Multilevel latent class analysis with covariates: Analysis of cross-national citizenship norms with a two-stage approach
This paper focuses on the substantive application of multilevel LCA to the evolution of citizenship norms in a diverse array of democratic countries. To do so, we present a two-stage approach to fit multilevel latent class models: in the first stage (measurement model construction), unconditional cl...
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Zusammenfassung: | This paper focuses on the substantive application of multilevel LCA to the
evolution of citizenship norms in a diverse array of democratic countries. To
do so, we present a two-stage approach to fit multilevel latent class models:
in the first stage (measurement model construction), unconditional class
enumeration is done separately on both low and high level latent variables,
estimating only a part of the model at a time -- hence keeping the remaining
part fixed -- and then updating the full measurement model; in the second stage
(structural model construction), individual and/or group covariates are
included in the model. By separating the two parts -- first stage and second
stage of model building -- the measurement model is stabilized and is allowed
to be determined only by it's indicators. Moreover, this two-step approach
makes the inclusion/exclusion of a covariate a relatively simple task to
handle. Our proposal amends common practice in applied social science research,
where simple (low-level) LCA is done to obtain a classification of low-level
unit, and this is then related to (low- and high-level) covariates simply
including group fixed effects. Our analysis identifies latent classes that
score either consistently high or consistently low on all measured items, along
with two theoretically important classes that place distinctive emphasis on
items related to engaged citizenship, and duty-based norms. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2307.10720 |