Connecting local economic decline to the politics of geographic discontent: the missing link of perceptions
Connecting local economic decline to the politics of geographic discontent: the missing link of perceptions
Local economic decline has been presented as an explanation for populism, political alienation and geographic polarisation. This approach risks underestimating the complexity of observing local economic decline. Using original survey questions in the British Election Study, we theorise five models to explain who is likely to perceive local economic decline, and why. Using linked objective data, we analyse the relationship of perceptions to existing economic indicators, finding correspondence but also substantial and systematic variation driven by partisanship and heuristics, such as declining personal circumstances. These findings suggest that researchers should not equate objectively measured decline with homogeneous or direct effects of the local economy on vote choice, populist leanings, and localised discontent. There is value in establishing how voters reason about economic decline to both explain their choices and the way they are likely to respond to remedial policy measures.
Green, Jane
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Jennings, Will
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Mckay, Lawrence
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Stoker, Gerry
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22 July 2024
Green, Jane
f70aa78c-6492-4a37-82ef-19d3abc72d6a
Jennings, Will
2ab3f11c-eb7f-44c6-9ef2-3180c1a954f7
Mckay, Lawrence
4ecf2fd8-3fbf-4a3c-9c22-6856fc1a09be
Stoker, Gerry
209ba619-6a65-4bc1-9235-cba0d826bfd9
Green, Jane, Jennings, Will, Mckay, Lawrence and Stoker, Gerry
(2024)
Connecting local economic decline to the politics of geographic discontent: the missing link of perceptions.
Political Behavior.
(doi:10.1007/s11109-024-09951-9).
Abstract
Local economic decline has been presented as an explanation for populism, political alienation and geographic polarisation. This approach risks underestimating the complexity of observing local economic decline. Using original survey questions in the British Election Study, we theorise five models to explain who is likely to perceive local economic decline, and why. Using linked objective data, we analyse the relationship of perceptions to existing economic indicators, finding correspondence but also substantial and systematic variation driven by partisanship and heuristics, such as declining personal circumstances. These findings suggest that researchers should not equate objectively measured decline with homogeneous or direct effects of the local economy on vote choice, populist leanings, and localised discontent. There is value in establishing how voters reason about economic decline to both explain their choices and the way they are likely to respond to remedial policy measures.
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Green_et_al_2024_AAM_decline_perceptions
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s11109-024-09951-9
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 June 2024
Published date: 22 July 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 491110
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491110
ISSN: 0190-9320
PURE UUID: 07b07b01-e4b6-4688-8f03-7c1f25ba8ce8
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Date deposited: 12 Jun 2024 17:13
Last modified: 26 Jul 2024 02:01
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Author:
Jane Green
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