Title of article
The Individual–Institutional Nexus of Protest Behaviour
Author/Authors
DALTON، RUSSELL نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages
23
From page
51
To page
73
Abstract
Political protest is seemingly a ubiquitous aspect of politics in advanced industrial societies, and its
use may be spreading to less developed nations as well. Our research tests several rival theories of
protest activity for citizens across an exceptionally wide range of polities. With data from the
1999–2002 wave of the World Values Survey, we demonstrate that the macro-level context – levels
of economic and political development – significantly influences the amount of popular protest.
Furthermore, a multi-level model examines how national context interacts with the micro-level predictors
of protest activity. The findings indicate that contemporary protest is expanding not because
of increasing dissatisfaction with government, but because economic and political development
provide the resources for those who have political demands.
Journal title
British Journal of Political Science
Serial Year
2010
Journal title
British Journal of Political Science
Record number
652457
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