[Allison, Paul D. 2009. Fixed Effects Regression Models. Los Angeles: Sage.10.4135/9781412993869]Search in Google Scholar
[Bandura, Albert. 1977. Social learning theory. Prentice Hall: Englewood Cliffs.]Search in Google Scholar
[Bartolini, Stefano and Peter Mair. 1990. Identity, Competition, and Electoral Availability: The Stabilization of European Electorates, 1885–1985. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Beck, Paul Allen and M. Kent Jennings. 1975. Parents as ‘Middlepersons’ in Political Socialization. The Journal of Politics 37(1): 83–107.10.2307/2128892]Search in Google Scholar
[Benabou, Roland and Efe A. Ok. 2001. Social Mobility and the Demand for Redistribution: The Poum Hypothesis. The Quarterly Journal of Economics 116(2): 447–87.10.1162/00335530151144078]Search in Google Scholar
[Breen, Richard (ed.). 2004. Social Mobility in Europe. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/0199258457.001.0001]Search in Google Scholar
[Clark, Andrew E. and Emanuela D’Angelo. 2013. Upward Social Mobility, Well-Being and Political Preferences: Evidence from the BHPS. CEP Discussion Paper No 1252. London School of Economics and Political Science, http://cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/download/dp1252.pdf (26.05.2016).]Search in Google Scholar
[Clark, Terry N., Seymour M. Lipset, and Michael Rempel. 1993. The Declining Political Significance of Social Class. International Sociology 8(3): 293–316.10.1177/026858093008003003]Search in Google Scholar
[Clifford, Peter and Anthony F. Heath. 1993. The Political Consequences of Social Mobility. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A (Statistics in Society) 156(1): 51–61.10.2307/2982860]Search in Google Scholar
[De Graaf, Nan Dirk, Paul Nieuwbeerta, and Anthony F. Heath. 1995. Class Mobility and Political Preferences: Individual and Contextual Effects. American Journal of Sociology 100(4): 997–1027.10.1086/230607]Search in Google Scholar
[Downs, Anthony. 1957. An Economic Theory of Democracy. New York: Harper and Row.]Search in Google Scholar
[Erikson, Robert and John H. Goldthorpe. 1992. The Constant Flux. A Study of Class Mobility in Industrial Societies. Oxford: Clarendon Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Erikson, Robert, John H. Goldthorpe, and Lucienne Portocarero. 1979. Intergenerational Class Mobility in Three Western European Societies: England, France and Sweden. The British Journal of Sociology 30(4): 415–41.10.2307/589632]Search in Google Scholar
[Evans, Geoffrey. 1993. Class, Prospects and the Life-Cycle: Explaining the Association between Class Position and Political Preferences. Acta Sociologica 36(3): 263–76.10.1177/000169939303600308]Search in Google Scholar
[Evans, Geoffrey. 2000. The Continued Significance of Class Voting. Annual Review of Political Science 3(1): 401–417.10.1146/annurev.polisci.3.1.401]Search in Google Scholar
[Falcon, Julie. 2013. Social Mobility in 20th Century Switzerland. PhD dissertation, Insitut des sciences sociales, Université de Lausanne, CH.]Search in Google Scholar
[Franklin, Mark N., Thomas T. Mackie, and Henry Valen (eds.). 1992. Electoral Change: Responses to Evolving Social and Attitudinal Structures in Western Countries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[FSO. 2010. Statistical Data on Switzerland 2010. (025-1000) Neuchâtel: Swiss Federal Statistics Office.]Search in Google Scholar
[Glass, Jennifer, Vern L. Bengtson, and Charlotte Chorn Dunham. 1986. Attitude Similarity in Three-Generation Families: Socialization, Status Inheritance, or Reciprocal Influence? American Sociological Review 51(5): 685–98.]Search in Google Scholar
[Goldthorpe, John H. 1986. Social Mobility and Class Structure in Modern Britain. (Second Edition). Oxford: Oxford University Press.]Search in Google Scholar
[Häusermann, Silja and Hanspeter Kriesi. 2015. What Do Voters Want? Dimensions and Configurations in Individual-Level Preferences and Party Choice. Pp. 202–30 in The Politics of Advanced Capitalism, edited by Pablo Beramendi, Silja Häusermann, Herbert Kitschelt, and Hanspeter Kriesi. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1017/CBO9781316163245.009]Search in Google Scholar
[Jackman, Mary R. 1972. Social Mobility and Attitude toward the Political System. Social Forces 50(4): 462–72.10.2307/2576789]Search in Google Scholar
[Jansen, Giedo, Geoffrey Evans, and Nan Dirk De Graaf. 2013. Class Voting and Left–Right Party Positions: A Comparative Study of 15 Western Democracies, 1960–2005. Social Science Research 42(2): 376–400.10.1016/j.ssresearch.2012.09.007]Search in Google Scholar
[Jennings, M. Kent and Richard G. Niemi. 1968. The Transmission of Political Values from Parent to Child. The American Political Science Review 65(1): 169–184.10.1017/S0003055400115709]Search in Google Scholar
[Kitschelt, Herbert and Philipp Rehm. 2014. Occupations as a Site of Political Preference Formation. Comparative Political Studies 47(12): 1670–1706.10.1177/0010414013516066]Search in Google Scholar
[Knutsen, Oddbjørn. 2006. Class Voting in Western Europe: A Comparative Longitudinal Study. Oxford: Lexington Books.]Search in Google Scholar
[Lachat, Romain. 2018. Which way from left to right? On the relation between voters’ issue preferences and left-right orientation in West European democracies. International Political Science Review 39(4): 419–35.10.1177/0192512117692644]Search in Google Scholar
[Lipset, Seymour M. 1960. Political Man. The Social Bases of Politics. London: William Heinemann Ltd.]Search in Google Scholar
[Mair, Peter. 2007. Left-Right Orientations. Pp. 206-22 in The Oxford Handbook of Political Behavior, edited by Russell J. Dalton and Hans D. Klingemann. Oxford: Oxford University Press.10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199270125.003.0011]Search in Google Scholar
[Manza, Jeff, Michael Hout, and Clem Brooks. 1995. Class Voting in Capitalist Democracies Since World War II: Dealignment, Realignment, or Trendless Fluctuation? Annual Review of Sociology 21:137–62.]Search in Google Scholar
[OECD. 2017. Labour Force Participation Rate (Indicator). OECD, http://doi.org/10.1787/8a801325-en10.1787/8a801325-en]Search in Google Scholar
[Oesch, Daniel. 2006. Redrawing the Class Map. Stratification and Institutions in Britain, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.10.1057/9780230504592_8]Search in Google Scholar
[Oesch, Daniel. 2008. The Changing Shape of Class Voting. European Societies 10(3): 329–55.10.1080/14616690701846946]Search in Google Scholar
[Oesch, Daniel and Line Rennwald. 2010. The Class Basis of Switzerland’s Cleavage between the New Left and the Populist Right. Swiss Political Science Review 16(3): 343–371.10.1002/j.1662-6370.2010.tb00433.x]Search in Google Scholar
[Peugny, Camille. 2006. La mobilité sociale descendante et ses conséquences politiques: recomposition de l’univers de valeurs et préférence partisane. Revue Française de Sociologie 47(3): 443–478.10.3917/rfs.473.0443]Search in Google Scholar
[Turner, Frederick C. 1992. Social Mobility and Political Attitudes. Comparative Perspectives. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers.]Search in Google Scholar
[Van der Brug, Wouter. 2010. Structural and Ideological Voting in Age Cohorts. West European Politics 33(3): 586–607.10.1080/01402381003654593]Search in Google Scholar
[Ventura, Raphael. 2001. Family Political Socialization in Multiparty Systems. Comparative Political Studies 34(6): 666–91.10.1177/0010414001034006004]Search in Google Scholar
[Wernli, Boris. 2010. ‘Tels Parents, Tels Enfants?’: L’utilisation de données de seconde main Dans l’étude des influences politiques parentales en Suisse. Bulletin de Méthodologie Sociologique 106(1): 19–43.10.1177/0759106309360113]Search in Google Scholar
[Westholm, Anders and Richard G. Niemi. 1992. Political Institutions and Political Socialization: A Cross-National Study. Comparative Politics 25(1): 25–41.10.2307/422095]Search in Google Scholar
[Zuckerman, Alan S., Josip Dasovic, and Jennifer Fitzgerald. 2007. Partisan Families. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.10.1017/CBO9781139167390]Search in Google Scholar