TY - BOOK AU - Szulecki,Kacper AU - Erdal,Marta Bivand AU - Stanley,Ben ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - External Voting: The Patterns and Drivers of Central European Migrants' Homeland Electoral Participation T2 - Migration, Diasporas and Citizenship, SN - 9783031192463 AV - JV6225-6231 U1 - 304.82 23 PY - 2023/// CY - Cham PB - Springer International Publishing, Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan KW - Emigration and immigration KW - Social aspects KW - Political sociology KW - Elections KW - Sociology of Migration KW - Political Sociology KW - Electoral Politics KW - Diaspora Studies N1 - 1 Introduction -- Defining External Voting -- Expansion of Emigrant Franchise -- External Voting Landscape: Countries, Elections, Criteria, and Modalities -- What Do We Know About External Voting? Migration Studies Meet Political Science -- References -- 2 Emigration and Transnational Political Practices in Central and Eastern Europe After EU Enlargement.-04–2007 -- East-West Migration in Europe: Political Context and Consequences -- The DIASPOlitic Project, Data Gathering, and Methods -- Data Gathering and Method: Quantitative Analysis of External Voting Results -- Data Gathering and Method: Qualitative Study of Migrant Voting -- References -- 3 External Voting Patterns: CEE Migrants in Western Europe -- The Political Contexts of the Countries of Origin -- Bulgaria -- Czechia -- Latvia -- Lithuania -- Poland -- Romania -- Data and Methods -- Results of the Analysis -- Turnout Patterns and Change Over Time -- Overall Disparity -- Ideological Disparity -- References -- 4 Migrant Perspectives on External Voting.-Making Sense of the Reasons Why Migrants Vote “Back Home” -- Motivations for Voting in Country-of-Origin Elections -- The Practical Possibility of Casting the Vote in Elections -- Interacting Scales of Motivation for External Voting -- Emigration, External Voting, and Political Engagement -- Transnational Lifeworlds and Politics -- How Does the Experience of Migration Influence Political Views? -- Concluding Discussion -- References -- 5 Conclusions -- What Have We Learned About External Voting? Discussion of Findings -- Differences Between Diaspora Voting and “Homeland” Results -- Ideological Differences -- What Do We Know About Turnout? -- Why Do Migrants Vote, or Not? -- Legitimacy and Normative Considerations Surrounding External Voting -- Do Migrants Desire to Be “Agents of Change”? -- Research Frontiers and Future Knowledge Needs -- Three Areas for Further Research: Empirical Knowledge Needs -- Three Areas for Further Research: Normative Dimension -- References; Open Access N2 - This open access book is the first monograph that brings together insights from comparative politics, political sociology, and migration studies to introduce the current state of knowledge on external voting and transnational politics. Drawing on new data gathered within the DIASPOlitic project, which created a comparative dataset of external voting results for 6 countries of origin and 17 countries of residence as well as an extensive qualitative dataset of 80 in-depth interviews with four groups of migrants, this book not only illustrates theoretical problems with empirical material, but also provides answers to previously unaddressed questions. This book’s introduction takes stock of current research on transnational politics and external voting, presenting core puzzles. The following chapter introduces the context of intra-European migration and the political situation in Central-Eastern European sending countries. The next two sections address the empirical puzzles, drawing on new quantitative and qualitative. The conclusion takes stock of the evidence gathered, discusses the normative problem of non-resident voters enfranchisement, connects external voting to the broader debate on political remittances and finally, maps the terrain ahead for future research. This concise, empirically grounded introduction to external voting is critical reading in structuring the debate around migration and shaping research agendas for the future UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-19246-3 ER -