Conventional and unconventional participation in Latin America: a hierarchical latent class approach
Building on past research, we implement a hierarchical latent class model to analyze political participation from a comparative perspective. Our methodology allows simultaneously: (i) estimating citizens’ propensity to engage in conventional and unconventional modes of participation; (ii) classifyin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Political science research and methods 2021-10, Vol.9 (4), p.878-888 |
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creator | Alvarez, R. Michael Katz, Gabriel Levin, Ines Núñez, Lucas |
description | Building on past research, we implement a hierarchical latent class model to analyze political participation from a comparative perspective. Our methodology allows simultaneously: (i) estimating citizens’ propensity to engage in conventional and unconventional modes of participation; (ii) classifying individuals into underlying “types” capturing within- and cross-country variations in participation; and (iii) assessing how this classification varies with micro- and macro-level factors. We apply our model to Latin American survey data. We show that our method outperforms alternative approaches used to study participation and derive typologies of political engagement. Substantively, we find that the distribution of participatory types is similar throughout the continent, and that it correlates strongly with respondents’ socio-demographic characteristics and crime victimization. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1017/psrm.2020.35 |
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subjects | Alternative approaches Classification Cluster analysis Crime Estimates Government & Law Hierarchies Latent class analysis Participation Political behavior Political participation Political Science Polls & surveys Probability Research Note Respondents Social Sciences Variables Victimization |
title | Conventional and unconventional participation in Latin America: a hierarchical latent class approach |
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