Referierte Aufsätze Web of Science
Jennifer Fitzgerald, Pavel Bacovsky
In: Political Studies 72 (2024), 2, 634-651
Decades of evidence point to the vital role of parents in shaping their children’s partisan leanings, particularly concerning mainstream parties. And yet the contours of intergenerational influence remain quite obscured. For instance, scholars disagree on when social learning in the household occurs (childhood vs adolescence) and about who is the dominant socializer (mother vs father). Data from a long-term German household panel survey allow for a fine-grained examination of intergenerational influence processes over time. We model the partisan preferences of 18-year-olds as a function of their mothers’ and fathers’ own contemporaneous and past partisan preferences. Our intergenerational inquiry reveals that mothers dominate socialization during childhood while influence in late adolescence is more evenly distributed between mothers and fathers. We also find that mothers have an advantage over fathers in communicating center-left party preferences. These findings have implications for our understanding of socialization, partisanship, and democratic stability.
Themen: Familie
Keywords: partisanship, youth, family influence, panel survey data, socialization, Germany
Externer Link:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/00323217221133643
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1177/00323217221133643