Income Inequality and Voting for Radical Right-wing Parties
K. Han. Electoral Studies, 42 (6):
54-64(2016)(EVS) (ISSP).
Zusammenfassung
Using a multilevel analysis method, this article tests different hypotheses for how income inequality affects voter support for radical right-wing parties (RRPs) in Western Europe. Specifically, the article shows how this ‘income inequality effect’ encourages poor people to vote for RRPs, while it concurrently discourages rich people from doing so. This finding supports the social identity hypothesis, which states that social identity (a micro-level factor) intermediates income inequality effect (a macro-level factor) on voter support for RRPs. The article's results suggest, further, that income inequality has different effects between the main supporters of RRPs with dissimilar occupations (e.g., manual workers and the petty bourgeoisie) because they belong to different income groups; and that country-level factors may have different effects on people regarding their support for RRPs.
•Income inequality has different effects on the support for radical right-wing parties between different income groups.•While income inequality encourages the poor to vote for radical right-wing parties, it dissuades rich people from doing so.•Inequality has dissimilar impacts on party support between different key constituencies of radical right-wing parties.
%0 Journal Article
%1 han2016income
%A Han, Kyung Joon
%D 2016
%J Electoral Studies
%K 2016 EVS EVS_input2016 FDZ_IUP ISSP ISSP_input2016 SCOPUSindexed SSCIindexed article checked indexproved input2016 isspbib2016 review_proved reviewed
%N 6
%P 54-64
%T Income Inequality and Voting for Radical Right-wing Parties
%V 42
%X Using a multilevel analysis method, this article tests different hypotheses for how income inequality affects voter support for radical right-wing parties (RRPs) in Western Europe. Specifically, the article shows how this ‘income inequality effect’ encourages poor people to vote for RRPs, while it concurrently discourages rich people from doing so. This finding supports the social identity hypothesis, which states that social identity (a micro-level factor) intermediates income inequality effect (a macro-level factor) on voter support for RRPs. The article's results suggest, further, that income inequality has different effects between the main supporters of RRPs with dissimilar occupations (e.g., manual workers and the petty bourgeoisie) because they belong to different income groups; and that country-level factors may have different effects on people regarding their support for RRPs.
•Income inequality has different effects on the support for radical right-wing parties between different income groups.•While income inequality encourages the poor to vote for radical right-wing parties, it dissuades rich people from doing so.•Inequality has dissimilar impacts on party support between different key constituencies of radical right-wing parties.
@article{han2016income,
abstract = {Using a multilevel analysis method, this article tests different hypotheses for how income inequality affects voter support for radical right-wing parties (RRPs) in Western Europe. Specifically, the article shows how this ‘income inequality effect’ encourages poor people to vote for RRPs, while it concurrently discourages rich people from doing so. This finding supports the social identity hypothesis, which states that social identity (a micro-level factor) intermediates income inequality effect (a macro-level factor) on voter support for RRPs. The article's results suggest, further, that income inequality has different effects between the main supporters of RRPs with dissimilar occupations (e.g., manual workers and the petty bourgeoisie) because they belong to different income groups; and that country-level factors may have different effects on people regarding their support for RRPs.
•Income inequality has different effects on the support for radical right-wing parties between different income groups.•While income inequality encourages the poor to vote for radical right-wing parties, it dissuades rich people from doing so.•Inequality has dissimilar impacts on party support between different key constituencies of radical right-wing parties.},
added-at = {2019-03-20T18:49:19.000+0100},
author = {Han, Kyung Joon},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2b2ce47d04e03767e419fed2f82391cb9/gesis_dump},
interhash = {d5e303be0f2dfe74d5c7a39b4079a52f},
intrahash = {b2ce47d04e03767e419fed2f82391cb9},
journal = {Electoral Studies},
keywords = {2016 EVS EVS_input2016 FDZ_IUP ISSP ISSP_input2016 SCOPUSindexed SSCIindexed article checked indexproved input2016 isspbib2016 review_proved reviewed},
note = {(EVS) (ISSP)},
number = 6,
pages = {54-64},
tagadata-svko-dda-test = {10767},
tagadata-svkoddatest2 = {10760},
timestamp = {2019-10-01T13:01:21.000+0200},
title = {Income Inequality and Voting for Radical Right-wing Parties},
volume = 42,
year = 2016
}