Activating effects of elections : changes in young voters’ political engagement over the course of an election year

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Authors

ECKSTEIN Katharina MIKLIKOWSKA Marta ŠEREK Jan NOACK Peter KOERNER Astrid

Year of publication 2024
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Frontiers in Political Science
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Social Studies

Citation
Web article - open access
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpos.2024.1302686
Keywords elections; political engagement; election participation; young voters; political socialization
Attached files
Description Although the effects of elections and measures of direct democracy on policy outcomes have been well researched, their indirect “educative value” has received less attention, particularly in relation to political engagement of young people. This study examined the activating effect of the national elections in Germany (2009), Czech Republic (2010), and Sweden (2014) on young voters’ political engagement. Young voters (Germany: N?=?388; Czech Republic: N?=?196, and Sweden: N?=?246) were surveyed several months before (T1), shortly after (T2), and several months after (T3) the respective national elections. For all three countries, the results revealed significant increases in political engagement during the election period, followed by significant declines after the election. The post-election declines were smaller compared to the election increases, suggesting a persistence of elections’ activating effects. With the exception of German young adults who were less engaged or first-time voters and showed higher increases in engagement during the election period, there were few interindividual differences. The findings suggest that major political events such as national elections can have activating effects on youth’s political engagement. They support the idea of the socializing value of election participation and of late adolescence and young adulthood as a window of opportunity for reaching young voters during politicized times.
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