Does symbolic representation through class signalling appeal to voters? Evidence from a conjoint experiment

Research output: Working paperWorking papers

Standard

Does symbolic representation through class signalling appeal to voters? Evidence from a conjoint experiment. / Weisstanner, David; Engler, Sarah.
Zürich: Universität Zürich, 2023. (URPP Equality of Opportunity Discussion Paper Series; No. 32).

Research output: Working paperWorking papers

Harvard

Weisstanner, D & Engler, S 2023 'Does symbolic representation through class signalling appeal to voters? Evidence from a conjoint experiment' URPP Equality of Opportunity Discussion Paper Series, no. 32, Universität Zürich, Zürich.

APA

Weisstanner, D., & Engler, S. (2023). Does symbolic representation through class signalling appeal to voters? Evidence from a conjoint experiment. (URPP Equality of Opportunity Discussion Paper Series; No. 32). Universität Zürich.

Vancouver

Weisstanner D, Engler S. Does symbolic representation through class signalling appeal to voters? Evidence from a conjoint experiment. Zürich: Universität Zürich. 2023 Sept. (URPP Equality of Opportunity Discussion Paper Series; 32).

Bibtex

@techreport{7830a6abe3b84be9880168bdcc414843,
title = "Does symbolic representation through class signalling appeal to voters? Evidence from a conjoint experiment",
abstract = "Affluent voters are over-represented in politics. The persisting lack of descriptiverepresentation even among left parties with strong working-class ties or populist radical right parties continues to puzzle researchers. In this paper, we provide a novel explanation for the under-representation of voters from lower socio-economic backgrounds. We focus on symbolic representation and argue that political elites can engage in symbolic representation through class signalling to compensate for lack of descriptive representation. Using original survey data from a conjoint experiment in Switzerland in 2023, we find that many voters are biased in favour of politicians from less affluent backgrounds and class-neutral cultural consumption. More importantly, we demonstrate that both types of symbolic class signalling increase support for affluent politicians among less affluent voters. Hence, symbolic representation can “compensate” for lack of descriptive representation. This contributes to ourunderstanding of the puzzle why descriptive misrepresentation persists.",
keywords = "Politics",
author = "David Weisstanner and Sarah Engler",
year = "2023",
month = sep,
language = "English",
series = "URPP Equality of Opportunity Discussion Paper Series",
publisher = "Universit{\"a}t Z{\"u}rich",
number = "32",
address = "Switzerland",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "Universit{\"a}t Z{\"u}rich",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Does symbolic representation through class signalling appeal to voters? Evidence from a conjoint experiment

AU - Weisstanner, David

AU - Engler, Sarah

PY - 2023/9

Y1 - 2023/9

N2 - Affluent voters are over-represented in politics. The persisting lack of descriptiverepresentation even among left parties with strong working-class ties or populist radical right parties continues to puzzle researchers. In this paper, we provide a novel explanation for the under-representation of voters from lower socio-economic backgrounds. We focus on symbolic representation and argue that political elites can engage in symbolic representation through class signalling to compensate for lack of descriptive representation. Using original survey data from a conjoint experiment in Switzerland in 2023, we find that many voters are biased in favour of politicians from less affluent backgrounds and class-neutral cultural consumption. More importantly, we demonstrate that both types of symbolic class signalling increase support for affluent politicians among less affluent voters. Hence, symbolic representation can “compensate” for lack of descriptive representation. This contributes to ourunderstanding of the puzzle why descriptive misrepresentation persists.

AB - Affluent voters are over-represented in politics. The persisting lack of descriptiverepresentation even among left parties with strong working-class ties or populist radical right parties continues to puzzle researchers. In this paper, we provide a novel explanation for the under-representation of voters from lower socio-economic backgrounds. We focus on symbolic representation and argue that political elites can engage in symbolic representation through class signalling to compensate for lack of descriptive representation. Using original survey data from a conjoint experiment in Switzerland in 2023, we find that many voters are biased in favour of politicians from less affluent backgrounds and class-neutral cultural consumption. More importantly, we demonstrate that both types of symbolic class signalling increase support for affluent politicians among less affluent voters. Hence, symbolic representation can “compensate” for lack of descriptive representation. This contributes to ourunderstanding of the puzzle why descriptive misrepresentation persists.

KW - Politics

UR - https://www.urpp-equality.uzh.ch/en/Discussion-Paper-Series.html

M3 - Working papers

T3 - URPP Equality of Opportunity Discussion Paper Series

BT - Does symbolic representation through class signalling appeal to voters? Evidence from a conjoint experiment

PB - Universität Zürich

CY - Zürich

ER -