Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
140102 The Social Science Journal 2014 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Education, voting, participation in civil society organizations, and government dissatisfaction drive protest actions.•The influence of macro-level factors differs between various forms of protest actions.

There is little evidence on the factors that drive peaceful unconventional political participation. This study evaluates the impact of seven individual level constituents – age, income, education, gender, satisfaction with the government, engagement in civil society organizations and voting – as well as five macro-level factors – economic development, democratic experience, income inequalities, a country's regime type and federalism – on citizens’ participation in boycotts, demonstrations and petition signing activities. Participation in all three protest activities hinges on education, voting, participation in civil society organizations, and lack of satisfaction with the government. Moreover, the influence of some macro-factors, such as democratic experience and economic development, and micro-level factors, such as gender differs between the three forms of political engagement.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Psychology Social Psychology
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