Item previously deposited in Strathclyde University repository on 12 Sep 2017 at: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/61785Item not available in this repository.Sociological debates on youth engagement with electoral politics play out against a backdrop of supposed ‘decline’ in civic participation (e.g. Putnam 2000, Norris, 2011), in turn contextualized by theories of individualization in ‘late’ or ‘reflexive’ modernity (Beck, Giddens). However, the enfranchisement of 16 and 17 year olds in the 2014 Scottish Independence Referendum catalysed remarkably high levels of voter turnout among this youngest group, and was accompanied by apparently ongoing political engagement. We explored this engagement among a strategic sample of young ‘...
The Scottish independence referendum was the first wide-scale election in the UK to allow 16 and 17 ...
The UK’s EU referendum was often discussed in terms of a generational divide between older citizens ...
Citizenship has become a catchphrase in debates about young people’s political engagement. In many o...
Sociological debates on youth engagement with electoral politics play out against a backdrop of supp...
Item previously deposited in University of Strathclyde repository: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk...
In 2014 the issue of constitutional change in the UK brought about by an agreement between the UK an...
The Electoral Commission this week began a publicity drive to ensure that people register to vote in...
The Scottish referendum was not only historic for its constitutional implications, it was also the f...
This paper examines the rights claims-making that young people engaged in during the 2014 Scottish i...
Five hundred and seventy-three Scottish high school students were surveyed in the 2 months following...
This paper examines the rights claims-making that young people engaged in during the 2014 Scottish i...
Conventional wisdom holds that young people in Britain are alienated from politics, with some claimi...
Five hundred and seventy three Scottish high school students were surveyed in the two months followi...
Within the UK, Scotland offers a unique case study of 'Votes-at-16' in practice. Research provided e...
This paper draws on the 2009/2010 British Election Survey to explore the political engagement of you...
The Scottish independence referendum was the first wide-scale election in the UK to allow 16 and 17 ...
The UK’s EU referendum was often discussed in terms of a generational divide between older citizens ...
Citizenship has become a catchphrase in debates about young people’s political engagement. In many o...
Sociological debates on youth engagement with electoral politics play out against a backdrop of supp...
Item previously deposited in University of Strathclyde repository: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk...
In 2014 the issue of constitutional change in the UK brought about by an agreement between the UK an...
The Electoral Commission this week began a publicity drive to ensure that people register to vote in...
The Scottish referendum was not only historic for its constitutional implications, it was also the f...
This paper examines the rights claims-making that young people engaged in during the 2014 Scottish i...
Five hundred and seventy-three Scottish high school students were surveyed in the 2 months following...
This paper examines the rights claims-making that young people engaged in during the 2014 Scottish i...
Conventional wisdom holds that young people in Britain are alienated from politics, with some claimi...
Five hundred and seventy three Scottish high school students were surveyed in the two months followi...
Within the UK, Scotland offers a unique case study of 'Votes-at-16' in practice. Research provided e...
This paper draws on the 2009/2010 British Election Survey to explore the political engagement of you...
The Scottish independence referendum was the first wide-scale election in the UK to allow 16 and 17 ...
The UK’s EU referendum was often discussed in terms of a generational divide between older citizens ...
Citizenship has become a catchphrase in debates about young people’s political engagement. In many o...