“School’s out!” A Test of Education’s Turnout Raising Potential

Youth turnout in the UK is falling despite young people representing arguably the most educated generation. This article examines education’s role in social sorting, contending that the positive impact of educational expansion on electoral participation is tempered by relative education concerns. Us...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Charlotte Snelling
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Tübingen University 2016-06-01
Series:Intergenerational Justice Review
Online Access:https://open-journals.uni-tuebingen.de/ojs/index.php/igjr/article/view/447
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spelling doaj-a475099d89754fdf876b39079d916ddc2020-11-24T21:44:24ZengTübingen UniversityIntergenerational Justice Review2190-63352016-06-012110.24357/igjr.8.1.447409“School’s out!” A Test of Education’s Turnout Raising PotentialCharlotte Snelling0University of EdinburghYouth turnout in the UK is falling despite young people representing arguably the most educated generation. This article examines education’s role in social sorting, contending that the positive impact of educational expansion on electoral participation is tempered by relative education concerns. Using the 2011 UK Citizens in Transition Survey, it argues that education affects turnout by determining young people’s positioning within social networks. Some of these networks are more politicised than others. Individuals with relatively lower educational status continue to be excluded from more politically engaged networks – irrespective of their educational attainment – and as such lack the mobilisation and greater sense of political efficacy required to vote.https://open-journals.uni-tuebingen.de/ojs/index.php/igjr/article/view/447
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charlotte Snelling
spellingShingle Charlotte Snelling
“School’s out!” A Test of Education’s Turnout Raising Potential
Intergenerational Justice Review
author_facet Charlotte Snelling
author_sort Charlotte Snelling
title “School’s out!” A Test of Education’s Turnout Raising Potential
title_short “School’s out!” A Test of Education’s Turnout Raising Potential
title_full “School’s out!” A Test of Education’s Turnout Raising Potential
title_fullStr “School’s out!” A Test of Education’s Turnout Raising Potential
title_full_unstemmed “School’s out!” A Test of Education’s Turnout Raising Potential
title_sort “school’s out!” a test of education’s turnout raising potential
publisher Tübingen University
series Intergenerational Justice Review
issn 2190-6335
publishDate 2016-06-01
description Youth turnout in the UK is falling despite young people representing arguably the most educated generation. This article examines education’s role in social sorting, contending that the positive impact of educational expansion on electoral participation is tempered by relative education concerns. Using the 2011 UK Citizens in Transition Survey, it argues that education affects turnout by determining young people’s positioning within social networks. Some of these networks are more politicised than others. Individuals with relatively lower educational status continue to be excluded from more politically engaged networks – irrespective of their educational attainment – and as such lack the mobilisation and greater sense of political efficacy required to vote.
url https://open-journals.uni-tuebingen.de/ojs/index.php/igjr/article/view/447
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