Political Behavior
@polbehavior.bsky.social
An interdisciplinary journal associated with the EPOVB section of @APSA.bsky.social. Edited by Chris Karpowitz & Jessica Preece, @BYU
https://www.springer.com/journal/11109
https://www.springer.com/journal/11109
Immigration doesn’t always spark backlash.
Attewell, Jozwiak & Kuhn find that when migrants share ethnicity with natives, exposure can boost empathy and support pro-immigrant parties. In Germany, co-ethnic inflows aided the CDU.
#Immigration
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Attewell, Jozwiak & Kuhn find that when migrants share ethnicity with natives, exposure can boost empathy and support pro-immigrant parties. In Germany, co-ethnic inflows aided the CDU.
#Immigration
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Backlash or Inclusion? The Political Effects of Co-Ethnic Immigration - Political Behavior
Immigration often causes backlash, to the benefit of anti-immigrant parties. Most studies that identify the effect of immigration on native attitudes and behaviors leverage variation in inflows of new...
link.springer.com
October 20, 2025 at 5:18 AM
Immigration doesn’t always spark backlash.
Attewell, Jozwiak & Kuhn find that when migrants share ethnicity with natives, exposure can boost empathy and support pro-immigrant parties. In Germany, co-ethnic inflows aided the CDU.
#Immigration
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Attewell, Jozwiak & Kuhn find that when migrants share ethnicity with natives, exposure can boost empathy and support pro-immigrant parties. In Germany, co-ethnic inflows aided the CDU.
#Immigration
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Political distrust pushes citizens away from representative democracy, but not uniformly toward its rivals. Van der Meer & Janssen find that distrust (especially among populists) fuels support for direct democracy.
#Democracy
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#Democracy
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Pushing and Pulling: The Static and Dynamic Effects of Political Distrust on Support for Representative Democracy and its Rivals - Political Behavior
Distrust is widely argued to stimulate support for political and institutional change. Yet, there is little agreement among scholars whether distrust pulls people towards rivaling decision-making mode...
link.springer.com
October 17, 2025 at 4:53 AM
Political distrust pushes citizens away from representative democracy, but not uniformly toward its rivals. Van der Meer & Janssen find that distrust (especially among populists) fuels support for direct democracy.
#Democracy
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#Democracy
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Couples therapy for a divided America?
A Braver Angels–inspired workshop reduced partisan polarization among students through empathy and reflection, though some effects faded with time. Emotional + informational dialogue works.
#Depolarization
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A Braver Angels–inspired workshop reduced partisan polarization among students through empathy and reflection, though some effects faded with time. Emotional + informational dialogue works.
#Depolarization
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Couples Therapy for a Divided America: Assessing the Effects of Reciprocal Group Reflection on Partisan Polarization - Political Behavior
Overcoming America’s deep partisan polarization poses a unique challenge: Americans must be able to sharply disagree on who should govern while agreeing on more fundamental democratic principles. We s...
link.springer.com
October 15, 2025 at 7:28 PM
Couples therapy for a divided America?
A Braver Angels–inspired workshop reduced partisan polarization among students through empathy and reflection, though some effects faded with time. Emotional + informational dialogue works.
#Depolarization
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
A Braver Angels–inspired workshop reduced partisan polarization among students through empathy and reflection, though some effects faded with time. Emotional + informational dialogue works.
#Depolarization
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Leaving a legacy?
Darr & Harman find that Americans who move away from local newspapers lose faith in elections, but not in democracy itself. Declining local news may erode electoral trust.
#PoliticalBehavior #MediaEffects
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Darr & Harman find that Americans who move away from local newspapers lose faith in elections, but not in democracy itself. Declining local news may erode electoral trust.
#PoliticalBehavior #MediaEffects
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
October 13, 2025 at 11:35 PM
Leaving a legacy?
Darr & Harman find that Americans who move away from local newspapers lose faith in elections, but not in democracy itself. Declining local news may erode electoral trust.
#PoliticalBehavior #MediaEffects
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Darr & Harman find that Americans who move away from local newspapers lose faith in elections, but not in democracy itself. Declining local news may erode electoral trust.
#PoliticalBehavior #MediaEffects
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Can seeing the “other side” differently heal division?
Myers & Hvidsten find that meeting counter-stereotypical partisans reduces bias and improves feelings toward the out-party.
#PoliticalBehavior #AffectivePolarization
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Myers & Hvidsten find that meeting counter-stereotypical partisans reduces bias and improves feelings toward the out-party.
#PoliticalBehavior #AffectivePolarization
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Do Fans Make Poor Referees? Exploring Citizens’ Reactions to Partisan Gamesmanship - Political Behavior
Political (as opposed to professional) election oversight is one area in which the U.S. scores extremely low in measures of election integrity. Meanwhile, rancorous political battles to determine acceptable election procedures and judge when tactics cross the line have become common events. Our work contributes to recent scholarship investigating whether voters prioritize democratic principles or strategically favor electoral procedures that provide partisan advantage. In two survey experiments, we confirm that Americans’ attitudes about antidemocratic election tactics reveal more about which team they are cheering for than they do about whether the tactics are fraudulent. The tendency to engage in partisan motivated reasoning occurs among all partisans, but there are subtle differences as to when citizens will engage in it. Partisan motivated reasoning is more common when actions cause harm and by the partisans that are harmed. Finally, Independents are more impartial, but less likely to call out improper tactics in the aggregate because they often fail to condemn actions by either party.
link.springer.com
October 8, 2025 at 6:13 PM
Can seeing the “other side” differently heal division?
Myers & Hvidsten find that meeting counter-stereotypical partisans reduces bias and improves feelings toward the out-party.
#PoliticalBehavior #AffectivePolarization
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Myers & Hvidsten find that meeting counter-stereotypical partisans reduces bias and improves feelings toward the out-party.
#PoliticalBehavior #AffectivePolarization
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Do fans make poor referees? ⚖️
Claassen, Ensley & Ryan find that when judging election tactics, partisans care more about who benefits than what’s fair. Independents? More neutral—but quieter critics.
#PoliticalBehavior #ElectionIntegrity
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Claassen, Ensley & Ryan find that when judging election tactics, partisans care more about who benefits than what’s fair. Independents? More neutral—but quieter critics.
#PoliticalBehavior #ElectionIntegrity
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Do Fans Make Poor Referees? Exploring Citizens’ Reactions to Partisan Gamesmanship - Political Behavior
Political (as opposed to professional) election oversight is one area in which the U.S. scores extremely low in measures of election integrity. Meanwhile, rancorous political battles to determine acceptable election procedures and judge when tactics cross the line have become common events. Our work contributes to recent scholarship investigating whether voters prioritize democratic principles or strategically favor electoral procedures that provide partisan advantage. In two survey experiments, we confirm that Americans’ attitudes about antidemocratic election tactics reveal more about which team they are cheering for than they do about whether the tactics are fraudulent. The tendency to engage in partisan motivated reasoning occurs among all partisans, but there are subtle differences as to when citizens will engage in it. Partisan motivated reasoning is more common when actions cause harm and by the partisans that are harmed. Finally, Independents are more impartial, but less likely to call out improper tactics in the aggregate because they often fail to condemn actions by either party.
link.springer.com
October 6, 2025 at 4:11 PM
Do fans make poor referees? ⚖️
Claassen, Ensley & Ryan find that when judging election tactics, partisans care more about who benefits than what’s fair. Independents? More neutral—but quieter critics.
#PoliticalBehavior #ElectionIntegrity
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Claassen, Ensley & Ryan find that when judging election tactics, partisans care more about who benefits than what’s fair. Independents? More neutral—but quieter critics.
#PoliticalBehavior #ElectionIntegrity
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
When do strong attitudes turn dangerous?
Clifford & Lothamer show that intense policy opposition, not partisanship, channels aggressive personalities toward supporting political violence. #AmericanPolitics
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Clifford & Lothamer show that intense policy opposition, not partisanship, channels aggressive personalities toward supporting political violence. #AmericanPolitics
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
How Strong Policy Attitudes Activate Support for Aggressive Political Action - Political Behavior
There is a long history of political violence in the United States. Scholars have documented numerous dispositions that predict support for violence as a political tactic, finding that a general tendency toward aggression is consistently among the strongest predictors. Yet, we know much less about how political attitudes might activate aggressive personalities and direct them toward specific targets. In this paper, we examine how policy attitudes interact with dispositional aggression to motivate support for political violence. Across two studies, using novel measures and within-subjects designs, we show that intense policy opposition strongly predicts support for aggressive political tactics against politicians responsible for the legislation – primarily among those who are dispositionally prone to aggression. Surprisingly, the strength of partisan identity plays little role in explaining support for political aggression. Our findings suggest that policy attitudes are a crucial factor for understanding when aggressive individuals might turn to political violence.
link.springer.com
October 6, 2025 at 4:05 PM
When do strong attitudes turn dangerous?
Clifford & Lothamer show that intense policy opposition, not partisanship, channels aggressive personalities toward supporting political violence. #AmericanPolitics
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Clifford & Lothamer show that intense policy opposition, not partisanship, channels aggressive personalities toward supporting political violence. #AmericanPolitics
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Do ethnic minority interest parties grow through programs, or people? Schaaf, Otjes & Spierings show that DENK’s support in the Netherlands stems mainly from personal & religious networks, while online ties matter less. #ComparativePolitics
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The Role of Networks in Mobilization for Ethnic Minority Interest Parties - Political Behavior
Recently, parties that are run by and for ethnic minority citizens with a migration background have become more prominent. They can be considered a manifestation of ethnic political segregation. A key example of such a party is DENK in the Netherlands. So far, the explanatory literature has focused on how programmatic considerations drives voting for these parties. Other factors, such as the role of social networks in mobilization, have received limited testing and limited exploration in more detail. Furthermore, the literature on social networks is mainly based on majority populations. To inform our understanding of the role of social networks in voting (in general but also particularly among ethnic minority communities and for ethnic minority interest parties) this paper analyzes the voting behavior for DENK focusing on the role of personal, online and religious networks. The paper uses both qualitative interviews (with bicultural youth in the third largest city of the Netherlands in 2022) and quantitative surveys (the 2021 Dutch Ethnic Minority Electoral Study). Our analysis points to the importance of religious and personal networks for voting for DENK, whereas online networks appear to be less relevant.
link.springer.com
October 1, 2025 at 11:45 PM
Do ethnic minority interest parties grow through programs, or people? Schaaf, Otjes & Spierings show that DENK’s support in the Netherlands stems mainly from personal & religious networks, while online ties matter less. #ComparativePolitics
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Is nostalgia for authoritarian rule just history, or political behavior? Kim-Leffingwell shows that in South Korea & Taiwan, authoritarian nostalgia fosters group sentiment & attachment to successors, shaping voter behavior. #ComparativePolitics
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Authoritarian Nostalgia, Group Sentiment, and Voter Behavior: Evidence from East Asia - Political Behavior
Legacies of an authoritarian past have enduring effects on voters’ attitudes and behaviors. I argue that authoritarian nostalgia is an important source of group sentiment and voter behavior in post-authoritarian democracies. Voters with nostalgic sentiment construct strong group sentiment based on historical perception and express attachment towards authoritarian successors. I test this argument with a new measure of authoritarian nostalgia. With original data collected from South Korea and Taiwan, I provide evidence that nostalgic voters are likely to exhibit strong group sentiment observable through partisan attachment. Abstracting from the specific cases, I use a randomly assigned candidate comparison analysis to demonstrate that voters high in authoritarian nostalgia are more attracted to hypothetical candidates invoking nostalgia than those with high programmatic or ideological proximity. Overall, the results show how authoritarian nostalgia remains important as a source of group sentiment in maturing democracies.
link.springer.com
September 29, 2025 at 7:04 PM
Is nostalgia for authoritarian rule just history, or political behavior? Kim-Leffingwell shows that in South Korea & Taiwan, authoritarian nostalgia fosters group sentiment & attachment to successors, shaping voter behavior. #ComparativePolitics
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
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Is support for “states’ rights” really about federalism, or partisanship? Doherty, Touchton & Lyons show views on devolving policy to states hinge on elite cues & which party controls the legislature. #AmericanPolitics
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Partisanship and Support for Devolving Concrete Policy Decisions to the States - Political Behavior
Do people think that some policies should be handled by the states, rather than the national government? In an era characterized by stark party polarization there is reason to suspect that attitudes regarding federalism are shaped by partisan considerations. Specifically, reported support for devolution may be driven by exposure to elite partisan cues and partisan reasoning tied to which political party devolution would empower. Using data from the 2022 Cooperative Election Study, we find that partisans tend to differ—often substantially—in their support for state-level decision-making regarding concrete policy proposals. However, these differences are largely driven by those who are most likely to be exposed to elite cues. We also find that, among both Democrats and Republicans, support for policy devolution is contingent on which party controls the state legislature in an individual’s state. The findings suggest that partisanship plays a central role in shaping what the public says when asked about which level of government should determine whether to implement specific policy proposals.
link.springer.com
September 28, 2025 at 6:23 PM
Is support for “states’ rights” really about federalism, or partisanship? Doherty, Touchton & Lyons show views on devolving policy to states hinge on elite cues & which party controls the legislature. #AmericanPolitics
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
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How do independents talk politics? Eveland & Gee show that while partisans & true independents have similar discussion frequency & network size, their networks differ in partisan composition, shaping democratic diversity. #PoliticalBehavior
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Independent Political Networks: Comparing the Discussion Network Size and Composition of Partisans, Leaners, and Independents - Political Behavior
Most prior U.S. political discussion research has failed to pay close attention to the networks of political independents, and to the differences between true partisans, leaners, and true independents. This is in direct contrast to the (appropriately) growing research attention paid to the decades-long rise in the proportion of independents and the decline of true partisans. This study presents representative U.S. survey data that compares political discussion frequency, network size, and the partisan composition of the discussion networks of partisans, leaners, and independents. After applying controls for ideological strength and political interest, we find that the three groups do not differ in discussion frequency or network size. However, there are meaningful differences across the groups in three different network composition measures, including partisan bias. We interpret our findings in the context of both applied measurement considerations and normative democratic expectations of partisan diversity within discussion networks.
link.springer.com
September 24, 2025 at 4:17 PM
How do independents talk politics? Eveland & Gee show that while partisans & true independents have similar discussion frequency & network size, their networks differ in partisan composition, shaping democratic diversity. #PoliticalBehavior
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Can local climate disasters shift voting behavior? Damsbo-Svendsen finds severe flooding in Denmark boosts support for pro-climate parties & candidates, evidence that personal experience with climate risks raises issue salience. #ClimatePolitics
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Pro-climate Voting in Response to Local Flooding - Political Behavior
Political Behavior -
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September 22, 2025 at 11:31 AM
Can local climate disasters shift voting behavior? Damsbo-Svendsen finds severe flooding in Denmark boosts support for pro-climate parties & candidates, evidence that personal experience with climate risks raises issue salience. #ClimatePolitics
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
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Can media stories about immigrant success shift public opinion? Unan shows German coverage of BioNTech’s Turkish-German founders boosted support for easing immigration, evidence that positive exposure can reshape perceptions. #Immigration
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Media Exposure to Highly Skilled Immigrants and Attitudes Toward Immigration - Political Behavior
Can exposure to successful immigrants in the mass media affect perceptions of immigrants and alter attitudes toward immigration? To address this question, I study the case of Ozlem Tureci and Ugur Sah...
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September 20, 2025 at 6:44 PM
Can media stories about immigrant success shift public opinion? Unan shows German coverage of BioNTech’s Turkish-German founders boosted support for easing immigration, evidence that positive exposure can reshape perceptions. #Immigration
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
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Do local politicians know their constituents’ views, or just happen to align with them? Lucas, Sheffer & Loewen show congruence and perceptual accuracy are intertwined pathways to substantive representation in Canada. #Representation
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Pathways to Substantive Representation: Policy Congruence and Policy Knowledge Among Canadian Local Politicians - Political Behavior
In recent years, new data and methods have reinvigorated research on two central elements of elite political behavior: politicians’ congruence with and knowledge of citizens’ opinions. Here, we survey...
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September 17, 2025 at 7:24 AM
Do local politicians know their constituents’ views, or just happen to align with them? Lucas, Sheffer & Loewen show congruence and perceptual accuracy are intertwined pathways to substantive representation in Canada. #Representation
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Russia’s invasion was expected to centralize EU defense, echoing Tilly’s state-formation logic. But Moise, Truchlewski & Oana show public preferences lean Milward—threats strengthen national coordination, not EU centralization. #Security
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Tilly versus Milward: Experimental Evidence of Public Preferences for European Defense Amidst the Russian Threat - Political Behavior
Following the “bellicist” school of state formation, the external threat of war is expected to spur polity formation by centralizing military capacity (Tilly, in Coercion, Capital, and European States...
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September 15, 2025 at 6:49 PM
Russia’s invasion was expected to centralize EU defense, echoing Tilly’s state-formation logic. But Moise, Truchlewski & Oana show public preferences lean Milward—threats strengthen national coordination, not EU centralization. #Security
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
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Public service motivation isn’t just about bureaucrats. Hassell, Hollibaugh & Miles show it also predicts ambition for elected, judicial & high-level public sector roles. APM transcends institutions in shaping public service goals. #PublicService
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Seeking the Public Good: Public Service Motivation and Political Ambition - Political Behavior
Many previous studies have shown that public service motivation (PSM) is associated with public sector employment. However, with few exceptions, such studies have focused on unelected positions in pub...
link.springer.com
September 15, 2025 at 6:45 PM
Public service motivation isn’t just about bureaucrats. Hassell, Hollibaugh & Miles show it also predicts ambition for elected, judicial & high-level public sector roles. APM transcends institutions in shaping public service goals. #PublicService
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Big data meets democracy: Harada, Ito & Smith show how cell-phone mobility data tracks voter turnout. By mapping GPS near polling stations, they uncover how distance shapes the cost of voting. #Elections #VoterTurnout
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Using Cell-phone Mobility Data to Study Voter Turnout - Political Behavior
Studies of voting behavior in some settings may be hampered by poor data availability or unsuitably large units of aggregation for reported turnout. We propose and demonstrate a practical big-data sol...
link.springer.com
September 9, 2025 at 6:57 AM
Big data meets democracy: Harada, Ito & Smith show how cell-phone mobility data tracks voter turnout. By mapping GPS near polling stations, they uncover how distance shapes the cost of voting. #Elections #VoterTurnout
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Read more:
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Negative partisanship reshapes primaries. Albert & Costa show voters who strongly dislike the other side prioritize electability over representation—trading ideological fit for candidates they believe can win. #Elections #NegativePartisanship
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Winning At All Costs? How Negative Partisanship Affects Voter Decision-Making - Political Behavior
Do voters who dislike the other side prefer candidates who can win, even if they are less representative? Negative partisanship is an important feature of American politics, but few scholars have exam...
link.springer.com
September 5, 2025 at 3:21 PM
Negative partisanship reshapes primaries. Albert & Costa show voters who strongly dislike the other side prioritize electability over representation—trading ideological fit for candidates they believe can win. #Elections #NegativePartisanship
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
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Rural hospital closures reshape politics as much as health care. Shepherd finds voters in communities losing hospitals shifted Republican, even though closures were more common in GOP-led states without Medicaid expansion. #HealthPolitics
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The Politics of Rural Hospital Closures - Political Behavior
Who do citizens hold responsible for outcomes and experiences? Hundreds of rural hospitals have closed or significantly reduced their capacity since just 2010, leaving much of the rural U.S. without a...
link.springer.com
September 3, 2025 at 4:19 PM
Rural hospital closures reshape politics as much as health care. Shepherd finds voters in communities losing hospitals shifted Republican, even though closures were more common in GOP-led states without Medicaid expansion. #HealthPolitics
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Peer socialization in elite business schools may not drive political attitudes after all. Lindskog, Gustafsson & Voytiv show that changes reflect self-selection more than cohort influence, with Covid disruptions underscoring the limits of socialization.
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Does Peer Socialization Within Cohorts Foster Political Attitudes? A Longitudinal Study of Elite Business Students - Political Behavior
The association between higher education and political attitudes is well-recognized, and research suggests that socialization amongst peers is one of the most probable mechanisms explaining a possible...
link.springer.com
September 3, 2025 at 4:23 AM
Peer socialization in elite business schools may not drive political attitudes after all. Lindskog, Gustafsson & Voytiv show that changes reflect self-selection more than cohort influence, with Covid disruptions underscoring the limits of socialization.
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
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Editorial Expression of Concern: Reframing Gendered Issues: Intersectional Identity Frames and Policy Agenda
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Editorial Expression of Concern: Reframing Gendered Issues: Intersectional Identity Frames and Policy Agendas - Political Behavior
Political Behavior -
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August 29, 2025 at 4:55 PM
Editorial Expression of Concern: Reframing Gendered Issues: Intersectional Identity Frames and Policy Agenda
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Peterson & Jeong find that local media strengthens issue accountability. By reducing uncertainty about legislators’ policy positions, news makes voters more likely to evaluate politicians on issues, not just party lines. #MediaAndPolitics
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Making Issues Matter: Local Media and Policy-Based Evaluations of Politicians - Political Behavior
Does the media enhance issue accountability? Many argue it does by covering where politicians stand on policy. However, evidence of this process is limited and fails to address two alternatives. First...
link.springer.com
August 29, 2025 at 4:44 PM
Peterson & Jeong find that local media strengthens issue accountability. By reducing uncertainty about legislators’ policy positions, news makes voters more likely to evaluate politicians on issues, not just party lines. #MediaAndPolitics
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Kopacheva shows protest in semi-authoritarian Russia is not just about exposure to info. Network position matters: brokers in low-density, high-closure networks mobilize more, while central nodes participate less. #ProtestPolitics
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Explaining Protest Participation in Semi-authoritarian Regimes: The Power of Social Networks - Political Behavior
This study uses the case of ecological protests in the Russian Federation and the social network of 903 263 VKontakte users to investigate the unique characteristics of protesters’ social networks and...
link.springer.com
August 29, 2025 at 4:43 PM
Kopacheva shows protest in semi-authoritarian Russia is not just about exposure to info. Network position matters: brokers in low-density, high-closure networks mobilize more, while central nodes participate less. #ProtestPolitics
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link.springer.com/article/10.1...
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Villamizar-Chaparro & Echeverri-Pineda find that group consciousness, not ethnic org membership, drives Afro-Colombians to favor reserved seats—representation rooted in identity over institutions.
#IdentityPolitics #LatinAmerica
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#IdentityPolitics #LatinAmerica
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Group Consciousness, Organizational Membership, and District Choice: Evidence from the Afro-Colombian Reserved Seats - Political Behavior
Numerous countries around the globe have undertaken efforts aimed at enhancing political representation. One of these efforts has taken the institutional form of reserved seats or ethnic districts whe...
link.springer.com
August 25, 2025 at 3:57 PM
Villamizar-Chaparro & Echeverri-Pineda find that group consciousness, not ethnic org membership, drives Afro-Colombians to favor reserved seats—representation rooted in identity over institutions.
#IdentityPolitics #LatinAmerica
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
#IdentityPolitics #LatinAmerica
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Strawbridge, Silber Mohamed, & Lucas show that racial resentment has long been tied to gendered attitudes in U.S. politics. Across five elections, racism and sexism reflect a broader system-justifying worldview, not just a 2016 spillover.
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White Racial Resentment and Gender Attitudes: An Enduring Connection or an Artifact of the 2016 Election? - Political Behavior
Several studies have demonstrated the importance of racial resentment and sexism in voting in the 2016 election. While this could be primarily a function of the particular electoral context, this stud...
link.springer.com
August 22, 2025 at 7:40 PM
Strawbridge, Silber Mohamed, & Lucas show that racial resentment has long been tied to gendered attitudes in U.S. politics. Across five elections, racism and sexism reflect a broader system-justifying worldview, not just a 2016 spillover.
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Read more:
link.springer.com/article/10.1...