Political participation and life course transitions among young people in Europe

Q3 Social Sciences Stanovnistvo Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.2298/stnv2202049s
D. Stanojević, Anja Gvozdanovic
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Abstract

The subject of this article is the analysis of the relationship between the life course of young people and political participation in Europe. Results show that young people?s transitions in education, work, and family in European countries are directly associated with institutional and non-institutional forms of political participation. Entering new roles and obtaining or losing resources (financial, social, or time) forms a more or less stimulating context for involvement in the political field. The analysis shows that our first hypothesis proved to be correct. Both institutional and non-institutional forms of participation are positively associated with the study expe?rience, and this indicator is the most consistent predictor of both forms of participation. Young people who go through higher education better understand the socio-political con?text and have more knowledge of how they can influence social processes. The transition to the labour market also shows positive associations with political participation, but only with certain practices, so our hypothesis is only partially correct. Young people who work vote more often, are active within parties, contact political representatives, and are active within NGOs. Work provides more financial and social capital, as well as the acquisition of new skills and competencies that are important for engagement. Employment seems to lead to a rationalisation of time and a better understanding of the effects of engagement. The third hypothesis also proved to be (almost) correct, as half of institutional and all non-institutional forms of participa?tion are negatively associated with parenthood. Entering the parental role leads to a certain repackaging of priorities, and the lack of available time reduces the probability of par?ticipation. The fourth hypothesis was (partially) confirmed. With the growth of democracy within society, young people are more willing to participate in almost all forms of non-in?stitutional practices (except for demonstrations) and to contact politicians and participate in campaigns more often. A high degree of organisation of political infrastructure and a democratic political culture represent a prerequisite for the existence of democratic practices. The hypotheses with which we examined the associations between context, life events, and participation generally did not prove to be justified. Although the highly educated in democratic societies vote more often and join parties (and similar groups), they participate less often in campaigns and are involved in all non-institutional forms of participation at the same level as those in less democratic societies. The explanation for the lack of differences between old and new democracies in the level of non-institutional participation of the highly educated may lie in the same role played by university education. In both developed and less developed democracies, those who establish or preserve these practices are students, who are both the most open to news and the most sensitive to social injustices. The relationship between work and activism was completely the opposite of what was expected. Given that work represents a source of resources (economic and social capital), we expected that in more democratic societies, which are also more economically developed, this connection would be stronger, but it is actually weaker. The explanation for this phenomenon may lie in the dependence of the sphere of work on the political field in ?new democracies?. The latter is dominated by clientelistic relations, where a significant number of young people who enter the labour market do so through political channels and in turn have to be active in political parties, especially during election campaigns. The last hypothesis proved to be correct, as context did not moderate the relationship be?tween parenting and participation. Entering the parental role is equally challenging for young people regardless of their location or social and political context, and on average it certainly leads to a lower level of participation.
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欧洲年轻人的政治参与和生命历程的转变
本文的主题是分析欧洲年轻人的生命历程与政治参与之间的关系。结果表明,年轻人?欧洲国家在教育、工作和家庭方面的转变与制度和非制度形式的政治参与直接相关。进入新的角色,获得或失去资源(财政、社会或时间),或多或少地形成了参与政治领域的刺激环境。分析表明我们的第一个假设被证明是正确的。机构和非机构形式的参与都与研究费用呈正相关。这个指标是两种参与形式的最一致的预测指标。受过高等教育的年轻人能更好地理解社会政治骗局?文本和对他们如何影响社会进程有更多的了解。向劳动力市场的过渡也显示出与政治参与呈正相关,但仅与某些实践有关,因此我们的假设只是部分正确的。工作的年轻人更经常投票,在政党中活跃,接触政治代表,在非政府组织中活跃。工作提供了更多的金融和社会资本,以及获得对参与至关重要的新技能和能力。就业似乎导致了时间的合理化,并更好地理解了投入的影响。第三个假设也被证明是(几乎)正确的,因为一半的机构和所有非机构形式的参与者?这与为人父母负相关。进入父母角色会导致优先事项的重新包装,而可用时间的缺乏降低了参与的可能性。第四个假设(部分)得到了证实。随着社会内部民主的发展,年轻人更愿意参与几乎所有形式的非参与活动。制度实践(示威除外),更频繁地联系政治家和参与竞选活动。政治基础设施的高度组织化和民主政治文化是民主实践存在的先决条件。我们用来研究情境、生活事件和参与之间联系的假设通常没有被证明是合理的。虽然在民主社会中受过高等教育的人更经常地投票和参加政党(和类似的团体),但他们较少参加竞选活动,也较少参与所有非体制形式的参与,其水平与民主程度较低的社会中的人相同。新旧民主国家在受过高等教育的人的非机构参与程度上没有差别,其原因可能在于大学教育所起的作用是相同的。无论是发达民主国家还是欠发达民主国家,建立或保留这些做法的人都是学生,他们对新闻最开放,对社会不公正也最敏感。工作和行动主义之间的关系与人们所期望的完全相反。鉴于工作代表了资源(经济和社会资本)的来源,我们预计在更民主的社会中,经济也更发达,这种联系会更强,但实际上它更弱。对这一现象的解释可能在于“新民主国家”的工作领域对政治领域的依赖。后者受裙带关系支配,大量进入劳动力市场的年轻人是通过政治渠道进入的,因此必须积极参加政党,特别是在竞选期间。最后一个假设被证明是正确的,因为环境并没有调节这种关系。育儿与参与。对于年轻人来说,无论他们身处何地,社会和政治背景如何,进入父母的角色同样具有挑战性,而且平均而言,这肯定会导致更低的参与度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Stanovnistvo
Stanovnistvo Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
7
审稿时长
15 weeks
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