Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7464160 | Electoral Studies | 2015 | 26 Pages |
Abstract
The political socialization literature attributes the formation of public political attitudes in mature democracies to varying mixtures of life-cycle processes, generational experiences and period effects. In the absence of long-term, individual-level panel data, delineating these effects has been a longstanding problem. Building on path-breaking work by Yang and Land, recent research has utilized multi-level analyses of repeated cross-sectional survey data sets to estimate life-cycle, generational and period effects in several Western countries. Employing data from national election surveys conducted over the past decade by the TEDS project, this paper uses the Yang-Land methodology to conduct illustrative analyses of age cohort and period effects on political attitudes and behavior in a new Asian democracy, Taiwan. Analyses of KMT partisanship show a significant generational component, and analyses of political efficacy, political interest and electoral turnout suggest that inferences about age cohort and period effects can depend on how individual-level age effects are specified.
Keywords
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Social Sciences and Humanities
Social Sciences
Geography, Planning and Development
Authors
Karl Ho, Dennis Lu-chung Weng, Harold D. Clarke,