Core and Peripheral Voters: Predictors of Turnout Across Three Types of Elections

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Core and Peripheral Voters : Predictors of Turnout Across Three Types of Elections . / Dahlgaard, Jens Olav; Bhatti, Yosef.

In: Political Studies, 09.04.2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Dahlgaard, JO & Bhatti, Y 2018, 'Core and Peripheral Voters: Predictors of Turnout Across Three Types of Elections ', Political Studies. https://doi.org/10.1177/0032321718766246

APA

Dahlgaard, J. O., & Bhatti, Y. (2018). Core and Peripheral Voters: Predictors of Turnout Across Three Types of Elections . Political Studies. https://doi.org/10.1177/0032321718766246

Vancouver

Dahlgaard JO, Bhatti Y. Core and Peripheral Voters: Predictors of Turnout Across Three Types of Elections . Political Studies. 2018 Apr 9. https://doi.org/10.1177/0032321718766246

Author

Dahlgaard, Jens Olav ; Bhatti, Yosef. / Core and Peripheral Voters : Predictors of Turnout Across Three Types of Elections . In: Political Studies. 2018.

Bibtex

@article{26f5d36f957a456a97c965e818b674e2,
title = "Core and Peripheral Voters: Predictors of Turnout Across Three Types of Elections ",
abstract = "Citizens who abstain from voting in consecutive elections and inequality in turnout in democratic elections constitute a challenge to the legitimacy of democracy. Applying the law of dispersion, which stipulates higher levels of turnout and higher levels of equality in turnout are positively related, we study turnout patterns across different types of elections in Denmark, a high-turnout European context. Across three different elections with turnout rates from 56.3% to 85.9%, we use a rich, nationwide panel dataset of 2.1 million citizens with validated turnout and high-quality sociodemographic variables. A total of 9% of the citizens are abstainers in the three consecutive elections, and these are disproportionately male, of non-Western ethnic background, with little education, and with low income. The law of dispersion finds support as inequalities in turnout increase when turnout decreases and vice versa. Furthermore, municipalities with lower turnout have higher inequalities in participation than high-turnout municipalities in local elections.",
keywords = "Faculty of Social Sciences, voter turnout, participation, law of dispersion, inequality",
author = "Dahlgaard, {Jens Olav} and Yosef Bhatti",
year = "2018",
month = apr,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1177/0032321718766246",
language = "English",
journal = "Political Studies",
issn = "0032-3217",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Core and Peripheral Voters

T2 - Predictors of Turnout Across Three Types of Elections

AU - Dahlgaard, Jens Olav

AU - Bhatti, Yosef

PY - 2018/4/9

Y1 - 2018/4/9

N2 - Citizens who abstain from voting in consecutive elections and inequality in turnout in democratic elections constitute a challenge to the legitimacy of democracy. Applying the law of dispersion, which stipulates higher levels of turnout and higher levels of equality in turnout are positively related, we study turnout patterns across different types of elections in Denmark, a high-turnout European context. Across three different elections with turnout rates from 56.3% to 85.9%, we use a rich, nationwide panel dataset of 2.1 million citizens with validated turnout and high-quality sociodemographic variables. A total of 9% of the citizens are abstainers in the three consecutive elections, and these are disproportionately male, of non-Western ethnic background, with little education, and with low income. The law of dispersion finds support as inequalities in turnout increase when turnout decreases and vice versa. Furthermore, municipalities with lower turnout have higher inequalities in participation than high-turnout municipalities in local elections.

AB - Citizens who abstain from voting in consecutive elections and inequality in turnout in democratic elections constitute a challenge to the legitimacy of democracy. Applying the law of dispersion, which stipulates higher levels of turnout and higher levels of equality in turnout are positively related, we study turnout patterns across different types of elections in Denmark, a high-turnout European context. Across three different elections with turnout rates from 56.3% to 85.9%, we use a rich, nationwide panel dataset of 2.1 million citizens with validated turnout and high-quality sociodemographic variables. A total of 9% of the citizens are abstainers in the three consecutive elections, and these are disproportionately male, of non-Western ethnic background, with little education, and with low income. The law of dispersion finds support as inequalities in turnout increase when turnout decreases and vice versa. Furthermore, municipalities with lower turnout have higher inequalities in participation than high-turnout municipalities in local elections.

KW - Faculty of Social Sciences

KW - voter turnout

KW - participation

KW - law of dispersion

KW - inequality

U2 - 10.1177/0032321718766246

DO - 10.1177/0032321718766246

M3 - Journal article

JO - Political Studies

JF - Political Studies

SN - 0032-3217

ER -

ID: 194945646