167 research outputs found
Voter preferences as a source of descriptive (mis)representation by social class
This paper presents the results of a conjoint survey experiment in which Swiss citizens were asked to choose among parliamentary candidates with different class profiles determined by occupation, education and income. Existing survey-experimental literature on this topic suggests that respondents are indifferent to the class profiles of candidates or biased against candidates with high-status occupations and high incomes. We find that respondents are biased against upper middle-class candidates as well as routine working-class candidates. While the bias against upper middle-class candidates is primarily a bias among working-class individuals, the bias against routine working-class candidates is most pronounced among middle-class individuals. Our supplementary analysis of observational data confirms the bias against routine working-class candidates, but not the bias against upper middle-class candidates.publishedVersio
Winner-Take-All Politics in Europe? The Political Economy of Rising Inequality in Germany and Sweden
Toward a Socialism for the Future, in the Wake of the Demise of the Socialism of the Past
http://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/51230/1/464.pd
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