Geographic representation in local politics: Evidence from parliamentary questions in German city councils
Autoren/Herausgeber: |
PD Dr. Martin Gross |
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Erschienen: | 2025 |
Publikationsart: | Publikationen des Lehrstuhls |
Der open-acess-Artikel kann unter folgendem Link abgerufen werden:
https://ejpr.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1475-6765.70019
Abstract
A well-established body of research has highlighted the importance of geographic representation in party-centred political systems. In party-centred systems, geographic ties are commonly expressed through non-binding legislative instruments such as parliamentary questions. While this literature has advanced our understanding of representation in parliamentary systems, there are notable gaps in the existing research. Most importantly, previous studies have almost exclusively analysed geographic representation in national politics, where legislators represent comparatively large electoral districts. In contrast, this study focuses on patterns of geographic representation at the local level to understand whether and how specific neighbourhoods are represented in local politics. By studying parliamentary questions in 12 German city councils, we assess party efforts to represent their electoral strongholds. Methodologically, we go beyond existing research on geographic representation by building comprehensive dictionaries to assess geographic representation based on geolocated data from Wikipedia and OpenStreetMap. The results show that geographic representation is a common feature of local politics and that parties tend to focus on areas where they are electorally strong, particularly when they are incentivized to do so by the electoral system and when their electorate is highly localized.