Why do voters in contexts of economic decline increasingly come to support far-right nationalist parties in some places but not in others? We develop a theoretical argument regarding the role of social interconnections in shaping responses to economic insecurity and suggest that social capital can mitigate the effects of adverse economic shocks on cultural backlash. We test our theory by combining individual-level data on voting behavior from the European Social Survey (waves 1–9) with data on economic conditions and memberships in civic organizations at the level of European regions. Our findings reveal that while economic decline strengthens support for far-right nationalist parties where levels of social capital are low, this effect is reversed in areas with high levels of social capital. Results remain robust when we replicate our findings using a proxy for social capital less susceptible to endogeneity: the regional share of non-egalitarian historical family types. Our findings contribute by advancing our understanding of the conditions under which economic decline fails to prompt cultural backlash.
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9 March 2022
Research Article|
March 09 2022
Democracy in Hard Times: Economic Decline, Social Capital, and Resilience Against Far-Right Nationalism
Francesc Amat;
Francesc Amat
Department of Economic History, Institutions, Politics and World Economy, University of Barcelona
Keynes 1-11, 08034 Barcelona
Spain
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Emmy Lindstam
Emmy Lindstam
Department of Political Science, University of Mannheim
A5,6, 68159 Mannheim
Germany
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Online ISSN: 2689-4823
Print ISSN: 2689-4815
© 2022 F. Amat and E. Lindstam
2022
F. Amat and E. Lindstam
Licensed re-use rights only
Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy (2022) 3 (1): 23–59.
Citation
Amat F, Lindstam E (2022), "Democracy in Hard Times: Economic Decline, Social Capital, and Resilience Against Far-Right Nationalism". Journal of Political Institutions and Political Economy, Vol. 3 No. 1 pp. 23–59, doi: https://doi.org/10.1561/113.00000051
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