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| Affective polarization is an emerging field of research. For now, I am defining it simply as any political science that analyzes polarization behaviorally. | Affective polarization is a recontextualization of [[PoliticalScience/PartyPolarization|polarization]]. It focuses on the difference between in-group attitudes and out-group attitudes. For now, I am taking a broad view towards this field and listing below any works which analyze polarization ''behaviorally''. |
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| * [[DemographicChangeAndPoliticalPolarizationInTheUnitedStates|Demographic Change and Political Polarization in the United States]], Levi Boxell, 2018 | |
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| * [[TheFreeMovementOfPeopleAndTheSuccessOfFarRightParties|The Free Movement of People and the Success of Far-Right Parties: Evidence from Switzerland’s Border Liberalization]]; Ala Alrababah, Andreas Beerli, Dominik Hangartner, and Dalston Ward; 2024 * [[WhoLooksUpToTheLeviathan|Who looks up to the Leviathan? Ideology, political trust, and support for restrictive state interventions in times of crisis]]; Matteo C. M. Casiraghi, Luigi Curini, Nicola Maggini, and Alessandro Nai; 2024 * [[DoesPolarizationIncreaseParticipation|Does polarization increase participation? A systematic literature review and meta-analysis]], Marta Kołczyńska, 2025 * [[DefendingTheStatusQuoOrSeekingChange|Defending the Status Quo or Seeking Change? Electoral Outcomes, Affective Polarization, and Support for Referendums]], Bjarn Eck and Emilien Paulis, 2025 * [[BeyondObservationalRelationships|Beyond Observational Relationships: Evidence from a Ten-Country Experiment that Policy Disputes Cause Affective Polarization]]; Noam Gidron, James Adams, Will Horne and Thomas Tichelbaecker; 2025 * [[AffectivePolarizationAndDemocraticErosion|Affective polarization and democratic erosion: evidence from a context of weak partisanship]]; Loreto Cox, Pedro Cubillos, and Carmen Le Foulon; 2025 * [[DoImmigrantsPartisanPreferencesInfluenceAmericansSupportForImmigration|Do Immigrants’ Partisan Preferences Influence Americans’ Support for Immigration?]], Daniel Mc``Dowell and David A. Steinberg, 2025 |
Affective Polarization
Affective polarization is a field of research that analyzes polarization through a behavioral lens.
Description
Affective polarization is a recontextualization of polarization. It focuses on the difference between in-group attitudes and out-group attitudes. For now, I am taking a broad view towards this field and listing below any works which analyze polarization behaviorally.
Reading Notes
Demographic Change and Political Polarization in the United States, Levi Boxell, 2018
Is It the Message or the Messenger? Examining Movement in Immigration Beliefs, Hassan Afrouzi, Carolina Arteaga, and Emily Weisburst, 2024
Discounting extreme positions: party normalization and support for the far right; Laia Balcells, Sergi Martínez, and Ethan vanderWilden; 2024
The Free Movement of People and the Success of Far-Right Parties: Evidence from Switzerland’s Border Liberalization; Ala Alrababah, Andreas Beerli, Dominik Hangartner, and Dalston Ward; 2024
Who looks up to the Leviathan? Ideology, political trust, and support for restrictive state interventions in times of crisis; Matteo C. M. Casiraghi, Luigi Curini, Nicola Maggini, and Alessandro Nai; 2024
Does polarization increase participation? A systematic literature review and meta-analysis, Marta Kołczyńska, 2025
Defending the Status Quo or Seeking Change? Electoral Outcomes, Affective Polarization, and Support for Referendums, Bjarn Eck and Emilien Paulis, 2025
Beyond Observational Relationships: Evidence from a Ten-Country Experiment that Policy Disputes Cause Affective Polarization; Noam Gidron, James Adams, Will Horne and Thomas Tichelbaecker; 2025
Affective polarization and democratic erosion: evidence from a context of weak partisanship; Loreto Cox, Pedro Cubillos, and Carmen Le Foulon; 2025
Do Immigrants’ Partisan Preferences Influence Americans’ Support for Immigration?, Daniel McDowell and David A. Steinberg, 2025
