TY - JOUR
T1 - To vote or not to vote? Migrant electoral (dis)engagement in an enlarged Europe
AU - Szulecki, Kacper
AU - Bertelli, Davide
AU - Erdal, Marta Bivand
AU - Coşciug, Anatolie
AU - Kussy, Angelina
AU - Mikiewicz, Gabriella
AU - Tulbure, Corina
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s).
PY - 2021/9/1
Y1 - 2021/9/1
N2 - External voting by nonresident citizens has become an important feature of contemporary democratic politics. However, compared to the average voter in domestic elections, we still know significantly less about migrants' motivations to vote or not. Whereas analyses of external voting patterns offer insights into the results of external voting compared to origin populations, there is a lacuna of knowledge about why migrants choose to vote, or not, when they have the right to do so. This article seeks to address this gap by building a framework rooted in both the electoral studies literature and on the growing body of knowledge on external voting within migration studies. We consider migrant voters' desire, mobilization, and ability to vote, and map the locus of all factors - either in the country of residence, country of origin, or within transnational political space. We explore evidence from 80 in-depth interviews, collected January-May 2020, with four groups of intra-European migrants - Romanian and Polish residing in Norway and Spain - to map the determinants of external voting. Our research generates three insights which challenge or nuance extant research on external voting. We show how migrants' motivations to vote depend not only on residence and origin contexts but also on subjective factors and perceptions of the legitimacy of external voting. This article complements existing macrolevel studies of voting determinants with an in-depth qualitative microperspective and generates hypotheses that can be further tested in large-n as well as cross-regional comparisons.
AB - External voting by nonresident citizens has become an important feature of contemporary democratic politics. However, compared to the average voter in domestic elections, we still know significantly less about migrants' motivations to vote or not. Whereas analyses of external voting patterns offer insights into the results of external voting compared to origin populations, there is a lacuna of knowledge about why migrants choose to vote, or not, when they have the right to do so. This article seeks to address this gap by building a framework rooted in both the electoral studies literature and on the growing body of knowledge on external voting within migration studies. We consider migrant voters' desire, mobilization, and ability to vote, and map the locus of all factors - either in the country of residence, country of origin, or within transnational political space. We explore evidence from 80 in-depth interviews, collected January-May 2020, with four groups of intra-European migrants - Romanian and Polish residing in Norway and Spain - to map the determinants of external voting. Our research generates three insights which challenge or nuance extant research on external voting. We show how migrants' motivations to vote depend not only on residence and origin contexts but also on subjective factors and perceptions of the legitimacy of external voting. This article complements existing macrolevel studies of voting determinants with an in-depth qualitative microperspective and generates hypotheses that can be further tested in large-n as well as cross-regional comparisons.
KW - diasporas
KW - external voting
KW - political participation
KW - transnationalism
KW - turnout
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85132770766&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/migration/mnab025
DO - 10.1093/migration/mnab025
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85132770766
SN - 2049-5838
VL - 9
SP - 989
EP - 1010
JO - Migration Studies
JF - Migration Studies
IS - 3
ER -