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European Sociological Review Advance Access originally published online on November 12, 2007
European Sociological Review 2008 24(2):169-182; doi:10.1093/esr/jcm041
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

A New Dimension of Social Stratification in Poland? Class Membership and Electoral Voting in 1991–2001

Henryk Domanski

Henryk Domanski, Institute of Philosophy and Sociology at Polish Academy of Sciences, 00-330 Warszawa, Nowy Swiat 72, Poland. Tel: +48 22 826 71 81; email: hdomansk{at}ifispan.waw.pl

In contemporary Central and Eastern Europe, the debate on class politics takes on a different form to that in the West—its concern is whether class divisions increased as the post-communist societies made the transition to the market system. Using Polish survey data on respondents voting behaviour in elections of 1991, 1994, 1997, and 2001, I present evidence on the significance of social class for voting behaviour. Results of log-linear analysis show that class membership does indeed exert a significant impact on voting behaviour. Although it changed across the time, it appeared no less in 2001 than in 1991. Also the patterns of this association (which class votes which party?) remained unchanged. On the whole our evidence suggests that in Poland a new dimension of social stratification—that which is referred in sociological literature as ‘class politics’—has emerged. At the same time, claims for the class basis of voting in Poland should not be exaggerated, as the class-vote link in Poland is much lower than in most of the Western societies. To estimate the relative strength of this association I compared it across 17 countries using data from the European Social Survey 2002.

Manuscript received: October 1, 2006.


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