The Exit of Residential Mobility or the Voice of Political Action? Understanding Problem-Solving in Residential Communities

Date

2003

Authors

van Vagt, Martin
John, Peter
Dowding, Keith
van Dijk, Erik

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Volume Title

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Abstract

This research investigated 2 action strategies for residents to deal with dissatisfying community services: moving out of the community (exit), or communicating dissatisfaction to local authorities (voice). Data were used from a population movement survey conducted among 1,529 households in 3 major cities in the United Kingdom in 1997. Employing concepts from interdependence theory (Kelley & Thibaut, 1978), we predicted that dissatisfaction with community services would lead to more exit and voice responses. Furthermore, exit was predicted to be dominant among residents who, for diverse reasons, were less dependent; and voice was predicted for residents who were more dependent on the community. These predictions were supported, and the relevance of these findings for understanding community stability and improvement is discussed.

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Citation

Source

Journal of Applied Social Psychology

Type

Journal article

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Restricted until

2037-12-31