Constantin Manuel Bosancianu

ORCID: 0000-0001-7950-9798
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About
Contact & Profiles
Research Areas
  • Electoral Systems and Political Participation
  • Vaccine Coverage and Hesitancy
  • COVID-19 epidemiological studies
  • SARS-CoV-2 and COVID-19 Research
  • Misinformation and Its Impacts
  • Media Influence and Politics
  • Social Capital and Networks
  • Qualitative Comparative Analysis Research
  • Social and Cultural Dynamics
  • Psychological Well-being and Life Satisfaction
  • Social Media and Politics
  • Populism, Right-Wing Movements
  • Political Influence and Corporate Strategies
  • Hate Speech and Cyberbullying Detection
  • Teacher Professional Development and Motivation
  • Culture, Economy, and Development Studies
  • Early Childhood Education and Development
  • Social Policy and Reform Studies
  • COVID-19 Pandemic Impacts
  • Public-Private Partnership Projects
  • COVID-19 Impact on Reproduction
  • Advanced Statistical Modeling Techniques
  • Parental Involvement in Education

WZB Berlin Social Science Center
2020-2022

Boston University
2020

Harvard University Press
2020

University of British Columbia
2020

Bay State College
2020

Central European University
2016-2017

Abstract Widespread acceptance of COVID-19 vaccines is crucial for achieving sufficient immunization coverage to end the global pandemic, yet few studies have investigated vaccination attitudes in lower-income countries, where large-scale just beginning. We analyze vaccine across 15 survey samples covering 10 low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) Asia, Africa South America, Russia (an upper-middle-income country) United States, including a total 44,260 individuals. find considerably...

10.1038/s41591-021-01454-y article EN cc-by Nature Medicine 2021-07-16

What political and social features of states help explain the distribution reported Covid-19 deaths? We survey existing works on (1) state capacity, (2) institutions, (3) priorities, (4) structures to identify national-level characteristics that may variation in ability societies limit mortality. Accounting for a simple set Lasso-chosen controls, we find measures interpersonal institutional trust are persistently associated with deaths theory-consistent directions. Beyond this, however,...

10.31235/osf.io/ub3zd preprint EN 2020-06-16

Abstract We analyze COVID-19 vaccine acceptance across 15 survey samples covering ten low- and middle-income countries (LMICs) in Asia, Africa, South America, Russia (an upper-middle-income country), the United States, using responses from 44,260 individuals. find considerably higher willingness to take a LMIC (80% on average) compared States (65%) (30%). Vaccine was primarily explained by an interest personal protection against COVID-19, while concern about side effects most commonly...

10.1101/2021.03.11.21253419 preprint EN cc-by-nc-nd medRxiv (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory) 2021-03-13

Objectives Competing theoretical models from economics and social psychology would suggest either a negative or positive association between income inequality attitude polarization. In order to address the conflicting nature of predictions made by these accounts, this analysis tests whether indeed impacts polarization in Left‐Right ideological self‐placement for diverse sample democracies. Methods I use World Values Surveys—European Surveys 1981–2008 combined data obtaining large time‐series...

10.1111/ssqu.12371 article EN Social Science Quarterly 2017-02-14

Populist appeals to ‘pure people’ have been theorised mobilise previously disengaged citizens. However, this ‘corrective consequence’ has found weak support in empirical research. This finding is consistent with studies that suggest novel campaign and new political offerings a negligible effect on turnout. As consequence, research proposes distinction between the behavioural attitudinal effects of populism introduces softened revision corrective argument: Despite impact individuals’ turnout...

10.1080/01402382.2022.2089963 article EN cc-by West European Politics 2022-07-21

Consistent evidence of variation in the participation gap between education or income groups developing and developed democracies has begun to accrue. This points varying disparities haves have nots that occasionally reach alarming levels, potentially triggering breakdowns political representation. A few cross-sectional analyses identify institutional factors, such as voting complexity state capacity, economic ones, like inequality, driving difference. Few explanations currently try address...

10.31219/osf.io/v2m46 preprint EN 2021-09-26

Poorer citizens generally participate less in politics; at the same time, income-based gap participation is not across democracies. Whereas Denmark 1977 turnout among poorer was 6 percentage points higher than wealthier ones, United States 1988 reversed: Americans 31 their peers. Existing attempts understanding sources of this variation point to macro-level factors, such as compulsory voting, ballot complexity, or income inequality (Gallego, 2015; Solt, 2008). Though important, we argue that...

10.31219/osf.io/nysb7 preprint EN 2021-10-13
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