Shifting Focus in Development Studies: Papers in Development and Society , 1998-2013
In: Development and society, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 59-80
ISSN: 2586-6079
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In: Development and society, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 59-80
ISSN: 2586-6079
In: Journal of Memory & Vision, Band 47, S. 134-187
In: Journal of Memory & Vision, Band 40, S. 62-120
In: Journal of Asian and African studies: JAAS, S. 002190962311680
ISSN: 1745-2538
This study examines how perceptions of economic inequality affect political participation focusing on East Asian democracies. It develops nuanced predictions on how perceptions of income inequality and social mobility and their interplay affect individuals' engagement in various types of political activities in six East Asian democracies. Using the fourth wave of the Asian Barometer Survey, we examine novel arguments built upon the existing inequality-participation nexus. Our analysis suggests that inequality is a multifaceted concept, and the mechanisms of the inequality-participation nexus could vary depending on the regional, socioeconomic, and political context.
In: Political studies: the journal of the Political Studies Association of the United Kingdom, Band 71, Heft 4, S. 1129-1150
ISSN: 1467-9248
Previous research has provided contested hypotheses about the impact of income inequality on electoral participation. This study reexamines the debate between conflict and relative power theories by focusing on a largely ignored factor: social mobility. We argue that social mobility conditions the inequality-participation nexus by alleviating the frustration, class conflict, and efficacy gaps between the rich and the poor that the prevailing theories assume income inequality to create. By utilizing the Cooperative Congressional Election Survey, we test this argument focusing on US counties. Our analysis confirms that the effects of income inequality on citizens' likelihood of voting vary depending on mobility, suggesting that social mobility provides a crucial context in which income inequality can play out in substantially different ways. This article implies that more scholarly endeavors should be made to clarify the multifaceted structure of inequality for improving our understanding of the relationship between economic and political inequality.
Previous research has provided contested hypotheses about the impact of income inequality on electoral participation. This study reexamines the debate between conflict and relative power theories by focusing on a largely ignored factor: social mobility. We argue that social mobility conditions the inequality-participation nexus by alleviating the frustration, class conflict, and efficacy gaps between the rich and the poor that the prevailing theories assume income inequality to create. By utilizing the Cooperative Congressional Election Survey, we test this argument focusing on US counties. Our analysis confirms that the effects of income inequality on citizens' likelihood of voting vary depending on mobility, suggesting that social mobility provides a crucial context in which income inequality can play out in substantially different ways. This article implies that more scholarly endeavors should be made to clarify the multifaceted structure of inequality for improving our understanding of the relationship between economic and political inequality.
BASE
In: Journal of Korean Women's Studies, Band 35, Heft 1, S. 1-37
In: Korean Journal of Sociology, Band 52, Heft 4, S. 115-159
In: Korean Journal of Sociology, Band 57, Heft 4, S. 1-47
ISSN: 2765-5814