The Scar Effects of Unemployment on Electoral Participation: Withdrawal and Mobilization across European Societies

Author:

Azzollini Leo12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, Institute for New Economic Thinking, OX1 3UQ Oxford, UK

2. Department of Sociology, Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science and Nuffield College, University of Oxford, OX1 1JD Oxford, UK

Abstract

Abstract Does unemployment increase or decrease electoral participation? A considerable body of work has examined this classic question, focusing on individual and contextual unemployment. However, this literature has scarcely examined the role of past experiences of unemployment, and not yet addressed their interaction with contextual unemployment. In this article, we extend the framework of unemployment scarring to study electoral behaviour. First, we posit that unemployment scars decrease electoral participation. Second, we formulate competing hypotheses on the macro–micro interactions between unemployment rates and scarring at the country, NUTS1 and 2 levels. We test these hypotheses relying on Rounds 4–8 (2008–2016) of the European Social Survey, for 26 countries. Results from logistic regressions with country and year fixed effects indicate that citizens with long unemployment scars are 9% less likely to vote than the non-scarred. We further find that higher unemployment rates at the sub-national levels slightly increase turnout, while there is no significant effect at the country level. For the sub-national levels, we find that lower unemployment rates exacerbate the individual scarring effect on turnout up to 13%. These findings remark that the framework of the scar effects of unemployment further illuminates the relationship between social stratification and political behaviour.

Funder

European Research Council

Synergy Project DINA

Towards a System of Distributional National Accounts

Leverhulme Trust Grant for the Leverhulme Centre for Demographic Science

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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