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Replication Data for: Popular Trust, Mistrust, and Approval: Measuring and Understanding Citizens' Attitudes Toward Democratic Institutions

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

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Title Replication Data for: Popular Trust, Mistrust, and Approval: Measuring and Understanding Citizens' Attitudes Toward Democratic Institutions
 
Identifier https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/CB3EKB
 
Creator Superti, Chiara
 
Publisher Harvard Dataverse
 
Description These files replicate the work in the dissertation entitled: Popular Trust, Mistrust, and Approval: Measuring and Understanding Citizens' Attitudes Toward Democratic Institutions. The three essays in this manuscript contribute to the political science literature by introducing a new measure of political approval, and by proposing a different institutional interpretation of the determinants of political trust. The first essay, “Individual Blank Voting, Mobilized Protest Voting, and Voting Abstention,” compares different forms of electoral dissent individual blank voting, mobilized null voting, and voting abstention – across Italy and in the Basque Country of Spain. It demonstrates that the least studied of the three – blank voting – expresses the most conscious and educated rejection of political candidates, parties, and electoral systems. The second essay, “Measuring Discontent and Predicting Trouble,” proposes the use of unconventional voting as a powerful alternative metric of popular electoral approval, by showing the existence of a systematic link between blank and null voting, and larger popular protests (e.g., riots and street demonstrations). This paper demonstrates that the rate of blank and null voting at the national level is a reliable proxy of larger popular discontent and an effective predictor of future protests. As such, it is comparable to other widely used measures of perceived electoral quality and popular approval, while being much less costly, time consuming, and with greater disaggregation potential. In the last essay, “Corruption and Trust in Institutions, Evidence from Israel,” Noam Gidron and I exploit a natural experiment offered by Israel’s unique immigration law, which expedites naturalization for Jewish immigrants. We find that cultural norms, as shaped by levels of corruption in immigrants’ sending countries, affect only their initial levels of trust, while subsequent exposures to socially inclusive institutions (e.g., the military) shape a mature and more positive political attitude.
 
Subject Social Sciences
 
Contributor Superti, Chiara