 Uncoded 13 13 12 7.5 3.7 2.7 Raw Dimensionality Ideological Dimensionality 1.3 1.3 1.5 1.7 1.9 1.9 Issue Dimensionality 24 22 22 22 21 19 Table 3: Empirical measures of conflict salience, issue salience and raw space dimensionality by decade based on CMP data from 1950 2003 for Western European countries (2005 for the United Kingdom). Note that the decade labeled 2000s only includes elections in the early 2000s. Salience is measured by the average percentage of political parties manifestos devoted to the set of issues, with the salience of sub-sets of issues of ideological conflicts shown in parentheses. 28

Belgium France Norway United Kingdom Figure 21: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); postmaterialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 29

Austria Denmark Finland Germany Figure 22: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); postmaterialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 30

Greece Iceland Ireland Italy Figure 23: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); postmaterialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 31

Luxembourg Netherlands Portugal Spain Figure 24: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); postmaterialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 32

Sweden Switzerland Figure 25: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations in two Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); postmaterialist (dashed blue); democratic-authoritarian (dot-dashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 33

Belgium France Norway United Kingdom Figure 26: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations and the combined post-materialism/ethnic conflict in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); post-materialism/ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); democratic-authoritarian (dotdashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 34

Austria Denmark Finland Germany Figure 27: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations and the combined post-materialism/ethnic conflict in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); post-materialism/ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); democratic-authoritarian (dotdashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 35

Greece Iceland Ireland Italy Figure 28: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations and the combined post-materialism/ethnic conflict in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); post-materialism/ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); democratic-authoritarian (dotdashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 36

Luxembourg Netherlands Portugal Spain Figure 29: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations and the combined post-materialism/ethnic conflict in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); post-materialism/ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); democratic-authoritarian (dotdashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 37

Sweden Switzerland Figure 30: LOWESS smoothed conflict and issue salience using only baseline coding category conflict associations and the combined post-materialism/ethnic conflict in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom): socioeconomic (solid black); post-materialism/ethnic (dotted red); foreign policy (long dashed orange); religious (dot-dashed green); urban rural (two dashed purple); democratic-authoritarian (dotdashed maroon); valence (solid gray); and social groups (dashed gray). 38

Belgium France Norway United Kingdom Figure 31: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom) using the combined postmaterialism/ethnic conflict. An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 39

Austria Denmark Finland Germany Figure 32: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom) using the combined postmaterialism/ethnic conflict. An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 40

Greece Iceland Ireland Italy Figure 33: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom) using the combined postmaterialism/ethnic conflict. An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 41

Luxembourg Netherlands Portugal Spain Figure 34: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in four Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom) using the combined postmaterialism/ethnic conflict. An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 42

Sweden Switzerland Figure 35: LOWESS smoothed raw ideological dimensionality in two Western European countries, 1950 2003 (2005 for the United Kingdom) using the combined postmaterialism/ethnic conflict. An alternative measure using the standard effective number of Laakso and Taagepera (1979) is shown in dotted black. 43