Working Paper: Progressive Cities: Urban-rural polarisation of social values and economic development around the world
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/24765Date
2022-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
In contrast to the conservative values of rural populations, cities are often seen as
bulwarks of liberal, progressive values. This urban-rural divide in values has become one
of the major fault lines in western democracies, underpinning major political events of the
last decade, not least the election of Donald Trump. Yet, beyond a small number of
countries, there is little evidence that cities really are more liberal than rural areas.
Evolutionary modernisation theory suggests that socio-economic development may lead
to the spread of, progressive, self-expression values but provides little guidance on the
role of cities in this process. Has an urban-rural split in values developed across the
world? And does this gap depend on the economic development of a country? We answer
these questions using a large cross-sectional dataset covering 66 countries. We show
that there are marked and significant urban-rural differences in progressive values,
defined as attitudes to immigration, gender rights, and family life. These differences exist
even when controlling for observable compositional effects, suggesting that cities do play
a role in the spread of progressive values. Yet, these results only apply at higher levels
of economic development suggesting that, for cities to leave behind rural areas in terms
of liberal values, the satisfying of certain material needs is a prerequisite.
Description
Source at http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/113458/.
Publisher
London School of Economics and Political ScienceCitation
Luca, Terrero-Davila, Stein JS, Lee. Working Paper: Progressive Cities: Urban-rural polarisation of social values and economic development around the world. LSE International Inequalities Institute. 2022Metadata
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