What Explains Support for Territorial Redistribution?
Marta Eidheim, postdoktor ved Institutt for politikk og forvaltning presenterer eit surveyeksperiment gjennomført i seks europeiske land.
Marta Rekdal Eidheim er postdoktor på ERC-prosjektet INCLUDE, som så langt har gjennomført to undersøkingar i seks europeiske land. Marta presenterer eit av sine surveyeksperiment frå desse undersøkingane, i denne presentasjonen med tittelen "What Explains Support for Territorial Redistribution? Evidence from a Survey Experiment in Six European Countries"
Presentasjonen blir på engelsk. Ein lett lunsj blir servert, etter førstemann til mølla-prinsippet.
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Engelsk samandrag
In recent years, studies have given considerable attention to place-based resentment and its effects on political behavior, yet less is known about voters’ willingness to alleviate these grievances. Drawing on a survey experiment conducted in six Western European countries, I examine how place characteristics affect support for targeted territorial redistribution. Consistent with expectations, rural areas enjoy higher baseline support than cities. Findings further show how supporting redistribution to city areas is more dependent on highlighting disparities compared to rural areas, indicating voters’ tendency to associate deprivation less readily with cities. These place characteristics are further important for garnering support from specific voter groups; rural identity strongly predicts pro-rural redistribution, economic left-wing voters respond most to places with disparities, and cultural right-wing voters sharply reduce their support for urban funding when immigration is salient.