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Elite polarization, party extremity, and affective polarization

Electoral Studies, 2018
Abstract Elites in the U.S. have become increasingly polarized over the past several decades. More recently, the degree to which partisans view the opposing party more negatively than their own — a phenomenon called affective, or social, polarization — has increased. How does elite polarization inform affective polarization?
Kevin K. Banda, John Cluverius
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Affective Polarization

Competing political ideals are considered a necessary requirement for a healthy democracy. However, scholarship has uncovered a more worrisome form of political polarization, not based on ideology but rather rooted in distrust, dislike, and contempt across party lines.
Diego Garzia   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Social Desirability and Affective Polarization

Public Opinion Quarterly, 2023
Abstract Media coverage of affective polarization—partisans disliking and distrusting out-partisans while liking and trusting in-partisans—is abundant, both creating and reflecting a belief among the public that partisans are more affectively polarized than they are.
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How Ideology Fuels Affective Polarization

Political Behavior, 2015
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.
Jon C. Rogowski, Joseph L. Sutherland
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Affective Polarization in the U.S.

2022
Affective polarization is a phenomenon that has invaded the political arena empowered by social networks. In this chapter, the authors analyze the Capitol riot posts on Twitter. To achieve this, the authors use affective computing introducing the multi-emotional charge combined with statistical analysis based on the t-student test and Welch's t-test ...
David Valle-Cruz   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Handbook of Affective Polarization

Contemporary democracies appear to be characterized by rising levels of antipathy, tribalism, intolerance, and negative emotions between citizens with opposing political views. This phenomenon, recently conceptualized as affective polarization, refers to the tendency of individuals to favor their own partisan group while harboring negative sentiments ...
Mariano Torcal, Eelco Harteveld
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(Mis)estimating Affective Polarization

The Journal of Politics, 2022
James N. Druckman   +4 more
openaire   +1 more source

Gender and affective polarization

European Journal of Political Research
AbstractThough many empirical analyses on affective polarization demonstrate that women hold a higher level of affective polarization than men in industrialized democracies, a theoretical explanation for the gender difference is hardly discussed in the literature.
openaire   +1 more source

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