Conjoint survey experiment data from Israel's 2019-2021 election cycles measures voter preferences across security, redistribution, and nationalist policy axes. Created by Shingo Hamanaka, the study identifies how specific policy areas influence party support during periods of parliamentary instability.
Use Cases
- Quantifying the marginal utility of redistributive policy stances on voter party selection
- Comparing the relative importance of security policy versus Jewish nationalist legislation in the 2019-2021 election cycle
- Simulating coalition stability by analyzing voter support for policy-broad vs. ideologically narrow party profiles
Strengths
- Conjoint experiment methodology allows for the isolation of specific policy effects on voter choice
- Covers the unique 2019-2021 period featuring four national elections in Israel
- Includes specific variables for Jewish nationalist legislation and redistributive policies
Limitations
- Specific record count and sample size are not disclosed in the metadata
- Geographically restricted to Israel, limiting generalizability to other parliamentary systems
- Lack of explicit column definitions or a data dictionary in the provided summary
Provenance
- Source
- Harvard Dataverse
- Collection Method
- conjoint survey experiment
- Time Range
- 2019-2021
- Freshness
- Last updated March 2026.
- Geography
- Israel