What About Ambivalence and Indifference? Rethinking the Effects of European Attitudes on Voter Turnout in European Parliament Elections
Loading...
Files
Date
2017
Authors
Kentmen-Cin, Cigdem
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley
Open Access Color
BRONZE
Green Open Access
No
OpenAIRE Downloads
OpenAIRE Views
Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
Previous studies of turnout in European Parliament elections have focused on how positive and negative attitudes towards the EU affect voter turnout while ignoring other EU related attitudes. To fill this gap, this article compares the impact of ambivalence and indifference on turnout with that of positive and negative attitudes. Using multilevel logit regression, it demonstrates that ambivalence increased the odds of turnout in the 2004 and 2009 European Parliament elections compared to both negative and indifferent attitudes. However, ambivalence only increases the possibility of turnout if the number of positive thoughts about the EU is equal to or higher than the number of negative thoughts. Having a greater number of negative thoughts, in contrast, does not discourage turnout. The paper concludes that one-dimensional measures of EU attitudes are over-simplistic and fail to provide a complete description of European voting behaviour.
Description
Keywords
Ambivalence, indifference, univalent attitudes, European Parliament elections, voter turnout, Business Cycles, Panel-Data, Trade, Specialization, Integration
Fields of Science
05 social sciences, 0506 political science
Citation
WoS Q
Q1
Scopus Q
Q1

OpenCitations Citation Count
6
Source
Jcms-Journal of Common Market Studıes
Volume
55
Issue
6
Start Page
1343
End Page
1359
PlumX Metrics
Citations
CrossRef : 6
Scopus : 7
Captures
Mendeley Readers : 19
SCOPUS™ Citations
7
checked on Mar 02, 2026
Web of Science™ Citations
8
checked on Mar 02, 2026
Page Views
4
checked on Mar 02, 2026
Google Scholar™


