Layered Legacies. How Multiple Histories Shaped the Attitudes of Contemporary Europeans

IF 2.7 2区 社会学 Q1 SOCIOLOGY
Andreas Wimmer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This article introduces the concept of multiple, layered, and interacting histories, which opens four new avenues of research. We can ask which types of institutions or events, such as states, religions, or war, are more likely to leave a historical legacy. We can also explore why only certain states, religions, or wars leave legacies. We can compare the consequences of older and newer layers of history, such as of a series of successor states. Finally, these layers may interact with each other by preserving, neutralizing, or amplifying each other's effects. To illustrate these new research avenues, I use measurements of value orientations as well as generalized trust from the European Social Survey as dependent variables. New data on the history of states as well as the wars fought since 1500 are combined with existing data on the medieval policies of the Church, all coded at the level of 411 European regions. A series of regression models suggests that the political history of states is more consequential for contemporary attitudes than medieval religious policies or wars, that older layers of states can be as impactful as more recent ones, that interactions between layers are frequent, and that modern nation-states are more likely to leave a legacy than other types of polities.
分层的遗产。多重历史如何塑造当代欧洲人的态度
本文引入了多重、分层和相互作用的历史概念,开辟了四个新的研究途径。我们可以问哪些类型的机构或事件,如国家、宗教或战争,更有可能留下历史遗产。我们还可以探讨为什么只有某些国家、宗教或战争会留下遗产。我们可以比较新旧历史层次的后果,比如一系列继承国的后果。最后,这些层可以通过保持、中和或放大彼此的影响而相互作用。为了说明这些新的研究途径,我使用欧洲社会调查的价值取向测量和广义信任作为因变量。关于国家历史的新数据以及自1500年以来的战争与中世纪教会政策的现有数据相结合,所有这些数据都以411个欧洲地区的水平进行编码。一系列的回归模型表明,与中世纪的宗教政策或战争相比,国家的政治历史对当代态度的影响更大;较老的国家阶层与较新的国家阶层一样有影响力;各阶层之间的互动频繁;现代民族国家比其他类型的政治更有可能留下遗产。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Sociological Science
Sociological Science Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
2.90%
发文量
13
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: Sociological Science is an open-access, online, peer-reviewed, international journal for social scientists committed to advancing a general understanding of social processes. Sociological Science welcomes original research and commentary from all subfields of sociology, and does not privilege any particular theoretical or methodological approach.
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