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Pauline Grosjean - UNSW Australia
Thursday 19 May 2016, 05:30pm - 07:00pm

Render Unto Caesar: Welfare, Charity, and Political Islam (with Maleke Fourati and Gabriele Gratton)

Abstract:

Data from the first post-Arab Spring elections reveal that support for Islamic parties came from richer districts and individuals. We develop a theory of political support for religious parties that explains this phenomenon. We predict that the probability that a voter supports a religious party (i) increases in income for the poorest voters, but decreases in income for the richest; and (ii) is greater for voters in richer districts. We test these predictions on original micro-level data in a nationally representative sample of 600 individuals in 30 districts in Tunisia. Our empirical results confirm both predictions and suggest that belonging to the middle class and living in a richer district together affect voting decisions more than being a religious voter. We document similar patterns in other key elections in the Muslim world.

   
   
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