The Origins of Common Identity: Division, Homogenization Policies and Identity Formation in Alsace-Lorraine

83 Pages Posted: 4 Aug 2017

See all articles by Sirus H. Dehdari

Sirus H. Dehdari

Uppsala University - Department of Government

Kai Gehring

CESifo; University of Bern - Faculty of Economics and Social Sciences

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Date Written: July 10, 2017

Abstract

We exploit the fact that disagreements in the German leadership after the Franco-Prussian War in 1870 led to a quasi-exogenous division of Alsace and Lorraine to provide rare evidence of group identity formation within historically homogeneous regions. In line with the rejection-identification hypothesis, people in the treated area which experienced a change in nation-status and were exposed to repressive homogenization policies express a stronger regional identity and support more regional autonomy today. On average, subjects with a stronger regional also express a stronger European identity, which we exploit in a regression discontinuity design at the municipal level to reveal whether these identity differences are causal. We find that support for the European Union is significantly stronger in two crucial referenda, a result that is robust across different specifications and bandwidths, and not driven by language differences, large agglomerations or distance to foreign countries. The effect seems to be the strongest for the first two age cohorts after World War II and diminishes for later generations.

Keywords: group identity, identity formation, homogenization policies, assimilation, rejection-identification hypothesis, persistence of preferences, Alsace-Lorraine

JEL Classification: D910, H700, H800, N400, Z190

Suggested Citation

Dehdari, Sirus Håfström and Gehring, Kai, The Origins of Common Identity: Division, Homogenization Policies and Identity Formation in Alsace-Lorraine (July 10, 2017). CESifo Working Paper Series No. 6556, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3013036 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3013036

Sirus Håfström Dehdari

Uppsala University - Department of Government ( email )

Gamla Torget 6
751 20
Uppsala
Sweden

Kai Gehring (Contact Author)

CESifo ( email )

Poschinger Str. 5
Munich, DE-81679
Germany

University of Bern - Faculty of Economics and Social Sciences ( email )

United States

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