02391nas a2200229 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002653002400043653002900067653001300096653002700109653001800136100001900154700001600173700001800189245015100207856014800358300001100506490000700517520161700524022002002141 2021 d10aintangible heritage10aCarnival of Barranquilla10aColombia10acultural participation10aprobit models1 aAaron Espinosa1 aLuis Martos1 aLuis Quintero00aWho Participates in Popular Feasts and Festivals? An Empirical Approach from Cultural Economics Applied to the Carnival of Barranquilla (Colombia) uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85122234663&doi=10.47743%2fSAEB-2021-0032&partnerID=40&md5=04bc2985a0e0754a7c7a6c3cb3557073 a79-1030 v683 aThe empirical analysis of individual participation in local and popular feasts and festivals is a field little explored by cultural economists. This article proposes a methodological scheme to analyse the profile of the participants in local and popular feasts and carnivals, allowing the establishment of a taxonomy that captures the heterogeneity of the participants replicable to other festivities and carnivals around the world. Similarly, participation equations that allow the analysis of the influence of context variables on individual decisions to participate in these types of events are estimated. For this, the Carnival of Barranquilla, the largest and most representative popular celebration in Colombia and declared by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity, is used as a case study. The data were obtained from the Citizen Perception Survey of the Barranquilla Cómo Vamos programme, which evaluates the quality of life and the fulfilment of development plans in that city, and an empirical strategy is employed consisting of the estimation of a probit discrete choice model, which allows modelling the individual decisions of a time-intensive good, such as a carnival, with a strong influence of traditional variables, such as cultural capital and the availability of leisure time, and other context variables: location of people in the territory, stratification and poverty. The different profiles found offer information on the different strategies that can be implemented from public policy to stimulate greater participation by the population in popular festivities and festivals. a25011960 (ISSN)