Published on 01 January 2020 |
Replication Data for: Politically integrated, perceptually disintegrated? Why dimensions of Euroscepticism diverge across the left-right spectrum and cluster geographically
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A growing body of research has identified general trends of Euroscepticism in the European Union. This article argues that underlying motivations for being Eurosceptic should be expected to differ across member states and citizens of different ideological preferences, as EU integration has a different impact on member states and as preferences diverge across ideology. Focusing merely on general trends is likely to result in non-findings or faulty generalizations.Comparative studies have already identified different trends across member states, but research on Euroscepticism need a more systematic focus on divergent trends at both the individual and member state level.Using cluster analysis and testing the occurrence of four established dimensions of Euroscepticism, this analysis confirms that significantly different trends occur across the 28 member states. Further, the relationship between the left-right spectrum and dimensions of Euroscepticism differs across member states. The results stress the importance of further focus on divergent trends.
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Publication Details
Subfield
Political Science and International Relations
Field
Social Sciences
Domain
Social Sciences
Confidence Score
96%
Source
Open Alex