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Replication Data for: From the Streets to the Party Lists: Electoral Advantages of Social Movement Activism

Harvard Dataverse (Africa Rice Center, Bioversity International, CCAFS, CIAT, IFPRI, IRRI and WorldFish)

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Title Replication Data for: From the Streets to the Party Lists: Electoral Advantages of Social Movement Activism
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/D8JH3E
 
Creator Kruszewska, Dominika
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description Social movements form political parties, influence policy outcomes, and contribute to the renewal of political elites by supplying political candidates. Yet, we know little about the relationship between contentious and electoral politics. What are the electoral advantages of participation in social movement activism and under what conditions are those advantages the highest?



In this dissertation, I employ a mixed-methods design to argue that movement roots can provide activists with a reputational advantage, particularly useful in times of political crisis. When voters look for alternatives to the establishment, movement leaders can successfully play into the discourse of the society versus the state and establish credentials as authentic representatives of the people. Using the cases of post-transition Poland and Spain, I show that these credentials serve as particularly valuable heuristics in contexts with high uncertainty and low information such as new democracies. However, they can increase the chances of activists getting elected also in times of other political crises. Under conditions of party system volatility and decline of trust in government institutions, parties seek to energize their bases by developing closer ties to social movements. Attendance of established politicians at demonstrations, similarly to highlighting activist origins, can serve as a form of costly signaling of responsiveness to the concerns of constituents.



However, reputational benefits decline over time. Whereas uncertainty increases the value of activist reputation, the stability of the party system limits its appeal. First, when party labels are highly informative, voters are less reliant on activism as a heuristic for valence attributes. Second, when movements operate within an established party system, they are perceived along partisan lines. When protest participation signals an ideological position, it increases support only among voters in close proximity to candidate's inferred ideal point but at the cost of losing other voters.
 
Subject Social Sciences
social movements, activists, Spain, Poland
 
Contributor Kruszewska, Dominika
 
Relation Polish_dissidents.RData compiles publicly available biographies of Solidarity activists: http://www.encysol.pl/wiki/Skorowidz_biogramów
Chapter 2 is based on EAST PaC Data available here: https://electoralcontrol.org/east-pac-data/
 
Type survey experiments
data on political candidates and MPs
biographical information on Solidarity activists in Poland