Publikation: European Institutional Integration and the Educational Divide in Support for the European Union
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Since the 1950s, the history of European integration unfolds as a unique social experiment, witnessing the transformation of a non-existent entity into an increasingly institutionalized force. This article delves into the consequences of this ongoing institutionalization on public attitudes towards the institution itself: the European Union (EU). We argue that as European institutional integration advanced, a divide in EU support between more and less educated individuals emerged, with the latter becoming progressively less supportive. Drawing on data from eighty-five waves of the Eurobarometer survey across fifteen countries and over 820,000 individuals from 1976 to 2014, a Bayesian mixed-effects analysis reveals that the gap in support between the more and less educated significantly widened with a country's level of institutional integration. This study emphasizes the necessity of distinguishing institutional effects from temporal patterns in order to enhance our understanding of EU-related public opinion dynamics.
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BAUTE, Sharon, Tobias TOBER, 2024. European Institutional Integration and the Educational Divide in Support for the European Union. In: British Journal of Political Science. Cambridge University Press (CUP). ISSN 0007-1234. eISSN 1469-2112. Verfügbar unter: doi: 10.1017/s0007123424000309BibTex
@article{Baute2024-12-03Europ-71564, title={European Institutional Integration and the Educational Divide in Support for the European Union}, year={2024}, doi={10.1017/s0007123424000309}, issn={0007-1234}, journal={British Journal of Political Science}, author={Baute, Sharon and Tober, Tobias} }
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