Set against the backdrop of the Great Recession, the paper explores the interplay of unemployment experiences and political trust in the USA and 23 European countries between 2002 and 2017. Drawing on harmonized data from the European Social Survey and the General Social Survey, we confirm that citizens’ personal experiences of unemployment depress trust in democratic institutions in all countries. Using multilevel linear probability models, we show that the relationship between unemployment and political trust varies between countries, and that, paradoxically, the negative effect of unemployment on political trust is consistently stronger in the more generous welfare states. This result holds while controlling for a range of other househol...
Recent cross-national comparative studies have found no effect of countries’ macroeconomic performan...
Levels of rising political distrust in the USA and parts of Europe attracted political scientists' a...
This article analyses comparative data for the last half of the 1990s to investigate the determinant...
Are citizens’ level of satisfaction with the functioning of democracy affected by welfare state-rela...
How does unemployment affect generalised social trust? A growing body of work has analysed the scar ...
We study the implications of the Great Recession for voting for anti-establishment parties, as well ...
The aim of this paper is to investigate whether the increase in income inequality contributed to the...
Several decades of trust research has confirmed that difficult national economic conditions help exp...
Does unemployment increase or decrease electoral participation? A considerable body of work has exam...
The essential cornerstone of society and the state is political support. Studying political support ...
A long-standing argument in the political sciences holds that high levels of inequality are incompat...
We explore how negative attitudes toward the unemployed are related to countries’ overall and long-t...
A long-standing argument in the political sciences holds that high levels of inequality are incompat...
During the Great Recession mass demonstrations indicated weakened political support in Europe. We sh...
One of most important effects of the recent economic crisis has been the decline of citizens’ trust ...
Recent cross-national comparative studies have found no effect of countries’ macroeconomic performan...
Levels of rising political distrust in the USA and parts of Europe attracted political scientists' a...
This article analyses comparative data for the last half of the 1990s to investigate the determinant...
Are citizens’ level of satisfaction with the functioning of democracy affected by welfare state-rela...
How does unemployment affect generalised social trust? A growing body of work has analysed the scar ...
We study the implications of the Great Recession for voting for anti-establishment parties, as well ...
The aim of this paper is to investigate whether the increase in income inequality contributed to the...
Several decades of trust research has confirmed that difficult national economic conditions help exp...
Does unemployment increase or decrease electoral participation? A considerable body of work has exam...
The essential cornerstone of society and the state is political support. Studying political support ...
A long-standing argument in the political sciences holds that high levels of inequality are incompat...
We explore how negative attitudes toward the unemployed are related to countries’ overall and long-t...
A long-standing argument in the political sciences holds that high levels of inequality are incompat...
During the Great Recession mass demonstrations indicated weakened political support in Europe. We sh...
One of most important effects of the recent economic crisis has been the decline of citizens’ trust ...
Recent cross-national comparative studies have found no effect of countries’ macroeconomic performan...
Levels of rising political distrust in the USA and parts of Europe attracted political scientists' a...
This article analyses comparative data for the last half of the 1990s to investigate the determinant...