The Voice of the Absent? The Link Between Descriptive and Substantive Representation of the Working Class in Western Europe. Hahn, C. Political Studies, October, 2022.
The Voice of the Absent? The Link Between Descriptive and Substantive Representation of the Working Class in Western Europe [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Recent research has revealed a considerable representation gap disadvantaging the lower social class in the political process. However, we know little about the underlying mechanisms of this bias or the measures that could compensate for it. Combining cross-national data from a general population survey and an elite-level survey, the present article addresses this knowledge deficit by looking at one potential determinant of working-class underrepresentation: the unequal composition of parliaments. Building on arguments for descriptive representation, I argue that members of the working class experience similar living situations and life chances that form their preferences. Consequently, working-class politicians may be better suited to representing working-class views. The results confirm lower congruence levels between the political elite and working-class citizens. However, class-based preference gaps among politicians are relatively small, and politicians’ social class appears to have a limited impact on compensating for the representational inequality of the working class.
@article{hahn_voice_2022,
	title = {The {Voice} of the {Absent}? {The} {Link} {Between} {Descriptive} and {Substantive} {Representation} of the {Working} {Class} in {Western} {Europe}},
	issn = {0032-3217, 1467-9248},
	shorttitle = {The {Voice} of the {Absent}?},
	url = {http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/00323217221126668},
	doi = {10.1177/00323217221126668},
	abstract = {Recent research has revealed a considerable representation gap disadvantaging the lower social class in the political process. However, we know little about the underlying mechanisms of this bias or the measures that could compensate for it. Combining cross-national data from a general population survey and an elite-level survey, the present article addresses this knowledge deficit by looking at one potential determinant of working-class underrepresentation: the unequal composition of parliaments. Building on arguments for descriptive representation, I argue that members of the working class experience similar living situations and life chances that form their preferences. Consequently, working-class politicians may be better suited to representing working-class views. The results confirm lower congruence levels between the political elite and working-class citizens. However, class-based preference gaps among politicians are relatively small, and politicians’ social class appears to have a limited impact on compensating for the representational inequality of the working class.},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2023-01-09},
	journal = {Political Studies},
	author = {Hahn, Caroline},
	month = oct,
	year = {2022},
	pages = {003232172211266},
}

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