2016
DOI: 10.1590/1807-01912016221195
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Abstract: Civil society plays an increasingly important role in the formulation of foreign policy in emerging countries. This article investigates whether public opinion is sensitive to framing effects regarding foreign policy. Data from a survey experiment with a sample of 1,530 students at the Universidad de Buenos Aires and the Universidad Nacional de Avellaneda, we find that participants are sensitive to framing effects on foreign affairs. The interviewees changed their preferences when stimulated by information reg… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…In turn, a recent experimental survey by Mouron and Urdinez (2016) shows that Argentinian citizens are sensitive to new information about Brazil's growing power. The main finding is that Argentinians tend to overestimate the power of their own country when compared to Brazil, and are sensitive to situations that emphasize the disparity in power between the two countries.…”
Section: A Leader With Insignificant Followersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In turn, a recent experimental survey by Mouron and Urdinez (2016) shows that Argentinian citizens are sensitive to new information about Brazil's growing power. The main finding is that Argentinians tend to overestimate the power of their own country when compared to Brazil, and are sensitive to situations that emphasize the disparity in power between the two countries.…”
Section: A Leader With Insignificant Followersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Previous empirical work found that Brazil's image has in the past been used as an inverted mirror in Argentinean domestic debates, where Brazil is portrayed as a rising power and Argentina as a country in decline [32]. Pablo Javkin argued: BDiscussing the center-periphery logic means setting a strategy.…”
Section: Untying the Knot: What Do Legislators Say Of China?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, the polemic issues of Chávez and Venezuelan democracy are directly related to the degree to which chavismo can be used to take advantage of a country's domestic politics. In Argentina's case, opposition parties have potrayed chavismo in a negative light (Kitzberger 2010a), while, for example, Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's Brazil has been used as an "inverted mirror" in order to present a contrast between a rising Brazil and a decadent Argentina (see for instance Russell and Tokatlian 2011;Mouron et al 2016). As such, understanding why and where this polarization exists in a country's politics is important to comprehend how foreign affairs can influence domestic debates.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%