Publication Type
Journal Article
Version
publishedVersion
Publication Date
9-2005
Abstract
The Convention on the Future of Europe that led to the eventual drafting of an EU Constitution involved numerous political actors from many countries. Their negotiations over the constitution generated a huge volume of texts containing substantive information about their preferences for EU institutional and political outcomes. In this paper, we attempt to measure these preferences at the national party level by analysing the Convention texts using the computerized ‘word-scoring’ method for text analysis (Laver et al., 2003). For each national party whose delegates’ texts were recorded at the Convention, we estimate their positions on four political dimensions. We then test the validity of these estimates by comparing them with measures of national party positions on EU policy dimensions obtained through an extensive expert survey undertaken in 27 countries (the EU 25 plus Turkey and Romania). Our results show strong evidence that the word-scoring method is broadly successful in reconstructing the map of national party preferences for and against a more centralized and more powerful Europe as expressed through the Convention texts.
Discipline
Eastern European Studies | Political Science
Research Areas
Political Science
Publication
European Union Politics
Volume
6
Issue
3
First Page
291
Last Page
313
ISSN
1465-1165
Identifier
10.1177/1465116505054834
Publisher
SAGE Publications
Citation
BENOIT, Kenneth, LAVER, Michael, ARNOLD, Christine, PENNINGS, Paul, & HOSLI, Madeline O..(2005). Measuring national delegate positions at the convention on the future of Europe using computerized word scoring. European Union Politics, 6(3), 291-313.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3987
Copyright Owner and License
Publisher
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 International License.
Additional URL
https://doi.org/10.1177/1465116505054834