Are “bad” jobs bad for democracy? Precarious work and electoral participation in Europe

IF 2.3 Q1 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Leo Azzollini, Ross Macmillan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction While socioeconomic inequality in voting has been central for research on electoral participation, recent years have seen radical changes in labor relations. The key issue is increasing prevalence of precarious work, involving dimensions as non-indefinite tenure and limited control over work activities. While occupations traditionally were the locus of political socialization, there is scarce research connecting occupational uncertainty to electoral participation. To fill this void, we develop a framework that connects the multiple dimensions of precarious work to electoral participation. Methods We test these ideas using data from 32 countries from the European Social Survey (2008–2018). Results and discussion Results indicate that work precarity is both strongly connected to traditional indicators of SES and has large, independent effects on probability of voting. We corroborate these results with heterogeneity analyses across countries. Findings show how precarious work heightens socio-economic stratification in electoral participation, undermining the universality of the right to vote and the health of democracies.
“糟糕”的工作对民主不利吗?欧洲的不稳定工作和选举参与
引言虽然投票中的社会经济不平等一直是选举参与研究的核心,但近年来劳资关系发生了根本性变化。关键问题是不稳定工作日益普遍,涉及非无限期任期和对工作活动的有限控制等方面。虽然职业传统上是政治社会化的场所,但很少有研究将职业不确定性与选举参与联系起来。为了填补这一空白,我们制定了一个框架,将不稳定工作的多个层面与选举参与联系起来。方法我们使用来自欧洲社会调查(2008-2018)的32个国家的数据来测试这些想法。结果和讨论结果表明,工作不稳定性与SES的传统指标密切相关,并且对投票概率有很大的独立影响。我们通过各国的异质性分析证实了这些结果。调查结果表明,不稳定的工作如何加剧了选举参与中的社会经济分层,破坏了投票权的普遍性和民主国家的健康。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Political Science
Frontiers in Political Science Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
135
审稿时长
13 weeks
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