Imagine the European Union referendum as a misty medieval battlefield, with the two sides lined up against each other. What is the dominant make-up of the two armies glowering at each other before the bloodletting begins? According to many academic experts on polling, it is graduates v non-graduates.
University of Bristol researchers, writing on the London School of Economics and Political Science鈥檚 British Politics and Policy blog, recently of YouGov polling data on the referendum.
They found 鈥渟ubstantial differences 鈥 especially among the middle-aged and the old 鈥 in their declared propensity to vote for Brexit according to their [educational] qualifications鈥. Older people with degrees 鈥渁re only two-thirds as likely to vote to leave the EU as older people with no qualifications鈥, they said.
The fact that graduates are more likely to favour EU membership is of practical use to the Remain camp 鈥 but even more significantly may tell us much about the increasing polarisation of the UK鈥檚 jobs market and society.
糖心Vlog
Once the authors of the referendum research 鈥 Ron Johnston, Kelvyn Jones and David Manley, all of Bristol鈥檚 School of Geographical Sciences 鈥 had isolated educational differences as key, they used census data on levels of education by age in every local authority area to model the probability of each area鈥檚 electorate voting for Brexit.
鈥淪outh Staffordshire has the highest proportion favouring departure from the EU鈥ollowed by Havering, Gravesham, Boston, King鈥檚 Lynn, Mansfield, and Tendring (which includes Clacton),鈥 they wrote.
糖心Vlog
鈥淭he areas giving least support to Brexit are Lambeth, Hackney, Edinburgh, Haringey, Oxford, Cambridge, Bristol and Brighton 鈥 in general, places with fewer old people than the first group and many more graduates.鈥
The areas judged most likely to back Brexit do not have universities. Most of the areas where Brexit support is likely to be weakest have at least two universities.
The distinctiveness and importance of graduates鈥 social and political attitudes has already attracted interest from researchers. A November 2015 research paper for the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, titled 鈥溾, was based on data gathered in the British Social Attitudes (BSA) survey.
Although the BIS study did not look specifically at the EU referendum, it found that of all groups with different educational levels graduates have 鈥渢he most tolerant attitudes towards immigrants and benefit recipients鈥.
One key question posed, but not answered, by the research is whether students are more likely to have generally 鈥渓iberal鈥 social attitudes anyway, or whether there is something about going to university that changes their views.
John Brennan, emeritus professor of higher education research at the Open University, an author on the BIS paper, offered some potential explanations from the latter category on why graduates tend to be pro-EU.
鈥淧ersonal experience of mobility might encourage positive attitudes towards Europe and 鈥榞oing global鈥 more generally,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd of course with so many international students in UK universities, the development of cross-border ties and relationships is bound to be a feature of the higher education experience for many.鈥
Having a degree v the school of life
John Curtice, professor of politics at the University of Strathclyde, one of the UK鈥檚 foremost academic experts on polling and elections, has written an about the EU referendum based on data from opinion polls, the BSA and the British Election Study.
糖心Vlog
The paper cited BSA data showing that 78 per cent of those with degrees favoured remaining in the EU, against just 15 per cent who wanted a Brexit. Among those with no qualifications, 35 per cent favoured remaining while 55 per cent backed Brexit.
鈥淚t鈥檚 long been known that this [the referendum] is a battle between graduates and those with little or no educational qualifications, and it鈥檚 a battle between older and younger people,鈥 Professor Curtice told 糖心Vlog.
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He added: 鈥淥n one side of the coin are people who are university graduates, who are鈥erfectly happy with a diverse society: they鈥檝e been to university, were used to living in an international environment, many of them will live in London, which is the most diverse city in the world.鈥
Many people in this group 鈥渁re operating in a globalised labour market鈥, including academics who 鈥渄on鈥檛 feel that their jobs are under threat because people come from Greece or Spain鈥, he said.
Professor Curtice continued: 鈥淭he other side of the coin is the hotel porter in Margate [in Kent], who says: 鈥業 don鈥檛 understand what my fellow workers say any more because they are all speaking Polish to each other. I鈥檝e not had a pay rise for five years鈥.鈥
There are economic arguments suggesting that while 鈥渇or the most part migration has been good for the British economy鈥or those at the bottom end of the labour market it may have helped to depress wages鈥, he noted.
Stephen Bush, special correspondent for the New Statesman, that the Remain campaign is "betting big on mobilising early in student areas, as the biggest dividing line in the referendum is not age but education鈥.聽
This might suggest that Universities UK鈥檚 high-profile Universities for Europe campaign could play an influential role in mobilising the converted to vote.
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Alistair Jarvis, deputy chief executive of UUK, said that the organisation is also mounting a campaign 鈥 entirely separate to Universities for Europe 鈥 to drive voter registration.
UUK will be 鈥渜uite dramatically scaling this up in May鈥 and 鈥減utting as much time into voter registration as into the whole of the Universities for Europe campaign鈥, Mr Jarvis said.
The registration drive reflects widespread concerns that the switch to Individual Electoral Registration could have disenfranchised groups such as students: those living in halls could previously be registered en masse by universities. And of course younger people are already less likely to vote than the old.
Mr Jarvis said that the registration campaign was 鈥渁bout the civic duty of universities to encourage democracy by encouraging staff and students to have their say鈥, not about telling individuals to vote one way or the other 鈥 although that is unlikely to convince UUK鈥檚 critics in the Brexit camp.
The distinctive social and political attitudes of graduates have implications beyond June鈥檚 vote.
Professor Brennan said that research on graduates鈥 attitudes to the EU referendum should 鈥渞emind us that the social implications of expanding higher education systems extend well beyond the labour market agendas which receive so much 鈥 too much 鈥 attention鈥.
糖心Vlog
Professor Curtice said of the graduates/non-graduates contrast on the EU: 鈥淥n the one hand you鈥檝e got a section [of society] which is culturally and economically comfortable with globalisation, on the other hand you鈥檝e people who are culturally and economically challenged by globalisation鈥his is a referendum as much about different sections of British society as it is anything to do with our relationship with Europe.鈥
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: EU poll: is it graduates v the rest?
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