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The effect of government responsiveness on future political participation
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Mellon, Andrew Jonathan (Author)
- Sjoberg, Fredrik Matias (Author)
- Peixoto, Tiago Carneiro (Author)
Title
The effect of government responsiveness on future political participation
Abstract
What effect does government responsiveness have on political participation? Since the 1940s political scientists have used attitudinal measures of perceived efficacy to explain participation. More recent work has focused on underlying genetic factors that condition citizen engagement. The authors develop a ‘calculus of participation’ that incorporates objective efficacy, the extent to which an individual’s participation actually has an impact, and test the model against behavioral data from FixMyStreet.com (n=399,364). The authors find that a successful first experience using FixMyStreet.com (e.g., reporting a pothole and having it fixed) is associated with a 54 percent increase in the probability of an individual submitting a second report. The authors also show that the experience of government responsiveness to the first report submitted has predictive power over all future report submissions. The findings highlight the importance of government responsiveness for fostering an active citizenry, while demonstrating the value of incidentally collected data to examine participatory behavior at the individual level.
Report Number
99519
Institution
The World Bank
Date
2015/02/26 23:50:02
Pages
1-33
Language
en
Accessed
03/04/2016, 11:16
Library Catalogue
Citation
Mellon, A. J., Sjoberg, F. M., & Peixoto, T. C. (2015). The effect of government responsiveness on future political participation (No. 99519; pp. 1–33). The World Bank. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/09/25051854/effect-government-responsiveness-future-political-participation
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