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Samenvatting Literatuur Political Attitudes and Behaviour in Context.

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A summary of all literature that should be read for the 'Political Attitudes and Behaviour in Context' course. Written in academic year 2020/2021.

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Summary Literature – Political Attitudes and
Behaviour in Context
1.1 Hadjar, A., & Beck, M. (2010). Who Does Not Participate in
Elections in Europe and Why Is This? A Multilevel Analysis of
Social Mechanisms behind Non-Voting. European Societies,
12(4), pp. 521-542.

I. Introduction
Voter turnout on decline in democracies  social problem  lack of voting signifies lack of
democratic representation  decrease legitimacy of elected government  decrease degree of
acceptance of governmental decisions.
RQ: Who are the non-voters, what characterises them and how can voter turnout be increased in
Europe?
 Looking at individual characteristics of non-voters & aspects of electoral systems in Europe.

II. Determinants of Non-Voting
This article: focus on motivational factors (political efficacy, interest, trust, satisfaction) &
sociodemographic factors (education, cohort, gender).

Individual Level Factors
1. Cohort: generation that is characterised by certain educational level & shared socialisation
experiences  common general world view.
 Post-materialism theory: value change  voting no longer adequate means to deal with
issues  more distant from traditional political institutions  cannot be mobilised  non-
voting & unconventional forms of political participation.
 Age effect: political orientations & behaviour develop & increase during lifelong socialisation
process. Political attachments & interests increase over life cycle  voter turnout rises with
age. Lifecycle theory: political concerns mature with age  more likely to vote & deal with
politics.
2. Education: understood in terms of cognitive abilities. Also: indicator of social position & status.
 High education  improvement of participation, shape opportunities & political
competences. Characterised by more advanced competences in recognising, understanding
& reflecting on political issues  easier access to politics & political issues.
 Education determinant of moral development & responsibility  higher educated stronger
sense of civic duty to participate in elections & socialised in environment that supports civic
norms of political participation/democracy. Voting habit.
 Education not same for all cohorts. Changing composition of educational groups might close gap
between higher educated & less educated in political attitudes & behaviour. Influx of working class
into higher education  heterogenization  voting behaviour of higher educated more similar to
that of lower educated.
3. Gender: women expected to be non-voters more often than men.
4. Political Efficacy: the degree to which person believes in own ability to understand politics &
individual political action does have influence on political processes. Lack of efficacy  non-voter.
 Internal efficacy: individual competences, skills & resources to deal with politics.

,  External efficacy: individual perception that political institutions are responsive to one’s
attempt to exert political influence.
5. Political Interest: degree to which politics arouses citizens’ curiosity. Linked to political behaviour.
Interest  involvement political activities  more likely to vote.
6. Trust: trust in countries political system is part of individual’s evaluation of political system on
whether political objects are performing in accordance with normative expectations of public. Trust
 confident that political system is responding to their voting behaviour  vote.
7. Satisfaction with political institutions & politicians: highly satisfied with government & political
system  voting as ‘civic duty’  less likely non-voter.

The probability of non-voting …
… is higher among younger – later-born – cohorts (H1).
… increases with a lower educational level (H2a).
… increases more strongly over cohort succession among tertiary-educated; therefore the distinction
of the tertiary-educated people in their higher voting level decreases over time (H2b).
… is higher among women than among men (H3).
… decreases with a higher political efficacy (H4).
… decreases with a higher political interest (H5).
… decreases with a higher political trust (H6).
… decreases with a higher political satisfaction (H7).

Societal Level Factors
1. Compulsory voting: increases voter turnout by enforcement or internalisation.
2. Disproportionality factor: shape of disproportionality of electoral system determines actual &
perceived impact of vote. High disproportionality  non-voting. Also influences political efficacy.
3. Maturity of democracy: democratic experience  stimulation of political learning process 
political efficacy  voting.
4. Forms of direct democracy (referendum): participation opportunities. Direct democracies 
educative effect  enhanced civic engagement, more political trust & mobilisation of
parties/interest groups  increase voter turnout.

The probability of non-voting …
… is higher in ‘young democracies’ with a short democratic experience (H8).
… is lower in countries with a compulsory voting law (H9).
… is lower in countries where elements of direct democratic participation are frequently used (H10)
… increases with an increasing disproportionality factor (H11).

,
, 1.2 Van der Meer, T., & Hakhverdian, A. (2017). Political Trust
as the Evaluation of Process and Performance: A Cross-National
Study of 42 European Countries. Political Studies, 65(1), pp. 81-
102.

Introduction
Trust in democratic political institutions important facet of legitimacy. Also: degree of scepticism
beneficial  seeking evidence to (dis)trust  motivates to involve in politics. Diffuse vs. specific
support  trust in regime, scepticism in governing institutions/actors.
RQ: Do citizens retroactively judge the quality of the macroeconomic outcomes or democratic
procedures? And if so, do citizens decide to grant/withhold trust based on cross-sectional evidence
on how well one’s own country is performing compared to other countries?
Debated whether political trust is based on actual policy performance & actual procedures.
 This article: examining evaluative nature of political trust  1) test to what extent performance
(economically) & process (corruption) feature in citizens’ trust-calculus, 2) taking (cognitive/moral)
heterogeneity of population into account (individuals different criteria for evaluation).

Theory
The Nature of Trust
Trust: subjective evaluation of relationship between subject & object – A trusts B to do x. Relational
nature  look for explanations of trust in characteristics of subject (citizen), object (institution) &
their interaction.
 Rational: evaluated by own merits. Trust as rational implies that objects meets requirements
of being:
o Competent: perform according to expectations.
o Caring: intrinsically committed.
o Accountable: extrinsically committed due to encapsulated interest.
o Predictable: consistent.

Economic Performance
Trust  evaluative  good performance in terms of substantive policy outcomes  higher trust.
Mostly focus on macro-economic performance, seems to have most impact. However: based on
(individual/aggregate) subjective evaluations of economy rather than objective performance 
contested whether objective evaluations influence trust.
This article: considering six economic indicators & how they relate to trust: economic development
(+), growth (+), inflation (-), unemployment (-), budget deficits (-) & income inequality (-).

Democratic Processes
Democratic process accounts go beyond discontent with particular decisions/outcomes, tap more
deep-rooted perceptions about how democracy works. Trust  evaluation  higher trust in context
of institutional quality.
This article: focus on corruption. Undermines efficiency & effectiveness of national politics  lack of
accountability/responsiveness  less trust.

Who Cares About Performance?

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