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INTRODUCTION: The paper outlines the connection between being disadvantaged and perceptions of democracy, through the paradigm of the capability approach. The paper briefly summarises the notion of adaptive preferences and how this can be used to explain why disadvantaged citizens are likely to hold different levels of satisfaction with democracy.
METHODS: The study analyses about 3.2 million respondents from 162 cross-national surveys covering 143 countries between 1973 and 2016. This public opinion data is analysed against relative levels of economic deprivation and contrasted with five indices of democratic quality.
RESULTS: Respondents are more satisfied with democracy as income is more equitably distributed between population quintiles. Democratic satisfaction is more sensitive to changes in income distribution for some demographic groups. Higher socioeconomic groups exhibit stronger correlations with expert indices of democratic quality.
DISCUSSION: We find that there is evidence for the utility of the notion of adaptive
preferences for understanding satisfaction with democracy. This suggests that more attention should be paid to how inequality is distributed across society, rather than just presenting analysis on how much inequality there is in various democratic societies.
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https://www.researchgate.net/publication/328289134_Disadvantage_and_Democracy_Why_Income_and_Education_Matter_for_Attitudes_Towards_Democracy. (EVS)
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Disadvantage and Democracy: Why Income and Education Matter for Attitudes Towards Democracy
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inproceedings
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Conference for the Australian Political Studies Association help in Brisbane, QLD, Australia, 21.-25. July 2018, 25th World Congress of the International Political Science Association
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In Conference for the Australian Political Studies Association help in Brisbane, QLD, Australia, 21.-25. July 2018, 25th World Congress of the International Political Science Association, 2018
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European Values Study (EVS)
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