Local politics as a context for polarizing cues

IF 2 3区 社会学 Q2 POLITICAL SCIENCE
M. Painter, David Kimball
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT There is adequate research demonstrating that source cues (such as prominent politicians or interest groups) can move public support for some policies, however, most of the research on source cues in the United States tests the impact of national leaders or parties as cues. We argue that hypotheses about source cues should be tested in other settings, such as local politics. Local settings offer a test where source cues may not be so closely tied to partisan identity. We hypothesize that in contexts where the source is well-known, and the policy is relatively obscure, source cues can polarize public opinion substantially. However, on highly salient policies the impact of source cues may be much weaker. We report the results of three survey experiments testing the polarizing impact of a mayor as a source cue on city voters. We find strong source cue effects in each test. The often racially divisive nature and machine-versus-reform type polarization of urban politics provides a fertile context for testing the polarizing impact of source cues.
地方政治作为两极分化线索的背景
有足够的研究表明,源线索(如著名政治家或利益集团)可以推动公众对某些政策的支持,然而,美国大多数关于源线索的研究都测试了国家领导人或政党作为线索的影响。我们认为,关于来源线索的假设应该在其他环境中进行测试,例如当地政治。当地环境提供了一种测试,在那里,来源线索可能与党派身份没有那么紧密的联系。我们假设,在消息来源众所周知,而政策相对模糊的情况下,消息来源线索可以在很大程度上使公众舆论两极分化。然而,对于高度突出的政策,源线索的影响可能要弱得多。我们报告了三个调查实验的结果,测试了市长作为城市选民的来源线索的两极分化影响。我们在每个测试中都发现了很强的源线索效应。城市政治中经常出现的种族分裂性质和机器与改革类型的两极分化为测试来源线索的两极分化影响提供了丰富的背景。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
5.60%
发文量
21
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