2021
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2116863118
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The emergence and perils of polarization

Abstract: We provide commentaries on the papers included in the Dynamics of Political Polarization Special Feature. Baldassarri reads the contribution of the papers in light of the theoretical distinction between ideological partisanship, which is generally rooted in sociodemographic and political cleavages, and affective partisanship, which is, instead, mostly fueled by emotional attachment and repulsion, rather than ideology and material interests. The latter, she argues, is likely to lead to a runaway process and thr… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 36 publications
(12 reference statements)
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“…At the same time, there is evidence that ideological and partisan considerations inform the choice of friends, as well as business and romantic partners 218 221 . It is not entirely clear whether people are explicitly choosing interaction partners on the basis of political considerations or whether ideological homophily is a byproduct of associational patterns rooted in socio-demographic similarities 59 . This is an important question because the implications for polarization differ.…”
Section: Social-communicative Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…At the same time, there is evidence that ideological and partisan considerations inform the choice of friends, as well as business and romantic partners 218 221 . It is not entirely clear whether people are explicitly choosing interaction partners on the basis of political considerations or whether ideological homophily is a byproduct of associational patterns rooted in socio-demographic similarities 59 . This is an important question because the implications for polarization differ.…”
Section: Social-communicative Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are, for instance, wealthy, nonreligious progressive urbanites, as well as morally conservative, low-income ethnic minorities, and both are likely to encounter people who share some but not all of these characteristics, making it difficult for them to inhabit ideological bubbles 222 . If political considerations become the primary factor driving social relationships, however, people will become much more isolated and polarized along ideological lines 59 . This is because possessing ideologically homogeneous networks exacerbates issue and affective polarization, whereas having a heterogeneous network facilitates the correction of stereotypical misconceptions and decreases polarization 223 – 227 .…”
Section: Social-communicative Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Polarization used to be strong among elites, including legislators and elected officials ( Leonard et al, 2021 ), yet less pronounced among the general public (McCarty, 2019). However, American citizens increasingly dislike and distrust those of the other party or political labels—Democrat, Republican, Liberal, Conservative (Alexlrod et al, 2021; Baldassarri and Page, 2021 ). Such affective polarization among the general public, coupled with polarized elites, could lead to increasing ideological polarization and boost the salience of partisan identity during population health crises ( Allcott et al, 2020 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is the homophily effect of similarity-breeds-connection—i.e., birds of a feather flock together (McPherson, et al, 2001). The partisan identification and homophily seems to manifest group attachment dynamics, including in-group solidarity and out-group hostility ( Baldassarri and Page, 2021 ). The polarizing election, the pandemic and the polarized media ecosystems and information cascades may have sharply reduced bridging ties between people from different ideologies ( Tokita et al, 2021 ) and linking social capital in Trump-supporting regions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%