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A revolt of the deplored? The role of perceived cultural distance in the educational gradient in anti-establishment politics.


ABSTRACT: Anti-establishment politics have become part of contemporary Western democracies. Less-educated citizens in particular have been found to display political distrust and populist attitudes, support populist parties, and abstain from voting. We advance a novel explanation for these patterns, drawing on extant theoretical insights to hypothesize that less- and more-educated citizens differ in the extent to which they perceive politicians to be culturally distant to them. Informed by our earlier in-depth qualitative research, we developed novel indicators of such perceptions and included them in a survey fielded among a high-quality panel representative of the Dutch population. We found: 1) positive associations between perceived cultural distance to politicians and political distrust, populist attitudes, the intention to vote for a populist party, and non-voting; and 2) that, overall, perceived cultural distance contributes substantially more to the educational gradient in anti-establishment political attitudes and behavior than the conventional rationalist and materialist approaches.

SUBMITTER: Noordzij K 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9292966 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A revolt of the deplored? The role of perceived cultural distance in the educational gradient in anti-establishment politics.

Noordzij Kjell K   de Koster Willem W   van der Waal Jeroen J  

The British journal of sociology 20210906 5


Anti-establishment politics have become part of contemporary Western democracies. Less-educated citizens in particular have been found to display political distrust and populist attitudes, support populist parties, and abstain from voting. We advance a novel explanation for these patterns, drawing on extant theoretical insights to hypothesize that less- and more-educated citizens differ in the extent to which they perceive politicians to be culturally distant to them. Informed by our earlier in-  ...[more]

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