Results 111 to 120 of about 1,774 (143)
No negative effect of mentioning COVID-19 vaccine in influenza vaccine encouragements: Evidence from a survey experiment. [PDF]
Viskupič F, Wiltse DL.
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The influence of perceived threat on the motive attribution asymmetry bias for groups in conflict. [PDF]
Hughes RE, Stewart BD.
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Media choice and audience perceptions: Evidence from visual framing of immigration in news stories. [PDF]
Gasparyan O, Sirotkina E.
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Charting multidimensional ideological polarization across demographic groups in the USA. [PDF]
Ojer J +3 more
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The political economy of reshoring: Evidence from the semiconductor industry. [PDF]
Clark R, Kreps S, Rao A.
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Negative Partisanship in Latin America
Latin American Politics and Society, 2022ABSTRACTThe literature on comparative partisanship has demonstrated the low rates of party identification in Latin America. Such low rates are commonly interpreted as a sign of citizens’ disengagement with parties and democracy in the region. This article revisits this interpretation by considering voters’ adverse affection toward a party, or negative ...
Agustina Haime, Francisco Cantú
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Do Elite Appeals to Negative Partisanship Stimulate Citizen Engagement?
The Forum, 2022AbstractScholars have extensively studied whether campaign attack advertisements –messages that attack individual candidates– mobilize or demobilize voters with mixed results. We argue that group-oriented partisan affect in campaigns –messages about the parties in general– is just as important given increasing trends of affective polarization.
Mia Costa +8 more
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What Do We Mean by Negative Partisanship?
The Forum, 2021AbstractNegative partisanship is one of the most popular explanations for current levels of dysfunction in American politics. Yet, the term is used inconsistently in both academic research and the popular press. It is sometimes referred to as negative affect towards the out-party that is a more important predictor of political behavior than positive ...
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Elite Cues, Negative Partisanship, and the Changing Media Landscape
2023Abstract Chapter 2 empirically demonstrates the growth in strong partisanship and negative partisanship, and the relationship of these trends to the changing media environment. It shows that the share of the public that identifies as independent has remained stable over time.
Joshua J. Dyck, Shanna Pearson-Merkowitz
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