Long-Run Effects of Earlier Voting Eligibility on Turnout and Political Involvement
Beschreibung
"Theories of habit formation and transformative voting posit that voting has long-run consequences for turnout and political involvement, with younger voters possibly experiencing more pronounced effects from earlier eligibility. Long-term evidence of the effects of becoming eligible to vote at a younger age remains scarce. We use rich, long-term panel data from the United Kingdom to examine the effects of earlier voting eligibility on turnout and political involvement. By leveraging the election eligibility cutoff in a regression discontinuity design, our precise estimates document that earlier eligibility results in contemporaneous increases in several measures of political involvement. However, these short-term effects fade away quickly and do not translate into permanent changes in turnout propensity or political involvement. Our results imply that, in a setting with low institutional barriers to vote, the persistent and transformative effects of being eligible to vote at a younger age are short-lived at most." (Author's abstract, IAB-Doku) ((en))
Zitationshinweis
Jessen, Jonas, Daniel Kühnle & Markus Wagner (2024): Long-Run Effects of Earlier Voting Eligibility on Turnout and Political Involvement. In: The Journal of Politics, Jg. 86, H. 3, S. 1045-1059., akzeptiert am 01.10.2023. DOI:10.1086/729972