Self-employment as atypical or autonomous work: diverging effects on political orientations
2019
17
2
April
381-407
self employed ; social class ; welfare state ; precarious employment ; labour market ; workers rights ; politics
Employment
https://doi.org/10.1093/ser/mww017
English
Bibliogr.;Statistics;Charts
"It is often held that the self-employed are an economically conservative, political right-wing class. Previous studies, however, have primarily dealt with self-employed workers as a relatively monolithic social class with shared interests as entrepreneurs and (potential) employers. But, with its recent rise, self-employment has developed into a heterogeneous employment type, with a growing number of dependent and precarious self-employed. In this article, the political preferences of people in self-employment are compared to the preferences of employees on temporary contracts. In doing so, hypotheses are tested from both classic theories on class voting, as well as theories on job precariousness and labor market vulnerabilities. For this purpose, European Social Survey Round 4 (ESS-4) data on eight West European countries are analyzed. The findings suggest that particular segments of self-employment share the characteristics of other forms of ‘atypical' work, not only with respect to labor market insecurities, but also regarding the political orientations associated with such insecurities."
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