Are “bad” jobs bad for democracy? precarious work and electoral participation in Europe
Introduction: While socioeconomic inequality in voting has been central for research on electoral participation, recent years have seen radical changes in labor relations. The key issue is increasing prevalence of precarious work, involving dimensions as non-indefinite tenure and limited control over work activities. While occupations traditionally were the locus of political socialization, there is scarce research connecting occupational uncertainty to electoral participation. To fill this void, we develop a framework that connects the multiple dimensions of precarious work to electoral participation. Methods: We test these ideas using data from 32 countries from the European Social Survey (2008–2018). Results and discussion: Results indicate that work precarity is both strongly connected to traditional indicators of SES and has large, independent e Results indicate that work precarity is both strongly connected to traditional indicators of SES and has large, independent effects on probability of voting. We corroborate these results with heterogeneity analyses across countries Findings show how precarious work heightens socioeconomic stratification in electoral participation, underming the universality of the right to vote and the health of democracies
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Frontiers in Political SciencePublisher
frontiersOther Funding information
Leverhulme Trust Grant for the Leverhulme Center for Demographic Science.External identifier
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- Sociology