The United States is the place to go for conspiracy theories, with older controversies surrounding the assasination of John F. Kennedy and the mood landing giving way to the ‘9/11 was an inside job’ tendency and more recently the supposed deception around Barack Obama’s birth certificate. Here, Joseph Uscinski takes a look at ‘partisan’ conspiracy theories in the United States, and finds that in order to buy into a partisan conspiracy theory, one needs to be both inclined to believe in conspiracy theories and have partisan inclinations that match the logic of the particular conspiracy theory, making it difficult to convince a huge swathe of voters
Many people have used conspiracy theories as explanations to justify situations or events that the U...
The public is convinced that beliefs in conspiracy theories are increasing, and many scholars, journ...
How might social scientists best account for the widespread acceptance of such unlikely sounding cla...
Why are some conspiracy theories more popular than others? Joseph E. Uscinski writes that conspiracy...
In the years since 9/11, conspiracy theories have regained prominence in much of the American public...
Conspiracy theories have increasing relevance in American politics. In the age of the internet, wher...
Why do many Americans believe in conspiracy theories? One answer could be the lack of trust and tran...
In 2016, conspiracy theories seem to have become part of politics’ new normal. But what kinds of peo...
Are so-called “birthers” best thought of as true conspiracy theorists, or are they merely partisans ...
The popularity of Donald Trump in the 2016 race has also seen the elevation of conspiracy theories t...
Conspiracy theories are a feature of political discourse across the United States and Europe, but ar...
Conspiracy theories are not new – from theories about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy...
The “conspiracy theories are for losers” argument suggests that out-of-power groups use conspiracy t...
A sizable literature tracing back to Richard Hofstadter’s The Paranoid Style (1964) argues that Repu...
Conspiracy theories have been used by many Americans throughout history as explanations to justify s...
Many people have used conspiracy theories as explanations to justify situations or events that the U...
The public is convinced that beliefs in conspiracy theories are increasing, and many scholars, journ...
How might social scientists best account for the widespread acceptance of such unlikely sounding cla...
Why are some conspiracy theories more popular than others? Joseph E. Uscinski writes that conspiracy...
In the years since 9/11, conspiracy theories have regained prominence in much of the American public...
Conspiracy theories have increasing relevance in American politics. In the age of the internet, wher...
Why do many Americans believe in conspiracy theories? One answer could be the lack of trust and tran...
In 2016, conspiracy theories seem to have become part of politics’ new normal. But what kinds of peo...
Are so-called “birthers” best thought of as true conspiracy theorists, or are they merely partisans ...
The popularity of Donald Trump in the 2016 race has also seen the elevation of conspiracy theories t...
Conspiracy theories are a feature of political discourse across the United States and Europe, but ar...
Conspiracy theories are not new – from theories about the assassination of President John F. Kennedy...
The “conspiracy theories are for losers” argument suggests that out-of-power groups use conspiracy t...
A sizable literature tracing back to Richard Hofstadter’s The Paranoid Style (1964) argues that Repu...
Conspiracy theories have been used by many Americans throughout history as explanations to justify s...
Many people have used conspiracy theories as explanations to justify situations or events that the U...
The public is convinced that beliefs in conspiracy theories are increasing, and many scholars, journ...
How might social scientists best account for the widespread acceptance of such unlikely sounding cla...