The influence of various measures of health on different types of political participation

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The influence of various measures of health on different types of political participation. / Stockemer, Daniel; Rapp, Carolin.

I: Politics, Bind 39, Nr. 4, 01.01.2019, s. 480-513.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Stockemer, D & Rapp, C 2019, 'The influence of various measures of health on different types of political participation', Politics, bind 39, nr. 4, s. 480-513. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263395719844700

APA

Stockemer, D., & Rapp, C. (2019). The influence of various measures of health on different types of political participation. Politics, 39(4), 480-513. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263395719844700

Vancouver

Stockemer D, Rapp C. The influence of various measures of health on different types of political participation. Politics. 2019 jan. 1;39(4):480-513. https://doi.org/10.1177/0263395719844700

Author

Stockemer, Daniel ; Rapp, Carolin. / The influence of various measures of health on different types of political participation. I: Politics. 2019 ; Bind 39, Nr. 4. s. 480-513.

Bibtex

@article{5906d4dee5884ea991df0a6adcd25b26,
title = "The influence of various measures of health on different types of political participation",
abstract = "Recent research in political behaviour suggests that poor health can be an impediment for individuals to vote. At the same time, researchers argue that health may both hinder and reinforce other forms of political participation. With respect to these ambiguous expectations, our study asks: does the relationship between health and political involvement depend on how we measure health? We answer this question for two of the most widely used health indicators, self-reported health and being hampered by illness in daily activities. We use the European Social Survey (ESS) (N = 35,000) covering 20 European countries and find that the measurement of health indeed matters: our results illustrate that bad self-reported health is an impediment to voting, but not to other forms of political activity. When it comes to our second indicator, being hampered in daily activities, we also find a negative relationship with voting. Yet, our results also indicate that most individuals, who are hampered by illness in their daily lives, have a tendency to participate more regularly in most other forms of political activity, including boycotting, contacting a politician, or signing a petition. Robustness checks including waves 1–6 of the ESS support these findings.",
keywords = "Europe, hampered by illness, health, political participation",
author = "Daniel Stockemer and Carolin Rapp",
year = "2019",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1177/0263395719844700",
language = "English",
volume = "39",
pages = "480--513",
journal = "Politics",
issn = "0263-3957",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The influence of various measures of health on different types of political participation

AU - Stockemer, Daniel

AU - Rapp, Carolin

PY - 2019/1/1

Y1 - 2019/1/1

N2 - Recent research in political behaviour suggests that poor health can be an impediment for individuals to vote. At the same time, researchers argue that health may both hinder and reinforce other forms of political participation. With respect to these ambiguous expectations, our study asks: does the relationship between health and political involvement depend on how we measure health? We answer this question for two of the most widely used health indicators, self-reported health and being hampered by illness in daily activities. We use the European Social Survey (ESS) (N = 35,000) covering 20 European countries and find that the measurement of health indeed matters: our results illustrate that bad self-reported health is an impediment to voting, but not to other forms of political activity. When it comes to our second indicator, being hampered in daily activities, we also find a negative relationship with voting. Yet, our results also indicate that most individuals, who are hampered by illness in their daily lives, have a tendency to participate more regularly in most other forms of political activity, including boycotting, contacting a politician, or signing a petition. Robustness checks including waves 1–6 of the ESS support these findings.

AB - Recent research in political behaviour suggests that poor health can be an impediment for individuals to vote. At the same time, researchers argue that health may both hinder and reinforce other forms of political participation. With respect to these ambiguous expectations, our study asks: does the relationship between health and political involvement depend on how we measure health? We answer this question for two of the most widely used health indicators, self-reported health and being hampered by illness in daily activities. We use the European Social Survey (ESS) (N = 35,000) covering 20 European countries and find that the measurement of health indeed matters: our results illustrate that bad self-reported health is an impediment to voting, but not to other forms of political activity. When it comes to our second indicator, being hampered in daily activities, we also find a negative relationship with voting. Yet, our results also indicate that most individuals, who are hampered by illness in their daily lives, have a tendency to participate more regularly in most other forms of political activity, including boycotting, contacting a politician, or signing a petition. Robustness checks including waves 1–6 of the ESS support these findings.

KW - Europe

KW - hampered by illness

KW - health

KW - political participation

U2 - 10.1177/0263395719844700

DO - 10.1177/0263395719844700

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85065445616

VL - 39

SP - 480

EP - 513

JO - Politics

JF - Politics

SN - 0263-3957

IS - 4

ER -

ID: 225662596