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Relative deprivation and inequalities in social and political activism

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Relative deprivation and inequalities in social and political activism. / Grasso, Maria T.; Yoxon, Barbara; Karampampas, Sotirios et al.
In: Acta Politica, Vol. 54, 01.07.2019, p. 398-429.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Grasso, MT, Yoxon, B, Karampampas, S & Temple, L 2019, 'Relative deprivation and inequalities in social and political activism', Acta Politica, vol. 54, pp. 398-429. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41269-017-0072-y

APA

Grasso, M. T., Yoxon, B., Karampampas, S., & Temple, L. (2019). Relative deprivation and inequalities in social and political activism. Acta Politica, 54, 398-429. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41269-017-0072-y

Vancouver

Grasso MT, Yoxon B, Karampampas S, Temple L. Relative deprivation and inequalities in social and political activism. Acta Politica. 2019 Jul 1;54:398-429. Epub 2017 Dec 13. doi: 10.1057/s41269-017-0072-y

Author

Grasso, Maria T. ; Yoxon, Barbara ; Karampampas, Sotirios et al. / Relative deprivation and inequalities in social and political activism. In: Acta Politica. 2019 ; Vol. 54. pp. 398-429.

Bibtex

@article{17108aee36034ce88f6407f64a517ec0,
title = "Relative deprivation and inequalities in social and political activism",
abstract = "In this paper we analyse whether relative deprivation has divergent effects on different types of social and political action. We expect that it will depress volunteering with parties as well as different types of conventional political participation more generally while stimulating volunteering with anti-cuts organisations and engagement in various kinds of protest activism. There is little research into how relative deprivation impacts on different types of social and political action from the wide range of activities available to citizens in contemporary democracies as well as into how this relationship might vary based on the wider economic context. While many studies construct scales, we examine participation in specific activities and associations, such as parties or anti-cuts organisations, voting, contacting, demonstrating and striking to show that deprivation has divergent effects that depart from what is traditionally argued. We apply random effects models with cross-level interactions utilizing an original cross-national European dataset collected in 2015 (N = 17,667) within a collaborative funded-project. We show that a negative economic context has a mobilizing effect by both increasing the stimulating effect of relative deprivation on protest activism as well as by closing or reversing the gap between resource-poor and resource-rich groups for volunteering with parties and voting.",
author = "Grasso, {Maria T.} and Barbara Yoxon and Sotirios Karampampas and Luke Temple",
year = "2019",
month = jul,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1057/s41269-017-0072-y",
language = "English",
volume = "54",
pages = "398--429",
journal = "Acta Politica",
issn = "0001-6810",
publisher = "Palgrave Macmillan Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Relative deprivation and inequalities in social and political activism

AU - Grasso, Maria T.

AU - Yoxon, Barbara

AU - Karampampas, Sotirios

AU - Temple, Luke

PY - 2019/7/1

Y1 - 2019/7/1

N2 - In this paper we analyse whether relative deprivation has divergent effects on different types of social and political action. We expect that it will depress volunteering with parties as well as different types of conventional political participation more generally while stimulating volunteering with anti-cuts organisations and engagement in various kinds of protest activism. There is little research into how relative deprivation impacts on different types of social and political action from the wide range of activities available to citizens in contemporary democracies as well as into how this relationship might vary based on the wider economic context. While many studies construct scales, we examine participation in specific activities and associations, such as parties or anti-cuts organisations, voting, contacting, demonstrating and striking to show that deprivation has divergent effects that depart from what is traditionally argued. We apply random effects models with cross-level interactions utilizing an original cross-national European dataset collected in 2015 (N = 17,667) within a collaborative funded-project. We show that a negative economic context has a mobilizing effect by both increasing the stimulating effect of relative deprivation on protest activism as well as by closing or reversing the gap between resource-poor and resource-rich groups for volunteering with parties and voting.

AB - In this paper we analyse whether relative deprivation has divergent effects on different types of social and political action. We expect that it will depress volunteering with parties as well as different types of conventional political participation more generally while stimulating volunteering with anti-cuts organisations and engagement in various kinds of protest activism. There is little research into how relative deprivation impacts on different types of social and political action from the wide range of activities available to citizens in contemporary democracies as well as into how this relationship might vary based on the wider economic context. While many studies construct scales, we examine participation in specific activities and associations, such as parties or anti-cuts organisations, voting, contacting, demonstrating and striking to show that deprivation has divergent effects that depart from what is traditionally argued. We apply random effects models with cross-level interactions utilizing an original cross-national European dataset collected in 2015 (N = 17,667) within a collaborative funded-project. We show that a negative economic context has a mobilizing effect by both increasing the stimulating effect of relative deprivation on protest activism as well as by closing or reversing the gap between resource-poor and resource-rich groups for volunteering with parties and voting.

U2 - 10.1057/s41269-017-0072-y

DO - 10.1057/s41269-017-0072-y

M3 - Journal article

VL - 54

SP - 398

EP - 429

JO - Acta Politica

JF - Acta Politica

SN - 0001-6810

ER -