This study examines citizens’ perceptions of fairness and legitimacy in political advertising. Using focus groups, an original national survey, and data on election 2000, as well as drawing on results from a replication of the national survey in 2004, we characterize political ads from the citizen’s perspective. We then turn to the impact of ‘‘negative’’ advertising on voter turnout. Like several studies, we find circumstances under which turnout can be increased by negative ad criticisms. However, we show that this general result is only part of the story. Drawing on research in political psychology, we suggest that voters are ‘‘motivated processors’’ of advertising claims; as such, they evaluate the fairness of an ad according to their pa...
Negative political advertising is a common feature of election campaigns in liberal democracies, whe...
Political negative advertising is an important aspect of electoral campaigning, and has attracted in...
Replication data and code forthcoming Scholars disagree whether negative advertising demobilizes ...
types: ArticleThis study examines citizens’ perceptions of fairness and legitimacy in political adve...
Scholars disagree whether negative advertising demobilizes or stimulates the electorate. We use an e...
Do negative advertisements demobilize voters? The answer to this question is crucial. If negativity ...
Many scholars have explored the effects of negative political advertising on voter turnout, some arg...
This study examines the effects of negative political campaigns on voter turnout over the last 10 ye...
This paper will attempt to examine the effect which negative political advertising has upon the voti...
The topic of negative advertising in political campaigns has been especially timely in recent years,...
We argue that citizens distinguish the tone of a campaign from the quality of information that it pr...
Negative advertising is frequent in electoral campaigns, despite its ambiguous effectiveness: negati...
More than 80 percent of advertisements in political campaigns are negative; a type of messaging that...
With political campaigns becoming increasingly adversarial, scholars have recently given some much-n...
Scholars have shown that voters are constrained by party identity in their reactions to negative att...
Negative political advertising is a common feature of election campaigns in liberal democracies, whe...
Political negative advertising is an important aspect of electoral campaigning, and has attracted in...
Replication data and code forthcoming Scholars disagree whether negative advertising demobilizes ...
types: ArticleThis study examines citizens’ perceptions of fairness and legitimacy in political adve...
Scholars disagree whether negative advertising demobilizes or stimulates the electorate. We use an e...
Do negative advertisements demobilize voters? The answer to this question is crucial. If negativity ...
Many scholars have explored the effects of negative political advertising on voter turnout, some arg...
This study examines the effects of negative political campaigns on voter turnout over the last 10 ye...
This paper will attempt to examine the effect which negative political advertising has upon the voti...
The topic of negative advertising in political campaigns has been especially timely in recent years,...
We argue that citizens distinguish the tone of a campaign from the quality of information that it pr...
Negative advertising is frequent in electoral campaigns, despite its ambiguous effectiveness: negati...
More than 80 percent of advertisements in political campaigns are negative; a type of messaging that...
With political campaigns becoming increasingly adversarial, scholars have recently given some much-n...
Scholars have shown that voters are constrained by party identity in their reactions to negative att...
Negative political advertising is a common feature of election campaigns in liberal democracies, whe...
Political negative advertising is an important aspect of electoral campaigning, and has attracted in...
Replication data and code forthcoming Scholars disagree whether negative advertising demobilizes ...