학술논문

Shifting Inequalities? Patterns of exclusion and inclusion im emerging forms of political participation
Document Type
Text
Source
Discussion Papers / Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung, Forschungsschwerpunkt Bildung, Arbeit und Lebenschancen, Abteilung Ungleichheit und soziale Integration (2009-204)
Subject
Politikwissenschaft
Soziologie, Anthropologie
Soziologie von Gesamtgesellschaften
politische Willensbildung, politische Soziologie, politische Kultur
bürgerschaftliches Engagement
Politik
Demokratie
Geschlecht
Europa
soziale Differenzierung
politische Partizipation
soziale Beziehungen
Bildung
Inklusion
politische Aktivität
soziale Integration
USA
Einkommen
politische Bewegung
Exklusion
Internet
Zivilgesellschaft
Forschung
soziale Ungleichheit
empirisch
empirisch-quantitativ
Sociology & anthropology
Political science
Macrosociology, Analysis of Whole Societies
Political Process, Elections, Political Sociology, Political Culture
research
civil society
education
political movement
social integration
social relations
social inequality
inclusion
United States of America
gender
Europe
income
political activity
democracy
political participation
social differentiation
exclusion
politics
citizens' involvement
empirical
quantitative empirical
Language
English
Abstract
"Previous research has found a steady increase in the number of people involved in emerging forms of civic engagements such as Internet campaigns, protests, political consumerism, and alternative lifestyle communities. Verba et al. (1995) have established that various forms of political participation in the United States follow a pattern of structural inequality, based on income, education, gender and civic skills. The growing popularity of emerging action repertoires forces us to re-evaluate the claims of this literature. Do these patterns of inequality persist for the emerging action repertoires across advanced industrialized democracies, or are they becoming even stronger, as Theda Skocpol (2003, 2004) argues? The results of this cross-national analysis with longitudinal comparisons suggest that gender inequalities in emerging political action repertoires have substantially declined since the 1970s, whereas other forms of inequality have persisted. However, contrary to the more pessimistic claims about a 'participation paradox', there is no evidence that inequality based on socio-economic status has substantially increased since the 1970s." (author's abstract)