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Economic Mobility, Marital Status, and Partisanship through the Life-Cycle |
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Abstract:
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Utilizing the Jennings four-wave student panel, this paper examines the impact of life changes such has upward economic mobility and marital status on partisan identification. Moreover, the analysis examines the extent an individual’s partisan inclinations are restructured by the emergence or intensification of social cleavages. The analysis finds that changes in economic status lead to changes in partisan identification but that marital status had no bearing on partisanship. Moreover, the emergence of social cleavages centered on gender and religiosity significantly impacted the partisanship of the student cohort. Finally, increasing racial polarization prompted white respondents to become more Republican. Partisanship inclinations acquired at the fresh young age of 18 continued to manifest themselves decades later, however, the intensification or emergence of new social cleavages and alterations in income significantly modified partisanship. |
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incom (112), partisanship (108), chang (64), respond (53), percentil (48), 1997 (45), polit (45), individu (42), parti (41), 1973 (38), thru (36), econom (34), american (34), one (32), 1965 (31), period (29), life (29), panel (29), republican (27), 1982 (27), partisan (26), |
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Association:
Name: American Political Science Association URL: http://www.apsanet.org
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Citation:
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MLA Citation:
| Koch, Jeffrey. "Economic Mobility, Marital Status, and Partisanship through the Life-Cycle" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Hyatt Regency Chicago and the Sheraton Chicago Hotel and Towers, Chicago, IL, Aug 30, 2007 <Not Available>. 2011-06-09 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p211156_index.html> |
APA Citation:
| Koch, J. W. , 2007-08-30 "Economic Mobility, Marital Status, and Partisanship through the Life-Cycle" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Hyatt Regency Chicago and the Sheraton Chicago Hotel and Towers, Chicago, IL Online <PDF>. 2011-06-09 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p211156_index.html |
Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript Abstract: Utilizing the Jennings four-wave student panel, this paper examines the impact of life changes such has upward economic mobility and marital status on partisan identification. Moreover, the analysis examines the extent an individual’s partisan inclinations are restructured by the emergence or intensification of social cleavages. The analysis finds that changes in economic status lead to changes in partisan identification but that marital status had no bearing on partisanship. Moreover, the emergence of social cleavages centered on gender and religiosity significantly impacted the partisanship of the student cohort. Finally, increasing racial polarization prompted white respondents to become more Republican. Partisanship inclinations acquired at the fresh young age of 18 continued to manifest themselves decades later, however, the intensification or emergence of new social cleavages and alterations in income significantly modified partisanship. |
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| Document Type: |
PDF |
| Page count: |
32 |
| Word count: |
6451 |
| Text sample: |
| Economic Mobility Marital Status and Partisanship through the Life-Cycle Jeffrey W. Koch email:koch@geneseo.edu Department of Political Science and International Relations State University of New York at Geneseo Abstract Utilizing the Jennings four-wave student panel this paper examines the impact of life changes such has upward economic mobility and marital status on partisan identification. Moreover the analysis examines the extent an individual’s partisan inclinations are restructured by the emergence or intensification of social cleavages. The analysis finds that changes in |
| 1973-1997 30 25 20 Percent 15 25.48% 25.32% 10 18.15% 10.83% 10.51% 5 4.78% 1.75% 2.39% 0 0.16% 0.48% 0.16% -5.00 -4.00 -3.00 -2.00 -1.00 .00 1.00 2.00 3.00 4.00 5.00 32 |
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