> the relevance of voter nonparticipation is not trying find
> the ideology that lurks behind it but reckoning with the
> refusal/nonparticipation as a political act itself.
(Wouldn't that be an ideology lurking?)
How would you square that with the other finding, which has been mentioned several times now, that non-voters are more satisfied with the way things are than voters? How could you tease non-voting as a political act out of that?
/jordan