Abstract

In many European countries, a growing share of population with immigrant background coincides with the surge in support for radical right parties. In this paper we show how such increases affect radical right candidacy. We use Swedish register data which identifies political candidates. With geocoded data, we match individuals running for the Sweden Democrats to their local neighbourhood contexts, and measure changes in the share of visible minority residents at scales ranging from 100 meters to 2 kilometres. For those who stayed in the same neighbourhood between 2006 and 2010, the change in the share of visible minorities generally does not affect the decision to join the pool of party candidates. This result is robust when we introduce additional tests and select on the scale of the neighbourhood, unemployment terciles, change in share of visible minority groups terciles, and entry threshold into the pool of candidates. For those who stayed in the same neighbourhood, the only significant finding is a small mobilisation effect for a subsample of individuals who live in densely populated metropolitan neighbourhoods – here we also observe a halo effect, with negative association for small-scale changes and positive association for changes in the larger halo zone.

Highlights

  • In many European countries, a growing share of population with immigrant background coincides with the surge in support for radical right parties

  • This article is about the effect demographic changes have one important case of ‘voice’, that is running as a candidate for a radical right party

  • This study adds to our knowledge of mobilising drivers: even though opposition to demographic change associated with immigration lies at the heart of the Sweden Democrats’ political message, there is limited evidence to suggest that local candidates are mobilised because of their first-hand experiences of increasing share of minority group residents in their neighbourhoods

Read more

Summary

Introduction

In many European countries, a growing share of population with immigrant background coincides with the surge in support for radical right parties. We match individuals running for the Sweden Democrats to their local neighbourhood contexts, and measure changes in the share of visible minority residents at scales ranging from 100 meters to 2 kilometres For those who stayed in the same neighbourhood between 2006 and 2010, the change in the share of visible minorities generally does not affect the decision to join the pool of party candidates. The models show little support for the notion that (changes in) the share of visible minority residents affects (changes in) the likelihood of entering the pool of candidates for the Sweden Democrats between 2006 and 2010 This null result persists at all neighbourhood scales, ranging from 100 by 100 meters to 2 by 2 kilometres

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call