Profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileira

This article is based on Robert Dahl´s argument that inequalities among different social groups in polyarchies tend to be non-cumulative. We investigate the question of whether this hypothesis applies to candidates for the post of State congressman in Brazil. The corpus of the study consists of 38,...

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Main Authors: Márcio Carlomagno, Adriano Codato
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de los Andes 2018-07-01
Series:Colombia Internacional
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/colombiaint95.2018.04
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spelling doaj-8719613e8af747e290a1c9941bc734f02020-11-24T23:25:20ZengUniversidad de los AndesColombia Internacional0121-56121900-60042018-07-01957910710.7440/colombiaint95.2018.04Profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileiraMárcio Carlomagno0Adriano Codato1Universidade Federal do Paraná (Brasil)Universidade Federal do Paraná (Brasil)This article is based on Robert Dahl´s argument that inequalities among different social groups in polyarchies tend to be non-cumulative. We investigate the question of whether this hypothesis applies to candidates for the post of State congressman in Brazil. The corpus of the study consists of 38, 278 candidates in 27 federal government units between 2002 and 2004, which covers four elections. As a dependent variable, we examine the amounts of campaign funds that were raised, and, as an explanatory variable, show that two social divisions were at work: the profession or occupation of the candidates, categorized by a model of willingness to enter politics, and the sex of the candidates. Average difference tests and a regression model show that social position (profession) is the biggest predictor of the political campaign recipe. However, between 2002 and 2010, those inequalities became more pronounced.https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/colombiaint95.2018.04Thesaurus; elections; professional occupation; women. Authors: electoral finance; professionalization of politics; Robert Dahl
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Márcio Carlomagno
Adriano Codato
spellingShingle Márcio Carlomagno
Adriano Codato
Profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileira
Colombia Internacional
Thesaurus; elections; professional occupation; women. Authors: electoral finance; professionalization of politics; Robert Dahl
author_facet Márcio Carlomagno
Adriano Codato
author_sort Márcio Carlomagno
title Profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileira
title_short Profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileira
title_full Profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileira
title_fullStr Profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileira
title_full_unstemmed Profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileira
title_sort profissão, sexo e dinheiro: mensuração da acumulação de desigualdades na competição eleitoral brasileira
publisher Universidad de los Andes
series Colombia Internacional
issn 0121-5612
1900-6004
publishDate 2018-07-01
description This article is based on Robert Dahl´s argument that inequalities among different social groups in polyarchies tend to be non-cumulative. We investigate the question of whether this hypothesis applies to candidates for the post of State congressman in Brazil. The corpus of the study consists of 38, 278 candidates in 27 federal government units between 2002 and 2004, which covers four elections. As a dependent variable, we examine the amounts of campaign funds that were raised, and, as an explanatory variable, show that two social divisions were at work: the profession or occupation of the candidates, categorized by a model of willingness to enter politics, and the sex of the candidates. Average difference tests and a regression model show that social position (profession) is the biggest predictor of the political campaign recipe. However, between 2002 and 2010, those inequalities became more pronounced.
topic Thesaurus; elections; professional occupation; women. Authors: electoral finance; professionalization of politics; Robert Dahl
url https://revistas.uniandes.edu.co/doi/full/10.7440/colombiaint95.2018.04
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