List of figures

  1. Figure 1.1 Trust in government in Australia, 1993–2013.
  2. Figure 2.1 Vote share of minor parties and independents in the Australian Senate, 1949–2016.
  3. Figure 2.2 Economic security by demographic group.
  4. Figure 2.3 Economic insecurity by urban geography and state.
  5. Figure 2.4 Economic security by Senate vote.
  6. Figure 2.5 How survey items load onto economic and social issue dimensions.
  7. Figure 2.6 Distribution of issue preferences of voters with high and low economic security.
  8. Figure 2.7 Issues representation by demographic group.
  9. Figure 2.8 Support for the Greens (and minor left parties) by issue representation and economic security.
  10. Figure 2.9 Support for the Nick Xenophon Team (and ‘Other’ parties and candidates) by issue representation and economic security.
  11. Figure 2.10 Support for libertarian and Christian right parties by issue representation and economic security.
  12. Figure 2.11 Support for the populist right by issue representation and economic security.
  13. Figure 3.1 Opinions about lower immigration and turning back asylum boats start to converge, 2001–2016.
  14. Figure 4.1 Respondents who believe that climate change is ‘not very dangerous’, or ‘not dangerous at all’ for the environment.
  15. Figure 4.2 Australian views about the causes of climate change.
  16. Figure 4.3 Australian attitudes about the degree of scientific consensus about climate change.
  17. Figure 5.1 Gender gap in vote choice, 1967–2016.
  18. Figure 6.1 Mentions of ‘aspirations voters’ in Australia and Britain, 1992–2016.
  19. Figure 6.2 Attitudes towards unions and taxation, 1993–2016.
  20. Figure 6.3 Types of voters, 1993–2016.
  21. Figure 6.4 Coalition voting among battlers and aspirationals, 1993–2016.
  22. Figure 7.1 Explanatory approaches to social and political tolerance.
  23. Figure 9.1 Attitudes on retaining the monarchy, 1993-2016.
  24. Figure 9.2 Attitudes about retaining the monarchy by age group.
  25. Figure 9.3 Attitudes about retaining the monarchy by gender group.
  26. Figure 9.4 Attitudes towards retaining the monarchy by class identification.
  27. Figure 9.5 Attitudes towards retaining the monarchy by education levels.
  28. Figure 9.6 Attitudes towards retaining the monarchy by partisanship.
  29. Figure 9.7 Attitudes towards retaining the monarchy by political interest.
  30. Figure 9.8 Attitudes towards retaining the monarchy grouped by the Postmaterialism Index.
  31. Figure 9.9 Support for retaining the monarchy by birth year and family income.
  32. Figure 9.A1 Political attitudes by generation.
  33. Figure 9.A2 Birth year mean-centred effects on attitudes towards retaining the monarchy grouped by each study.
  34. Figure 9.A3 Family income mean-centred effects on attitudes towards retaining the monarchy grouped by each study.