2018
DOI: 10.1111/pops.12485
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One Tribe to Bind Them All: How Our Social Group Attachments Strengthen Partisanship

Abstract: "Social sorting" is a concept used by Mason (2016) to explain the process by which individuals' social identities grow increasingly aligned with a partisan identity, reducing social cross-pressures on political behavior. Roccas and Brewer (2002) have found that individuals who feel fewer cross-pressures more strongly identify with their ingroups and are less tolerant of outgroups. Accordingly, we create "objective" and "subjective" measures of social sorting to help identify the mechanism by which individual p… Show more

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Cited by 225 publications
(195 citation statements)
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“…We recruited subjects from Amazon's Mechanical Turk, a survey platform whose subjects are known to fall short of demographically-representing the wider US population (Chandler & Shapiro, 2016). As highlighted in the introduction, Mason (2016Mason ( , 2018 finds that US party identity is increasingly in alignment with demographic identities (e.g., race, religiosity), and, importantly, that this alignment may serve to weaken barriers to out-party hostility (Mason & Wronski, 2018;Roccas & Brewer, 2002). For this reason, insofar as our subjects did not faithfully represent the demographic identities of the wider US population, it is possible that our analyses mis-estimated the population-level association between moral polarization and out-party hostility in IPD-MD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We recruited subjects from Amazon's Mechanical Turk, a survey platform whose subjects are known to fall short of demographically-representing the wider US population (Chandler & Shapiro, 2016). As highlighted in the introduction, Mason (2016Mason ( , 2018 finds that US party identity is increasingly in alignment with demographic identities (e.g., race, religiosity), and, importantly, that this alignment may serve to weaken barriers to out-party hostility (Mason & Wronski, 2018;Roccas & Brewer, 2002). For this reason, insofar as our subjects did not faithfully represent the demographic identities of the wider US population, it is possible that our analyses mis-estimated the population-level association between moral polarization and out-party hostility in IPD-MD.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Traditional views of partisan identification focus on the issues, ideologies, and groups connected to each party, what Huddy et al (2015; call the instrumental conception of partisanship (Berelson, Lazarsfeld, and McPhee 1954;Campbell et al 1960;Abramowitz and Saunders 2006). More recently, scholars have conceived of partisanship as a social identity, comparable to race or religion (Green, Palmquist, and Schickler 2002;Huddy, Mason, and Aarøe 2015;Huddy and Bankert 2017;Rothschild et al 2018;Mason and Wronski 2018). In this view, partisan affiliation is akin to a salient social group attachment (Tajfel 1981) and partisanship the result of "comparing a judgment about oneself with one's conception of a social group.…”
Section: Racial Realignment: Conceptions Of Partisanship and Partisanmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In recent years, political scientists have argued that party realignment has led to a Republican Party that is more socially and culturally homogenous than the Democratic Party (Mason, 2018b;Mason & Wronski, 2018). Mason and colleagues show that strength of partisan attachment has increased for those who are identified with both parties, but this effect is stronger for Republicans given the homogeneity of the group.…”
Section: Political Asymmetriesmentioning
confidence: 99%