Indrajit

@indrajitRoy
12 Followers
12 Following
6 Posts
Sr Lecturer- Global Development Politics University of York.
@IndrajitRoyYork on Twitter
Official websitehttps://www.york.ac.uk/politics/people/academicstaff/indrajit-roy/
Twitterhttps://twitter.com/IndrajitRoyYork
LinkedInhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/indrajit-roy-b87594a/
Personal websitehttps://indrajitroy.wixsite.com/indrajitroy

NEW PUBLICATION ALERT:

My new #OpenAccess article analyses framing of #welfare by #India lawmakers. It examines 78 Lok Sabha debates on #NREGA from 2004-5.

Best part of the paper: reading debate transcripts in English (35) & Hindi (43)!

I'd love to know what you think.

https://doi.org/10.1093/polsoc/puad010

How welfare wins: Discursive institutionalism, the politics of the poor, and the expansion of social welfare in India during the early 21st century

Abstract. The worldwide explosion of social welfare has been described as the “quiet revolution” of our time. This paper analyses the expansion of social welfar

OUP Academic

Our article on the association between local immigration & unemployment and voting for the far right in France is out in the latest issue of #PoliticalBehavior


(with Haley McAvay & Sylvain Brouard)

@politicalscience #politicalscience #socialscience

Main findings

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11109-021-09676-z

Residential Context and Voting for the Far Right: The Impact of Immigration and Unemployment on the 2017 French Presidential Election - Political Behavior

The assumption that increasing diversity and economic hardship boost support for the far right is widespread, yet extant research comes up with contradictory findings. This article investigates the link between context and the far right by investigating the impact of immigration and unemployment on voting for Marine Le Pen in the first round of the 2017 French Presidential election. We match a large individual-level survey with contextual variables constructed from the census describing voters’ residential environments. Unlike previous studies, we measure immigration and unemployment at the neighborhood level and the broader level of the department. Using a multilevel model, we find that voters in neighborhoods with high levels of immigration are less likely to vote for the far right. However, in departments, increased immigration and unemployment correlate with greater support for Le Pen. These findings suggest that contact theory and ethnic threat operate differently according to spatial scale.

SpringerLink
Hey there,
Any folks working on #politics of #global_development out here (yet)?
Pictures and videos should now be loading fast again on mastodon.social. The load balancer was hitting the limits of its hardware too so I had to upgrade it #devops
Hello world 😃