Journal article 12997 views
Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization
The Annals of Regional Science, Volume: 62, Issue: 3, Pages: 529 - 562
Swansea University Author:
Annie Tubadji
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DOI (Published version): 10.1007/s00168-019-00906-1
Abstract
The present paper focuses on the emergence and consequences of the so-called ‘Dogville Effect’, i.e., the negative socioeconomic and spatial impacts caused by radicalization of cultural attitudes in a region. After a conceptual and historical outline of this phenomenon, we present an empirical case,...
Published in: | The Annals of Regional Science |
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ISSN: | 0570-1864 1432-0592 |
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2019
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa52029 |
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2022-11-15T16:03:25.7737803 v2 52029 2019-09-23 Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization f17b08e9124965486f3b5885a87b396d 0000-0002-6134-3520 Annie Tubadji Annie Tubadji true false 2019-09-23 SOSS The present paper focuses on the emergence and consequences of the so-called ‘Dogville Effect’, i.e., the negative socioeconomic and spatial impacts caused by radicalization of cultural attitudes in a region. After a conceptual and historical outline of this phenomenon, we present an empirical case, viz. the rise of the ultra-right-wing party in Greece, Chrysi Avgi. We analyze the party’s spatial dispersion and its aftermaths in the period 1993–2015, using both local and regional election results. Spatial-economic controls are derived from the EUI (European University Institute, Florence) regional database. We employ a 2SLS approach (with historical voting results from 1974 as an instrumental variable) and a difference-in-differences approach with a propensity score matching. Our findings show that there exists a cultural persistence in the local share of ultra-right-wing support. The growth in this radicalization, however, is predominantly determined by the shrinking regional household welfare caused by exogenous forces in our model. Finally, the ‘Dogville Effect’, i.e., a further impoverishment of more radicalized localities, seems to be present in Greece, in the vein of the notion of Myrdal’s vicious circles. Journal Article The Annals of Regional Science 62 3 529 562 0570-1864 1432-0592 Phenomenon, Resizing, Politics, Welfare, Political economy, Socioeconomic status, Instrumental variable, Economics, Microeconomics, Voting, Radicalization 12 4 2019 2019-04-12 10.1007/s00168-019-00906-1 COLLEGE NANME Social Sciences School COLLEGE CODE SOSS Swansea University 2022-11-15T16:03:25.7737803 2019-09-23T11:57:49.6186623 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Management Annie Tubadji 0000-0002-6134-3520 1 Peter Nijkamp 2 |
title |
Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization |
spellingShingle |
Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization Annie Tubadji |
title_short |
Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization |
title_full |
Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization |
title_fullStr |
Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization |
title_full_unstemmed |
Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization |
title_sort |
Cultural attitudes, economic shocks and political radicalization |
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f17b08e9124965486f3b5885a87b396d |
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f17b08e9124965486f3b5885a87b396d_***_Annie Tubadji |
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Annie Tubadji |
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Annie Tubadji Peter Nijkamp |
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The Annals of Regional Science |
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The present paper focuses on the emergence and consequences of the so-called ‘Dogville Effect’, i.e., the negative socioeconomic and spatial impacts caused by radicalization of cultural attitudes in a region. After a conceptual and historical outline of this phenomenon, we present an empirical case, viz. the rise of the ultra-right-wing party in Greece, Chrysi Avgi. We analyze the party’s spatial dispersion and its aftermaths in the period 1993–2015, using both local and regional election results. Spatial-economic controls are derived from the EUI (European University Institute, Florence) regional database. We employ a 2SLS approach (with historical voting results from 1974 as an instrumental variable) and a difference-in-differences approach with a propensity score matching. Our findings show that there exists a cultural persistence in the local share of ultra-right-wing support. The growth in this radicalization, however, is predominantly determined by the shrinking regional household welfare caused by exogenous forces in our model. Finally, the ‘Dogville Effect’, i.e., a further impoverishment of more radicalized localities, seems to be present in Greece, in the vein of the notion of Myrdal’s vicious circles. |
published_date |
2019-04-12T07:35:12Z |
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1827913032959787008 |
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11.055693 |