Marcel van Egmond
University of Amsterdam
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Publication
Featured researches published by Marcel van Egmond.
Journal of European Social Policy | 2012
Brian Burgoon; Ferry Koster; Marcel van Egmond
This paper argues that immigration has varying implications for attitudes about government redistribution depending on the level at which immigration is experienced. Working in occupations with higher shares of foreign-born employees can raise individual economic insecurities in ways that might overwhelm the way high foreign-born shares of the population can reduce solidarity or increase fiscal burdens. Hence, experiencing more immigration in one’s occupation might more positively affect support for government redistribution than does experiencing more national-level immigration. We test this and other expectations on survey data in 17 European polities, focused on occupational and national measures of immigration. While national-level exposure to foreign-born populations tends to have little effect on support for government redistribution, occupational-level exposure to immigration tends to spur such support. These results suggest that immigration directly influences the politics of inequality, but in ways more complicated than recent scholarship suggests.
European Journal of Political Research | 1998
Marcel van Egmond; Nan Dirk de Graaf; Cees van der Eijk
Research into electoral participation has produced two traditions, one focusing mainly on individual level explanations while the second concentrates primarily on aggregate level explanations. By bringing these two research approaches together, we are not only able to explain individual electoral participation more thoroughly, but we also gain additional insight into the influence of aggregate level characteristics on individual behavior. We combine eight National Election Studies held in the Netherlands between 1971 and 1994 enabling us to study variation on the individual and the contextual (aggregate) level, including interactions between these two levels. Findings show that the addition of contextual characteristics form a significant improvement to an individual level model predicting electoral participation. Findings also confirm our expectation that the influence of individual characteristics such as education or political interest is dependent upon contextual characteristics describing for instance the salience of the election.
British Journal of Political Science | 2012
Heinz Brandenburg; Marcel van Egmond
This study reassesses the ability of the mass media to influence voter opinions directly. Combining data on media content with individuals’ assessments of British political parties during the 2005 general election campaign allows a test of newspapers’ persuasive influence in a way previously considered a ‘virtual impossibility’. Utilizing repeated measures from the 2005 BES campaign panel, multilevel regression analysis reveals significant impact of partisan slant not just on the evaluation of the party mentioned but also on evaluations of its competitor(s). The strongest evidence of direct media persuasion is provided by the finding that variation in slant over the campaign drives how undecided voters evaluate the incumbent government party, even when controlling for a newspapers average partisan slant.
Electoral Studies | 2011
Catherine E. de Vries; Wouter van der Brug; Marcel van Egmond; Cees van der Eijk
Journal of Population Research | 2010
Marcel van Egmond; Janeen Baxter; Sandra Buchler; Mark Western
Electoral Studies | 2007
Cees van der Eijk; Marcel van Egmond
Archive | 2010
Marcel van Egmond; Janeen Baxter; Sandra Buchler; Mark Western
Archive | 2005
Marcel van Egmond
Archive | 2017
Marcel van Egmond; Wouter van der Brug; Sara B. Hobolt; Mark N. Franklin; Eliyahu V. Sapir
Archive | 2010
Marcel van Egmond; Hajo G. Boomgaarden; Wouter van der Brug