We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Inequalities in Non-institutionalised Forms of Political Participation: A Multi-level Analysis of 25 countries.
- Authors
Marien, Sofie; Hooghe, Marc; Quintelier, Ellen
- Abstract
Various studies suggest that while institutionalised and electoral forms of political participation are in decline in Western societies, non-institutionalised forms of participation (like demonstrating, political consumerism or signing petitions) are on the rise. However, this expansion of the political action repertoire of citizens also entails the question of equal participation opportunities. It can be argued that contemporary ideals of democratic participation assume an equal representation of citizens' interests. In this article we analyse the equality of participation patterns using comparative data from the 2004 ISSP survey. Our results suggest that non-institutionalised forms of participation increase patterns of inequality due to education but strongly reduce or even reverse gender and age inequalities. As such, both institutionalised and non-institutionalised forms of participation have specific (dis)advantages from the perspective of preserving equal access to democratic decision-making procedures.
- Subjects
POLITICAL participation; SOCIAL action; ACTIVISTS; RIGHT of petition; PUBLIC demonstrations; SOCIOLOGY; DECISION making; POLITICAL community
- Publication
Political Studies, 2010, Vol 58, Issue 1, p187
- ISSN
0032-3217
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1467-9248.2009.00801.x