Narratives on migration and political polarization: How the emphasis in narratives can drive us apart

E. Levi, M. Bayerlein, G. Grimalda, T. Reggiani
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Nowadays, immigration is a polarizing topic in politics. In this paper, we investigate how much this political polarization is driven by the depiction narratives made of immigrants vis-a-vis the natives. Furthermore, we look at whether polarization is rooted in private preferences over narratives or in how they are endorsed in public settings and social media. Our empirical strategy consists of a survey experiment in the 2021 German elections and a field experiment on Twitter in which we manipulate the “pinned tweets” of experimental users. To build our narratives, we manipulate either the policy position — hostile toward or accepting migration — or an emphasis on the out-group, on the in-group, or on economic reciprocity. We find that political polarization is driven both by the policy position and emphasis in narratives. On Twitter, the out-group emphasis drives supporters of different parties apart, and the corresponding hostile narrative becomes the only one going viral. In the survey, right-wing participants prefer the reciprocity emphasis more, but we still find evidence of more polarization when allowing the participants to go public.
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关于移民和政治两极分化的叙事:叙事中的强调如何将我们分开
如今,移民是一个政治上两极分化的话题。在本文中,我们调查了这种政治两极分化在多大程度上是由移民与本地人的描述叙事所驱动的。此外,我们还研究了两极分化是源于个人对叙事的偏好,还是源于它们在公共环境和社交媒体上的认可。我们的实证策略包括2021年德国大选的调查实验和Twitter的现场实验,其中我们操纵实验用户的“固定推文”。为了构建我们的叙事,我们要么操纵政策立场——对移民持敌对态度,要么接受移民——要么强调群体外、群体内或经济互惠。我们发现,政治两极分化是由政策立场和叙事重点共同驱动的。在Twitter上,对群体外的强调让不同党派的支持者分道扬镳,相应的敌对叙事成为唯一一种病毒式传播的叙事。在调查中,右翼参与者更倾向于互惠的强调,但我们仍然发现,当允许参与者公开时,两极分化的证据更多。
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