Publication | Open Access
Thatcher’s Children, Blair’s Babies, Political Socialization and Trickle-down Value Change: An Age, Period and Cohort Analysis
244
Citations
44
References
2017
Year
Public OpinionPolitical BehaviorSocial ChangeIntergenerational EquitySocial SciencesAdditive ModelsSocial Policy ResearchPolitical EconomyTrickle-down Value ChangeNew GenerationsHuman WelfarePolitical PartiesHealth SciencesSocial InequalityPublic PolicyDemographic ChangeCohort AnalysisEconomic DemographySociologyPolitical PluralismPolitical AttitudesPolitical SocializationSocial PolicyPolitical Science
To what extent are new generations ‘Thatcherite’? Using British Social Attitudes data for 1985–2012 and applying age-period-cohort analysis and generalized additive models, this article investigates whether Thatcher’s Children hold more right-authoritarian political values compared to other political generations. The study further examines the extent to which the generation that came of age under New Labour – Blair’s Babies – shares these values. The findings for generation effects indicate that the later political generation is even more right-authoritarian, including with respect to attitudes to redistribution, welfare and crime. This view is supported by evidence of cohort effects. These results show that the legacy of Thatcherism for left-right and libertarian-authoritarian values is its long-term shaping of public opinion through political socialization.
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