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@article{ Bolet2022,
 title = {The janus-faced nature of radical voting: Subjective social decline at the roots of radical right and radical left support},
 author = {Bolet, Diane},
 journal = {Party Politics},
 number = {OnlineFirst},
 pages = {1-14},
 year = {2022},
 issn = {1460-3683},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1177/13540688221085444},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-86514-1},
 abstract = {This study advances the decline of Parent-Relative Subjective Social Status (PRSSS) as a reconciling factor among radical right and radical left supporters. While self-employed workers, men and rural residents perceive socioeconomic decline relative to their parents and support the radical right, the well-educated, urbanites and low-income individuals are likely to feel similar decline given the rising levels of unemployment and social inequality. These structural changes may push the latter to support a party which stresses income inequality, a catchcry of the radical left. Using a 2017 Eurobarometer Survey, logistic regressions show positive associations between low PRSSS (versus equal or high PRSSS) and support for right- and left-wing radicalism in 28 European countries. The traditional attitudes of each group magnify the PRSSS effects on radical support: it is reinforced by anti-immigrant support for the radical right and by preference for redistribution for the radical left.},
 keywords = {Eurobarometer; Eurobarometer; Rechtsradikalismus; right-wing radicalism; Linksradikalismus; left-wing radicalism; Partei; party; sozialer Status; social status; Europapolitik; European Policy; politische Einstellung; political attitude; Wahl; election}}