Scholars have reached mixed conclusions about the implications of increased political polarization for citizen decision-making. In this paper, we argue that citizens respond to ideological divergence with heightened affective polarization. Using a survey experiment conducted with a nationally representative sample of U.S. citizens, we find that increased ideological differences between political figures produce increasingly polarized affective evaluations, and that these differences are especially large among respondents with stronger ideological commitments and higher levels of political interest. We provide further support for these findings in an observational study of citizens’ evaluations of the U.S. Senators from their state. We also ...
Public opinion research has traditionally viewed ideological self-identification as largely subsidia...
The American electorate is characterized by political polarization, and especially by increasingly n...
Abstract Few topics in public opinion research have attracted as much attention in recent years as p...
At least two theories have been offered that explain the rise of affective polarization. Some schola...
Affective polarization—the tendency of Democrats and Republicans to dislike and distrust one another...
Elites in the U.S. have become increasingly polarized over the past several decades. More recently, ...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Disagreements over whether polarization exists in the mass public have confounded two separate types...
Partisan bias and hostility have increased substantially over the last few decades in the American e...
Recent decades have seen a rise in polarization in many countries, but the causes and mechanisms beh...
When defined in terms of social identity and affect toward co-partisans and opposing partisans, the ...
Abstract Scholars view polarization with trepidation. But polarization may clarify voters ’ choices ...
“Self-Fulfilling Misperceptions of Public Polarization”Mass media convey deep divisions among citize...
This thesis considers the relationship between public and elite opinion and explores the causes of p...
This study explores whether, in societies around the world, affective polarization – or animosity be...
Public opinion research has traditionally viewed ideological self-identification as largely subsidia...
The American electorate is characterized by political polarization, and especially by increasingly n...
Abstract Few topics in public opinion research have attracted as much attention in recent years as p...
At least two theories have been offered that explain the rise of affective polarization. Some schola...
Affective polarization—the tendency of Democrats and Republicans to dislike and distrust one another...
Elites in the U.S. have become increasingly polarized over the past several decades. More recently, ...
Nearly seventy years ago, members of the American Political Science Association's Committee on Polit...
Disagreements over whether polarization exists in the mass public have confounded two separate types...
Partisan bias and hostility have increased substantially over the last few decades in the American e...
Recent decades have seen a rise in polarization in many countries, but the causes and mechanisms beh...
When defined in terms of social identity and affect toward co-partisans and opposing partisans, the ...
Abstract Scholars view polarization with trepidation. But polarization may clarify voters ’ choices ...
“Self-Fulfilling Misperceptions of Public Polarization”Mass media convey deep divisions among citize...
This thesis considers the relationship between public and elite opinion and explores the causes of p...
This study explores whether, in societies around the world, affective polarization – or animosity be...
Public opinion research has traditionally viewed ideological self-identification as largely subsidia...
The American electorate is characterized by political polarization, and especially by increasingly n...
Abstract Few topics in public opinion research have attracted as much attention in recent years as p...