Social status, political priorities and unequal representation

Researchers on inequalities in representation debate about whether governments represent the preferences of the rich better than those of less affluent citizens. We argue that problems of high- and low-status citizens are treated differently already at the agenda-setting stage. If affluent and less affluent citizens have different priorities about which issues should be tackled by government, then these divergent group priorities explain why government favours high- over low-status citizens. Due to different levels of visibility, resources and social ties, governments pay more attention to wha... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Traber, Denise
Hänni, Miriam
Giger, Nathalie
Breunig, Christian
Dokumenttyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2022
Verlag/Hrsg.: GBR
Schlagwörter: Soziologie / Anthropologie / Politikwissenschaft / Sociology & anthropology / Political science / political priorities / Allgemeine Soziologie / Makrosoziologie / spezielle Theorien und Schulen / Entwicklung und Geschichte der Soziologie / politische Willensbildung / politische Soziologie / politische Kultur / General Sociology / Basic Research / General Concepts and History of Sociology / Sociological Theories / Political Process / Elections / Political Sociology / Political Culture / Ungleichheit / Repräsentation / sozialer Status / Priorität / politische Agenda / Österreich / Belgien / Dänemark / Frankreich / Bundesrepublik Deutschland / Ungarn / Italien / Niederlande / Spanien / Großbritannien / Europa / Regierungspolitik / inequality / representation / social status / priority / political agenda / Austria / Belgium / Denmark / France / Federal Republic of Germany / Hungary / Italy
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26541293
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://www.ssoar.info/ssoar/handle/document/77719

Researchers on inequalities in representation debate about whether governments represent the preferences of the rich better than those of less affluent citizens. We argue that problems of high- and low-status citizens are treated differently already at the agenda-setting stage. If affluent and less affluent citizens have different priorities about which issues should be tackled by government, then these divergent group priorities explain why government favours high- over low-status citizens. Due to different levels of visibility, resources and social ties, governments pay more attention to what high-status citizens consider important in their legislative agenda and pay less attention to the issues of low-status citizens. We combined three types of data for our research design. First, we extracted the policy priorities (most important issues) for all status groups from Eurobarometer data between 2002 and 2016 for 10 European countries and matched this information with data on policy outcomes from the Comparative Agendas Project. We then strengthen our results using a focused comparison of three single country studies over longer time series. We show that a priority gap exists and has representational consequences. Our analysis has important implications for the understanding of the unequal representation of status groups as it sheds light on an important, yet so far unexplored, aspect of the political process. Since the misrepresentation of political agendas occurs at the very beginning of the policy-making process, the consequences are potentially even more severe than for the unequal treatment of preferences.