Political party affiliation strength and protest participation propensity: theory and evidence from Africa

IF 2.5 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Joel Blaxland
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

ABSTRACT The confluence of political party polarization, interparty conflict, and contentious politics is nearly a universal axiom in Africa. Although the reasons for parties to protest and rally are many, pinpointing who actually participates is rather tricky. Building on previous literature regarding the influential power of political parties on member behaviour, this study proposes political party affiliation strength as metric for identifying whom within political parties is more and less likely to participate in in-person political protests and rallies. Using data on Kenya, Nigeria, and Tunisia, this study finds strong supporting evidence that party affiliation strength effects protest participation propensity mediated by party-government linkages. Those strongly affiliated to political parties that enjoy majority power in government are less likely to protest, and strong affiliates of non-majority power-holding parties are more likely to protest. Preliminary evidence presented here also demonstrates those with non-political party affiliation are significantly more likely to post online about political issues rather than participate in in-person contentious politics. This study’s findings help further bridge the gap between individual political psychology and macro-level political behaviour.
政党隶属度与抗议参与倾向:来自非洲的理论与证据
在非洲,政党极化、政党间冲突和有争议的政治几乎是一个普遍的公理。尽管各党派抗议和集会的原因有很多,但确定谁真正参与是相当棘手的。在先前关于政党对成员行为的影响力的文献的基础上,本研究提出政党隶属关系强度作为确定政党中谁更可能或更不可能参与面对面的政治抗议和集会的指标。利用肯尼亚、尼日利亚和突尼斯的数据,本研究发现了强有力的支持证据,表明政党隶属强度影响由党政关系中介的抗议参与倾向。那些与在政府中享有多数权力的政党关系密切的人不太可能抗议,而与非多数权力政党关系密切的人更有可能抗议。这里提出的初步证据还表明,那些与政党无关的人更有可能在网上发表政治问题,而不是亲自参与有争议的政治活动。本研究的发现有助于进一步弥合个人政治心理和宏观政治行为之间的差距。
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
CiteScore
7.50
自引率
9.70%
发文量
55
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